Ferrari team
principal Jean Todt said that he feels the 2007 Drivers'
championship could be very different if McLaren appeal the
penalty imposed on them at the World Council last week. He
also called the $100m penalty and loss of Constructors'
points 'soft' and suggested that an appeal could provoke an
even more serious penalty.
Todt was speaking after his drivers Kimi Raikkonen and
Felipe Massa finished first and second in the Belgian Grand
Prix, the final race in Europe before the last three
overseas Grands Prix of the season. It had marked a total
reversal of form in comparison to the Italian Grand Prix the
previous weekend but now his drivers had closed the gap to
McLaren's.
"If you get deeply into all this sad story," said Todt in
Belgium, referring to the spying case of which McLaren had
been found guilty, "you realise that it's a very soft
sentence which we respect. Today, it has no meaning to speak
about the Drivers' championship because we know our major
competitor still has time to make an appeal, and we will
wait for their decision to be able to comment about that. It
will be very important to see if they make an appeal or not.
If they do appeal, I think it will change the Drivers'
situation quite a lot. The appeal would probably be judged
before the Japanese Grand Prix and we may therefore be
facing a completely different situation. Before we know
about the appeal, it's not something I'm going to comment on
further."
However, Todt admitted that "if you ask me what they will
do, personally I wish they will do (an appeal). I think the
result should be different. But again, it's a personal
feeling." Todt pointed out that there was nothing in his
power to affect the FIA's penalty or even any penalty in the
case of an appeal, but Ferrari has its own view. "We feel
it's a soft penalty considering the whole story. What was
very important for us, as I mentioned before, is that if you
are guilty, you must be penalised. So they were guilty, they
were penalised. Now you can always decide enough, not
enough.
"I know that yesterday the president of the FIA said that he
confirmed that it was soft but we know in this business you
have to take a lot of things into consideration and I can
understand that. It's much better to have four races,
including this one, with all the drivers and I'm not arguing
about that.
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Jean Todt called the $100m penalty and loss of
Constructors' points 'soft' and suggested that an
appeal could provoke an even more serious penalty.
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Ferrari team principal Jean Todt (top) said that he
feels the 2007 Drivers' championship could be very
different if McLaren appeal the penalty imposed on
them at the World Council last week. |
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"But lots of things were taken into consideration in order
to favour the championship rather than this single bad
case." Todt also pointed out that there was no chance of
Ferrari stopping its civil actions against McLaren if they
decided not to appeal. "For me, what matters are the team's
interests. Considering the civil case in England, the penal
case in Italy, it has nothing to do with the FIA. It's up to
the judges to cover the matter. I know that our president
dedicated this success to our supporter who had the idea of
informing us about those stolen documents. Fortunately we
had somebody loyal and fair who helped us in that and we
don't have any reason to stop any legal action."
But Todt emphasised that a punishment was important, even if
the controversy had damaged Formula One's and even Ferrari's
image. "Really it is not good for F1. When you hear all of
those problems in cycling, it is not good for the sport.
What is very important is to punish. When things are wrong
you must answer properly to try and make sure it doesn't
happen again. The sport, the competition, and all that is
fantastic. But you must know where to put the limit. We all
want to win, we all want to go to the limit, but it is very
important not to overpass the limit."
Finally, having called for a minute's silence in memory of
former rally champion Colin McRae, who died the previous day
in a helicopter crash, Todt paid his own tribute to the
former World Rally champion. "I have been involved in
rallying as a co-driver from 1966 to 1981 and he was much
younger than me. Then I was a team director of a rally team
which then went into a sportscar championship at the end of
1991 until 1993, so I did not work with Colin McRae. But I
still follow rallying because I like this sport and he was a
great champion. I remember when he was World Champion in
1995 and I saw last night on television some pictures of his
skills. He was one of the best rally drivers in history."
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