Sports
Romain Grosjean Angers PETA with 'Flippant' Comments After Killing Bird During Indy 500 Testing
AI Summary
French racing driver Romain Grosjean has sparked outrage from animal rights group PETA after making 'flippant' comments about killing a bird during Indianapolis 500 testing. Grosjean described the incident in graphic terms, prompting PETA to accuse him of lacking empathy.
The Incident
French racing driver Romain Grosjean has angered animal rights group PETA for “flippant” comments after hitting a bird while testing for next month’s Indianapolis 500.
Grosjean's Comments
The driver, who survived a fireball crash during the 2020 Formula One Bahrain GP, described the bird strike at around 230 mph in graphic terms this week.
- “I still have blood on my race suit, there were pieces of the bird on the rollbar. I couldn’t see where I was going any more, there’s plenty on the aero screen,” he said.
- “The helmet stinks, the seat stinks. I didn’t get any chicken for lunch; I just walked past it.”
PETA's Response
Mimi Bekhechi, the senior vice-president for PETA UK and Europe, accused the 40-year-old of lacking empathy.
- “Birds have feelings, apparently more than Grosjean does, considering that he seemed more concerned with his car, helmet, and suit – all replaceable – than the smash-up of this unsuspecting bird,” Bekhechi said in a statement.
Previous Incidents
It’s not the first time Grosjean has struck an animal on a racetrack. In 2018 during practice for Formula One’s Canadian Grand Prix, a groundhog got on the course as Grosjean drove through the 13th turn.
The Future
The Indianapolis 500 is on 24 May. Grosjean drives for the Dale Coyne Racing team.