The Guardian (USA)

F1 teams increasing­ly dissatisfi­ed with FIA president after delays at Italian GP

- Giles Richards

Senior figures in motor racing have expressed a widespread sense of fatigue and dissatisfa­ction among Formula One teams with the sport’s governing body, the FIA.

What is seen as an increasing­ly fraught relationsh­ip between the teams and the FIA was exacerbate­d further at last weekend’s Italian Grand Prix, while the organisati­on’s president Mohammed bin Sulayem has been criticised for a failure of leadership.

F1 is enjoying a huge surge in popularity at present but many within the sport are concerned that the FIA, which enforces its regulation­s, is proving to be more of hindrance than help to this growth.

At Monza last weekend, with a swathe of grid penalties applied across the field, the governing body was only able to provide a grid for Sunday’s race three and a half hours after qualifying had concluded, a period inexplicab­le to fans. Indicative of a difficult relationsh­ip with F1 – the commercial rights holder – the FIA claimed the hold-up was due to F1 not releasing timing data, which was vigorously refuted by F1.

The race itself ended behind the safety car, which generated disapprova­l from team principals including Christian Horner and Mattia Binotto of Red Bull and Ferrari, while Haas’s Guenther Steiner bluntly stated: “It wasn’t handled how it should’ve been.” However, the Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff pointedly noted that the FIA had followed their regulation­s correctly.

Ben Sulaymen took over as president in December last year and his leadership has come under criticism ever since. There was exasperati­on when the Monaco GP was not started in the rain and disappoint­ment when the FIA failed to ban Russian drivers from competing after the invasion of

Ukraine. The report into the controvers­ial end to the Abu Dhabi GP last year was felt by many to be unsatisfac­tory and it is claimed Ben Sulaymen has opposed the increase in the number of sprint races as a way of extracting more money from F1, an accusation he has denied.

Recently it is believed the president has demanded the FIA be afforded a motorhome of equivalent size to that used by the teams. Sources have suggested this was indicative of concern that Ben Sulayem gave more import to appearing on the podium and being seen at races than managing his organisati­on. Equally, teams had been left confused by what he was trying to do and drivers by a failure to make regulation­s clear, giving a sense there was no coherent strategy coming from the president.

The FIA did employ its rules around the safety car absolutely to the letter in Italy, however, and did so after what it said had been full and open discussion­s with the teams as to how the safety car should be used in the wake of Abu Dhabi, agreeing that the rules should be followed in exactly the same way, regardless of when or at what race.

The organisati­on insisted that it remained in a good working relationsh­ip with the F1 teams and that they were in every position to bring up any grievances.

“We are running the sport in a collaborat­ive way, as we have always done,” a spokespers­on said. “Our processes involve all the teams at all levels, any issues teams want to bring up can be dealt with through the sporting and technical advisory committees, the F1 Commission and ultimately the World Motor Sport Council to make any changes agreed upon.”

 ?? ?? The FIA president, Mohammed bin Sulayem, presents Carlos Sainz with the British GP trophy at Silverston­e. Photograph: Matt Dunham/AP
The FIA president, Mohammed bin Sulayem, presents Carlos Sainz with the British GP trophy at Silverston­e. Photograph: Matt Dunham/AP
 ?? Darron Cummings/AP ?? Haas team principal Guenther Steiner said the Italian Grand Prix was ‘not handled how it should have been’. Photograph:
Darron Cummings/AP Haas team principal Guenther Steiner said the Italian Grand Prix was ‘not handled how it should have been’. Photograph:

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