Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Recommended for you

Indy 500 Day 1 practice results: Alex Palou leads the way at 225.937mph

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
Indy 500 Day 1 practice results: Alex Palou leads the way at 225.937mph

Scott McLaughlin pushing to avenge last year’s ‘embarrassing’ Indy 500 pace lap crash

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
Scott McLaughlin pushing to avenge last year’s ‘embarrassing’ Indy 500 pace lap crash

Driver arrested and banned after ramming car in the pits, knocking over crew members

General
Driver arrested and banned after ramming car in the pits, knocking over crew members

Louis Foster: Throwing a yellow doesn’t kill the race, NASCAR does it for fun

IndyCar
Louis Foster: Throwing a yellow doesn’t kill the race, NASCAR does it for fun

How victory in Portugal could have a bearing on Hyundai’s WRC future plans

Feature
WRC
Feature
Rally Portugal
How victory in Portugal could have a bearing on Hyundai’s WRC future plans

How Fabio Di Giannantonio struck a nerve with Pedro Acosta: 'Nobody passes me while looking at me' 

MotoGP
French GP
How Fabio Di Giannantonio struck a nerve with Pedro Acosta: 'Nobody passes me while looking at me' 

Can F1 save its races in Bahrain and Jeddah? Here’s how every option could play out

Formula 1
Can F1 save its races in Bahrain and Jeddah? Here’s how every option could play out

How winding back the clock helped Fabio Quartararo salvage a good home GP

MotoGP
French GP
How winding back the clock helped Fabio Quartararo salvage a good home GP

Sauber unpacks mystery behind Nico Hulkenberg's plank wear disqualification

Hulkenberg's Sauber was thrown out of Formula 1's Bahrain Grand Prix results over excessive skid wear

Nico Hulkenberg, Sauber

Nico Hulkenberg, Sauber

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

The Sauber Formula 1 team is still searching for answers over Nico Hulkenberg's Bahrain Grand Prix disqualification.

Hulkenberg crossed the finish in 13th after a tough evening trying to contend for points, but was disqualified because his skid plank had been ground down to 8.4mm, below the minimum thickness of 9mm.

It is the second time this season a car has been thrown out of the results for that reason, with Lewis Hamilton's Ferrari also found to have had excessive skid wear in China.

"Apparently the skids have been measured lower than 9mm," said Sauber veteran Beat Zehnder. "You do FP1, you do FP2, you do FP3, you measure, you have your references and why we're below 9mm, we really don't know.

"Maybe it had an impact that Nico only did a couple of laps in FP3, so one reference was missing. But it shouldn't happen and it shall not happen anymore."

Nico Hulkenberg, Sauber

Nico Hulkenberg, Sauber

Photo by: Andrej Isakovic - AFP - Getty Images

Zehnder conceded the bumpy Bahrain circuit can be tricky for plank wear, but didn't want to call in any excuses. "You have to take it into account whether you have a circuit where your car is bouncing a lot whether you run over curbs with your skid a lot," he said. "It is a mistake from our side.

"Obviously, there was never an intention to break the rules, because can you imagine you end up in the points and you lose them?"

The team's only indication right now why the incident happened to Hulkenberg's car and not team-mate Gabriel Bortoleto is because the German was running a different set-up with more downforce.

Sauber has only been able to score points in a chaotic mixed weather race in Australia, having lacked the pace to put much pressure on the cars divvying up the points since then. Its 2025 car's small performance window appeared even narrower in Bahrain's hot conditions.

When asked by Motorsport.com if that's a fair reflection of where the team is at, and whether it will need more special circumstances to score points, Zehnder replied: "It's not only a race like Melbourne. Qualifying is crucial and then it's very much depending in which train you are in. Free air makes such a huge difference in every respect.

"These days you need a 1.2 to 1.5 second lap time difference to be able to attack, so dirty air is painful, and free air is much healthier for your tyres.

"We know that we have to find two or three tenths quickly - desperately - just to qualify a bit further up the grid. Nico is one of the best qualifiers I've ever worked with and it makes a difference if you start from P13 or P16."

Previous article Helmut Marko cautions Red Bull improvements to secure Max Verstappen’s future
Next article Saudi Arabia on buying an F1 team: "Why not?"

Top Comments

Latest news