The Phnom Penh Post

End of era as Dennis quits as McLaren boss

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RON Dennis confirmed on Tuesday that he has quit as boss of Formula One outfit McLaren after 35 years following shareholde­r pressure.

The 69-year-old – who helped guide the likes of Lewis Hamilton and Ayrton Senna to the world title – quit after shareholde­rs demanded at a meeting on Tuesday he step down as chairman and chief executive.

Dennis has a 25 percent stake in McLaren, while Bahrain’s Mumtalakat investment fund owns 50 percent and the remaining 25 percent is held by his long-time business partner Mansour Ojjeh, a Saudi-born Frenchman.

However, Dennis and Ojjeh fell out a while ago and that parting has come back to haunt the Englishman as Ojjeh sided with the Bahrainis.

A statement from Dennis (pictured, AFP) said he had “been required to relinquish his duties as chairman and chief executive of McLaren Technology Group (MTG). This follows a decision by the majority shareholde­rs to place him on gardening leave”.

Dennis said the other main shareholde­rs “forced through” the decision “despite the strong warnings from the rest of the management team about the potential consequenc­es of their actions on the business”.

Dennis dismissed complaints about his management style given he helped McLaren enjoy such success on the track although in recent years they have trailed their main rivals such as Mercedes and Red Bull.

According to reports, the r e l a t i o n s h i p re a c h e d breaking point when Dennis last week presented a $2 billion takeover keover offer from a Chinese inese c o ns o r t i um and that did not go down well with the shareholde­rs.

D e n n i s h a d applied to the he High Court inn London last Fri- d a y f o r a n injunction to o p r e v e n t t h e board shake-up but lost and had been on gardening leave. His loss will be keenly felt by many y in the F1 p paddock, most notably 85-y 85-year-old ringmaster Bern Bernie Ecclestone. “We don’t want to lose Ron,” Eccle Ecclestone said in Brazil on Sunday. De Dennis said in his s statement that the reasons for hi his removal held no weight. “The grounds th they have state ed are entirely sp spurious,” said t h e E n g l i s h - ma man. “My manage agement style is the same as it has always been and is one that has enabled McLaren to become an automotive and technology group that has won 20 Formula One World Championsh­ips and grown into an £850 million-a-year business.

However, Dennis – who has a 25 percent stake in McLaren – said he would not be walking away from the company entirely and would look out for the welfare of the employees.

“My first concern is to the business I have built and to its 3,500 employees,” he said.

“I will continue to use my significan­t shareholdi­ng in both companies and my seats on both boards to protect the interests of McLaren and help shape its future.”

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