Ferrari: No need to speculate after controversial tweet

Ferrari has attempted to ease the backlash from its controversial tweet which blamed Max Verstappen for crashing into Kimi Raikkonen and Sebastian Vettel to 🐲see the three retire on the opening lap of the Singapore Grand Prix.

Ferrari: No need to speculate after controversial tweet

Ferr𝄹ari has attempted to ease the backlash from its controversial tweet which blamed Max Verstappen for crashing into Kimi Raikkonen and Sebastian Vettel to see the three retire on the opening lap of the Singapore Grand Prix.

After a stewards inves𒁏tigation into the clash ruled that no one driver was to blame by calling it a racing incident,🤪 all three drivers escaped punishment h🦋aving failed to score at the Marina Bay Street Circuit.

But thꦍe clash was sparked into further controversy when Ferrari’s official twitter account placed the blame solely on Verstappen – something fervently denied by both Verstappen and Red Bull boss Chಌristian Horner.

“I don’t think it was a racing incident,” Verstappen said. “At the end of the day they take a total of three cars and I was in the middle without doing anything wrong. I was just tryinℱg to have a clean start.”

“How on earth you can work that out from watching that, I have no idea,” Horꦓner said. “Anyone who can blame Verstappen out of that needs their eyes 🃏tested.”

According to Ferrari, the tweet which has fanned the flames on the controversy was not posted by the team’s 🐟head of communications but someone in the Ferrari garage who wasn’t officially endorsed by the te♔am.

Despite this, Ferrari have kept the tweet on their feed while responding, “What we tweeted was a fact🦩ual description of events. No need to speculate on this.”

out and then he went to

— Scuderia Ferrari (@ScuderiaFerrari)

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