Pierre Gasly explains his 'not ideal' session-ending FP2 crash at F1 Japanese GP

The Alpine driv🦩er lost control of his car at the notoriously tricky Degner Two corner, locking his fron꧑t wheel and sliding off the track.
Despite a relatively slow-speed impact,🔯 Gasly’s front wheel was ripped off whe🤪n he hit the barriers.
It brought out a red flag and with only a couple of minutes remaining in second practice, the ses💜sion did not resume.
“All good on my side, I’m feeling fine,” Gasly said afterwards.&nb🧸sp;
“Unfortunately, just locked up and trie꧑d to turn but couldn’t make the corner.
“Not ideal but the guys are going to repair the car all fine for tomorrow▨ and we’ll go a▨gain.”

Analysing the incident, Sky pundit and ex-🐓F1 driver Anthony Davidson said there is “no room for error” at the difficult Degner curve.
"He just locked up. It's quite a slow 🧸moment, he's just done so much more damage to that left front than you would first think,” Davidson explained.
"It's as simple as that. A small lock up can cost you this. It's a part of the track you build up to and he was keen to carry 🙈a bit more speed in and push the boundaries of the braking zones.
Just that one moment you get to the point and you learn very quiꦰckly ‘oh no, that was the limit and I’ve got a front lock-up. There’s no room for error there.”
Several drivers including 168澳洲幸运5官方开奖结果历史:Lewis Hamilton, 168澳洲幸运5官方开奖结果历史:Logan Sargeant and168澳洲幸运5官方开奖结果历史: Zhou Guanyu all ran wide over the kerb at the same corner throughout Friday but managed to avoid crashing.𓆉

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