Following up on this.There were at least three other incidents of the same kind that were investigated during the grand prix, and probably more that went unnoted. It just draws more attention when it happens between contenders and is on the broadcast. I saw some yesterday in the sprint as well. You’ll get that at any place that doesn’t have walls, grass, or gravel immediately off the side of the track.
Aston are pretty anonymous. I don’t even notice them anymore now that Lance has stopped crashing for a good while, which is at least a decent bright spot. But they’re just totally irrelevant unless Alonso is complaining about something. The contrast between them and McLaren starting from 2023 preseason testing is pretty fascinating.Aston was shockingly bad yesterday. I don't know if everyone else brought upgrade and they didn't or if they brought another failed upgrade but they were dreadfully slow and the second-slowest team, only ahead of Sauber.
They had the second-best car at the start of 2023 and have only gone backwards since.
It seems like they can't figure out their issues and are now throwing all their faith behind Newey.
Mostly about the new drivers!Alonso is complaining about something.
I'm trying to think of where this happened. The track is pretty well wrapped with fencing.Gotta squeeze them for more money.
U.S. GP promoter fined over $500,000 for track invasion
The promoter of the United States Grand Prix has been fined over $500,000 due to the number of fans invading the track before all cars had returned to the pit lane after the race. Track access is p…racer.com
I think it’s the fourth time it’s happened in the past two seasons. Australia and Brazil last year, Canada and COTA this year. All part of the risk in having massively growing crowds, but the FIA is signaling that the promoters need to put an end to it before something really dumb/bad happens.What caught my eye was the hefty fine.