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F1 race director Masi denies FIA is trying to stop Hamilton

FIA race director Michael Masi has defended Formula 1's regulatory and judicial system after Lewis Hamilton suggested the stewards "are trying to stop me" with penalties.

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes-AMG F1 in the press conference

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes-AMG F1 in the press conference

FIA Pool

Hamilton was given two five-second penalties in the Russian Grand Prix for making two pre-race practice starts in the wrong place, and after serving the penalty he dropped to third place behind Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas and Red Bull's Max Verstappen.

The sanction originally also included two penalty points, which would have put him on 10 for the current 12-month period, and vulnerable to a one-race ban if he received two more points over the next four races.

However, the penalty points were subsequently rescinded and replaced with a €25,000 fine for Mercedes instead, meaning Hamilton has dropped back to eight for the 12-month period.

Hamilton also had a brush with the stewards earlier in the Russian GP weekend when he was one of several drivers called up over failing to rejoin the track in the prescribed run-off after going off the track at Turn 2 in qualifying, resulting in the world champion having the lap time deleted.

Two races ago Hamilton received a 10-second stop-and-go penalty in the Italian GP for entering the pitlane just after race control had declared it closed.

Asked if he thought the Sochi penalty was excessive, he said: "Of course it is. But it's to be expected. They're trying to stop me, aren't they?

"But it's OK. I just need to keep my head down and stay focused, and we'll see what happens."

Told about Hamilton's comments Masi said that he is always available if a driver has an issue he wants to discuss.

"From my perspective it's very simple," said Masi. "If Lewis wants to raise something, as I have said to him before, and said to all the drivers numerous times, the door is always open, and I'm more than happy to discuss anything.

"But I think from an FIA perspective, we are there as a sporting regulator, to administer the regulations.

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"We have the stewards as an independent judiciary to adjudicate those, and therefore there was an infringement and it doesn't matter if it was Lewis Hamilton or any other one of the 19 drivers. If a breach has occurred of the regulations, they will consider it on its merits.

"And also further to that, I would say, adjudicate it equitably and fairly in the circumstances, taking all the key elements into account."

While Hamilton suggested that recent penalties were the result of the FIA being out to get him, F1 managing director of motorsport Ross Brawn thinks what has happened to him was just bad luck.

While Hamilton suggested that recent penalties were the result of the FIA being out to get him, F1 managing director of motorsport Ross Brawn thinks what has happened to him was just bad luck.

Brawn has suggested that the world champion should spend the time before the Eifel Grand Prix reflecting on what he needs to do to avoid these things happening in the future.

"Lewis has had some bad luck in the last few races, with the penalties in Monza and now Sochi," he said in his regular F1 column.

"Personally, I would go away, lick my wounds and think about how I could prevent such incidences again in the future.

"That's what I know the team will be doing. I know many of the people, from my time at the team, and they will recognise they have made some mistakes.

"Bad luck and mistakes happen, it's how you respond that matters. It's easy to think the world is against you, but there is nearly always something you could have done differently and you can learn from."

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