Commons sense prevails: No grid drop for Bottas

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For Cadillac’s Valtteri Bottas, the start of the 2026 season in Melbourne brings relief: a lingering grid penalty from the 2024 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix has been thrown out the window by the FIA.

Bottas, who had been handed a five-place drop for contact with Red Bull’s Sergio Perez, now his Cadillac teammate, had faced uncertainty about whether he would need to serve it on his F1 return this weekend.

While the sanction was initially confirmed by the governing body, a tweak to F1’s sporting regulations has cleared up the confusion, allowing Bottas to line up in the spot he qualifies without penalty.

“Apparently it's vanished thanks to some new regulation,” Bottas said. “So no grid penalty.”

Common Sense Prevails

The root of the uncertainty lay in the wording of Article B1.9.5h of the 2026 sporting regulations, which now defines a grid penalty as “a drop of any number of grid positions for the next sprint or race in which the driver participates in the subsequent twelve (12) month period.”

A clarification to a different article, B2.5.4b, retroactively applies the rule, effectively wiping Bottas’ pending penalty.

The FIA rules state: “Classified drivers who have received 15 or less cumulative unserved grid penalties for the race imposed in the previous twelve (12) months will be allocated a temporary grid position equal to their qualifying session classification plus the sum of their unserved grid penalties.”

For Bottas and Cadillac, the news is more symbolic than competitive. As the 11th entrant to F1, the team isn’t expected to challenge for Q2 this weekend.

“It’s been hard work, lots of problem solving, but we've already made great progress,” Bottas said. “And really hats off to the whole team being here ready for race one, which I think already is incredible. So looking forward to this journey.”

After months of uncertainty, what could have been a frustrating start instead resolves neatly, allowing Bottas and Cadillac to focus on building momentum from race one.

In the end, common sense – and a rule tweak – prevailed.

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