Russell no thanks to FIA for making right their wrong on swearing

F1 News
Friday, 16 May 2025 at 15:39
george russell

George Russell saw no reason to thank Formula 1 governing body - the FIA - after it halved the maximum fines drivers face for swearing.

The Mercedes driver Russell, a director of the Grand Prix Drivers' Association (GPDA), said the high fines were "a little bit ludicrous in the first place."
"Of course we're happy to see (the changes), but it (the fines) should never have been there," the Briton told reporters ahead of the Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix at Italy's Imola circuit. "So it feels a bit wrong to be thanking (the FIA) for the changes when we shouldn't have been in that place to begin with."
The governing FIA announced on Wednesday that it was reducing the maximum penalties for drivers swearing by 50% and giving stewards more discretion on deciding penalties.
Competitors in Formula 1 and rallying have been at loggerheads with FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem over a crackdown on bad language during events. The FIA amended the sporting code in January to set out stiff sanctions for drivers who break the rules concerning conduct.
A first offence triggered a €40,000 ($44,764) fine for F1 drivers, rising to €80,000 for the second and €120,000 with a one-month suspension and deduction of championship points for a third breach. Those fines are now halved. Abuse of officials will now result in sporting penalties rather than fines.
McLaren's Oscar Piastri, the Formula One championship leader, said that was a positive step: "The stewards have a lot more control now, which I think is a good thing because the circumstances definitely need to be taken into account,
"I think one of the big things for the FIA was putting something in for abusing officials, which I think is very fair and reasonable. I think maybe some of the other areas got a bit caught up in that sentiment and felt a bit harsh.
"But I think there are some genuine reasons behind what they´re doing. I think they´ve listened to some of our feedback and the changes are in the right direction," said the Australian.
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