logo
Life after Horner - what Mekies will bring to Red Bull

Life after Horner - what Mekies will bring to Red Bull

BBC News23-07-2025
Laurent Mekies intends to be a soft-touch boss of Red Bull in Formula 1, at least for the period that he is settling in with his new team.The 48-year-old Frenchman took over as team principal and chief executive officer of Red Bull Racing after Christian Horner was sacked by the shareholders three days after the British Grand Prix.Ultimately, Mekies' job is to turn around the performance of a team that has been suffering a competitive decline for the past 18 months.And in terms of getting off to a positive start, this weekend's Belgian Grand Prix could not, on paper, be a better place for Mekies to make his first public appearance in his new role.
Spa success would not end Red Bull problems
Red Bull's lead driver Max Verstappen has struggled to compete with the McLarens of Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris on a consistent basis this year, but the circuits where he has been able to are fast and flowing - exactly like Belgium's Spa-Francorchamps.Verstappen, after all, was on pole at high-speed Silverstone three weeks ago, only for his race to come unstuck in the wet as a consequence of the low-downforce set-up Red Bull chose.Spa is famous for its long, demanding, fast corners, just like Suzuka, where Verstappen won from pole. It would be no surprise to see him repeat that feat this weekend.While that would be a nice fillip for the new Mekies-led Red Bull, it would not be an indication that their problems were behind them.The team's struggles this year were central in the mix of issues that led to Horner's departure. The shareholders - tired, too, of Horner's demands to be in total control of everything while the team appeared to be fracturing around him - felt something needed to be done.But this is still the core of the team that two years ago produced the most dominant season in F1 history, and for which last year Verstappen won seven of the first 10 races to lay the foundations for his fourth world title.So it was no surprise to hear Mekies pledging, in a video distributed by Red Bull, to get the best out of what he describes as "this incredible team".As someone who has been in F1 for more than 20 years, and who has worked at governing body the FIA and Ferrari in addition to two stints at Red Bull's junior team, Mekies already knows well several key people at Red Bull, such as technical director Pierre Wache and head of engineering Paul Monaghan.
A new Red Bull emerges - without Newey
Mekies has spent the last two weeks getting to know the staff at Red Bull's base in Milton Keynes. In Spa, he has a chance to watch first-hand a race team which still has a claim to be in many aspects - strategy, nimbleness, mixing improvisation with aggression - the best in the business, notwithstanding its recent difficulties.He says he wants to "discover the magic". His first few weeks in charge, he says, will be about "listening to the people to try to understand this beautiful magic machine that his Red Bull F1, and eventually find a way to contribute and support".There was a dichotomy, and a paradox, about Red Bull under Horner. On the one hand, he built it in his own image - and he led a pyramid-like structure from the top.At the same time, he built the design and engineering aspect of the team around design chief Adrian Newey, organising the people around him to get the best out of Newey's creativity.The result was success - and plenty of it. Eight drivers' titles, six constructors' championships, 124 grand prix wins. Even when Red Bull fell from competitiveness during the early years of hybrid engines, their chassis was still for the most part regarded as one of the best in the field. It was Renault's power-units that fell short.Red Bull's competitive decline started as soon as Newey left. How much of that was coincidence - in the context of McLaren's rise to prominence and the weaknesses of Red Bull's current car-design philosophy being exposed - and how much cause remains a point of debate. The truth is probably a bit of both.Now both Horner and Newey have gone, and a new Red Bull has to emerge. Mekies has to forge a new team that can return to the top without Newey's influence.
Mekies is 'different character' from Horner
Horner was the boss who was accused of sexual harassment and coercive, controlling behaviour by a female employee, accusations which were dismissed by two internal investigations last year and always denied by Horner.He was the guy who lost Newey, the sport's pre-eminent design genius. And Jonathan Wheatley, the sporting director who masterminded the best-drilled team in the pit lane. And Will Courtenay, the head of the strategy at the team that, for the past decade and more, has had the best and most improvisational race operations, and who is bound at some point for McLaren.Horner, is the man whose in-your-face approach led Mercedes F1 boss Toto Wolff to describe him as a "yapping little terrier". It's an image he was aware of himself - he even asks whether he is being portrayed as the "villain" midway through the latest series of Netflix's successful Drive to Survive series. He was.Horner built up this image - whether intentionally or just because of who he is - over many years. Not least through the dramatic 2021 season and his key interventions with former race director Michael Masi, which preceded the Australian's mishandling of the rules during the final race in Abu Dhabi, which directly led to Verstappen taking the championship from Lewis Hamilton.
Teams are a reflection of their culture, and culture is a reflection of leadership, so it's perhaps no surprise that Red Bull have become the team many people love to hate.Red Bull's brand image is about edginess, fun and disruption. Under Horner's controlling influence, the shareholders felt something of the spirit of Red Bull had been lost in recent times.Mekies' arrival is a chance for a clean slate. He is a very different character from Horner.An engineer with extensive experience of F1, he can engage with the technical team on an in-depth level.In that way, he is a 'technical team principal', as McLaren Racing chief executive officer Zak Brown refers to Andrea Stella, who has been such a revelation since becoming McLaren team boss at the end of 2022.As a character, Mekies seems so far to be softer, less prickly and less adversarial than Horner. While still a keen competitor, he might be expected to take a different approach to any disputes that arise externally.The controversies surrounding Horner - the allegations; his volatile relationship with Verstappen's father Jos; questions about the driver's future; the drip-drip exodus of major figures - had led to something of a siege mentality at Red Bull.Mekies' arrival is a chance for that to change, and for Red Bull to forge a new relationship, with their rivals, with the sport and with its audience.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Won't matter once we're all dead – Lando Norris plays down F1 title battle
Won't matter once we're all dead – Lando Norris plays down F1 title battle

