F1 ICON JOHNNY HERBERT SENT DEATH THREATS AFTER ROLE IN CONTROVERSIAL FERNANDO ALONSO PENALTY

Johnny Herbert has revealed a torrent of abuse and death threats sent his way by trolls furious over a penalty given to Fernando Alonso.

Herbert was on the stewarding team at last month's Australian Grand Prix which found Alonso guilty of contributing to George Russell's crash. They did not make contact, but the Spaniard braked much earlier than usual before a corner which caused the Briton to take evasive action and lose control of his Mercedes.

Former F1 driver and Sky Sports pundit Herbert was on that stewarding panel which handed the Aston Martin driver a 20-second penalty after the chequered flag. And trolls picked up on a previous run-in the 59-year-old had with Alonso as they attacked him on social media.

Herbert told Fastest Payout Online Casino: "I was a steward at the Melbourne GP and the repercussions were awful. I got a torrent of death threats via social media. I am lucky I have got broad shoulders. I find it pathetic that I was the one thrown under the bus.

"It goes back to Bahrain two years ago, I think. Some years before when he was with McLaren, Alonso had been on the radio slagging off the engine almost every race saying it was like a GP2 engine. He was really vocal. I was working for Sky and said if Alonso didn't like it he should leave the team. I didn't say retire.

"Then he came up to me live on air in Bahrain and had a dig at me saying he was a world champion and would not retire and become a commentator because you were not a world champion. The fans then used that as a weapon against me after Australia.

"There were messages with dagger emojis at the bottom of the screen; people saying we know where you live, we will come for you. Most of them were Spanish. They should have understood because it was so clear how and the decision was arrived at in the statement that was put out. People were also saying because I had never been a world champion I was not qualified to have a say in it."

Herbert insists, though, that he will continue to work as a steward when invited to by the FIA despite the backlash. And the three-time F1 Grand Prix winner thinks social media companies should be doing more to stop such behaviour.

He added: "It has not put me off stewarding. It’s all part and parcel of it unfortunately. I was the drivers' steward in Melbourne so when it is a driving steward he is the one who gets the hard time. I accept it. It is not an issue.

"The threats lasted for two weeks and still are coming. It is part of the social media world where everyone has an opinion but don't have the facts to back it up. It happens too much now. Athletes, officials in many sports get bombarded with death threats. And many do suffer a lot because of it. The filth and abuse happens in all walks of life even to ordinary people.

"Those platforms should be on top of it. But they are not. They allow it to happen. I don't understand why. They should take action. But they say they cannot find a way of stopping it. I don't believe that.

"I can laugh about it. We are lucky that it doesn’t affect us. But it does hurt many people. When it does happen, action should be taken. Something has to be done about it. But I never hear anything being done.

"The comments about knowing where I lived, the daggers and the threats that they were going to hurt me - I don't get the mentality of people who do that. They are not true F1 fans and I am sure Fernando would be embarrassed if he knew that his fans were doing that."

2024-04-23T10:00:34Z dg43tfdfdgfd