Saturday July 5th, 2003
By Alan Baldwin
David Coulthard accepted, for the first time, that he was to
blame for a 1998 collision in Belgium that left a raging Michael
Schumacher accusing the McLaren driver of trying to kill him.
Speaking at the French Grand Prix, the Scot also said he fears a
Formula One fatality if young drivers fail to act responsibly on the
track.
Coulthard was comparing the 1998 incident, which happened at
Spa-Francorchamps, with the one last week when he almost ploughed
into the back of Spaniard Fernando Alonso's Renault at the European
Grand Prix. Alonso denied 'brake testing' Coulthard, by slowing
early to throw his rival off, but the Briton felt the whole story
had not been told.
"It could have been a much more severe accident," he said of the
Nurbrugring incident, citing previous examples of track collisions
including the 2001 Australian Grand Prix when a marshal died after
Jacques Villeneuve's BAR flew over Ralf Schumacher's Williams.
"I was that close to getting one of those," said Coulthard,
talking to a group of reporters. "As sure as we are all sitting
here, there will be a fatality in motorsport at some time in the
future.
"Let's hope it's not any time soon and that it never happens. But
it's a dangerous business and you can't just brush these things
under the carpet."
Spa Blame
At Spa in 1998, Schumacher's Ferrari ploughed into Coulthard's
car in heavy spray while the German was leading and trying to lap
Coulthard. The Scot vehemently denied he had braked early at the
time.
"I'm not doing a Fernando-beating thing," said Coulthard. "But I
realised on reflection...when Michael ran into the back of me, his
reaction was that I'd brake tested him or tried to kill him and all
that sort of thing. The stewards looked at the data and I hadn't
braked, so it was just all brushed under the carpet.
"The reality is that I lifted to let him pass me, but I lifted in
heavy spray on the racing line. You should never do that. I would
never do that now. In 1998, I didn't have the experience and the
knowledge, and I had never had someone run into the back of me. And
because someone pushes you, you react. So you act as though 'I
didn't do that,'" he said.
"The minute I knew he was there, and I was told by the team that
he was and was trying to allow him to pass me, I should have made a
smarter decision."
Coulthard said he had learnt from the experience and that drivers
like Alonso would have to learn as well.
"The risk is that it could have been a very dangerous accident
for Michael and Nurburgring could have been a very dangerous
accident for me," he said. "Eventually, somewhere down the line,
eight or 10 years from now, a young guy will come in and it will
happen to Fernando and then he will feel slightly different about
it."
Penny Dropped
Coulthard was asked whether he had told Schumacher what really
happened all those years ago. "No, because the penny has only
dropped since Nurburgring," he replied.
That last Grand Prix was the second time this year that Alonso
has been mired in controversy. In Brazil, the 21-year-old ended the
race early when he ploughed into wreckage on the track, despite
warning flags. The Spaniard still took third place.
Coulthard, who had just made a pitstop and might have won rather
than finishing fourth, was bitterly disappointed.
"I hit the bar when I got back to the hotel and was put to bed in
a hell of a state," he recalled. "Not that I think its clever to
drink heavily as that kind of response, but what can you do? You
can't punch someone. I often think boxers have a great position to
be in because, if someone hits you and it hurts, you've got the
opportunity to punch the bastard back."
Published at 13:04:51
GMT