Charles Leclerc's torrid start to the new Formula One season was dealt a further blow on Wednesday when it was confirmed he will serve a grid penalty at this weekend's Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.
Leclerc retired from F1’s season-opening race in Bahrain while running in third place after his Ferrari engine expired in the latter stages.
And his Ferrari team has revealed prior to Sunday's round in Jeddah that they will have to fit a new electronics control unit - the Monegasque's third already this season - resulting in a 10-place grid drop.
Leclerc could also incur further grid penalties if more replacement engine parts are required.
“On Sunday in Bahrain, we had two different issues,” said Frederic Vasseur, the Ferrari team principal.
“The first one was on the Sunday morning, when we did the fire-up, and the second one was in the race. Unfortunately, it was two times the control unit, the ECU.
“It's something that we never experienced in the past. I hope now it's under control, but we have a deep analysis on this.
“Unfortunately, we'll have to take the penalty in Jeddah, because we have only a pool of two control units for the season.”
Leclerc's championship challenge last year faded away through a litany of mechanical and strategic mistakes. He finished the season 146 points behind Red Bull's Max Verstappen.
His retirement at the opener in Bahrain already leaves him 25 points adrift of Verstappen, who romped to an ominous victory.