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Alpine Battles Through Controversial FIA Penalty Review Success

Highlights
- Alpine’s review request on Gasly’s penalties was accepted.
- Gasly received two pit lane speeding penalties at Monaco GP.
- New evidence questions accuracy of timing loops and speed data.
- Second hearing phase to fully investigate both penalties concurrently.
- Final decision will clarify possible technical errors in penalties.
Alpine clears the first hurdle in challenging Pierre Gasly’s Monaco pit-lane speeding penalties, after stewards accept a review request and open the door to reassessing the timing evidence.
The team questions why Gasly received two penalties while similar cases drew one.
The comparison group includes Lewis Hamilton, George Russell, Oscar Piastri, and teammate Franco Colapinto.

Gasly’s combined 10-second add-on dropped him from a potential podium. Alpine argues the sanctions overstated any infringement and skewed the final classification.
Under the International Sporting Code, a review needs significant, relevant new evidence, and the absence of a hearing at the initial decision. Alpine contends those criteria are satisfied.
Stewards deem both Alpine petitions admissible and identify new evidence worth testing. That advances the case into a fact-heavy examination of Monaco’s pit-lane measurement process.
Alpine submits telemetry and timing-loop data, arguing Gasly engaged the limiter correctly. The team challenges loop placement and distance mapping that feed average speed calculations.
It contends the official timekeeper’s model overstated speed by mismeasuring segment lengths, inflating calculated averages despite limiter engagement at the relevant loops.
Stewards note this evidence was unavailable when the penalties were issued. That alone justifies reopening to verify the methodology’s accuracy and any systematic bias.
Debate continues over pre-race awareness of potential errors. Stewards report no prior warning reached them, and the concern only surfaced after a third alleged incident.
Both penalties now proceed to a combined second hearing. Running them concurrently should deliver consistency and a single, transparent outcome.
The admissibility rulings are final and cannot be appealed. Teams now await the deeper analysis of loop calibration, limiter traces, and distance models.
Further background on Alpine’s challenge appears in the Alpine Grand Prix review, which outlines timelines and early submissions.
The case also sits within wider FIA scrutiny of officiating consistency, explored in the broader review ruling and in analysis of a recent controversial decision that shaped debate.
Whatever the verdict, it will guide future enforcement and technology checks, alongside ongoing discussion of prospective FIA F1 rule changes scheduled for scrutiny in 2026.
Visual Summary

Daniel Miller reports on Formula 1 Grand Prix weekends with race-day analysis, team-radio highlights, and point-standings updates. He explains power-unit upgrades, aerodynamic developments, and driver rivalries in straightforward, SEO-friendly language for a global F1 audience.





