- 14 Sep 07, 15:14#13813Although there is no 'hard evidence', based on the number and frequency of the messages and that certain decisions were made, at least one engineer must have been involved.
I think the FIA were correct in saying that there would have been at least some impact, however small, to the 2007 McLaren car and I guess testing the 2008 car is inevitable based on these facts.
The problem is that all this seemingly happened without the majority of McLaren's knowledge. This is something Dennis should stop from happening again, though it's difficult for any company to check what 100% of its employees are up to. What further complicates this is that with most other companies, the individuals involved would be sacked and no penalty would be given to the company, but this is sport and therefore relies on outcomes of races, tainted by this information. In my opinion, the FIA could have possibly allowed McLaren to continue racing in an older, pre-march car and to lose all their constructor points so far. But they chose to stop them gaining any points for the remaining races as well, which will have a knock on effect.
Some may argue that this goes on within most teams and Ferrari has been seen sneaking around garages taking notes, as with many teams, but here they just happened to have a whistle-blower, which made all the difference.
Ultimately, McLaren were found to have been in the wrong due to a small number of staff 'cheating'. The whole company has been punished as a result. Some overly zealous Ferrari fans may say that McLaren themselves are all-over nasty cheating liars, but from the evidence, it's pretty assured that this is not the case. What they do need to do is clean up their house and every other F1 team will need to take note and stop copying from other teams too.
I believe it could well have been any team up before the FIA, but due to circumstances and several people who took it further than usual, it was McLaren. It was bound to happen to one team or another though, and is a clear message to all the teams. Maybe one that is too harsh, but a message none-the-less.
As for the drivers, the FIA were fully justified for not penalising them, as they fully co-operated, but it won't help the feeling between Alonso and the team that he was the one with the emails.
"Time is an illusion, lunchtime doubly so"