Piastri’s Post-Race Fury Erupts: “I’m Not Sure Where I’m Supposed to Go!” – McLaren Star Blasts FIA’s “Shocking” 10-Second Penalty That Torpedoed His Title Hopes at Brazil GP

SÃO PAULO – The rain-slicked chaos of Interlagos had barely dried when Oscar Piastri’s composure shattered like a carbon fiber wing under pressure. Moments after crossing the line in a provisional P2 that could have slashed Lando Norris’s championship lead to ribbons, the McLaren prodigy was hit with a gut-wrenching 10-second penalty from the FIA stewards – a decision that plunged him to P5, ballooned his teammate’s advantage to 24 points, and ignited a firestorm of outrage across the F1 paddock. “I’m furious,” Piastri seethed in a blistering post-race debrief, his usual cool Aussie demeanor cracking wide open. “I had a clear opportunity – went for it – and now this? I’m not sure where I’m supposed to go next time. It’s like they want one McLaren in the fight, not two.” With three races left in a title battle that’s gripped the globe, Piastri’s meltdown wasn’t just personal – it exposed the FIA’s razor-thin tolerance for aggression, fueling whispers of favoritism toward Norris and threatening to derail McLaren’s dream double act.

The incident unfolded like a high-stakes poker bluff gone wrong, right on the Lap 6 safety car restart after Gabriel Bortoleto’s opening-lap shunt turned the grid into a demolition derby. Piastri, starting P4 after a Sprint crash sidelined him Saturday, dived bombshell-style into Turn 1’s apex, threading the needle inside Mercedes rookie sensation Kimi Antonelli for what looked like a masterstroke overtake. But as Antonelli held his line – braking late alongside Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc on the outside – Piastri’s front-left clipped the Mercedes’ rear, sending Antonelli into a wild spin that collected Leclerc and triggered his retirement. “He left me no space,” Piastri radioed his engineer Tom Stallard, voice edged with disbelief as he pitted under the ensuing safety car to serve the penalty – plus two points on his superlicense, inching him to six total. The drop from podium contention to fifth handed Norris an unchallenged romp to victory, his seventh of 2025, while Max Verstappen clawed from pitlane to P3 in a Red Bull redemption arc.

The stewards’ room verdict was swift and unforgiving: Piastri was “wholly responsible,” lacking the “required overlap” – his front axle never alongside Antonelli’s mirror at the apex, per FIA’s overtaking guidelines. “The penalty is appropriate and consistent with recent precedents,” they intoned, citing similar infractions like Norris’s own brushes in Monza ’24. But Piastri, pulling no punches in Sky Sports’ cooldown room, called BS. “The other two braked late – I locked up trying to back out, but Kimi wasn’t yielding an inch. I can’t just disappear into the grass. The decision? Gutting. Especially when it feels like every dive I make gets the black mark.” His frustration boiled over in the media pen, where he slammed the FIA for “inconsistent standards” – pointing to Verstappen’s unpunished aggression in past restarts while rookies like Antonelli skate free on defense. “If I’d given him space, he’d have pushed me wide anyway. Now? I’ve lost 18 points in one corner. Title’s slipping, and it stinks of bias.”

The backlash lit up social media like a Vegas Strip sprint, with #JusticeForOscar trending worldwide and 1.2 million impressions in hours. Fans accused the FIA of “Norris protectionism,” especially after McLaren CEO Zak Brown’s “equality pledge” – no team orders, both drivers No. 1 – drew fire from Jos Verstappen. “They’re handing Lando the crown,” one viral X post fumed, splicing Piastri’s lock-up replay against unpenalized moves from Monza. Antonelli, gracious in P2, defended Piastri: “He committed early – I held my line, but it was tight. Racing incident.” Leclerc, fuming from the garage, echoed: “Kimi squeezed him – stewards missed that.” Even Martin Brundle, on Sky commentary, labeled it “ferocious but fair” – yet admitted the call “feels harsh for a restart scrap.”

For Piastri, it’s a double whammy after a weekend nightmare: Sprint crash with Colapinto and Hulkenberg, P4 qualifying, and now this title gut-punch. The 24-year-old, who led early-season with three wins, has clawed back from low-grip woes in Austin and Mexico – only for Interlagos’ slippery chaos to bite harder. “Wouldn’t change a thing,” he insisted, eyes steely. “But if this is how they police fights, the championship’s rigged for the cautious.” McLaren boss Andrea Stella backed his charge: “Oscar drove aggressively – that’s our DNA. The penalty? We’ll review, but it won’t break us.”

As the paddock packs for Las Vegas’s neon glow, Piastri’s rage resonates beyond Brazil’s barriers. In a season of intra-team harmony and Verstappen shadows, this “shocking” sanction isn’t just 10 seconds – it’s a 24-point chasm that could crown Norris or resurrect Max. The FIA’s black-and-white book clashed with F1’s gray-area grit, leaving fans divided: justice served, or favoritism fueled? Piastri’s vow? “I’ll fight dirtier next time – and let them penalize that too.” With Qatar’s twists looming, the title fight just got bloodier. Will the FIA’s gavel silence the underdog, or spark a stewards’ revolt? Interlagos won’t forget – and neither will Oscar.
