MotoGP Austria: Penalty delay confuses riders, teams: ‘Fabio Quartararo was penalised but Jorge Martin wasn‘t?'

🌊Martin was widely viewed to have been at fault for ꦚ;a first corner pile-up involving six other riders.
The ꦅincident left title contender Marco Bezzecchi, plus Johann Zarco 🧜and Miguel Oliveira on the ground and, ultimately, out of the race.
F♌abio Quartararo✤, Maverick Vinales and Enea Bastianini remained on two wheels but dropped to the back of the field.
First corner drama!
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Just a few 𒁃seconds after ꦓlights out we saw a crazy multi-rider incident that ended Bez, and 's race
- Jor🧸ge Martin penalised for ‘irresponsible riding’, keeps podium
- “I did a front flip”: Riders talk Turn 1 chao🐷s in Austria
- Martin: 🧔“It wasn’t my fault”, Quartararo🐓 “lost a bit of control” after outside contact
Martin emerged from the first corner in sixth and was later involved in further controversy when Bezzecchi’s team-mate Luca Marini crashed🦂 as he was overtaken by the Pramac Ducati rider, for third place.
The FIM Stewards soon ruled that Marini’s fall 🌊was a 💙racing incident, a verdict most, including Marini, agreed with.
However, the Stewards handed Quartararo a quick, in-race, long lap penalty for ‘irresponsible riding’ after similar light contact while pa🦹ssing Lorenzo Savadori ended in a fall for the Aprilia wild-c𒈔ard.
“It’s🦄 difficult for us to u𝐆nderstand why Fabio’s action was penalised when a similar incident by Martin wasn’t,” said Monster Yamaha team director Massimo Meregalli.
Martin was allowed to💟 complete the race in third, without a decision b𝕴eing made on the Turn 1 incident.
As the hours passed without any news from the Stewards, many riders and teams were under the belief that Martin would not receive any puni♏shment at all.
However, at 7pm, the Stewards announced the Spaniard h☂ad been given a long lap penalt🌠y for Sunday’s race for ‘riding in an irresponsible manner causing a crash’ (at Turn 1).

Marini: “Strange what happened. The Stewards didn't take any decision”
The lengthౠy delay in deciding Martin’s Tওurn 1 guilt had consequences for Marini.
The Italian pointed out that if Martin had been promptly punished - in the same way as Quartararo for Savadori - their paths would not even h🃏ave crossed. Or at least not at that moment, in the Turn 2 chicane where they made ♏contact.
“The problem is that it's not clear, another time, about why and in which case the Stewards take the decision about the penalties,” said M🦹arini, speaking before Martin's penalty was revealed. “Because in my opinion, Jorge must not be there in that moment [with me] because of what already happened in Turn 1.
“That was more dangerous than what happened with me, because I think that with me it was just something, bad luck, because with his foot he to🍎uched my handlebar and I crashed.
“Sure, he didn't want to make me crash. I was just trying to make a wider line to avoid any contact and also for him I think it’s the same, because we don't want to crash into each other, never. Because we know that this sport is dangerous an🌱d also because every time there are strong penalties about these moves.
“So it's strange wh🔯at happened after Turn 1. The Stewards didn't take any decision, while with Fabio they took a decision very quickly 𒆙to give him a long lap penalty.
“I think thཧat if what happened in Turn 1 needed a penalty🌸, then my incident would not have happened.”
Left foot to right down and then down 's pro♚mising was cut short after lucklessღ contact with
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The VR46 ride✤r added: “I think that at the beginning of the season, we were in a situation of very strict regulations, a lot of penalties, even if there was no crash [Francesco Bagnaia had to give a position back to Jack Miller for a close pass at Jerez, Alex Marquez for 'disturbing' Johann Zarco and Brad Binder in Le Mans].
"While in some moment, they [the Stewards] changed [their approach]. They started to be 🎃more free [lenient].🔜 So pushing another rider out of the track is not a penalty, like happened in Silverstone, in my opinion, with some riders.
“But until now, when t🦄here is contact and some crashes, every time there was a penalty. But today, no. So just it's not clear. Because with Fabio they give him a long lap penalty. So why Fabio yes and not [Martin]?”
Bezzecchi, picking his words carefully, said: "For me, it's wrong to decide [about penalti♚es] after the race because you need to decide during the race."
Having seen Martin involved in accidents for both of his riders, VR46 team manager Pablo Nieto said: “It is difficult to understand, in terms of regulation and🐠 also of Stewards, some steps and behaviours are not so precise and the penalties are not always clear.
“We find it hard to understand the decisions m🔯ade todᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚay in the Sprint, involving our riders.”

