Ferrari boss Jean Todt denied on
Friday that the Formula One world champions had anything against
struggling Minardi.
Minardi owner Paul Stoddart wants to enter Sunday's
season-opening Australian Grand Prix with last year's cars, which
do not conform to the regulations, and has accused Todt and Ferrari
of being the main resistance to his high-profile campaign.
"It is not Ferrari against Minardi," Todt
said after stewards ruled that the Italy-based team could not take
part in the race without making modifications to the aerodynamics.
Stoddart has taken legal action to try and overturn
the stewards' ruling.
"We have been always supportive of Minardi,
we have been giving (them) parts for so many years -- loaning our
track, we have been doing as much as we could do for Minardi.
"It is not a question of trying to be nasty
to Minardi. We respect Minardi a lot, personally I do respect the
small teams who have to fight so hard to find the finance and all
that," added Todt.
"That said, you have a game and if you want
to play in it the rules should be the same for everybody."
Minardi had sought exemption from the aerodynamics
regulations, arguing initially that they were introduced for safety
reasons which should not apply to them because their cars were already
several seconds slower than the rest.
Todt suggested the performance issue, and an attempt
to gain publicity, lay behind Stoddart's actions.
"I don't want to talk on his behalf but we
know that between the 2004 and 2005 rules you lose performance,"
said Todt.
"So if you keep the 2004 package, you don't
lose this performance and you become more competitive. It's the
only reason.
"Maybe sometimes to get publicity you do things
that you shouldn't do, some need it, some don't. Personal opinion,"
added the Frenchman.
"Sometimes big stories are made out of nothing,"
he said.
"We have a sporting regulator which is the
FIA. Some like it and some don't. We have a Formula One championship
under the control of the FIA. It is up to the FIA to make the rules
and to make sure that the rules are applied.
"As far as Ferrari is concerned, it's not a
question of whether we are happy or not.
"I've always said that if it comes to the teams,
and if everybody has signed, Ferrari will not block and will sign.
I don't feel that it is up to the teams to decide but it is what
we did," he added. |