H Metro

F1 teams deny complainin­g to FIA about the Wolffs

- Reuters.

FORMULA ONE teams on Wednesday denied complainin­g to the governing body about Mercedes principal Toto Wolff and his wife Susie, who runs the sport’s all-female F1 Academy series.

The paddock’s power couple were in the spotlight after the FIA issued a surprise statement on Tuesday announcing its compliance department was looking into media speculatio­n about a potential conflict of interest.

According to a report in Business F1 magazine, some team principals had raised concerns about possible leaks of informatio­n from private meetings.

Nine of the 10 teams, all except Mercedes who issued their reaction on Tuesday, published almost identical statements via social media that effectivel­y undermined the premise of the investigat­ion.

“We can confirm that we have not made any complaint to the FIA regarding the allegation of informatio­n of a confidenti­al nature being passed between an F1 Team Principal and a member of FOM staff,” they said.

“We are pleased and proud to support F1 Academy and its managing director through our commitment to sponsor an entrant in our liveries from next season.”

The F1 Academy aims to help women climb the motorsport ladder to Formula One and is supporting seven grands prix next season.

All 10 teams each nominate a driver and will have their livery on a car.

Susie Wolff, a former racer who reports to Formula One chief executive Stefano Domenicali and is one of the most senior women in motorsport, issued her own statement on Tuesday saying she felt “deeply insulted” to have her integrity questioned. She spoke also of “intimidato­ry and misogynist­ic behaviour” that was “focused on my marital status rather than my abilities”.

Her wording acquired particular resonance in the light of FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem being embroiled in a controvers­y last January over decades-old sexist comments attributed to him that appeared on an old personal website.

Mercedes also rejected allegation­s against Toto that it said “wrongly impinges on the integrity and compliance of our team principal.”

Liberty Media-owned Formula One meanwhile expressed “complete confidence that the allegation­s are wrong”.

Red Bull boss Christian Horner said his dominant team had a big rivalry on track with championsh­ip runners-up Mercedes but had not raised any official complaint against Susie, Toto or Mercedes to the FIA.

Toto Wolff and Horner have had a fierce, and sometimes almost theatrical, rivalry over the years fuelled by the popular Netflix docu-series ‘Drive to Survive’. Formula One and the FIA have also been at loggerhead­s repeatedly since Ben Sulayem took the helm at the end of 2021, with the possible addition of US-based Andretti as an 11th team the latest sticking point.

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