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After Alpine appeal, motor racing penalties in Monaco are being reviewed

On Thursday, two time penalties for pitlane speeds that cost Pierre Gasly the podium at last weekend's Monaco Grand Prix were being reviewed after it was revealed Formula One made a measurement error.

In a statement made at the Barcelona-Catalunya grand prix, the Stewards stated that the Frenchman’s Renault-owned Alpine Team was able to submit a petition for review in both cases. A second hearing could be held.

The stewards also accepted that there were significant new elements that they did not have at the time the decisions were made last Sunday.

Alpine argued that the stewards were not aware of the issue with the timing loops at the pit lane, but that the governing FIA (Foundation One Management) and the governing FIA knew about it before the race.

SPEED MEASUREMENT IS INACCURATE OR OVERESTIMATED

Alpine said it also had data that showed Gasly had activated his car's speed limiter before entering pit lane, and had stayed inside the limit.

The submission stated "FOM as Official Timekeeping supplier to the Competition provided evidence that distance?used in calculating F1 Official Timing was inaccurate and underestimated the speed of the Car 10 (Gasly).

The Stewards confirmed that the incorrect distance measurement was only confirmed by the?FOM on Wednesday, after the race.

The team also noted that they had raised concerns during the race following three initial 'pitlane speeding violations and asked race control whether there was a problem with the system.

They said that "Race Control reported back that they raised the issue with the official timekeeper, and were reassured there was no problem."

Gasly was third in the Monaco road race, which is a home race of sorts for him and his team. However, he was demoted to 7th after two 5-second penalties. Gasly was recorded at 60.1 kph and 60.4 km/h, when the speed limit is 60 kph.

Gasly stated that he felt "absolutely broken" by the penalties, and that "a dream I've had for my entire life of being on the podium in Monaco was taken from me because of reasons I cannot understand".

Red Bull's Isack Hadjar could have been reinstated, but that would be problematic, as other drivers were also penalised.

Eight of the eleven teams, except for Alpine, requested to attend the virtual hearing. The final decision was still pending.

"I thought in the race, it was fairly obvious." "I thought there was something strange going on, because you only get a penalty if you have two or three cars in the same race. But not if you had seven or eight," said Oscar Piastri of McLaren.

It's obvious that it has affected the outcome of the race one way or the other. If I hadn't received a penalty, I would not have pitted. "They can't change the outcome now, because it has happened?before" (Gasly’s penalty). George Russell of Mercedes, who was out of points in a race that his teammate Kimi won, claimed he had pleaded to the FIA for a post-race punishment rather than the drive through he received, which could not be reversed once it had been served. (Reporting and editing by Alex Richardson, Clare Fallon, and Alan Baldwin)

(source: Reuters)