
Getty Images
Wolff hits back at ‘brainless’ accusations by Red Bull’s Marko
Toto Wolff vented his annoyance at Red Bull claims that Kimi Antonelli intentionally allowed McLaren drivers to overtake him in the Qatar Grand Prix.
Antonelli was passed by Oscar Piastri into Turn 1 early in Piastri’s second stint – just prior to making his own second stop – while he then made a mistake on the penultimate lap that allowed Lando Norris to get through. Both McLaren drivers are locked in a championship fight with Red Bull's Max Verstappen, and after Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko suggested both occasions were cases of Antonelli intentionally letting the McLarens by, Wolff angrily refuted the claims.
“Bless him, Helmut,” Wolff said. “This is total utter nonsense that blows my mind even to hear that. We're fighting for P2 in the championship, which is important for us; Kimi's fighting for a potential P3. I mean, how brainless can you be to even say something like this?
“It annoys me, because I'm annoyed with the race itself, how it went. I'm annoyed with the mistake at the end. I'm annoyed with other mistakes. And then hearing such nonsense blows my mind.”
Wolff was also unhappy at Verstappen’s race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase for telling his driver over team radio: “Not sure what happened to Antonelli, Max, looks like he just pulled over and let Norris through”. While the pair cleared the air afterwards, Wolff said the comments were unnecessary and misinformed.
“The other thing is that, beyond losing the points for our constructors’ championships… I spoke to GP, I saw him, and obviously, he was emotional in that moment, because they needed a P3 [in Abu Dhabi], I guess, to win the championship, or a P4, I don't know, but one position," he said. "Now, they need more.
“I said to him, ‘He just went off, he had a bit of a moment in the previous corner, and then had less entry speed into that left-hander, put the gas down, and at that moment, which can happen, that lost the position.’ So with GP, everything's clear. Cleared the air. He said he didn't see the situation. Why would we do this?
“Why would we even think about interfering in a driver championship? I mean, you really need to check yourself, whether you see ghosts.
“I said to GP that there's quite a social media storm … And GP said, ‘Sorry if I caused that, I didn't see the incident.’"
Chris Medland
While studying Sports Journalism at the University of Central Lancashire, Chris managed to talk his way into working at the British Grand Prix in 2008 and was retained for three years before joining ESPN F1 as Assistant Editor. After three further years at ESPN, a spell as F1 Editor at Crash Media Group was followed by the major task of launching F1i.com’s English-language website and running it as Editor. Present at every race since the start of 2014, he has continued building his freelance portfolio, working with international titles. As well as writing for RACER, his broadcast work includes television appearances on F1 TV and as a presenter and reporter on North America's live radio coverage on SiriusXM.
Read Chris Medland's articles
Latest News
Comments
Comments are disabled until you accept Social Networking Cookies. Update cookie preferences
If the dialog doesn't appear, ad-blockers are often the cause; try disabling yours or see our Social Features Support.





