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14 juin 2022 à 10:51 : Sadie78G12766 (discussion | contributions) a déclenché le filtre filtre 1 en effectuant l’action « edit » sur F1 Risk Row With Hamilton Over NOSE STUD Amid Crackdown On Jewellery. Actions entreprises : Interdire la modification ; Description du filtre : Liens externe si !page de guilde (examiner)

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Formula One drivers have been served a reminder that they are banned from wearing jewellery while racing ahead of the Australian Grand Prix.<br>The ruling was included in the  event notes that was issued by new F1 race director Niels Wittich, who will share the position with Eduardo Freitas following the sacking of Michael Masi.<br>This will affect drivers including  who has been seen sporting a nose stud while behind the wheel of his Mercedes.<br>      Formula One drivers have been remind that they are banned from wearing jewellery while racing such as nose studs which seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton wears<br>  RELATED ARTICLES                <br><br><br><br>Share this article<br>Share<br><br><br>It has been part of the sporting regulations since 2005, though drivers who have worn jewellery behind the wheel have not been penalised.<br> <br> The new race directors though are set to take a sterner stance and fine those who are caught wearing any form of body piercing or metal neck chains.<br>It's said the reminder is not aimed at any one person and that multiple drivers up and down the grid have been spotted wearing jewellery - also including rings and bracelets. <br>        A number of drivers have been spotted wearing jewellery while racing this season<br>        New race directors Niels Wittich (pictured) and Eduardo Freitas are to take a sterner approach against those wearing jewellery with drivers set to receive fines if they are caught<br>There is a risk the stricter approach could spark a new row with seven-time champion [https://imgur.com/hot?q=Hamilton Hamilton]. <br>Hamilton was seen wearing a nose stud at both last year's season-ending Abu Dhabi GP and this year's opener in Bahrain, where it was clearly visible through his open visor.<br>The Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) confirmed a nose stud would fall foul of the ban, raising the prospect of Hamilton being forced to remove it.  <br>The rule prohibiting the wearing of jewellery is Article 5 of the third chapter of Appendix L of the governing body's International Sporting Code (ISC).<br>The full wording of the rule states: 'The wearing of jewellery in the form of body piercing or metal neck chains is prohibited during the competition and may therefore be checked before the start.'<br>The FIA first instigated in 2005 what was then described as 'an immediate ban on the wearing of jewellery (body piercing and heavy chains) by race and rally competitors',  [https://www.content-spinning.fr/ Rédaction content spinning] with the rule later adopted into the ISC.<br>        Drivers have been banned from wearing jewellery since 2005 but no punishments were issued<br>It was brought in to prevent piercings and chains injuring the driver in the event of a collision, and the FIA said it also applied to the wearing of rings and bracelets. <br>There was also concern jewellery could slow drivers getting out of the car after a heavy crash. <br>Wittrich is one of two new F1 race directors, in an alternating arrangement with Freitas, following the ousting of Masi in the wake of the controversial climax to last season, which saw Hamilton denied a record-breaking eighth world title.<br>      Hamilton faces an uphill challenge this weekend with his Mercedes team on the backfoot<br>Masi's controversial call to only allow drivers between Hamilton and Max Verstappen to unlap themselves, led to the Dutchman passing his rival on the last lap on much fresher tyres and claim his maiden championship.<br>This led to appeals from Mercedes in the aftermath of the race in which they eventually dropped.<br>Hamilton has already been cast 29 points adrift in the championship race after he finished only 10th at the second round in Saudi Arabia a fortnight ago.<br>Mercedes have dominated the sport since 2014 - carrying Hamilton to six titles and winning an unprecedented eight constructors' championships in succession. <br>However, they have failed to get the best of the new regulations for this season so far, with Red Bull and Ferrari leaving the Brackley based outfit playing catch-up. <br>  RELATED ARTICLES                <br><br><br><br>Share this article<br>Share<br><br><br><br>adverts.addToArray({"pos":"inread_player"})Advertisement

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VariableValeur
Nom du compte de l’utilisateur (user_name)
'Sadie78G12766'
ID de la page (page_id)
0
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0
