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Michael Masi, the former F1 race director, is defended by successor Niels Wittich, who claims Masi was a 'scapegoat' for the 2021 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix controversy. Masi's decisions during the race, which determined the championship, are deemed not as flawed as portrayed.
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Former Formula 1 race director Michael Masi has received support from his successor Niels Wittich with regards to his controversial officiating in the title-deciding 2021 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.
Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton were tied on points going into the Yas Marina race, meaning whoever finished ahead would claim the title â unless they both ended up out of the top 10, in which case the Dutchman would prevail on countback.
Hamilton led Verstappen by more than 11 seconds when the race was neutralised by the safety car with six laps remaining, after Williamsâ Nicholas Latifi crashed as he battled with Haasâ Mick Schumacher over the penultimate position.
Due to concerns the red flag might be waved and allow a free tyre change, or the race might end behind the safety car, Mercedes decided against pitting its race leader in order to preserve track position. Having nothing to lose, Verstappen went for new soft tyres and maintained second place.
On lap 57 of 58, Masi directed the five lapped cars separating Hamilton and Verstappen â and only those â to unlap themselves, and instructed the safety car to pit straight away ahead of the final lap. Verstappen overtook Hamilton, whose car was still fitted with used hard rubber, and claimed his maiden title.
Masiâs officiating was at odds with F1âs sporting regulations.
Article 48.12 stipulated: âIf the clerk of the course considers it safe to do so, and the message "LAPPED CARS MAY NOW OVERTAKE" has been sent to all Competitors via the official messaging system, any cars that have been lapped by the leader will be required to pass the cars on the lead lap and the safety car.
Niels Wittich stated that Michael Masi was a 'scapegoat' and did not do much wrong regarding his officiating during the controversial race.
The race was pivotal as Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton were tied on points, with the outcome determining the championship winner.
The safety car was deployed after Nicholas Latifi crashed while battling Mick Schumacher, which occurred with six laps remaining in the race.
The main contenders for the title were Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton, both of whom were tied on points before the race.

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The FIA Safety Car leads Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes
âUnless the clerk of the course considers the presence of the safety car is still necessary, once the last lapped car has passed the leader the safety car will return to the pits at the end of the following lap.â
If the safety car had pitted at the end of the following lap â the final tour â as prescribed by the rules, the championship would have gone to Hamilton.
âFrom my point of view, Michael didnât do that much wrong,â Wittich, who officiated in F1 from 2022 to 2024, told Motorsportâs sister YouTube channel Formel1.de. âThe regulations didnât strictly define everything. What he did was within his authority. He had a certain level of discretion in how to deploy the safety car.
"He essentially did what everyone had agreed upon: create one final racing lap"
Niels Wittich
âOne key factor was that teams, FIA, and Formula 1 had all agreed â over many meetings â that races should, if possible, finish under green flag conditions. Nobody wanted a race ending behind the safety car.
âIn Abu Dhabi, the situation was such that any intervention would have disadvantaged someone. You could have red-flagged the race â but that requires specific conditions like danger to personnel or a blocked track. That wasnât the case. So red flag wasnât really an option.
âThen came the lapped cars question. Initially, he said they wouldnât unlap themselves, then he allowed it â but modified the usual procedure by not waiting an extra lap. That was within his authority under the regulations at the time.
âHe essentially did what everyone had agreed upon: create one final racing lap. It produced a spectacular finish, an overtake, a winner and a runner-up. It could have gone the other way just as easily. Thatâs sport.
Niels Wittich, Race Director, FIA
âA late safety car is always controversial. Fans donât like it if it decides the race â but that applies everywhere. Whether itâs lap one or the final laps, someone gains, someone loses. Thatâs part of the sport.
âThe Abu Dhabi race itself had been quite uneventful until Latifiâs crash. Without that, it would have been a straightforward, perhaps even dull finale. But because of the incident and the intervention, it suddenly became decisive â and that upset one group of fans or the other.
âPeople later said, âYou could have red-flagged it, you could have done this or that.â Yes, you could â but those would have been inconsistent decisions compared to earlier races. And consistency is key.
âIn meetings with the teams in early 2022, I asked them directly: âDo you want us to red-flag every minor incident?â They said no. âDo you want different rules for the final race?â Again, no.
âA championship isnât decided in one race alone. Points lost earlier in the season matter just as much. Both Hamilton and Verstappen had chances to secure the title earlier.â
The FIA attributed the incident to a âhuman errorâ and removed Masi from the race director position as the Australian suffered a wave of abuse, including death threats, before he eventually left the federation altogether.
âAfter the investigation following Abu Dhabi, the conclusion seemed to be that Michael had to go â essentially finding a scapegoat,â Wittich added.
Michael Masi
âWhat was really disappointing â for me and many colleagues â was the lack of support from the FIA for Michael. Thatâs something that needs to be clearly criticised. Everyone knew that in extreme situations, youâd be left on your own.
âIn the past, under Charlie Whiting, there was always backing from FIA leadership â Max Mosley stood firmly behind him. That support wasnât there anymore. It still isnât. Thatâs one of the reasons Iâm no longer a race director in Formula 1.
âWhatever happened, there was no proper discussion, no backing for employees. And thatâs the worst takeaway from that whole situation.â
Masi is currently on the board of directors of Karting Australia and was the event director for the Repco NextGen NZ Championship, which includes the Formula Regional Oceania Trophy.
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