May
14th
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From GMM
McLaren has denied a radio call to Sergio Perez during Sunday's Spanish grand prix was a 'team order'.
After Mexican Perez and teammate Jenson Button's wheel-banging recently in Bahrain, boss Martin Whitmarsh said the incident proved that McLaren lets its drivers race.
But in the closing stages in Barcelona on Sunday, Perez again closed on his experienced teammate Button's sister car but was told to look after his tires.
The 22-year-old, who had apologised in the wake of the Bahrain incident, duly followed Button to the chequered flag, for ninth place.
"Checo (Perez) himself said at the end that his tires were finished," Whitmarsh is quoted by the Sapa-AFP news agency.
"What we didn't want was him to be battling until he ran out of rubber. So it was not tactical, it was practical.
"It was a fair fight, but if you are asking 'did we ask him to back off and not fight?' No, not at all," he insisted.
Perez also denied the 'team order' charge via his Twitter account.
"Just want to tell everyone (that) the radio message was all about saving the tires. Never a team order," he said.
McLaren has denied a radio call to Sergio Perez during Sunday's Spanish grand prix was a 'team order'.
After Mexican Perez and teammate Jenson Button's wheel-banging recently in Bahrain, boss Martin Whitmarsh said the incident proved that McLaren lets its drivers race.
But in the closing stages in Barcelona on Sunday, Perez again closed on his experienced teammate Button's sister car but was told to look after his tires.
McLaren pitwall in Barcelona. (Photo: McLaren F1 Team) |
The 22-year-old, who had apologised in the wake of the Bahrain incident, duly followed Button to the chequered flag, for ninth place.
"Checo (Perez) himself said at the end that his tires were finished," Whitmarsh is quoted by the Sapa-AFP news agency.
"What we didn't want was him to be battling until he ran out of rubber. So it was not tactical, it was practical.
"It was a fair fight, but if you are asking 'did we ask him to back off and not fight?' No, not at all," he insisted.
Perez also denied the 'team order' charge via his Twitter account.
"Just want to tell everyone (that) the radio message was all about saving the tires. Never a team order," he said.