Eddie Irvine has waded into the Renault/’Singapore-gate’ controversy in his typical irreverent, insouciant manner – suggesting that Formula 1 should be a war in which everyone does ‘anything to win’ with ‘nothing beyond the realms of decency’, and lamenting its modern-day transformation into a state of ‘boring’ political correctness.
Renault is due to face the FIA World Motor Sport Council (WMSC) on Monday (21 September) to answer accusations of having ordered its driver Nelsinho Piquet to deliberately crash out of last year’s inaugural night race in the Far Eastern city-state, thereby enabling team-mate Fernando Alonso to go on to triumph – and quite possibly securing the Régie’s short-term future at the highest level.
The potential recourses of action available to the WMSC should the Enstone-based outfit outfit indeed be found guilty as charged – and it has signalled that it does not intend to contest the claims – extend as far as outright expulsion from competition, with the most serious aspect of the case being that in agreeing to shunt his car into the Marina Bay street circuit’s unforgiving concrete wall, Piquet was endangering not only his own life but also those of nearby marshals and spectators. Irvine, however, argues that the entire situation has been exaggerated out of all proportion.
“I think the chances of someone being killed were very, very slim,” the ever-outspoken Irishman stressed, speaking to the BBC. “I think that’s all been blown up. It was a reasonably slow corner; it was no big deal of an accident to be honest. When you plan to crash you can crash pretty much any way you want, so the idea that it’s the most amazing piece of cheating in professional sport – which I’ve read – I think is totally out of order.
“Formula 1 has always been a war, and in a war all’s fair. When I was in various teams you’d do anything to win – you’d push people off, you’d do whatever you could do to win the race. This probably is slightly on the wrong side of the cheating thing, but if you look back to all the days gone past in Formula 1, every team has done everything they could – bend the rules, break the rules, do whatever they could, sabotage opponents. That’s the way I see it.
“This new political correctness is just the FIA going on a crusade. It was totally normal back in the day. And if you think that McLaren got a $100 million fine because they had some paperwork of Ferrari’s, what punishment is relevant here? It’s a complete ban from motor racing to a certain extent, but I don’t believe that’s going to happen because Formula 1 cannot afford to lose more teams.
“The manufacturers are falling like ducks here, so to me it will probably be a massaged court where the fine or whatever it will be will be reduced [so as] not to scare Renault away. There are several teams out there that are looking pretty shaky, and they can’t afford to give Renault the boot out of Formula 1. What they did to McLaren was completely over-the-top.”
Irvine spent nine years competing at the highest level – triumphing in four grands prix for Ferrari along the way and coming within barely a whisker of lifting the 1999 drivers’ world championship crown with the Scuderia – and he is quick to bemoan the way in which he believes F1 has morphed over the years from an almost gladiatorial combat to more of a business than a sport, and one bedevilled by political correctness at that. Though some things remain the same as they were in his era, the 43-year-old contends, others are now very, very different.
“It’s got to the stage where if you just look at all these new tracks that are coming up, they’re all so beautifully-made and the run-off areas are so big and the grass is not grass, it’s painted tarmac,” he mused, “[but] there’s no excitement. Formula 1 has always been a spectacle and it is a car race and there are two cars driving for the same team, but it’s not fair because if the second guy is half a second behind his team-mate and it rains, he is at a huge disadvantage. There are just intrinsic disadvantages and scenarios in Formula 1 that do not make it a sport.
“If you look back in the day, when Damon Hill won the championship he only had to beat his team-mate – there was no-one else to beat. [Nigel] Mansell was the same – he only had to beat his team-mate; he didn’t have a team-mate to be honest for most of the year. You’ve got two drivers driving for the same team; the idea is to make one of those drivers get the best result possible, and when I was racing we pretty much did everything we could do to make one guy win the race.
“The greats of motor racing like Colin Chapman and Enzo Ferrari, they would do anything to win; nothing was beyond the realms of decency, and that’s what Formula 1 always was. Formula 1 is not a pure sport; it’s gladiatorial more than anything else, and I believe that’s the way it should be – not this politically correct thing where the cars go round and round like in Scalextric and the fastest car wins. In the last few years there’s been this huge thing to make Formula 1 politically correct and wonderful and beautifully-packaged for manufacturers – but there’s actually no point in watching because it’s so boring.”





