Motorsports
Alonso’s cheating repeated by Verstappen against Hamilton in Abu Dhabi
inside F1 Abu Dhabi GP practice 2teams and drivers needed to drive and accumulate laps to complete a work program, but track time was extremely limited due to the crash. Carlos Sainz and after that Nico Hulkenbergthis Saturday had very little representative data and left everyone with many questions.
When the session resumed after two red flags due to running requirements, there were large queues on Garage Street and tense moments as drivers tried to exit the pit lane and onto the track. abu dhabi, don’t waste your time. And there, Fernando Alonso He left another cheat in the collection. In it, he indicated that he saw doors that other people usually don’t see.
After Sainz’s accident, after the red flag, Fernando Alonso stood in the garage street behind AlphaTauri, waiting for the pit lane light to turn green. It was Yuki Tsunoda. Fernando did not like that the Japanese cut in front of him when the Spaniard was already moving down Garage Street. And already in the exit tunnel, in the traffic jam that had formed, he did something that no one expected.
While stationary, he turned the steering wheel to the left to gauge whether his car would pass between AlphaTauri and the wall. And when it seemed like he wouldn’t do it, he did it. He overtook his rival on his left and gained the starting position for the subsequent opening turn.
Shortly after, the Hulkenberg accident occurred, rendering the course unusable. A new red flag sent everyone back to the pits. The session resumed after just 15 minutes of shooting time. There, everyone started banging their elbows at the pit lane exit, wanting to get out of the pit lane as quickly as possible to make the most of the remaining minutes. In this context, Max Verstappen committed another cheat by catching the two Mercedes off guard and overtaking George Russell and Lewis Hamilton in the tunnel on the right.
Source: Mundo Deportivo
I am a writer at Sportish, where I mainly cover sports news. I’ve also written for The Guardian and ESPN Brasil, and my work has been featured on NBC Sports, SI.com and more. Before working in journalism, I was an athlete: I played football for Colgate University and competed in the US Open Cross Country Championships.
