
Formula E CEO says Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton wouldn't instantly win races as SunSport goes behind the scenes
JEFF DODDS says Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton would struggle to win races in Formula E right away.
Dodds is the CEO of the radical motor sport series paving the way for the future, with cars all powered by electricity.
Advertisement
4
This season's FE cars are now accelerating to 100 kilometres in 1.8 seconds, which is 30 per cent faster than F1 cars
4
Formula E CEO Jeff Dodds says within five-years FE cars will be beating F1 cars around Monaco
4
Four-time F1 world champion Max Verstappen could one day dip his toes in Formula E
4
Germany's Maximilian Gunther won in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia this season
SunSport's F1 reporter Isabelle Barker went behind-the-scenes at the double-header in Tokyo this weekend to see what the series is all about.
In an exclusive interview with SunSport, Dodds says 'never say never' to four-time world F1 champion Verstappen one day burning rubber in an electric car.
When asked if Hamilton or Verstappen would have instant success in the series, he said: 'I'm almost sure they wouldn't because driving the cars are different.
'It isn't a natural translation from driving a petrol car, a combustion car, to driving an electric car.
Advertisement
READ MORE IN SPORT
'We have to regenerate our battery, so we're braking and slowing to put power back into the battery. They accelerate differently, the gearing is different.'
Dodds is good pals with Red Bull driver Verstappen,
Dodds added: 'I know Max, I'm a massive fan of Max. He's a generational talent.
Advertisement
Most read in Motorsport
BEST ONLINE CASINOS - TOP SITES IN THE UK
"If Max came across and stuck at it for a few years, I think there's a very good chance he'd be the best Formula E driver ever.
'But he wouldn't show up and be the best Formula E driver ever instantly.
Sergio Aguero takes up new sport aged 36 and Man City legend will compete against Brooklyn Beckham
'There's too many of the most talented drivers in the world that have been racing these cars for years.
Advertisement
'Max and I have spoken a few times. I had a bet on Max last year, which was pretty well publicised that he would win the title.
'It came through but he and I decided to give the money in equal parts to his charity.
'Max just loves to race, anything with an engine, motor or even sim racing.
'He loves to race, he loves to win, he's a generational talent. He's being paid an awful lot of money to race in F1.
Advertisement
"He's unlikely to give up his chance at becoming an eight time world champion and that money simply to go and try something else.
'The only thing I would say with Max is, never say never because he doesn't follow the rules.
'If anyone was going to say, 'hey, screw this, I just want to go and try something else' it could be Max. He's very much his own man.'
HORSE-POWER
Ex F1 CEO Bernie Ecclestone has been heavily critical of FE and once described the cars as "lawnmowers".
Advertisement
This season's cars are now accelerating to 100 kilometres in 1.8 seconds, which is 30 per cent faster than F1 cars.
The series obviously has sustainability and location on its side with races held in some of the world's most breathtaking cities from Mexico City to Tokyo, London, Monaco and more.
For a UK motor sport fan the cost of a FE weekend is enough to lure you in, with a grandstand pass for a double-header weekend in Berlin at just £104, for example.
Or you can bag a one day grandstand ticket with a hotel included from £100 - £124 depending on the Saturday or Sunday race day.
Advertisement
To put that into perspective with F1, a grandstand weekend ticket at
CAN HEAR A PIN DROP
The elephant in the room though and of the greatest traits that sets F1 apart from other sports is the ear-piercing sounds of V12 and V10 engines.
Which makes the sound, or lack thereof in electric cars a hot topic in FE and something die-hard motor sport fans continue to scoff at.
But the old-school, predominantly male fan-base is not the market which FE is targeting, with half of the fan base being women.
Advertisement
The sound is similar to a high-pitched whirring noise and there are benefits to the quieter atmosphere.
Races are able to take place sometimes smack bang in the middle of the world's best cities.
You can also hear every crunch and clank when the cars collide, which makes crashes all the more dramatic.
And there have been plenty of crashes at that, just not fiery ones due to the lack of fuel.
Advertisement
Also the prime locations mean for a race like Tokyo you can hop on the subway and travel just a few stops to the Big Sight centre where the race is held.
F1 fans may be haunted with flashbacks to sitting in hours of traffic en route to Silverstone or Spa in the peeing down rain for the Belgian Grand Prix.
NEW AUDIENCE
Dodds said: 'We have about 400 million fans around the world. Half of them male, half of them female.
"That's very unusual for motor sport, and half of them are under the age of 40.