Titre de la page (sans l’espace de noms) (page_title)
'F1 Risk Row With Hamilton Over NOSE STUD Amid Crackdown On Jewellery'
Titre complet de la page (page_prefixedtitle)
'F1 Risk Row With Hamilton Over NOSE STUD Amid Crackdown On Jewellery'
Action (action)
'edit'
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''
Ancien modèle de contenu (old_content_model)
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Nouveau modèle de contenu (new_content_model)
'wikitext'
Texte wiki de l’ancienne page, avant la modification (old_wikitext)
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Texte wiki de la nouvelle page, après la modification (new_wikitext)
'Formula One drivers have been served a reminder that they are banned from wearing jewellery while racing ahead of the Australian Grand Prix.<br>The ruling was included in the event notes that was issued by new F1 race director Niels Wittich, who will share the position with Eduardo Freitas following the sacking of Michael Masi.<br>This will affect drivers including who has been seen sporting a nose stud while behind the wheel of his Mercedes.<br> Formula One drivers have been remind that they are banned from wearing jewellery while racing such as nose studs which seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton wears<br> RELATED ARTICLES <br><br><br><br>Share this article<br>Share<br><br><br>It has been part of the sporting regulations since 2005, though drivers who have worn jewellery behind the wheel have not been penalised.<br> <br> The new race directors though are set to take a sterner stance and fine those who are caught wearing any form of body piercing or metal neck chains.<br>It's said the reminder is not aimed at any one person and that multiple drivers up and down the grid have been spotted wearing jewellery - also including rings and bracelets. <br> A number of drivers have been spotted wearing jewellery while racing this season<br> New race directors Niels Wittich (pictured) and Eduardo Freitas are to take a sterner approach against those wearing jewellery with drivers set to receive fines if they are caught<br>There is a risk the stricter approach could spark a new row with seven-time champion [https://imgur.com/hot?q=Hamilton Hamilton]. <br>Hamilton was seen wearing a nose stud at both last year's season-ending Abu Dhabi GP and this year's opener in Bahrain, where it was clearly visible through his open visor.<br>The Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) confirmed a nose stud would fall foul of the ban, raising the prospect of Hamilton being forced to remove it.  <br>The rule prohibiting the wearing of jewellery is Article 5 of the third chapter of Appendix L of the governing body's International Sporting Code (ISC).<br>The full wording of the rule states: 'The wearing of jewellery in the form of body piercing or metal neck chains is prohibited during the competition and may therefore be checked before the start.'<br>The FIA first instigated in 2005 what was then described as 'an immediate ban on the wearing of jewellery (body piercing and heavy chains) by race and rally competitors', [https://www.content-spinning.fr/ Rédaction content spinning] with the rule later adopted into the ISC.<br> Drivers have been banned from wearing jewellery since 2005 but no punishments were issued<br>It was brought in to prevent piercings and chains injuring the driver in the event of a collision, and the FIA said it also applied to the wearing of rings and bracelets. <br>There was also concern jewellery could slow drivers getting out of the car after a heavy crash. <br>Wittrich is one of two new F1 race directors, in an alternating arrangement with Freitas, following the ousting of Masi in the wake of the controversial climax to last season, which saw Hamilton denied a record-breaking eighth world title.<br> Hamilton faces an uphill challenge this weekend with his Mercedes team on the backfoot<br>Masi's controversial call to only allow drivers between Hamilton and Max Verstappen to unlap themselves, led to the Dutchman passing his rival on the last lap on much fresher tyres and claim his maiden championship.<br>This led to appeals from Mercedes in the aftermath of the race in which they eventually dropped.<br>Hamilton has already been cast 29 points adrift in the championship race after he finished only 10th at the second round in Saudi Arabia a fortnight ago.<br>Mercedes have dominated the sport since 2014 - carrying Hamilton to six titles and winning an unprecedented eight constructors' championships in succession. <br>However, they have failed to get the best of the new regulations for this season so far, with Red Bull and Ferrari leaving the Brackley based outfit playing catch-up. <br> RELATED ARTICLES <br><br><br><br>Share this article<br>Share<br><br><br><br>adverts.addToArray({"pos":"inread_player"})Advertisement'
Horodatage Unix de la modification (timestamp)
1655203879