F1: Horner fumes at lack of consistency in stewards' decisions

Red Bull Formula 1 chief Christian Horner has called out the FIA stewards for showing a lack of consistency in their deci💫sion making after Max Verstappen was stripped of ওa podium finish in Sunday's United States Grand Prix.

Verstappen fought from P16 on the grid to pass K🍎imi Raikkonen for third place on the last lap in Austin, only for the stewards to hit him with a five-second time penalty for leaving the track and gaining an advantage.

Horner fumes at lack of consistency in stewards' decisions

Red Bull Formula 1 chief Christian Horner has called out the FIA stewards for showing a lack of consistency in their decision making after Max Verstappen was strippe🎉d of a podium finish in Sunday's United States Grand Prix.

Verstappen fought from P16 on the grid to pass Kimi Raikkonen for third place on the last lap in Austin, only for the stewards to hit him with a five-second time penalty for le𒐪aving the track and gaining an advantage.

Verstappen and Horner slammed the penalty after the race, while a number ofꦅ other figures in the F1 paddock also wad𝓰ed in, including Mercedes non-executive chairman Niki Lauda, who called it "the worst decision I've ever seen".

Much of the debate after the race surrounding the definition of track limits, but Horner felt the bigger problem was the lack of consistency from the stewards after seeing a number of other off-track excursions go unpunished in the rac🅷e.

"If you do🀅n’t want cars to go there, put a bigger curb or gravel or something else there," Horner s♚aid.

"What is annoying is the lack of c💎onsistency. Where do you draw the line? For the fans and cওasual viewers, it needs to clear. How can you say what Valtteri did, on one hand, is okay but what Max did isn’t?

"In any other sport if you are out you are out. You can’t have it’s alrꦯight to be out there but not okay to be out here. Either get rid of it completely and just let them race. Or if you don’t want the cars to go there put in a gravel trap or bigger curbs or a deterrentဣ for drivers not to go there.

"The problem෴ is that we all spend an awful lot of money going motor racing, and you want it to be ൩consistently and professionally refereed.

"When you get decisions like toda👍y it is difficult to understand where the consistency is."

Horner also felt the need to rush through a decision and ensure the right drivers stood on the podium affected🦩 the stewards' call, leaving them under pressure.

"𒁏They were desperate to get the right people on the podium but they then jumped to a conclusion without considering all of th🏅e facts," Horner said.

"After Mexico last year when there was at least one steward that was involved in that decision, it was agreed th꧒at to avoid the debacle of Mexico where there were three different people on the podium, to take a brea𝕴th to understand and listen to the drivers.

"If you look at the consistency of decision making, that is what is disap♏pointingꦫ today."

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