Advertisement
'The reason we attract a slightly different audience is because we don't bring all of that tradition and history that comes with maybe F1 or Indy car.
'The cars are ridiculously fast. The quality of racing is very high impact, very wheel-to-wheel.
'It's all thrills, all spills. There's an enormous amount of activity you can go and do, music concerts.
'It's family day out but the quality of racing that underpins it is absolutely top class.
Advertisement
'You can hear each other speak. You don't get drowned out or burst your eardrums."
GREEN FLAG
One thing that makes you sit up and take note is that the entire FE paddock, including all the teams, for the whole season is less than the emissions for one whole F1 team for a season.
There are typically no pit stops, because the drivers don't change tyres, for the sake of sustainability.
The tyres are are all-weather for sustainability reasons so need to perform on sizzling hot tracks like Jakarta as well as street tracks and in the rain.
Advertisement
Race teams only bring with them two sets for a single header while F1 teams can take around 12-13 different sets for a weekend.
Dodds added: "Everything we do is zero emission. So not only do you get to watch an amazing race, you get to look in the mirror and feel good about it.'
STAR STUDDED LINE UP
Currently the most well known name in the series is former F1 driver Nyck de Vries who competed for Williams and Alpha Tauri.
But the series has attracted the likes of Hamilton's former Mercedes teammate turned rival Nico Rosberg,
Advertisement
Dodds added: 'I'm not sure if Lewis Hamilton retires and then decides he wants to come and do a couple of seasons in Formula E.
'It might bring Lewis Hamilton fans to come and have a look. I don't think it's transformative for our sport.'
There is one more season of the current car but next year the series' new car will be launched which is set to have twice the power.
Dodds added: 'I'm very confident that within five years, around Monaco, our cars will be beating F1 cars.
Advertisement
'That might not translate immediately to more popularity because I don't think you can just rewrite history.
'You can't erase, and neither should we, Ayrton Senna, Michael Schumacher, Alain Prost and Emerson Fittipaldi.
"You can't erase McLaren and Mercedes' history in F1, there's a legacy that comes with that and so it should, but our technology will surpass it, there's no question about it.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


RTÉ News
2 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Airbus can hit delivery goal despite delays, CEO says
Airbus is "cautiously hopeful" that it can meet a 2025 target of 820 deliveries despite bottlenecks that have left nearly 40 completed airframes parked at its factories waiting for engines, the CEO of its core planemaking business said. While overall supply chains have "improved significantly," bottlenecks remain in the supply of CFM engines for single-aisles and cabin interiors for wide-body jets, with lavatories joining the list of delays, Christian Scherer said. "We haven't changed our (delivery) guidance. I caution you not to extrapolate too much from monthly numbers," Scherer told reporters, following a recent spate of monthly declines in deliveries compared to last year. "There is a gradual increase in output of engines that we get from CFM. The reason we have not changed our outlook for the year is because we believe that between now and the end of the year we will get the engines," he said. "So it is a gradual increase - a little behind the curve at the we are cautiously hopeful that it can be done," he added. Co-owned by GE Aerospace and France's Safran, CFM supplies more than half of the engines used on the best-selling Airbus A320neo family, competing with alternative engines from Pratt & Whitney. CFM also exclusively supplies the Boeing 737 MAX with a different engine variant. "We have nearly 40 gliders parked across our system," Scherer said, using the planemaker's nickname for planes that are otherwise complete but unable to be delivered to airlines as they wait for their engines, which are sold separately. CFM could not immediately be reached for comment. Its top executives have said it has seen improvements in its own supply chain and it is poised to recover from a slow start to the year. On underlying jet production, a barometer for supply chains, Scherer said Airbus was on its way towards a goal of assembling 75 A320neo-family jets a month in 2027. Most analysts remain cautious about when the already delayed goal can be reached. "On single-aisle (A320neo-family) we are on track to do that (75 a month) and we are just cruising past 60 (a month). We are trending in the right direction into the 60s," Scherer said. Airbus rarely discusses detailed monthly production goals in public, having dropped an interim target of 65 a month in 2023. Reuters reported in January that Airbus was closing in on production of 60 jets a month, around pre-Covid levels. Scherer was speaking during briefings on Airbus market forecasts and products ahead of the Paris Airshow next week.


