Racing Point F1 team sees no wrong in Sergio Perez’s Mexico trip

Racing Point F1 boss Otmar Szafnauer says Sergio Perez did nothing wrong by returning to Mexico between the Hungarian and British GPs.
Racing Point F1 team sees no wrong in Perez’s Mexico trip

Racing Point Formula 1 boss Otmar Szafnauer says Sergio🐼 Perez did nothing wrong by returning to Mexico between the Hungarian and British Grands Prix.

Perez was ruled out of this week๊end’s British Grand Prix after he became the first F1 driver to test positive for COVID-19 since the delayed 2020 season started earlier this month in Austria.

The Mexican revealed he returned to hওis home country last week to see his mother, who had spent time in hospital after being involved in what Perez described as a “bad accident”.

Despite Mexico being one of the current coronavirus hotspots with aroun🦂d 7,000 new cases confirmed each day, Szafnauer said he had no issue with Perez’s trip.

“I don’t think Checo did anyth𝓡iꦫng wrong going back to his family,” said Perez. “He takes all the precautions.

“I think it’s no different than, you know, F🐷errari going back to Italy, for examp🅠le. We've got no clauses in the contract where he's got to ask permission to go back to his family.

"I think his family was in Mexico, an🐼d it's not a surprise that he went back to Mexico, that'𓃲s what he's done forever while he's been driving for us.

"We did though disc💫uss how he was flying there and back, and it was always by a private flight, never commercially. There's no issue with that.

"Hindsight is a wonderful thing. T🐻here are many people that are in hotspꦆots all around the world.

"We have a big contingent of our factory who live in Northampton, and you Northampton was shut down as well. So our philosophy is wꦺe take all the precautions necessary in light of where we are travelling.

"And if we do take those precautions, I'm conf🎃ident that we won't get the virus. We just need to now forensically look baไck and try to ascertain how Checo became infected, and make sure that we cover that off in the future."

Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was at the centre of controversy recently when he broke F1’s strict protocols by returning home to Mo🥃naco between the two Austria rounds, and Perez’s trip has raised similar questions given it ultimately resulted in him contracting COVID-🍬19.

But Szafnauer stressed the FIA’s COVID-19 code of conduct does not prevent drivers from🌃 travelling when there are gaps in the calendar between a run of consecutive races.

"The code, as it's writte🧸n now, in between the Austrian races and in Hungary we shouldn't have left and gone outside, which our drivers didn't do," sa𝓰id Szafnauer.

"Neither di🔯d our team personnel. For example, we had a rule that once we we⛎re in Hungary nobody could leave the hotel even if you had a Schengen passport. We treated everybody the same, including the drivers.

"But in between H꧋ungary [and Silverstone], because we had that weekend off, I think everybody went to wherever their families were. I think the Italian teams went back to Italဣy.

"Probably the Swiss team went ♛back to Switzerland, Pirelli flew everyone back to Italy, and the drivers went to their home countries.

"Like I said, hindsight is a wonderful thing. Perhaps we should l♔ook at that, change the code and say throughout the season, you stay within your bubble? I don't know, but that's something for the FIA to consider. I read ꧑through the code a couple of times now, and it is a living document.

"So they say at the very beginning: from time to time as we learn this will change, so perhaps that'll change. But I don't thꦐink Checo did anything wrong, going back to his family. He takes all the precautions. I think it's no different than Ferrari going back to Italy, for exampl𓆏e."

Szafnauer also confirmed that Perez’s assistant and physio aꦿre both self-isolating as a precaution despite testing negative for coronavirus.

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