26/06/2025 16:50
George Russell believes F1 teams should have to offer a larger
deposit when launching a protest after the "faff" of his Canadian
GP investigation. In Montreal, Red Bull protested Russell's win
after it felt he had braked behind the safety car on purpose to
allow Max Verstappen to pass him and to get the Dutchman a penalty,
whilst also inquiring about Russell falling more than 10 car
lengths behind the safety car. After a lengthy investigation, the
stewards ultimately threw out Red Bull's protests, meaning
Russell's victory stood, with the team forfeiting its €2,000
deposit as a result. The Mercedes driver felt that a bigger
initial deposit could make teams think twice about launching
spurious protests. "Yeah, 100%," Russell told media including
RacingNews365 when questioned about raising the deposit. "When you
look at the financial penalties for using swear words in the heat
of the moment, or touching a rear wing, €2,000 for a team making
nine-figure profits is not even going to touch the side. "It is not
going to be thought about, so yeah, potentially, if it was a
six-figure sum to be put down, maybe they would think twice about
it, and you do get your money back if you win a protest, so it is
basically your own risk. "Whereas, at the moment, €2,000 for a
Formula 1 team is not even a consideration. "It was nothing, and it
all came from Red Bull, as opposed to Max, I don't think he was
even aware of the protests. "It was pretty clear that there was not
going to be any penalty, and my personal view is that they wanted
to go and be offensive to protect Max in case he got a penalty for
going ahead of me during the safety car incident. "My personal view
is that it was just a bit of a faff and not really necessary."