The Irish Sun
2 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Abandoned F1 track lies overgrown and covered in rubbish 13 years after last race as £255m of debt is racked up
FORMULA ONE will have two Grand Prix events in Spain next year following the announcement of the 2026 calendar. The last time the country did this was between 2008 and 2012. 8 Fernando Alonso was the last winner of a race at the Valencia Street Circuit Credit: Getty Images - Getty 8 The track hosted five Grand Prix between 2008 and 2012 but ate up huge running costs Credit: Action Images - Reuters 8 It has now laid abandoned for 13 years with rubbish seen across the track 8 Weeds are now seen growing through the kerbs 8 Running costs totalled up to a staggering £255m in debts 8 The once picturesque harbour-view track still holds some scars of its past 8 Old sponsors and paint markings can be seen on the site The first was in Located near the port of Valencia, the F1 track record at the 3.4-mile circuit was set by Timo Glock in 2009 with a time of 1:38.683, though However, the track was far from popular with drivers for its mundane layout and eventually a lack of interest and funding saw F1 move away. The deal to bring it to F1 had allegedly been part of an election promise between former F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone and Valmor Sport group, led by former motorcycle racer Jorge "Aspar" Martínez and READ MORE IN F1 But when Valmor went bankrupt through taking care of all the costs involved in running the races, the tracks seven-year deal was cut down to five and dug a financial hole worth £255million in debt. An estimated £87m is said to have been paid to Ecclestone, while there were also considerable costs for the construction of the circuit, television broadcasting and various invoices related to the organisation. All told, the Generalitat Valenciana had to fork out a bill of more than £85m to cover the losses. And the circuit itself has been left in a state of disrepair after being closed in 2013. Most read in Motorsport BEST ONLINE CASINOS - TOP SITES IN THE UK Some of it was converted back to walkways for the public. But the majority of the track looks like something out of an urban jungle. One of F1's most recognisable voices reveals Leclerc and Hamilton moments that will live with him forever Weeds have overtaken the slip roads on the site, rust has taken root on old safety barriers, and access tunnels have been flooded. Buildings on the site look every hour of their age, with a repurposed 19th-century warehouse showing signs of needing a major paint job. The track itself has not fared much better, with heaps of rubbish seen lying across it while weeds and plants grow out from under the kerbs of the circuit. Pit markings and tyre burns can also be seen over what was not cleared away, while there is even still some evidence of race sponsors from never-removed hoardings to painted pavement which has faded over time. Thieves have also had their way with what was left at the site. Anything valuable that might have been left over from the days of F1 has been gutted out. There was hope for the site in 2022 when an investment group was in talks with the City Council to reclaim the space, turning it into housing and flats for residents. 8


The Irish Sun
19 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Jadon Sancho at centre of three-way Premier League transfer battle with Man Utd misfit not part of Ruben Amorim's plans
THREE Premier League clubs are battling to sign Jadon Sancho, SunSport can reveal. The former Advertisement 4 Chelsea have turned down the chance to sign Jadon Sancho Credit: Alamy 4 He did score in the Conference League final Credit: Reuters Manager And SunSport understands Villa are thought to be keen on a loan deal for the player, but United would prefer cash to free up funds for a rebuild. Newcastle and Tottenham both see Sancho as a strong option as they look to build squads that can compete in the League and the Champions League. Advertisement READ MORE ON FOOTBALL Borussia Dortmund were also tracking Sancho, Despite netting in the 4-1 Europa Conference League final win over Real Betis, Chelsea had initially loaned Sancho from United and had agreed to buy him for £25million, unless they dropped below 14th or coughed up a £5m penalty clause. JOIN SUN VEGAS: GET £50 BONUS Advertisement Most read in Football After the Blues finished fourth and lifted the Conference League trophy, they opted to pay the £5m penalty. Now, Chelsea's eyes are set on a range of wingers, including Jamie Byroe-Gittens and Jadon Sancho shares his Chelsea highlights reel as he says goodbye to fans ahead of Man Utd return 4 They are still linked with Sancho's team-mate Alejandro Garnacho, who looks to have been banished to the wilderness by Ruben Amorim in a similar fallout to the one Sancho had with Advertisement United have set a Garnacho is viewed as one of United's sellable assets this summer as he is considered homegrown, although he does have three years remaining on his contract. Chelsea today confirmed Sancho's return to Man Utd in a 92-word statement on the club website. It said: "Sancho, 25, joined on a season-long loan on August 31 2024 and went on to make a total of 41 appearances for the club. Advertisement "The winger registered five goals during his time at Stamford Bridge, with his final strike coming in the Blues' UEFA Conference League Final victory against Real Betis on May 28. "Everyone at Chelsea would like to thank Jadon for his efforts and we wish him every success for the future." 4 Alejandro Garnacho could also be on his way out of Man United Credit: Getty