SINGAPORE (AP) — Sergio Pérez said Thursday he received a personal apology from Red Bull boss Helmut Marko over comments Marko made suggesting his heritage was to blame for inconsistent results on the track.

In comments last week on ServusTV, an Austrian broadcaster that is part of the Red Bull group, Marko described Pérez as “South American” and indicated that could explain a lack of focus or inconsistency. Pérez is from Mexico, which is in North America.

Marko issued a public apology Friday via ServusTV for what he called his “offensive remark” and said he had been wrong to link Pérez's results to his cultural heritage. As Red Bull's motorsport adviser, 80-year-old former F1 driver Marko is an influential presence at Red Bull and its second team, AlphaTauri.

“I got an apology from him, a direct apology, which to me was the most important one,” Pérez told British broadcaster Sky Sports ahead of the Singapore Grand Prix this weekend. “I know him, and I know that he doesn’t mean it that way as well. That to me is what matters. When you have a personal relationship with someone, I think, it’s a feeling that you’ve got to have and to me that’s the most important one.”

Pérez added he now wanted to focus on competing. He is second in the driver's standings behind Red Bull teammate Max Verstappen.

Seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton, who has worked extensively on in auto racing, told Sky Sports the comments by Marko were “completely unacceptable” and indicated that he did not consider an apology to be enough.

“I think it just highlights, firstly, the ," said Hamilton, who is the only Black driver in F1. "There are a lot of people in the background that really are trying to combat these sorts of things but it’s hard to maneuver if there are people in the top that have those sort of mindsets, that just stop us from progressing."

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