Button criticises Ferrari orders

Jenson Button
12 April 2012

Jenson Button has joined the growing chorus of criticism regarding team orders that may yet result in severe sanctions being taken against Ferrari.

The famous Maranello marque were on Sunday punished for fixing the German Grand Prix by stewards who fined them 100,000 US dollars. The matter, however, has been referred to the World Motor Sport Council who, if they choose to pursue the case, have unlimited powers of punishment at their disposal.

Speaking to Press Association Sport, Button said: "Personally I think team orders in Formula One are wrong, in any motor sport category, although sometimes they are inevitable. We all want to win, and every team wants to win, both the constructors' and drivers' championships. But they have to give both drivers the same opportunity to do so."

The incident that saw coded messages being passed to Felipe Massa that eventually resulted in him slowing to allow team-mate Fernando Alonso to pass and claim victory left a bitter taste in the mouth and infuriated millions of Formula One fans worldwide.

Button added: "This was very early in the season. How early is it going to start in the future?"

For any driver given the message 'your team-mate is faster', as was the case on Sunday to Massa from his race engineer Rob Smedley, the natural reaction is speed up, not slow down.

"If I was told my team-mate is faster, I would think my team-mate is faster, so I would keep driving and hope he doesn't overtake me," added Button.

Echoing his team-mate's sentiments, championship leader Lewis Hamilton said: "My reaction would be to go faster, that I need to find the time.

"For me if my engineer came across the radio, and just because I know how things are in our team, the message would be 'Jenson's faster, you've got to find time in the first and second sector'.

"As simple as that, which means pick up the pace if you can. It's encouraging rather than telling you. It's a lot different."

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