Formula 1: Ferrari to appeal Vettel's time penalty as former champs slam decision which 'robbed' German of victory

Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel was handed a five-second penalty for rejoining the track in an unsafe manner. PHOTO: AFP

MONTREAL (REUTERS) - Ferrari intend to appeal against the time penalty that cost Sebastian Vettel victory in Sunday's (June 9) Canadian Grand Prix, the Formula One team said.

He was handed a five-second penalty for rejoining the track in an unsafe manner, with the German's error forcing Mercedes rival Lewis Hamilton to take evasive action on Lap 48.

Hamilton crossed the line second but was the winner after the penalty was applied.

The stewards' decision reminded Ferrari that they had the right to appeal, although technically, the sporting regulations state that in-race penalties such as the one handed to Vettel cannot be protested.

Ferrari now have 96 hours to gather fresh evidence and decide whether to pursue the appeal.

The team hailed Vettel as the moral winner of the race while the German raged at being robbed of victory by race stewards.

"They are stealing the race from us," the angry German exclaimed over the team radio as he was told he was under investigation after running off the track and into the path of Hamilton.

"No, no, no. Not like that. You have to be an absolute blind man, you go on the grass, how are you supposed to control your car? This is the wrong world," the Ferrari driver yelled after being notified of the penalty.

"It's not making our sport popular is it? I mean, with these kind of decisions," he told Sky Sports television after the podium ceremony.

He had earlier parked his car in the wrong place and stormed straight to the Ferrari hospitality before returning to the pit lane. There, he rearranged the numbers in front of the cars, switching the "1" from Hamilton's car to the space where his Ferrari should have been.

"People want to see us race and that was, I think, racing. I hope the people come back, that's the main thing obviously... It's just a shame when we have all these little funny decisions," he said.

Ferrari team boss Mattia Binotto had initially indicated that there could be no appeal by the Italian team, but said there was no doubt about the real winner.

"It's not down to us to decide and that's the sport. But certainly if you look at the crowd, everybody I think today believes that there was nothing Sebastian could have done," he said. "I don't think he had any bad intention in what he was doing at all. He stayed ahead the entire race, he crossed the chequered flag first, for us he's the moral winner.

"We won today. I think honestly we have been the fastest on track today and that's important."

Ferrari found considerable support from former champions, who felt the regulations were at fault and that the stewards had come to the wrong decision.

Former Ferrari driver and 1992 world champion Nigel Mansell, who has also served as a steward, said on Twitter that the penalty was ridiculous.

"Very, very embarrassing. No joy in watching this race, two champions driving brilliantly, will end in a false result," he added.

Jenson Button, the 2009 champion commentating for Sky Sports, felt it was a sad outcome.

"It's always disappointing when there's a proper fight out on track between two greats, two multiple world champions, and then the stewards are able to come in and take that away from us really," he said. "It's a shame. For me, it's a racing incident... it doesn't deserve a penalty."

American Mario Andretti, the 1978 world champion, also joined the criticism on Twitter, saying: "I think the function of the stewards is to penalise flagrantly unsafe moves, not honest mistakes as result of hard racing. What happened at #CanadaGP is not acceptable at this level of our great sport."

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