“There aren’t any Papaya Guidelines anymore,” says championship contender Lando Norris. “We have by no means had them.”
Because the controversy over McLaren’s establishment of staff orders at Monza rumbles on, Lando Norris seems to have thrown gasoline on the fireplace by claiming that there aren’t any Papaya Guidelines.
The Woking staff first revealed the idea final 12 months, with Zak Brown claiming that the rule permits the staff’s drivers to “race one another respectfully, and provides one another sufficient room and do not contact one another”.
Regardless of quite a lot of incidents, and ongoing claims that the staff tends to favour Norris over his teammate, both strategically or, as was the case on Sunday, issuing exact directions, McLaren makes a lot of the idea, claiming that it’s distinctive to the Woking staff and honest to each its drivers and followers alike.
Not so, says Norris.
“There aren’t any Papaya Guidelines anymore,” he tells DAZN. “We have by no means had them.”
Although admitting that there’s a doc detailing racing protocol between the pair, the Briton insists: “It isn’t even a web page lengthy!
“The necessary factor is it says ‘Truthful’,” he provides. “And this covers many issues, equity for me and for Oscar.
“I do not select that this stuff occur,” he insists. “We do not care what’s occurred previously, however we do what we predict is true for us.”
Referring to Sunday’s controversy, when Piastri was ordered at hand again second place to his teammate following a botched pit cease, Norris says: “It isn’t what I need nor what the staff desires. It makes issues sophisticated, and complex the place.
“However it’s what all of us as a staff, each drivers, determined was the fitting factor to do if it occurred,” he provides. “It needed to be corrected. If it had occurred to Oscar, we might have executed precisely the identical.”
In the meantime, former F1 supremo, Bernie Ecclestone – by no means one to contain himself in issues controversial – has criticised McLaren for its actions on Sunday.
“They speak about equity on a regular basis,” he advised Blick. “However is it honest for Piastri if he’s punished for a mistake made by the staff? No.
“You slowly get the sensation that McLaren prefers a world champion named Lando Norris,” he added. “Errors like missed pit stops, engine failures, and suspension failures might have grow to be much less widespread, however they’re a part of the game.”