Formula 1 leader Oscar Piastri said he and McLaren teammate Lando Norris would race in Mexico this weekend with no further consequences after collisions between them in Singapore and the United States.
Norris, 14 points adrift and Piastri's closest rival in the
F1 Championship, had said in Austin before the pair collided in a sprint race that he faced consequences for the rest of the season.
Those consequences were never spelled out by drivers or the team, who have already retained their F1 Constructors' crown and are now going for their first title double since 1998.
If Singapore was held to be the Briton's fault, since Norris benefited from pushing Piastri wide, Australian Piastri acknowledged on Thursday that blame for
the Austin coming-together fell more on his shoulders.
Both drivers retired from that sprint, won by Red Bull's reigning F1 Champion Max Verstappen, who has now closed the gap to Piastri to 40 points with five rounds and two sprints remaining after being 104 behind at the end of August.
Piastri told reporters: "We've gone through it again, we go through every weekend with regards to what's happened, and I think there is a degree of responsibility from my side in the sprint. We're starting this weekend with a clean slate for both of us."
Asked for further clarification, Piastri added: "The consequences on Lando's side have been removed.
"There were a lot of factors involved but ultimately it was what's been decided," the Australian concluded.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin)