‘FIA is still making the same mistakes that got Masi fired’: Medland

At this point, I still side with race control. No team is going to want to make a pitstop for some flailing bodywork, and they will always argue that it isn’t a danger, especially when it’s a small piece. But at 200mph, a small piece can have a devastating impact on the car behind as the Halo will offer little protection if the debris detaches in the direction of a cockpit.

It felt like in Singapore they were doubling down on their previous stance and showing they would not compromise if there was any safety risk. So that makes what happened in Austin even more perplexing.

Sergio Perez’s front wing endplate was loose for five laps. He damaged it on lap one against Valtteri Bottas, and lost it on lap six when overtaking Lance Stroll. Five laps was plenty of time for the stewards to issue a black and orange flag to prevent it flying off at all, especially given the speed they have reacted to Magnussen in the past (he picked up damage on the opening lap in Hungary and came into the pits on lap five after the decision from race control).

Sergio Perez with damaged front wing at 2022 US GP

Perez ran with a flapping front wing — until it fell off — without intervention from race control

Florent Gooden/DPPI

Perez should have received the same flag, and should have been in the pits before the big chunk of carbon fiber made its escape. Haas was right to protest, if only to highlight the inconsistency that cannot be allowed when it’s on grounds of safety.

Fernando Alonso’s loose mirror was an even worse oversight, given it spent so many laps precariously shaking. If you’re going to deem a front wing endplate dangerous – on a Haas at least – then how you can not think the mirror could do just as much damage is beyond me. And there were more than 20 laps where it was threatening to break free before it finally did so, yet race control did not take any action despite multiple calls from the Haas team manager (and likely other teams too).

I know the fact Alonso somehow recovered to score points was incredible after that incident, and as fans we all want to see as many incredible feats as possible, but it’s clear to me that race control dropped the ball massively in this case.

Fernando Alonso with wobbly front right wing mirror at the 2022 US GP

Alonso’s mirror was showing signs of distress for 20 laps before it flew off

Getty Images

What’s not so clear is why, or what the the remedy is post-race. Certainly there have been times when those running a race have worked effectively, as the Magnussen incidents show. But they didn’t in Austin, which is why they were left open to protest.

The only difference between the Perez and Alonso incidents is the fact that Alonso made a pitstop and was sent back out with the damaged mirror, whereas Perez was never in the pit lane between sustaining damage and it falling off. When penalising Alonso, the stewards stated it was agreed by the FIA’s Nikolas Tombazis and Jo Bauer that the car was unsafe with only one mirror, while Bauer also said the flapping mirror was unsafe.

But if it was deemed unsafe with the loose bodywork then Red Bull surely would have got the same penalty for Perez. So from that we can deduce that in the stewards’ view once the mirror was gone is the only time the car was unsafe and therefore should have been called into the pits, but before then it was acceptable.

Confused? Yeah, me too.