Sunday afternoon in Baku, Azerbaijan, was shaping up to be a decent day at the office for the Red Bull Formula One team. Its two drivers were sitting in fourth and fifth places midway through the race and set to take home a solid points haul.

That is, until they did the one thing that teammates are absolutely never, under no circumstance supposed to do in Formula One. They crashed into each other.

“It’s a pretty crappy situation,” said Red Bull driver Daniel Ricciardo, who drove into the back of Max Verstappen’s car. “We want to race. We are thankful that the team let us race. This is the worst scenario, so that’s the crappy part of it.”

Teammates in all sports let each other down all the time. But no one takes that crime more seriously than Formula One. Mess up in other sports and you might get benched. For graver offenses, from missing a curfew to losing your playbook, you might even get fined.

But crash one of your team’s $15 million cars into another of its $15 million cars? Red Bull is punishing that with the ultimate ignominy: a public shaming.