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Verstappen risk prosecution over speed limit breach

 

F1 world champion Max Verstappen ‘could be prosecuted in France’ over a video of him driving 20mph over the speed limit in

France.

Footage is circulating on social media of Red Bull driver Max Verstappen appearing to break the French speed limit whilst driving a £2.7million Aston Martin ‘hyper car’.

The two-time world champion has been enjoying some time off at the height of the Formula One season, holidaying in Sardinia with his F1 scion girlfriend Kelly Piquet last week.

But the undated video appears to show the Monaco-based driver back in his Riviera homeland as he drives at blistering pace down the A8 motorway.

Filmed by his friend Mark Cox, who posted the video to Instagram, the Dutch driver is seen maneuvering the Aston Martin Valkyrie through the motorway’s Canta-Galet tunnel on the outskirts of Nice.

The video shows the speedometer on the dash registering the car’s speed of 77mph (124km/h) – 14mph over the motorway’s speed limit of 68mph (110km/h).

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Speed restrictions in tunnels such as Canta-Galet is reduced further to 55mph (77km/h) in the region.

But the 25-year-old paid no heed to the motorway’s regulations as he cruised out of the tunnel into the Cote d’Azur sunshine one-handed, in the left lane – in contravention of the Highway Code.

Verstappen was also sporting helicopter-grade headphones, which come as standard with the Adrian Newey-designed behemoth due to the noise made by the car’s 12-cylinder engine.

Drivers are alerted to road signals and sirens by a microphone outside of the car that feeds sound through to the noise-cancelling headphones.

Wearing headphones whilst driving is prohibited in France, and Nice-Matin speculated that it wouldn’t be implausible if Verstappen were to be prosecuted for the release of the video.

Many fans have expressed their anger at the video, with some commenting that he was ‘endangering the lives of others’ with his behaviour.

Taking in the views of the Alpes-Maritimes could suggest that the driver is in a hurry to return to the track ahead of this weekend’s Dutch Grand Prix, his home race.

But despite looking a shoo-in for a third consecutive title, Verstappen has cut an at-times pessimistic figure in interviews, frequently hinting at the possibility of early retirement.

READ ALSO F1: Verstappen raises red flag over 24 races a year plan

In late April, he criticised the calendar and warned about potential burnout, saying: ‘If we keep expanding the calendar and the whole weekend is that long, at one point you question yourself, “is it worth it?”

At the midpoint in the season, Verstappen tops the drivers standings with a towering 314 points.

His closest rival is team-mate Sergio Perez, who has accrued a comparatively paltry 189.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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