The 2021 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix ended with a Safety Car restart that decided the world championship. Max Verstappen, on fresh soft tyres, passed Lewis Hamilton, on 40-lap hard tyres, on the final lap. The controversy was not about the pass itself — on those tyre compounds, the outcome was predictable. The controversy was about how the race reached that point: Race Director Michael Masi's decision to allow only the lapped cars between Hamilton and Verstappen to unlap themselves, followed by the restart with one racing lap remaining.
The FIA's subsequent investigation concluded that the procedure had been applied incorrectly. Masi was replaced. The Race Directors' role was restructured. But the episode crystallized a tension that has existed in F1 for decades: when a race is neutralized for safety, the restart will always carry competitive consequences that affect different drivers differently. There is no neutral way to resume racing.
How the Safety Car Restart Procedure Works
When a Safety Car is deployed, the procedure follows a defined sequence:
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Deployment: The Safety Car enters the circuit with orange lights and flashing "SC" boards. Drivers must slow immediately, maintain position, and form up behind the Safety Car. Overtaking is prohibited.
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Lapped car unlapping: Under current regulations, all lapped cars are allowed to unlap themselves — driving through to the back of the queue — before the restart. This clears the field so that cars on the lead lap are not delayed by traffic when racing resumes. The Race Director instructs lapped cars to overtake the Safety Car and the lead cars.
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Lights out: The Safety Car turns off its lights to indicate it will enter the pit lane at the end of the lap. The leader controls the pace and dictates when to accelerate for the restart. Racing resumes when the leader crosses the control line after the Safety Car pulls in.
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Rolling restart: The restart is a rolling start — drivers are already moving when racing resumes. The leader has the advantage of controlling the acceleration point, but the chasing cars can use the slipstream to attempt an overtake into the first braking zone.
The key competitive tension in this procedure is that the restart bunches the field. A driver who built a ten-second lead over twenty laps suddenly has that gap erased. The safety requirement — keeping the field controlled and visible for marshals — directly conflicts with the competitive reality that the leader has earned that gap.
How Red-Flag Restarts Are Different
Red flags stop the race entirely. Cars return to the pit lane or a designated area. Teams can work on the cars — changing tyres, repairing damage, adjusting front wing angles — under supervision. When the race resumes, the restart format depends on the circumstances:
Standing restart: From the 2023 season onwards, races resumed after a red flag use a standing restart — cars line up on the grid, the lights go out, and the launch procedure is identical to the original race start. This was introduced to improve the spectacle and consistency of restarts.
Rolling restart behind Safety Car: In some conditions — particularly if the track is still wet or there are concerns about visibility — the race may resume behind the Safety Car before a green flag is shown.
Red-flag restarts are more disruptive than Safety Car restarts because they allow teams to change tyres and repair damage. A driver who was managing worn tyres to hold position may find that the red flag gives everyone fresh rubber. A team whose car had floor damage may get a chance to replace it. The competitive reset is more severe, and the controversy is correspondingly louder.
The Most Controversial Restart Moments
Abu Dhabi 2021: The decisive moment of the 2021 championship. A Nicholas Latifi crash triggered a Safety Car with five laps remaining. Hamilton led from Verstappen, with five lapped cars between them. Masi initially indicated that lapped cars would not be allowed to unlap, then reversed the decision for only the cars between Hamilton and Verstappen. This created a one-lap sprint with Verstappen on fresh softs and Hamilton on old hards. Verstappen passed and won the championship. The FIA later admitted the procedure was not correctly applied.
Spa 2021: The Belgian Grand Prix ran behind the Safety Car for multiple laps in heavy rain before a red flag was thrown. After a lengthy delay, the race was restarted behind the Safety Car, then red-flagged again after two laps. The final classification was taken from the end of the first lap, giving Verstappen the win with half points awarded. The race was widely criticized as a farce — drivers had not actually raced, but a result was declared.
Malaysia 2017: A red flag after a first-lap crash allowed Ferrari to change Sebastian Vettel's damaged front wing. Vettel had started from the back of the grid due to a penalty but resumed in a competitive position after the red flag. He finished fourth, salvaging points that would have been impossible without the red flag's repair window.
Silverstone 2020: The race was red-flagged after a massive crash involving Vettel, Giovinazzi, and Sainz. The restart gave several drivers the opportunity to switch tyre strategies, changing the competitive order. Red flags at high-speed circuits are particularly impactful because the high degradation nature of those races means tyre strategy is more sensitive.
Why the Current Rules Cannot Eliminate Controversy
The fundamental problem is that any neutralization affects drivers differently depending on their circumstances at the time:
- A leader with a comfortable gap loses the most. The gap they earned is erased.
- A chaser on worn tyres benefits if the Safety Car allows them to change rubber.
- A driver who just pitted loses the undercut advantage that motivated their stop.
- A driver with damage benefits from a red flag that allows repairs.
No procedural tweak can make the restart neutral for everyone. Even if the regulations were rewritten to minimize competitive distortion, the act of bunching the field — which is necessary for safety — always creates winners and losers.
The 2022 regulation changes, which gave the Race Director more structured guidance and introduced a permanent advisory panel, were aimed at improving consistency rather than eliminating controversy. The goal is to ensure that the same situation is handled the same way every time, even if the outcome still disadvantages some drivers.
Standing vs Rolling Restarts: What the Debate Misses
The introduction of standing restarts after red flags was controversial when it was first proposed. Some argued that a standing restart is more dangerous than a rolling restart, because the launch phase produces the highest collision risk of any moment in a race. Others argued that standing restarts are fairer because the grid order reflects the competitive state at the time of the red flag, rather than allowing the leader to control the restart pace.
The reality is that both formats create different competitive dynamics. A rolling restart gives the leader control over the acceleration point, which is a significant advantage. A standing restart eliminates that advantage but introduces launch variability — clutch bite, reaction time, wheelspin — that can shuffle the order unpredictably.
The format choice is therefore not a question of fairness but of which type of uncertainty the sport prefers. Standing restarts after red flags are now standard, but Safety Car restarts remain rolling, which means F1 operates with two different restart philosophies depending on how the race was neutralized.
What to Watch During a Restart
Restarts are among the highest-pressure moments in a race. Pay attention to:
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Tyre compound differential: If the Safety Car has allowed some drivers to pit and others have stayed out, the compound difference can produce dramatic pace swings over the first few racing laps.
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The leader's acceleration point: In a rolling restart, the leader chooses when to go. Too early and the chasing cars get a run. Too late and the field stacks up behind. Watch for the leader trying to "break the tow" by accelerating, then braking slightly, then accelerating again.
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Brake temperature: Under Safety Car conditions, brakes cool down. Cold brakes on the first racing lap after a restart are a real safety concern, particularly at circuits with heavy braking zones.
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Strategy reset windows: A Safety Car period can flip a two-stop strategy into a one-stop, or vice versa. Listen for team radio about whether the driver should pit under the Safety Car — the timing of that decision can determine the race.