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'This isn't right': Mercedes slam 'unacceptable' F1 season finale

Pictured right, Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen embrace after the final race of the season.
Mercedes boss Toto Wolff was fuming over race director Michael Masi's safety car decision late in the race. Pic: Getty

Mercedes has seen both of its protests waved away by race stewards after a dramatic season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix in which Red Bull's Max Verstappen claimed his maiden world title.

Verstappen snatched victory off Mercedes' seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton after overtaking his fierce rival on an extraordinary final lap under lights at the Yas Marina Circuit.

The lead-up to that move was one of two things Mercedes were scathing about, with the team filing for reconsideration to the International Court of Appeal.

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Verstappen overtook Hamilton on Lap 58 in thrilling style after a crash involving Nicholas Latifi brought out the safety car with just a few laps left and confusion surrounded the restart.

One of the lost protests was whether Verstappen had broken rules by passing Hamilton before the safety car period had ended, when they were jostling next to each other waiting for the restart.

“Although Car 33 (Verstappen) did at one stage, for a very short period of time, move slightly in front of Car 44 (Hamilton), at a time when both cars where accelerating and braking, it moved back behind Car 44," stewards concluded. "It was not in front when the Safety Car period ended (i.e. at the line). Accordingly, the Protest is dismissed.”

The other protest concerned the restart procedure itself and the number of lapped cars overtaking the safety car, having been given the green light to do so.

Of the lapped drivers, only Lando Norris, Fernando Alonso, Esteban Ocon, Charles Leclerc and Sebastian Vettel overtook — those five were originally between Hamilton and Verstappen — while Daniel Ricciardo, Lance Stroll and Mick Schumacher did not.

Mercedes argued Hamilton would have won the race if all had overtaken the safety car due to the time required, making a final lap showdown impossible. Stewards ruled that it made no difference since the other three were not interfering with the outcome of the race, and also that race director Michael Masi had authority “to control the use of the safety car” in this case.

Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff could be heard on radio saying to Masi: “this isn’t right”.

There had already been one virtual safety car deployed earlier in the race for a smaller crash, but this time the real one came out with little time left to remove Latifi's car and clear debris off the track.

Verstappen's Red Bull team decided to pit him to switch to new tires while Mercedes stayed out to keep track position. But it ultimately left Hamilton at Verstappen's mercy on far quicker, fresh tires than Hamilton's fading, slower ones. They were supposed to take him over the line, but in the end they couldn't hold off Verstappen.

Seen here, Max Verstappen celebrates winning his maiden F1 world title.
Max Verstappen won the F1 world title after overtaking Lewis Hamilton on a dramatic final lap at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. Pic: F1/Getty

Initially, the decision was taken not to let lapped cars overtake the safety car, which would have meant several drivers would have been in Verstappen's way at the restart and made it more difficult to reach Hamilton over one lap.

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner was in radio contact with Masi at that point and said “(But) we only need one lap” to finish a race properly.

Masi then reversed the call to allow lapped cars to pass and set up that final lap of racing.

Williams driver George Russell, who will replace Valtteri Bottas at Mercedes next season called it an “absolutely unacceptable” decision from the race director.

The finish angered Wolff, who demanded “the last lap be reinstated."

But Masi was firm in his reply.

“Toto, it’s called a motor race,” he said. “We want car racing.”

Mercedes protests waved away by officials

Verstappen made his pass in the fifth turn and Hamilton had one last shot. He pulled his Mercedes even with the Red Bull but couldn’t clear it. Verstappen became the first Dutch world champion and thwarted Hamilton's bid to move one clear of Michael Schumacher as the most successful driver in F1 history.

“When everything is clear you have to release the track, so that's a fair point from the race direction,” Verstappen said after the race in agreement.

The other protest was for the way Verstappen drove before the race restarted. He pulled right alongside Hamilton near the end of Lap 57 and fractionally ahead on Lap 58.

The regulations say “no driver may overtake another car on the track, including the safety car, until he passes the line for the first time after the safety car has returned to the pits.”

Mercedes had lodged their protests within the allotted 30-minute window after the race.

The team said it would “not make any further comment on the detail of that until the hearing has been conducted.”

Horner said "we are disappointed there has been a protest, but we trust in the FIA.”

with agencies

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