McLaren Boss Calls Piastri's Brazil GP Penalty 'Harsh' Amid Podium Loss

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella has spoken out against Oscar Piastri's penalty at the São Paulo Grand Prix. The Australian driver received a 10-second penalty for a collision with Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli during the race. Stella described the penalty as "definitely on the harsh side" and suggested responsibility should have been shared. Despite the penalty costing Piastri a potential podium finish, Stella found positives in his race pace during the later stages.

Key Points: Stella Defends Piastri After Brazil GP Penalty Costs Podium

  • Piastri finished fifth after serving penalty during first pit stop
  • Stewards deemed him fully responsible for Lap 20 collision with Antonelli
  • Contact sent Antonelli into Leclerc, forcing Ferrari driver's retirement
  • Stella suggests blame should have been shared between both drivers involved
3 min read

Formula 1: McLaren team principal Stella calls Piastri's Brazil GP penalty 'harsh'

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella criticizes Oscar Piastri's 10-second penalty as "harsh" after collision with Kimi Antonelli cost potential Brazil GP podium finish.

"I would say that it was definitely on the harsh side - Andrea Stella"

New Delhi, Nov 12

McLaren Team Principal Andrea Stella has described Oscar Piastri’s penalty at the São Paulo Grand Prix as “definitely on the harsh side”, after the Australian was handed a 10-second time penalty for a collision with Kimi Antonelli during Sunday’s race.

Piastri finished fifth at Interlagos after serving the penalty during his first pit stop. The stewards deemed him wholly responsible for the Lap 20 incident, which occurred immediately after a Safety Car restart when he attempted an inside move on Antonelli at Turn 1.

The two made contact, sending the Mercedes rookie into Charles Leclerc’s Ferrari, who had been trying to pass around the outside. The clash forced Leclerc to retire, while Piastri initially moved up to second behind teammate and eventual race winner Lando Norris — before the penalty cost him a potential podium.

“In terms of the penalty, I would say that [it was] definitely on the harsh side,” Stella was quoted by Formula 1. “It’s true, we see a little lock-up, but at the same time, he’s able to maintain the trajectory, which is ultimately what counts.”

The McLaren boss suggested that the blame should have been shared between the two drivers. “I think the responsibility should be shared with Kimi, because Kimi kind of knew that Oscar was on the inside, and the collision probably could have been avoided,” Stella continued.

“Perhaps Kimi was also worried about having Leclerc on the outside. A difficult situation, obviously, a difficult situation, but I think overall the penalty is harsh for Oscar to be considered fully to blame for this incident.

“At the same time, now it’s done. So, like I reiterate, the respect that we have for the stewards, we accept it, we move on.”

The result leaves Piastri 24 points behind Norris in the drivers’ standings with just three Grands Prix and one Sprint left in the season. The 24-year-old has not been on the podium for five races, and his recent performances have been inconsistent compared to his strong start to the year.

However, Stella found positives in Piastri’s race pace in Brazil. “From a pace point of view, I think the pace was quite encouraging in the second and third stints,” he said. “In the first stint, Oscar was carrying some damage on the tyre that was locked, and he was also kind of thinking that the stint would have been long, but in the second and the third stint, I think the performance was good.”

“Just talking right now with Oscar, some of the adaptations that we talked about in these low-grip conditions, I think he was able to execute them during the race,” Stella added. “So, I think we take away from this event encouraging indications from a performance point of view and a race pace point of view.”

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
As someone who follows F1 closely, I think the stewards were too quick to blame Piastri. These incidents are part of racing - if we penalize every contact, we'll lose the excitement. Stella's balanced view shows good sportsmanship while supporting his driver.
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Arjun K
Honestly, I think Stella is just protecting his driver. Piastri locked up and caused the collision - clear penalty for me. The rules are the rules, and if we start making exceptions, it sets a bad precedent. Respect to Stella for accepting it gracefully though.
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Sarah B
The real tragedy here is Leclerc having to retire because of someone else's mistake. Piastri's penalty cost him points, but Leclerc lost everything. F1 needs more consistency in stewarding decisions across different races.
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Karthik V
Piastri was having such a strong race until that incident! Fifth place is still good, but that podium was so close. Hope he bounces back in the remaining races - he's shown great potential this season. 🇮🇳 fans are rooting for more exciting battles!
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Michael C
Stella's comments show why he's such a respected team principal. He defends his driver but also respects the stewards' decision. That's the kind of leadership that builds strong teams. McLaren is lucky to have him.

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