Mercedes says confirming cause of Russell’s Canada retirement may take months

Mercedes has stated that confirming the exact cause of George Russell’s retirement from the Canadian Grand Prix could take several months. Russell was leading the race until a power-unit problem forced him to stop, allowing team-mate Kimi Antonelli to take his fourth consecutive win. The problem was identified as a catastrophic battery failure that occurred one-third of the way through the race. Technical director James Allison said the battery showed heat damage and the team will need to investigate the cause. Deputy team principal Bradley Lord noted the car underwent unusual safety procedures before being shipped back to the UK for analysis. As a result, Russell now trails Antonelli by 43 points in the Drivers’ Championship ahead of the Monaco Grand Prix.

What’s reported

George Russell retired from the Canadian Grand Prix due to a power-unit problem.
He was leading at the time; team-mate Kimi Antonelli won the race.
The problem was a catastrophic failure in the battery.
Technical director James Allison said there was heat damage and the cause will require investigation.
Deputy team principal Bradley Lord confirmed a “reasonable amount of damage” and said the module had to be shipped to the UK.
It may take several months before hardware is back and data can be fully analyzed.
Russell trails Antonelli by 43 points in the Drivers’ Championship.

Open questions

The exact cause of the battery failure remains unknown, and Mercedes has not specified whether other power units may be affected.

Key figures

George Russell (Mercedes driver)
Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes driver, Russell’s team-mate)
James Allison (Mercedes technical director)
Bradley Lord (Mercedes deputy team principal)

Sources: Sky Sports

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