Günther Steiner sharply criticizes FIA: “Monaco was a debacle”

(Motorsport-Total.com) – The subsequent reinstatement of Pierre Gasly’s podium position at the Monaco Grand Prix continues to spark discussions. Former Haas team principal Günther Steiner called the FIA’s decision a “debacle” and warned of the consequences for the consistency of rule interpretation in Formula 1.

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Photo for the news: Günther Steiner sharply criticizes FIA: "Monaco was a debacle"

In the podcast “The Red Flags Podcast”, Steiner spoke clearly about the decision with which the FIA withdrew a previously imposed penalty against Alpine.

New evidence led to the turnaround

The background: Gasly was originally penalized with a time penalty for speeding in the pit lane and thus dropped from third to seventh place. After Alpine requested a right to review, the podium was reinstated.

The FIA explained that the team had new evidence that was not available to the race stewards at the time of their original decision.

What causes particular discussion is the fact that several other drivers were also penalized for speeding in the pit lane. However, these penalties were already served during the race and cannot be reversed afterwards.

Steiner criticizes lack of equal treatment

Steiner sees this as a fundamental problem: “The podium should not have been reinstated. If you give him back third place, you would also have to correct the other cases, and that is no longer possible. In this respect, it was complete chaos in Monte Carlo.”

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According to the South Tyrolean, the problem had already started with incorrect information about the position of the measurement line or wrong information given to the teams.

“It started with the measurement line being in the wrong place or the teams being given incorrect information. But in the end, it is obviously the wrong decision to give him the podium back, because everyone else has received their penalties, and these can no longer be reversed,” explains Steiner.

He adds: “Such situations cannot be properly resolved in the end. Of course, I would have liked Pierre to have the podium, but he should stand there because he earned it the right way and not because of a problem that the rules do not even provide for or because someone made a mistake measuring a section of the track.”

“The whole thing was a debacle”

For Steiner, it is therefore clear: “In my opinion, the whole thing was a debacle.”

The discussion about the subsequent correction is likely to have effects beyond Monaco on the future handling of comparable cases. Especially the question of how equal treatment and the correction of obvious errors can be reconciled could occupy Formula 1 for a longer time.

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