An F1 Steward Received Death Threats Following Max Verstappen's Penalty In The US GP

Ex-F1 driver Mika Salo was one of the three stewards who decided to issue the penalty, and some 'fans' have taken their dissatisfaction way too far
An F1 Steward Received Death Threats Following Max Verstappen's Penalty In The US GP

On the last lap of last weekend’s United States Grand Prix, Max Verstappen put an incredible pass on Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen to pinch the final place on the podium, having started way down in 16th.

The only trouble is that he cut the track to do so, and that’s not allowed. The stewards swiftly decided to give him a five-second time penalty, dropping him back to fourth. It was a controversial call, given that other drivers had exceeded track limits in the weekend and got away with it, so naturally discussion after the race turned to whether it was a just penalty.

Now it’s fine to disagree with a decision, and even get a little angry about it, but some supposed ‘fans’ have (ironically) stepped way over the line. Mika Salo, an ex-F1 racer and former Ferrari driver was on the FIA’s panel of stewards for the race, and he revealed that he’s actually received death threats over the decision.

Yup, really. He told Finnish website SuomiF1:

“I have received death threats, mainly from Holland. The change in the Wikipedia article was a fun joke, but threats to me and other members of the jury should not be tolerated.”

Salo stood by the decision to penalise Verstappen, who was definitely off the circuit when he made the move
Salo stood by the decision to penalise Verstappen, who was definitely off…

Oh yeah, the Wikipedia edits. After the race some disgruntled fans went to his page and put in all sorts of ridiculous conspiracy theories, like “Mika Salo is rumoured to be involved in the largest FIA corruption scandal of 2016/2017,” and “as a steward of the FIA he helped Ferrari by giving Max Verstappen unreasonable penalties”.

Yeah, stuff like that can be kind funny because it’s obviously just a joke, but death threats? Really? Come on, guys…

Comments

Anonymous

Who still gives a damn about Formula 1 these days anyway?

10/28/2017 - 15:00 |
0 | 4
₩!Ź@ŔĐ Transit supervan

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Me and many other people .
Spa and monza had the best ever attendance this year . So f1 is as popular as ever

10/28/2017 - 16:21 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

I don’t fully agree with it, yes he cut the corner but Verstappen and Raikonen could just as wel both crashed out if he didnt, but this is taking it waaaay toooo far…

10/28/2017 - 16:32 |
0 | 0
lowie t

Good.

10/28/2017 - 16:49 |
2 | 2
GTRTURTLE 🔰 🐢(Oo \ S K Y L I N E / oO) (Koen

It’s like a gtr fanboy saying gtr is best and arguing that it is the best no matter what.

10/28/2017 - 18:49 |
0 | 0
imtrademarked

first of all it’s the Netherlands, holland is a part of the Netherlands.
second i’m ashamed of dutch sports culture.
in football: riots break out, citys get sorta terrorized, referees get attacked (verbal or physical).
F1: a choice wich is not in your “teams” favour and send him death threats.
and still people keep asking why i wanna get out of here.

10/29/2017 - 00:52 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

I cheer for Ferrari

10/29/2017 - 07:40 |
0 | 2
Goon Lyf

Well it was kinda bit off track in my opinion

10/29/2017 - 12:29 |
0 | 0
omgodzilla

Why do I suspect the dutch F1 “fans” of doing this? You know the ones that only started watching “because Max is driving”, that switch off the TV everytime he retires, think that Verstappen is some kind of god that can win every race without effort and suddenly became F1 “experts” without having any knowledge about the sport whatsoever? (I might be salty about these people)

10/29/2017 - 23:36 |
4 | 0

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