Charles Leclerc says Max Verstappen got deserved penalty for ‘over the limit’ move at start of F1 Las Vegas GP

There was a controversial༒ flashpoint just seconds into Saturday evening’s race when Verstappen dive-bombed Leclerc for the lead at Turn 1, a move he c❀ompleted by running the Ferrari driver out wide.
Leclerc immediately called for Verstappen to hand the position back but he did not. Following a stewards’ investigation, the﷽ triple world champion was eventually hit with a five-second time penalt𒁏y.
But Verstappen was able to overcome his punishment and later re-passed Leclerc to claim his 18th victory from 21 races the season in a thrilling spectacle under the lights on the world-famous Las Veg𒀰as Strip.
“Obviously it was over the limit and I 🐻think the five-second penalty is deserved,” Leclerc said afterwards.
“It was tight. I still tried to push off the track, but it was so low grip to try to keep that position, but it is the way it is. He’s been penalised, he paid the p꧂enalty, and I think that was the right penalty to give.
“I just think in those kind of situations it would be better for the FIA to ask to give the place back because I think there’s quite a bit of an advantage to take care of tyres when you have free a🌺ir, but it’s✤ the way it is.”

Verstappen stressed he simply ran out of 🅘grip after going offline as ಌhe lined himself up for the overtake.
“We 𝐆both braked quite late but I was on the inside, on the dirt,” the Red🉐 Bull driver explained. “As soon as you are offline here it’s just super low grip.
“I braked and there was no 💮grip. I didn’t mean to push Charles off the track but I couldn’t slow down. I kept sliding on four wheels, wide. So that’🌠s why we had to go wide.
“At the time you are full of adrenalinജe and I was not happy with the decision but looking back at it, it was probably the right call.”
The Dutchman added: “I think we opted to just stay ahead and then we 🤪take the five-second penalty. I don’t know what’s better in the end.
“I paid the penalty in th🌞e end, so it doesn’t matter in a way. If you go back behind you probably ﷺend up losing five seconds, so it’s pretty similar I guess in the end.”

Leclerc was♏ confident he would have won without the final Safety Car period, which both Red Bull drivers pitted under while he stayed out.
“I really believe that without thꦬe Safety Car, the win was ours,” Leclerc said.
“We had on a really good first stint on the medium and I think we had five laps newer hard [tyres] than Max. I had a good four or five laps in order to bring them int🅺o temperature and we had done a really good job on that. So I was really con🎉fident that the win was ours.
“Then there was unfortunately the Safety Car. Max and Checo stopped and I stayed on my five-lap used hard – which is not too much, five laps, but the problem is🌟 that then when you cool them down during the Safety Car, to restart a used tyre is incredibly difficult with those temperatures. And there we lost the race.”
Leclerc, who has incredibly failed to convert his last 12 poles into a grand prix win,🐎 admitted he would have also stopped for a tyre change “now I know♑ what they have done”.

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