Felipe Massa can count on the support of former
Ferrari team boss
Jean Todt in his legal battle for the 2008 world title. Todt, who later became president of the
FIA, does not want to get too deep into the case but agrees with Massa on one crucial point.
Todt backs Massa in legal battle
Massa has launched legal proceedings because he disagrees with the conduct of the 2008
Formula 1 season. In it, he lost the world title to
Lewis Hamilton at the very last moment. The case centres on Crashgate, in which
Nelson Piquet Jr. was instructed by Renault boss Flavio Briatore to deliberately crash Fernando Alonso to win the
Singapore Grand Prix.
Statements by former
F1 boss
Bernie Ecclestone prompted Massa to take legal action after 15 years. The 93-year-old Briton, who now claims to have no memory of the statements, claimed that everyone knew about the cheating, right up to the highest level of the organisation.
Todt fully agrees with Massa that the result of the Singapore GP should have been declared invalid. "I won't go into the controversy. For him, it was very difficult psychologically. Maybe we could have been stricter when the story came out. There is no doubt that the Singapore Grand Prix was rigged and should have been scrapped," Todt said to La Stampa.