SEPANG, Malaysia, 19 March 2006 — Michael Schumacher topped the time sheets in third practice for the Malaysian Grand Prix yesterday, but landed a 10-place penalty on the grid after Ferrari confirmed they were changing his car’s engine.
“We decided to change the engine,” a team spokesman said. “We found something that could have caused a problem in the race tomorrow and thought it was better to be safe than sorry.” The penalty is a major blow to the 37-year-old seven-time world champion, who was hoping to build on his second place finish behind world champion Fernando Alonso in last week’s season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix.
The penalty also put paid to his chances of claiming a 66th career pole position and surpassing Ayrton Senna’s record in qualifying later.
Schumacher’s Brazilian teammate Felipe Massa has already had a 10-place penalty imposed after having his engine changed, as has Red Bull’s David Coulthard whose car is also powered by a Ferrari engine.
Race officials later confirmed that Schumacher’s former Ferrari teammate, Rubens Barrichello, had also had the engine in his Honda changed after practice.
Renault’s Giancarlo Fisichella and Jacques Villeneuve of BMW will also have new engines but will not be penalized as they failed to finish last week’s race. The requirement for engines to last for two races was introduced last season as a cost-cutting measure.
Schumacher clocked one minute, 34.126 seconds on another hot and humid practice session at the Sepang circuit, edging Spain’s Alonso by 0.054 seconds.
Alonso was just quicker than his teammate Fischella’s late quick lap, with Jenson Button fourth fastest.
Christian Klien’s Red Bull ended up fifth despite a late spin, ahead of McLaren’s Kimi Raikkonen. The top six drivers were separated by just 0.728 seconds.
Massa was one of four drivers to spin off in the yesterday’s session.
