F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Steiner stands by shady Hungarian GP strategy call

Haas team boss Guenther Steiner says that a given another chance he would repeat the bold formation lap strategy call that warranted a time penalty for his drivers in the Hungarian Grand Prix.

Haas called in both Kevin Magnussen and Romain Grosjean at the end of the event's formation lap in order to switch its cars from wet to dry tyres, betting on a quick improvement of track conditions.

The gamble paid off for Magnussen who finished ninth on the road, but after the race the Hungarian Grand Prix stewards deemed the early strategy call a breach of Article 27.1 of the F1 sporting regulations, which states "The driver must drive the car alone and unaided".

The FIA stewards had thus frowned upon the team's action to instruct both drivers to pit for slick tyres at the end of the formation lap during a period when pit-to-car radio silence is imposed, and handed a 10-second time penalty to Haas' drivers, a punishment that demoted Magnussen to P10.

Steiner, who called the stewards' decision "ambiguous", insists he would make the same call if he had to do it all over again.

"For sure we would do the same thing again," Steiner said.

"The 10 second penalty was a little bit ambiguous. Unfortunately, we cannot appeal it because it’s a time penalty – you’re not allowed to appeal those ones.

"It was never done before, and it looks like if it’s never been done before – and there’s no clear regulation, you get a penalty.

"We need to move on from this, but it spiced the race up for everybody. I don’t think we should stop doing these things in racing, otherwise accountants can race in Formula 1."

Fortunately, while Grosjean was classified a lowly P16 after the time penalty was applied, Magnussen's margin allowed the Dane to remain in the top-ten and secure a championship point, a valued achievement in a season in which points will likely be hard to come by for Haas.

"I obviously feel we should get in (Q2) but unfortunately we don’t," explained the Italian team boss;

"We’re just lacking the speed in qualifying and that’s something we have to live with, as we’re not planning any big upgrades and there are no engine upgrades.

"We just need to fight and always try to do a good job, then we can hope we move on.

"Yes, we’ve had a lot of inconsistency, but I think we know pretty well where we’re at.

"We’re not the fastest midfield car this year, and we just need to deal with that one. We’re always trying to get the best out of the package.

"We’ve not planned any development for this year, so we have to focus on getting the best out of what we’ve got this season and look to next year to try to do something better for that season. It will not be an easy year, but we’re here to stay."

Gallery: The beautiful wives and girlfriends of F1 drivers

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via Facebook and Twitter

Michael Delaney

Recent Posts

Williams explain power trick that could define F1 in 2026

Formula 1’s next generation of cars will not just look different – they will sound…

51 mins ago

Williams FW48 finally hits the track at Silverstone after delay

Williams finally rolled its long-awaited FW48 onto the track at Silverstone on Wednesday, trading weeks…

16 hours ago

Horner weighs in on explosive 2026 F1 engine controversy

Christian Horner has waded into Formula 1’s latest technical storm, addressing the growing controversy over…

17 hours ago

Newey: AI has been shaping F1 ‘for a long time’

Aston Martin’s chief architect and team principal Adrian Newey believes Formula 1’s latest buzzword is…

18 hours ago

Norris gets a pole-position welcome at old primary school

Fresh from pre-season testing and with a world title now stitched onto his racing overalls,…

20 hours ago

Two on the trot for Laffite and Ligier in Brazil

On this day in 1979, Jacques Laffite won the Brazilian Grand Prix at Interlagos as…

21 hours ago