F1 team principals a disappearing breed

Flavio Briatore and his wife Elisabetta Gregoraci pose as they leave a hotel in central Rome to attend the wedding ceremony of F1 chief Bernie Ecclestone's daughter, Petra Ecclestone, at the Odescalschi Castle in Bracciano, near Rome, on August 27, 2011. AFP PHOTO / Tiziana Fabi / AFP / TIZIANA FABI

Flavio Briatore and his wife Elisabetta Gregoraci pose as they leave a hotel in central Rome to attend the wedding ceremony of F1 chief Bernie Ecclestone's daughter, Petra Ecclestone, at the Odescalschi Castle in Bracciano, near Rome, on August 27, 2011. AFP PHOTO / Tiziana Fabi / AFP / TIZIANA FABI

Published Feb 5, 2016

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London, England - Formula One has lost another of its principals.

Renault, returning as a constructor after buying back the team it sold in 2009, this week followed McLaren and reigning world champions Mercedes in doing away with the once exalted position of team principal.

Frederic Vasseur will be racing director instead, reporting to Renault Sport managing director Cyril Abiteboul under president Jerome Stoll - with company chief executive Carlos Ghosn above all.

It’s very different to last time, when Renault had Flavio Briatore - a flamboyant multi-millionaire who exercised complete control while never straying far from the celebrity gossip pages - as F1 team principal.

A decade or two ago, the principals were the main men in the paddock 'Piranha Club', big egos battling for supremacy and sometimes, when they could agree with the governing body, deciding the future of the sport.

Briatore, who remains close to Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone, won world titles with Benetton and Renault but was ousted after a Singapore race-fixing scandal that led to banishment from the paddock and the sale of the team.

Renault re-acquired it in December 2015 but Abiteboul, himself a former principal of the now-defunct Caterham team, said that while Formula One teams could not be run by committee, a new type of management was needed.

“In Flavio Briatore, we had a fantastic manager, a fantastic ambassador, but he was to a certain degree taking too much space,” he said.

“He was too big a personality and also had the expectation to have complete freedom, no sort of accountability.”

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For Renault, the talk now is of synergies and building the brand, the racing operations helping to sell road cars with the team part of a bigger and more engaged corporate whole.

Only two of the 11 teams now have a designated principal who is also the owner or founder, and both are privately-owned - Williams and Force India. The rest of those still bearing the job title are accountable to others.

Mercedes dispensed with a formal principal in 2013 when Ross Brawn, a commanding presence who led his own Brawn GP team to both titles in 2009 and then sold it to Mercedes at the end of that year, left.

Mercedes motorsport director Toto Wolff took charge of the commercial side while Paddy Lowe became responsible for the technical operation and former champion Niki Lauda was made non-executive chairman.

“The position of team principal is a thing of the past,” Wolff declared then. “It’s like any other major corporation: there is not that one guy on the board who is making all the decisions - it is divided by competency.”

McLaren's last team principal was Martin Whitmarsh, who took over from Ron Dennis and was ousted in 2014.

The duties are now shared by racing director Eric Boullier and newly-appointed chief executive Jost Capito, who reports to overall head Dennis, with the team part of a greater group.

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Gerard Lopez, principal of Lotus F1 in 2015 and former owner, who is now a minority shareholder in the Renault Sport team following December's takeover, agreed the title was outmoded.

“I'm not going to say it's something from the past but Formula One is a bit different now,” he said. “You need different hats on different people to do different things.

“I remember when I started watching Formula One - a team principal would manage, make the calls, strategise, bring the sponsors, hire the drivers and so on. There are five different people doing that in a modern team today.”

The big decisions now often involve executives way above those entrusted to run the team at Grand Prix weekends, leaders such as Ghosn.

Principals remain at the helm at Ferrari and Red Bull but both Maurizio Arrivabene and Christian Horner respectively report to president Sergio Marchionne and billionaire owner Dietrich Mateschitz.

Toro Rosso is also owned by Red Bull while Sauber principal Monisha Kaltenborn, the first woman to occupy the position, was appointed by founder and majority shareholder Peter Sauber.

American Gene Haas, a Nascar team co-owner whose Ferrari-powered Formula One outfit is the season's newcomer, has appointed Austrian Guenther Steiner as principal but nobody doubts who has the final say.

Force India co-owner Vijay Mallya is also the principal of his team but the embattled liquor baron does not attend all the races and leaves much of the day-to-day running to his trusted deputy Bob Fernley.

Even privately-owned Manor Racing, the smallest team on the starting grid, has yet to appoint a principal after the departure of founder John Booth at the end of 2015.

They offered it last year to Austria's now-retired F1 racer Alex Wurz. He turned it down.

Reuters

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