Loading
He said McLaren was still working out what went wrong, but accepted responsibility for his part in the mistake.
โIโm very sorry for everyone that came out to support me. Itโs obviously not the way I wanted to start the year either,โ Piastri said.
โI think last year, whilst the result wasnโt what I wanted, I felt like there was a lot of positives from the weekend. This year obviously the disappointment is even greater.โ
Immediately after the accident McLaren chief executive Zak Brown could not explain it.
โWeโve not seen anything on the data. He [Piastri] didnโt say anything on the radio. Weโll do a post-mortem after the race,โ said Brown.
โIโm sure he [Piastri] will be sore about that one for a while, but these race car drivers know how to recover quickly. Not the way he wanted to get started, but heโll be back.โ
Piastriโs drama started when he left the pits and was shifting up through the gears.
Piastri and teammate Lando Norris during the driversโ parade. Credit: Getty Images
He felt whatโs called a โtorque spikeโ, according to former F1 racer Antony Davidson on Sky Sports, and the engine power kicking in through cold tyres conspired against him.
โHis mind was focused on the battery [energy],โ Davidson said, saying it was combination of driver and mechanical error that speared him into the wall.
The incident is another chapter in a history of hard luck stories for Australian drivers at Albert Park, where no Australian has finished on the podium.
Daniel Ricciardo was denied a podium finish in 2014 by a disqualification after the race.
Piastri spun out of his home grand prix while in contention during last yearโs race, and rallied to finish 9th.
Loading
The race itself claimed two more casualties when Red Bull driver Isack Hadjar and Cadillacโs Valteri Bottas bowed out.
Aston Martinโs Fernando Alonso appeared to have retired on the 15th lap but later rejoined the race.
MORE TO COME