Comment 1 - 15 of 15
It says something for the relative safety of F1 cars that No.2 Eddie can suggest F1 should be all out war, I presume Mr Irvine likes going to his fellow drivers funerals and likes killing and maiming marshals and spectators indiscriminately.
Nothing could be further from the truth, F1 should be squeaky clean drivers should have maximum respect for each others safety and the safety of those who facilitate their sport at the track.
Schumacher and Senna have a lot to answer for in bring the Irvine supported 'war' school approach to racing and one of them paid for it with his life.
If Irvine really believed what he was saying he would never have signed a contract with Ferrari committing him to being No.2 to a superior driver, something that is obviously going to gnaw away at his conscience all the way to his grave.
IAN@8 very well put and 100 per cent the truth1!!!
eddie is right, the fia and stewards should let the racers race. maybe what renault did wasn't pc, but then again Alonso had a terrible car all season, and it was great to see him back in contention. Nelson's crash brought him back into contention, and it was still a great victory by a great driver. I am fast losing interest in F1, every race I have recently seen was tampered with by the stewards, like webber getting that stupid stop and go a few races back.
Well said IAN (#8) my sentiments exactly.
Personally, I cant help but feel that this whole 'crashgate' business is more down to personal vendetta's than anything else.
When you race autos at high speed, you have a duty to your competitor to look out for their safety, and he as to look out for yours. This is especially true in open-wheel racing.
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Maybe Irvine thinks that cheating is acceptable, but I'd say it's worthless to stand on the top step of the podium if you didn't really earn it with fair play. Competition, yes. War, no. Look at what happened to Massa. Irvine's asinine comments are probably because we have been fortunate not to have a death in F1 since Senna.
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War is war -- brutal inhumanity with suffering and unspeakable acts committed on human beings. Racing is racing -- how can it be war if there's Champagne and grid girls? This silly tw*t should spend some time in Africa to see what real war is before he opens his mouth.
:)
Not much of a suprise , after all the gladiators were for the amusement of Italians
EXACTLY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
There is a lot of truth in Eddie's comments. I have always believed the sport did have a 'dark' side for the reasons Eddie has listed.
However might I suggest that the more recent 'boring political correctness' may well be related to a certain individual's desire to settle personal scores. Why did the FIA not follow up on Pique Snr's serious earlier claim to Charlie Whiting?
Again I agree with Eddie's comments on the crash. Does every crash from now on have to carry the threat of legal action for endanger of life? A crash is a crash whether intentional or not. The threat of danger is always there. Why has this incident been 'exaggerated out of all proportion'?
Schumacher's penalty for the Monaco incident should be the yard stick for the penalty. Let's face it Nelson did not need to smash the car up so badly. He could have brushed the wall heavily and parked up to get the safety car out.
I don't have the first hand experience of Eddie but over the 47 years of following F1 I can list many many incidents which would qualify for the same if not more severe comment.
Ian
Totally agree with E/I...Nowdays one pilot has to ask permission to overtake anothet, otherwise he's accused of cheating..... FIA berni and Mosley= Bull shiFFFF
Ever notice that there is a hint of sourness or manevolance to every comment Eddie Irvine makes about the sport.
Once a @#$% always a @#$%! That goes for moronroute and Irvine alike.
Irvine spent all of his time at ferrari doin what he was told and keepin his mouth shut, if that isnt political correctness i dont know what is, anyway i dont recall reading about gladiators being told to cripple themselves to please thier paymasters
Touron. Use a better translation service, that one is full of grammatical errors.
I agree with eddie,...F1 should have some dirty work....makes things exciting, although in Renaults case it pushed the line....however i'd like F1 to be a cut-throat enviorment. If u want a sport with gentelmen like behaviour then might as well watch boring Cricket or Golf...
Come va vecchio amico si Long Way From Home, vieni a vedere la Ferrari a Spa, che godervi il vostro soggiorno in questa splendida terra, si desidera una foto scattata di Ferrari e la vostra auto meravigliose nessun problema il mio amico onorevole
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