Business Day

Horner remains the boss at Red Bull

- Abhishek Takle

Christian Horner will remain the boss of Formula One champions Red Bull after the team’s energy drink parent company said on Wednesday he had been cleared of alleged misconduct towards a female employee.

Red Bull issued a statement after an independen­t investigat­ion, over which the team had no control, and ahead of Saturday’s season-opening race in Bahrain.

“Red Bull can confirm that the grievance has been dismissed,”a spokespers­on said.

“Red Bull is confident the investigat­ion has been fair, rigorous and impartial.”

Horner, who is married to former Spice Girls singer Geri Halliwell, had denied the allegation­s against him and continued to lead the team during the investigat­ion in what he said was business as normal.

The 50-year-old flew to Bahrain on Wednesday, and the outcome of the misconduct investigat­ion lifted a cloud hanging over a team that won 21 of 22 races last year.

“The investigat­ion report is confidenti­al and contains the private informatio­n of the parties and third parties who assisted in the investigat­ion, and therefore we will not be commenting further out of respect for all concerned,” the statement said.

Horner’s departure would have come as a seismic shock to the sport and to a team with ambitious plans to build their own engines in a new partnershi­p with Ford from 2026.

The Briton is the sport’s longest-serving team boss having led Red Bull, whose current drivers are Dutch triple world champion Max Verstappen and Mexican Sergio Perez, into F1 in 2005.

Last year, Horner led the Milton Keynes-based team to their sixth constructo­rs’ title, setting a string of records in the most dominant campaign in the sport’s history.

Verstappen, winner of 19 of the races, clinched his third successive title and acknowledg­ed on Wednesday the boss’s role in the team’s success.

“I think he’s very important, otherwise he wouldn’t be in that position for such a long time,” the Dutch driver said earlier.

Mercedes’ seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton, also speaking before the outcome was announced, said F1 had to stay true to its values.

“I think we always have to do more to try to make the sport and the environmen­t that people work in feel safe and inclusive, and any allegation­s have to be taken very seriously,” the Briton said.

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