Current:Home > ContactAnalysis: Verstappen shows his petty side when FIA foolishly punishes him for cursing -Excel Money Vision
Analysis: Verstappen shows his petty side when FIA foolishly punishes him for cursing
View
Date:2025-04-15 07:20:28
Max Verstappen said a bad word — it started with an F — in a formal news conference to describe how his race car was performing. The man who called for Verstappen to be punished also drew sharp criticism for his own choice of words.
Verstappen’s sanction for his egregious behavior? The three-time Formula 1 champion was ordered by the sport’s governing body to complete a day of community service because the FIA has apparently banned cursing.
The crackdown had been foreshadowed — Ferrari team principal Fred Vasseur and Mercedes boss Toto Wolff were both summoned to speak to the stewards last November about their language at a news conference in Las Vegas — and FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem publicly rebuked cursing earlier this month.
Motorsport.com reported that the FIA had asked Formula One Management to better limit the naughty language broadcast during races. While the curse words — said on team radio that is accessible to the public — are bleeped out on television, Ben Sulayem found the frequency of the poor language unsettling.
“We have to differentiate between our sport — motorsport — and rap music,” Ben Sulayem said. “We’re not rappers, you know.”
Lewis Hamilton, who already felt he’d been personally targeted by Ben Sulayem when the president banned the wearing of jewelry during competition upon election, felt the comments had a racial element to them.
“I don’t like how he has expressed it. Saying ‘rappers’ is very stereotypical,” said Hamilton, the only Black driver in F1. “If you think about it, most rappers are Black. So it says, ‘We are not like them.’ So I think those are the wrong choice of words and there is a racial element there.”
So Verstappen shouldn’t have been surprised when the FIA actually slapped his wrist for cursing. The Dutch driver responded with his own form of protest by trolling every remaining news conference of the Singapore Grand Prix.
It felt a bit “I’m just here so I won’t get fined” Marshawn Lynch-like in that Verstappen showed up to his required media obligations, but offered only the briefest of answers. He made clear he was doing so because he no longer felt he could speak freely in official F1 settings.
He invited reporters to follow him out to the paddock for an unmonitored and unfiltered exchange both Saturday and Sunday, when he added this over-policing to the list of reasons why the 26-year-old may have a very short F1 career.
Verstappen was the youngest driver to ever start an F1 race, the youngest F1 race winner, and has made clear he doesn’t plan to stick around to become the oldest winner in the sport’s history. This latest drama may hasten his timeline for retirement.
“For sure, these kinds of things definitely decide my future,” Verstappen said. “When you can’t be yourself, or you have to deal with these kinds of silly things, I think now I’m at the stage of my career that you don’t want to be dealing with this all the time. It’s really tiring.”
He was also critical of Carlos Sainz Jr. being sanctioned for crossing the track on foot under a red flag after Sainz crashed in qualifying.
“I mean, what are we talking about? He knows what he’s doing. We’re not stupid. These kinds of things, like when I saw it getting noted, I was like, ‘My God,’” Verstappen said.
F1 considers its drivers the most elite in the world, so it isn’t wrong for Ben Sulayem to want to hold them to a high standard. But his standards are likely rooted in his own beliefs and not in sync to the realities of professional sports.
Globally, audiences are accustomed to hearing an occasional curse word caught on a live mic during a sporting event. Sometimes the words are said casually because what’s considered a slur in your country might be commonly accepted slang in another.
But many times the cursing is out of anger or frustration because of the high stakes, minimal margins for error, and intense effort put into each athletes craft.
And, the cursing is very rarely done openly for the entire world to hear. In racing, specifically, it is a privilege that spectators can eavesdrop on team communications over the radio. The FIA could eliminate that capability if it was truly worried about offending listeners.
In the case of Verstappen — or even Wolff and Vasseur — their cursing came in news conferences that aren’t designed to be consumed by the general public. F1 at any time could stop cutting clips and posting them online and truly make the sessions media-only.
But F1 is now owned by a media company and Liberty Media knows exactly what it is doing in delivering content any way possible.
Verstappen is right. This all seems rather silly, to the point of childish, especially from an organization that has refused all year to comment on the complaint against Red Bull boss Christian Horner filed by a suspended employee to the FIA ethics committee.
The same ethics committee, mind you, that investigated and cleared within a month a pair of whistleblower complaints filed against Ben Sulayem. Susie Wolff, the wife of the Mercedes boss and head of F1’s all-female F1 Academy, has also filed a criminal complaint in France against the FIA over its brief December conflict of interest investigation into the alleged sharing of confidential information between husband and wife.
Ben Sulayem has made strides in cleaning up online abuse, has fought to get Michael Andretti and Cadillac onto the grid and tackled other legitimate issues facing motorsports and F1. But some of the fights he’s honed in on seem small and Hamilton has a right to question if they are personal.
In the case of Verstappen saying a bad word, it seems the champion was punished to make an example. Verstappen made sure it backfired to look as silly as it is.
___
AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing
veryGood! (76619)
Related
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Kamala Harris to embark on reproductive freedoms tour as Biden campaign makes abortion a central issue
- Pregnant Suki Waterhouse Proudly Shows Off Her Bare Baby Bump on Tropical Vacation
- Naiomi Glasses on weaving together Native American art, skateboarding and Ralph Lauren
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Czech police say people have been killed in a shooting in downtown Prague
- Tearful Michael Bublé Shares Promise He Made to Himself Amid Son's Cancer Battle
- Comedian Jo Koy is picked to host the Golden Globes as award season kicks off
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Top US military officer speaks with Chinese counterpart as US aims to warm relations with Beijing
Ranking
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Ex-Alabama prison officer gets 7 years behind bars for assaulting prisoners
- Wisconsin leader pivots, says impeachment of state Supreme Court justice over redistricting unlikely
- A Dutch court has sentenced a man convicted in a notorious Canadian cyberbullying case to 6 years
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- More than 2.5 million Honda and Acura vehicles are recalled for a fuel pump defect
- Serbia opposition urges EU to help open international probe into disputed vote after fraud claims
- Florida State to discuss future of athletics, affiliation with ACC at board meeting, AP source says
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Golden Globe Awards attendees will receive $500K luxury gift bags: Here’s what’s inside
Canada announces temporary visas for people in Gaza with Canadian relatives
Tua Tagovailoa, Mike McDaniel sound off on media narratives before Dolphins host Cowboys
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
Oscars shortlists revealed: Here are the films one step closer to a nomination
Five-star safety reverses course, changes commitment to Georgia from Florida State
A train in Slovenia hits maintenance workers on the tracks. 2 were killed and 4 others were injured