/ 8 November 2007

New twist in Formula One spying scandal

Formula One’s spying scandal took a new twist on Thursday when Renault was accused by the sport’s governing body of possessing confidential information belonging to rival team McLaren.

FIA summoned Renault officials to a hearing of the World Motor Sport Council in Monte Carlo, Monaco, on December 6 to answer a charge of having ”unauthorised possession of documents and confidential information” of McLaren cars between September last year and October this year.

The information includes ”but [is] not limited to the layout and critical dimensions of the McLaren F1 car, together with details of the McLaren fuelling system, gear assembly, oil cooling system, hydraulic control system and a novel suspension component used by the 2006 and 2007 McLaren F1 cars”, the FIA statement said.

Renault finished third in the manufacturers’ championship with 51 points, 153 behind winners Ferrari.

Heikki Kovalainen finished seventh in the drivers’ standings with 30 points, followed by teammate Giancarlo Fisichella with 21. Ferrari champion Kimi Raikkonen finished with 110 points.

The move follows McLaren’s involvement in a spy scandal that overshadowed much of the season.

McLaren was fined a record $100-million by the World Motor Sport Council on September 13 after the FIA found the team guilty of using leaked secret data from Ferrari.

The FIA investigation centered on phone records and a trail of email exchanges, which included correspondence between McLaren test driver Pedro de la Rosa and McLaren chief designer Mike Coughlan, and De la Rosa and driver Fernando Alonso.

McLaren was also kicked out of the manufacturers’ championship by FIA, but Alonso and teammate Lewis Hamilton were not docked points. Hamilton finished second and Alonso third in the drivers’ championship.

The McLaren team declined to comment on FIA’s allegations against Renault. — Sapa-AP