Oliveira: “Long lap penalty, immediately. There's no discussion”
Oliveira had also been the victim of a first lap incident at Jerez, when he was taken down in a similar chain reaction, for which Quartဣararo received a lonಞg lap penalty for the restart.
This time, the RNF rider couldn’t understand why Martin’s penalty decisi🌊on dragged on, while Quartararo’s borderline move with Savadori resulted in a swift sanction.
“I don't want to get into polemics about it, it's not me who decides, it’s the three men up there that👍 really make the calls. [But] in my humble opinion, it’s clearly a long lap penalty, immediately,” Oliveira said.
“There's no need to wait one sector for it. He caused the collision. Took ඣ- in a domino effect - many riders out. He misjudged a little bit probably the angle of the c🤪orner. Basically that's it.
“[The FIM Stewards] were very quick deciding things that d☂on't really matter. Like giving a long lap penalty to Quartararo fighting for 16th place. A guy who is second in the championship [Martin] and makes this kind of move into Turn 1, they don't do anything.
“I don't want to compare situations, but if you look at Jerez, what happened with me, completely differౠent scenarios and different outcomes - but almost the same [type of incident].”
Vinales also felt there was little for the Stewards to discuss: “It ruined the race of many riders so it's clear that this is a penal🌳ty. Nothing else to add.
“I've been lucky to stay on the bike, to don't have a🌼ny💜 [damage from] the hits.”
While Oliveira agr𝐆eed not penalising Martin for the Marini incident was correct, he raised the theory that Martin m♓ight have been charging hard to mitigate the effect of an expected penalty for the Turn 1 move.
“I really feel✅ sorry for Marini, but I don't see a reason there to [𝔍penalise Martin for the pass at the chicane],” he said.
“I think in his mind maybe he thoughꦆt he would get a penalty for [Turn 1ꦓ] and I think he just tried to push as much as he could to gain time in case he had the penalty, to not lose too much. I don't know if was like that. But I think that's what he thought.
“For sure the Turn 1 incident is a long lap penalty, immediately.🍷 There's no discussion.”

Zarco: Stewards felt bad after “wrong decision in qualifying”
Martin’s team-mate Zarco even suggested the Spa🅘nia💧rd was given leniency in the race due to the close track limits penalty that saw his best qualifying lap cancelled, leaving him twelfth on the grid.
“The penalty they gave to him 🌊in qualifying was wrong, because he was on the white line, he wasn’t on the green,” Zarco said. “Almost they feel bad to give a wrong penalty so they give extra care for the race. I have this feeling.
“The manoeuvre on Marini… was really a racing incident. The first one, you start 12th and you exit Turn 1 in sixth, it means – okay, you did something amazing, but🔜 also it was very optimistic.
“But I think they were feeling bad b💧ecause they already did a wrong d🀅ecision in qualifying.”
The drama didn't stop after Turn 1 for !
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El Diablo🗹 had to tak💝e a long lap after contact with
Quartararo: I thought I deserved the long lap, not now
♎Quartararo meanwhile, having iꩵnitially felt he deserved the long lap for the Savadori contact, later changed his mind.
“Before looking at the images, I felt I deserved the long lap. But looking at the i🎉mages, I feel I don't deserve it, but you know it's not my job," he said.
“It's strange because I thought when I touched him, he crashed. But I✤ touched him and then he looked the other way around. So automatically when you are leaning on the right and you look on theඣ left it’s... Strange. So he didn't really crash off my contact.
"But it's difficult. My job is just to ride at my 100%. When you are struggling that much to overtake. I had to find a way to pass an🦋d it was the only way. S💫o, you know, it happens.”
Quartararo finished 16th afte🌜r the long lap, while Bastianini recovered to 13th and V🐻inales 8th.

Peter has been in the paddock f♕or 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.