F1 Swearing Crackdown Could Be Revised, Says FIA President
Formula 1 drivers face race bans if they repeatedly swear or criticise the sport’s governing body under new rules introduced this year. But FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem has hinted at softening the stance.
Why it matters:
F1 stars like Max Verstappen and Charles Leclerc were punished last year — Leclerc fined, Verstappen got community service — for using strong language. Drivers called the rules excessive.
The rules in question:
Appendix B of the FIA code punishes everything from political statements to “moral injury”— including swearing.
Backlash grows:
- WRC drivers recently boycotted TV interviews
- Verstappen avoided post-race comments to dodge possible fines
- Carlos Sainz wasn’t fined for swearing — possibly a softening stance?
What FIA now says:
Sulayem posted Monday:
“Humans make the rules and humans can improve the rules.”
He says he’s open to revising Appendix B after “constructive feedback” from drivers.
What’s next?
No timeline yet, but expect updated rules before mid-season.
(With inputs from AP)