Red Bull's Max Verstappen
Image: REUTERS
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Red Bull's Max Verstappen completed an unwanted 'track limits' triple when he was stripped of a fastest lap bonus point at the Portuguese Grand Prix on Sunday.

The deletion for going too far off the track came a day after the Dutch 23-year-old missed out on pole position when he also ran marginally wide in qualifying.

Victory also slipped through his fingers in Bahrain last month when he had to hand back the lead to Mercedes rival Lewis Hamilton for a breach while overtaking the seven-times Formula One world champion.

"Now we've lost the victory, fastest lap, and pole position," commented Red Bull motorsport consultant Helmut Marko to Sky Sports Germany. "All good things come in threes. I hope that's the end of it."

Verstappen, who finished second and is now eight points behind race winner Hamilton, was told his fastest lap had been deleted just before the podium celebrations.

"Oh really? That's a good one," he said with a look that made clear he was not amused. "That’s a bit odd because they (the stewards) were not checking track limits in 14, but whatever."

Updated notes circulated by race director Michael Masi had in fact notified teams of the change on Saturday morning, setting out the limits for turn 14.

Verstappen is enjoying his best ever start to a season, winning one race and finishing second in the other two won by Hamilton, but he acknowledged the title battle would come down to fine margins and avoiding mistakes.

"It’s close. I wish it was closer," he said.

"It’s a long season and we can’t afford to have any retirement or silly mistakes so we just have to keep on doing what we’re doing."

Team boss Christian Horner said the track limits rule and the consistency of its application was a continuing 'bone of contention'.

He said his other driver Sergio Perez, who finished fourth, had been "super-frustrated" earlier in the race when he was passed by McLaren's Lando Norris who appeared to go off track without punishment.

"We get a document from the FIA and it changes from one day to the next. The application of these are frustrating," said Horner.

Meanwhile, Kimi Raikkonen blamed himself  for a first lap collision with Alfa Romeo team mate Antonio Giovinazzi at the Portuguese Grand Prix.

The Finn was the only retirement of the race after running into the Italian.

"I was checking something on the steering wheel, changing a switch," the 2007 world champion told Sky Sports television.

"I got it wrong out of the last corner and had to change it (the switch) on the straight again and just drove into him, so really my mistake."

Giovinazzi was able to continue and finished 12th.

"He was very lucky," said Alfa's head of track engineering Xevi Pujolar. "For Kimi it was game over but Antonio no problem."

- Reuters

 

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