Advertisement

'Something he needed to do': Scott McLaughlin hits back in Bathurst 1000 'disgrace'

Scott McLaughlin has spoken out in defence of Fabian Coulthard and dismissed the notion he could have his Bathurst 1000 title taken away.

Officials will further investigate Coulthard's "disgraceful" safety car tactics after sensationally charging his Ford outfit with breaching team orders regulations.

‘REMARKABLE’: Poisoning drama delays start of Bathurst 1000

‘F***ING BULLS**T’: Bathurst 1000 erupts in furious moment

Coulthard was initially slapped with a drive-through penalty after he dramatically slowed down and held up the field behind his Ford teammate McLaughlin, who went on to claim his maiden Great Race on Sunday.

But Coulthard, who is third in the series standings, now faces a fine or loss of championship points after stewards ordered his DJR Team Penske team to face a hearing on the Gold Coast next week.

[Join or create a 2019 Yahoo Fantasy Basketball league for free today]

Fabian Coulthard and Scott McLaughlin, pictured here during the Bathurst 1000.
Scott McLaughlin has defended Fabian Coulthard. Image: Supercars/Getty

Officials will investigate whether Coulthard's actions influenced the outcome of the race after following team orders to slow down.

“I didn’t know anything about it until the press conference after the race,” McLaughlin has since revealed.

“We did our bit. We had a fast car, we won the race, so we’ll just get on with it, it’ll sort itself out.

“It certainly wasn’t intentional from our point of view, Fabian was just doing something he needed to do, but I just pushed on.

“We had a great car all day and unfortunately for him (Coulthard) there is a bit of conjecture there, but he drove a great race and I feel bad for him, that’s for sure.”

Coulthard seethes over ugly fallout

McLaughlin is not set to be stripped of his maiden Bathurst victory but governing body Confederation of Australian Motor Sport have confirmed the 2019 Bathurst 1000 results remain provisional until the hearing.

Coulthard sparked an uproar over his actions on Sunday, with Supercars legend Larry Perkins describing them as "disgraceful".

Critics weren't happy when a then-third placed Coulthard backed up the field as top two Jamie Whincup and McLaughlin raced to their garage for a pit stop to get much-needed fuel during the safety car period with 26 of the race's 161 laps left.

Coulthard's snail's pace under the yellow flag - in which drivers are not allowed to overtake - extended the gap between a hard charging Shane van Gisbergen and the leading duo from one to 47 seconds.

Coulthard's actions also avoided double stacking or waiting behind his teammate McLaughlin in the pits.

McLaughlin went on to hold out a fast-finishing van Gisbergen by 0.68 seconds to claim his first Bathurst crown.

DJR Team Penske team boss Ryan Story insisted on Sunday there was a problem with overheating in Coulthard's car at the time of the controversy.

Coulthard vowed to clear his name, saying he felt like a "scapegoat".

"For me, the Safety Car came out and I was told to slow up and take extreme caution," he told Motorsport.com.

"We had an overheating drama at the same time. I slowed up and did what I was told.

"I'm getting absolutely smashed for something I was told to do.

"I need to clear my name. It's not my style. I don't race like that, I'm a clean racer.

"To see what I'm reading, I'm getting pretty shafted for it. I'm the scapegoat."

Fabian Coulthard, pictured here during practice for the Bathurst 1000.
Fabian Coulthard looks on during the Bathurst 1000. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

Runner-up Van Gisbergen clearly wasn't happy about the incident after again missing out on winning his first Bathurst title.

"We got held up in the safety car by someone, it made it tough (to win)," said the Holden star.

"(But) that car (Coulthard) has been the sacrificial lamb all year (for DJR Team Penske)."

with AAP