Friday July 13, 11:12 PM
Coulthard fears spy saga will damage F1 image
LONDON (Reuters) - Former McLaren driver David Coulthard
fears Formula One's spying controversy could seriously damage
the sport's image.
"The whole saga is disappointing," the Scot, who races for
Renault-powered Red Bull, said in a column for the ITV Web site
(www.itv-f1.com).
"This isn't a Hollywood movie where when you get to the end
credits it's the end of the story.
"This could have a long-lasting damaging effect to the
integrity of the sport," added the 36-year-old, who had no
doubts about the integrity of championship leaders McLaren and
team boss Ron Dennis.
Coulthard recognised that espionage existed in Formula One,
a sport with major manufacturers spending billions of dollars
on technology, but said it was wrong.
"It's not good, it's not sporting and it should really have
no place in F1 competition," he said. "It's as dodgy as
blood-doping in cycling."
Formula One's governing body summoned McLaren on Thursday
to a hearing in Paris on July 26 to face a charge of
unauthorised possession of confidential Ferrari information.
If found guilty, possible sanctions range from a reprimand
to disqualification from the championship.
The team have already suspended chief designer Mike
Coughlan, alleged to have had two computer discs with 780 pages
of Ferrari information on them.
Ferrari have dismissed their former engineer Nigel Stepney,
who has denied passing the information to Coughlan, and are
taking legal action against him in Italy.
British newspapers on Friday highlighted the threat to the
title prospects of McLaren's rookie leader Lewis Hamilton,
currently 12 points clear of double world champion and team
mate Fernando Alonso.
McLaren lead Ferrari by 25 points in the constructors'
championship.
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