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Massa threatened with jail over team orders

Joined Sep 2006
23K Posts | 3+
Formula One star Felipe Massa has been threatened with a six-year jail sentence if he allows Ferrari team-mate Fernando Alonso to overtake him in Sunday's Brazilian Grand Prix.



Massa's (pictured, right) superstar status in his native Brazil was tarnished when he acceded to team orders to let Alonso (pictured, left) pass during the recent German Grand Prix at Hockenheim, an incident for which Ferrari were fined £65,000 for flagrant contravention of the ban on team orders.



The 29-year-old Massa, who has no chance of winning the title himself, has stated openly that he would help his team-mate to secure the drivers' championship.



But Paulo Castilho, a prosecutor in Brazil's Special Criminal Court, has told newspaper Folha de Sao Paulo that Massa will "leave Interlagos in handcuffs" should he let Alonso through, with the lawyer apparently ready to press charges of defrauding the Brazilian public under laws protecting the rights of fans to witness fair spectacles.



Massa himself remained unapologetic about the prospect of having to give up a victory to help his team mate, even if he acknowledged how much it upsets fans.



"For sure there are some people who understand it," he said. "They have the knowledge about this complicated sport when the team is in first position.



"But there are some people who will never understand. The crowd have opposing views but I insist our work is not to understand the opinion of the crowd but to do the best on the track."



My link
 
go for it lets have court cases all winter .... F1 Cheating scum



plz plz do this hope it happens
 
wow thats a bit extreme no?

No. Hang the cheats
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What a load of rubbish. F1 needs to sort out some of its stupid rules and just legalize team orders
 
in any other sport that would be called match fixing. Team orders are a curse on the sport



I disagree, we saw clear team orders in 125 like a weak ago and it wasn't a big deal, we've seen it plenty of times. And the rule is totally impossible to enforce, all the teams in F1 are using them so the sport is makjng a joke of itself trying to pretend its not happening. It's part of the sport and it always has been, where was the uproar in the last race of 2007?
 
And then you have this





An Italian politician has made the extraordinary outburst in the wake of Sunday's Abu Dhabi Grand Prix that Ferrari President Luca di Montezemolo should immediately resign for having 'shamed' the country with an 'insane strategy' in the final race of the F1 2010 campaign that caused the Scuderia to 'lose a championship already won'.



WTF. I guess the last 2 weeks have been hard on the Italians
 
Ferrari responds to insane politician





An angry Ferrari President Luca di Montezemolo and Piero Ferrari, son of the legendary Italian marque's founder Enzo, have hit back at comments made by an Italian politician regarding the Scuderia's misguided strategy call in last weekend's Abu Dhabi Grand Prix that arguably cost Fernando Alonso the F1 2010 crown.



In the aftermath of the race around the Yas Marina Street Circuit – one in which Alonso took the chequered flag just seventh, paying the price for an erroneous early pit-stop as his team elected to cover Mark Webber rather than race leader and eventual world champion Sebastian Vettel, and thereafter proving unable to overtake Renault rookie Vitaly Petrov – an emotional Roberto Calderoli launched a scathing attack on di Montezemolo in particular.



Accusing Ferrari of having 'managed to lose a championship already won', Calderoli – who serves in the cabinet of controversial Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi – went on to state that the country was 'ashamed of this insane strategy' and chastised di Montezemolo as the 'guilty' party, adding that 'he should get out of Maranello immediately so he does no further harm to Ferrari' [see separate story – click here].



It is criticism that has received short shrift indeed from its subject.



“When the statesman Calderoli will achieve in his life one per cent of what Ferrari has done for this country in terms of industry and sports, then he'll deserve an answer,” declared a palpably unimpressed di Montezemolo.



“I'm astonished and saddened by certain statements some politicians and a minister of the Italian Republic made after the race,” added Ferrari. “It has never happened in my entire life at Ferrari that politicians intervened during good and bad moments in our life in motorsport, and I want it to stay like this – but if we want to have a look at how much Ferrari has done for Italy's image around the world, then I can only say that it is definitely much more than certain politicians have done!”