F1 BOMBSHELL
Hamilton’s title hope as Red Bull face probe over spending breach
FORMULA ONE’S rulers are under pressure to crown lewis Hamilton world champion if red Bull are found guilty of breaking the spending cap during
max Verstappen’s controversial 2021 title-winning year.
In a twist that reopens the most contentious decider in the sport’s history, reports have surfaced in Italy and Germany claiming to show red Bull exceeded last year’s £114million limit.
Team principal Christian Horner denied the accusations yesterday, but mercedes counterpart
Toto Wolff called on the FIa to enforce their rules, which permit teams and drivers to be docked points. With Verstappen triumphing on the last lap of the final race in abu Dhabi to pip Hamilton (below) by eight points, the FIa’s adjudication could not be more sensitive.
speaking ahead of tomorrow’s singapore Grand Prix, Wolff said: ‘The cost cap is probably the most important evolution of regulations to keep a level playing field. It is of huge importance that these regulations are policed. The FIa, and particularly mohammed (ben sulayem, their president), have shown a pretty robust stance on enforcing all kinds of regulations. so if we are talking now about something big, he will show the same integrity and leadership that he has before.’ The FIa are due to release their findings on
Wednesday.
FORMULA One’s travelling circus came to singapore wondering if Max Verstappen could claim his second world title, only to be questioning how he won his first.
The sport that never lets intrigue sleep erupted into controversy under the floodlights yesterday after reports surfaced in europe’s press that Red Bull overspent in their quest to carry Verstappen past Lewis Hamilton to last year’s controversial title.
The budget cap was introduced in 2021 at £ 114million, once the $145m limit was converted at a set rate, to help level the plutocrats’ playing field in pursuit of sustainability and competitiveness.
Other teams were yesterday privately briefing that Red Bull have punctured the ceiling by some £10million. They deny this. The FIA are still auditing the figures for all 10 teams and are due to issue their conclusion on Wednesday.
If guilty of a minor breach — for spending less than a five per cent excess — Red Bull could face punishments ranging from a reprimand to losing points retrospectively from last year’s championship, which means Lewis Hamilton may yet be crowned world champion. If they have overspent by more than five per cent, they could be excluded from the world championship.
While Toto Wolff, the Mercedes team principal, called on the FIA president Mohammed ben sulayem to show the ‘ same integrity and leadership he has shown’ in a clear hint Red Bull should be sanctioned fearlessly if found guilty of a transgression, his opposite number Christian Horner dismissed the claims as ‘purely speculation’.
This is a nasty fight, to be sure. The two men despise each other. Mercedes are trying to play the good guy. It is not necessarily as simple as it seems and the only thing proven so far is that Formula One is a vicious, knife-fanged, slit-throat game.
Horner added: ‘We are certainly not aware of any breaches. The accounts were all submitted to the FIA way back in March, so it’s been a long process with the FIA and we are in that process as we speak. We are confident in our submission. There are always going to be rumours. I’ve heard of major breaches, but I’m certainly not aware of that.’
Wolff rejoined: ‘It’s funny that Christian says that, because it’s been weeks and months they’re being investigated, so maybe he doesn’t speak to his chief financial officer.
‘All of us have been investigated diligently. As far as we understand, there’s a team in minor breach and another team that is fundamentally, massively over and that is being still looked at. That’s an open secret in the paddock.’ Aston Martin are the other team allegedly in breach.
Red Bull, it is understood, will argue that when they submitted their accounts to the FIA they were more than £3m below the limit and that the goalposts have been moved — and that is a case of what to count in the permitted spend, and what not to.
Unusually, FIA president Ben sulayem is not in singapore but he has been in contact with the teams by phone for emergency talks. One inconvenience for him is his chief of staff is shaila-Ann Rao, who as recently as last year was Wolff’s personal lawyer.
Caught in the middle of this mess is Verstappen, 25 yesterday, and hunting for what he thought would not only be a processional second title but a controversyfree one. He leads by 116 points from Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and has an outside chance of wrapping up the championship here with five rounds remaining.
He has been totally dominant and deserves the second title, no matter what anyone might claim about the first. At least until it is claimed Red Bull are over-budget this year, too.
Keep tuned in.