Australian Formula 1 driver Daniel Ricciardo has hailed the sport’s governing body over “a change in mindset” to safety.
The McLaren driver’s comments follow last weekend’s frustrating Belgian Grand Prix, at which no racing took place as the grid instead completed two laps behind a safety car.
No overtaking is allowed when a safety car is on the track and, at the Belgian Grand Prix, half points were awarded.
READ MORE: Out-of-contract Bulldogs half Lachlan Lewis to get whacked with big fine
Ricciardo, competing in his 200th Formula 1 grand prix, collected six points because he had finished fourth in qualifying.
The Western Australian has since acknowledged the shift in attitude toward safety, which stands in stark contract to the hopeless efforts to improve on-track welfare in the early days of the world championship.
“There’s definitely a change in mindset to it all,” Ricciardo said.
“Obviously I wasn’t around in that era, but it was kind of normal to have fatalities and all that in the sport.
“I’m sure it was very hard to accept, but maybe because it was more regular it was somewhat expected.
“Now, knowing what we know, or at least what I know, would I have raced in the 60s?
“With the knowledge I have now, no.
“At the end of the day, it’s a sport, so we like the risk, but if you’re talking a matter of life and death, I don’t think that’s worth anything.”
READ MORE: Shardul Thakur hits fastest Test 50 ever in England
The world championship recorded 11 deaths in the 1950s, the first decade of the competition, before the 1960s resulted in eight deaths and the 1970s nine.
A shockwave was sent through the Formula 1 world when Ricciardo’s McLaren teammate, young Briton Lando Norris, crashed his car during the Belgian Grand Prix qualifying.
READ MORE: Aussie billionaire’s ‘unexpected’ cash bonus for medal-winning Olympians
Norris lost control of his McLaren in soaking-wet conditions as he tried to navigate the uphill sweep of the fast Eau Rouge corner.
Miraculously, he emerged unscathed and was approved to race in Belgium.
“You look at Lando’s crash on Saturday and I think he proved you can still have a big one,” Ricciardo said.
“And those conditions at the time, they were okay, well, on the edge, but obviously okay for us to have a green light.
“So I think we are still competing in a dangerous sport and playing on the edge of danger, but I think there’s kind of danger and being unsafe and then there’s the extreme, of course, with unnecessarily having people heli-aired out of here.”
For a daily dose of the best of the breaking news and exclusive content from Wide World of Sports, subscribe to our newsletter by clicking here!