03/08/2025 20:00
George Russell has revealed that Mercedes believe Charles Leclerc's
Ferrari was close to being "illegal", resulting in his dramatic
pace loss to avoid disqualification from the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Leclerc started from pole position at the Hungaroring and led for
the entire first stint of the race, before leading the vast
majority of his second stint. However, everything unravelled in
rapid fashion for the Ferrari driver after his final pit stop,
where he was quickly caught and overtaken by Oscar Piastri and
Russell. Leclerc had matched the McLarens for much of the race,
before his pace was considerably slower in the closing laps. He
furiously complained over the radio that the car was "undriveable",
but quickly took back his comments in the media pen post-race. The
Monegasque also received a five-second time penalty and a penalty
point for erratic driving whilst battling Russell. Discussing
Leclerc's drastic loss of speed in the closing stages, Russell
revealed that Mercedes wonder if measures were taken to avoid an
illegal level of plank wear. "Well, I saw how slow he was. I
presumed something was not right," Russell told Sky F1. "The only
thing we [Mercedes] can think of is that they were running the car
too low to the ground, and they had to increase the tyre pressures
for the last stint. "Because they were using an engine mode that
was making the engine slower at the end of the straight, which is
where you have the most amount of plank wear." Russell fires
Leclerc joke Ferrari has endured plank wear issues already this
season, with Lewis Hamilton having been disqualified from the
Chinese Grand Prix due to experiencing the problem. In his own
media pen, Leclerc explained that he had a chassis-based problem
which he was not aware of during the race, something Fred Vasseur
also confirmed. The FIA also cleared all cars following the
post-race scrutineering checks. Told that Leclerc said it was
something chassis-related, Russell joked: "Yeah, he's not going to
tell you that they're close to being illegal. "That's the only
thing we can think of, based upon the lap times and the engine mode
they were running and stuff like that. "But nevertheless, really
pleased with the result. Strange weekend, when you look at, if you
exclude McLaren, and you look at the the order of sort of P3 to P13
it's quite odd. "You wouldn't expect Max to be so far down. Aston
Martin had an amazing weekend. So we'll take the positive. We won't
get carried away with it."