Lewis Hamilton and Felipe Massa re-ignited their slightly rubbish war of words following their latest on-track clash in India, where Massa picked up a drive-through penalty for the collision as they fought for 5th place.
The pair have already been involved in contentious collisions at the Monaco, Singapore and Japanese races, and made contact again on lap 25 in India.Hamilton was attempting to pass the Brazilian for fifth place at the turn five corner, when Massa went to take his line for the corner and the pair collided.
Race stewards adjudged that Massa had been at fault for the crash, and gave the Brazilian a drive-through penalty for causing a collision with a rival.
And Hamilton, who eventually recovered to seventh place after pitting for repairs to his car, was adamant that Massa not left him enough room in the crash.
"There's not really much to say," Hamilton winced to the BBC after the race, "It's a disappointing day. My team worked hard all weekend as they always do. I don't really know what else to say."
He added: "In the race I tried to overtake [Massa] and I tried to come out of it because it didn't look like he was going to give me any space, and we collided.
"I'm really, really sorry for my team."
He also added that he had tried to speak to Massa before the race, saying: "We had the one minute silence before the start of the race and me and Felipe were standing next to each other.
"He hasn't spoken to me in a long, long time so I put my arm around him and just said 'good luck for the race'."
But Massa, who later retired with broken suspension after hitting a kerb, said that his penalty had not been fair, saying that he did not understand his punishment.
"My view is that I was in front, I braked later than him and I was in front, I was on the grippy area as well and then I started to turn and I didn't see him on the left as he was behind," Massa rambled.
"He touched my rear wheel. So, to be honest I don't understand why I have the penalty. It is not really understandable."
He added that the fact it was Hamilton had not made him drive more aggressively, saying: "If it is Lewis or not Lewis, whatever the driver is there, I would do the same."
After the incident, replays appeared to show Massa checking his mirrors before the corner, but he denied that he had known Hamilton was alongside him at the corner.
"I know he was on my side. But when I braked, this is the important place, not when you are on the straight, when I braked, he was not on my side," he rambled.
"So, I turned because I braked later than him. I cannot understand why I am supposed to back off and let him by, no? I braked later. He was on the dirty side.
"And then I turned and he touched me from behind. He did not touch on my side, or wheel-to-wheel. If it was wheel-to-wheel I would not try to close the door."
Massa also denied that Hamilton's good luck message before the race had been an attempt by him to end the bad feeling between them.
"No, he didn't try [to end the feud]. He didn't try to do anything," he rambled at reporters.
"When I tried to speak to him he passed through. He did not look to my face, so no. Not here. Here after the one minute silence he was at my side and then he just said, 'have a good race'.
"So this is trying to what? Have a good race? Is that not part of talking, or whatever?"
And asked what he would say to Hamilton now, he added: "If I saw him I would tell you what I am telling you now... I don't have anything. I have nothing against him. Zero. Zero."
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|