Leader Live

time27 minutes ago

  • Leader Live

Won't matter once we're all dead – Lando Norris plays down F1 title battle

Norris arrives for the concluding round before Formula One's three-week summer shutdown 16 points behind McLaren team-mate Piastri in the standings. The title momentum swung back in Piastri's favour at last weekend's rain-hit round in Belgium. Norris started on pole position but allowed Piastri to swoop past in the treacherous conditions. Norris was unable to stop Red Bull's Max Verstappen from taking his fourth consecutive championship last year, but such is McLaren's superiority, it is team-mate Piastri who has emerged as his sole rival for this season's crown. Piastri has six wins to Norris' four but when asked if he needs to get under the Australian's skin to land his maiden F1 title, Norris replied: 'I don't enjoy that. In 200 years no one is going to care. We'll all be dead. 'I am trying to have a good time. I still care about it, and that's why I get upset sometimes and I get disappointed and I get angry at myself. And I think that shows just how much I care about winning and losing. 'But that doesn't mean I need to take it out on Oscar. I just don't get into those kind of things.' Historically, intra-team title battles rarely end well in F1, but Norris continued: 'Yes, he (Piastri) is the guy I want to beat more than anyone else. 'But if I don't beat him, then that's just because he has done a better job. I will do it the way I believe is best for me, and just because one person did it a few years ago, it doesn't mean you have to do that, too. I don't really care about those things.' At the Hungaroring on Friday, Norris completed an impressive practice double – beating Piastri by just 0.019 seconds in the first session before extending his advantage to nearly three tenths later in the day. Norris has never been out-qualified by a team-mate on his six previous visits here, and he will be encouraged by his showing in practice. Over at Ferrari, Lewis Hamilton has won a record eight times in Hungary and has secured nine pole positions. But the 40-year-old, who remains without a podium in Ferrari colours, struggled for pace on Friday. In the first session, he complained his car didn't 'feel good' and ran off the road at the first corner following a major lock-up. He ended the day in sixth, three tenths and as many places behind team-mate Charles Leclerc. Verstappen ended speculation he could leave Red Bull at the end of the year by committing his future there for at least another season. However, he finished a distant 14th in practice, 1.1 seconds slower than Norris. 'I don't know what is going on,' said Verstappen over the radio. 'It is just undriveable.' Verstappen is also facing a stewards' investigation after he threw a towel – seemingly left in the Dutchman's cockpit by accident – out of his car.

Max Verstappen learns punishment after throwing towel out of F1 car
Max Verstappen learns punishment after throwing towel out of F1 car

Metro

time27 minutes ago

  • Metro

Max Verstappen learns punishment after throwing towel out of F1 car

Max Verstappen and Red Bull were under investigation after he threw a towel out of his Formula 1 car in bizarre scenes during Hungarian Grand Prix practice. Lando Norris topped the timesheets in both of Friday's practice sessions, as he looks to overtake his championship rival Oscar Piastri before F1 goes on its summer break. Verstappen, who prior to the weekend confirmed he would be staying at Red Bull for 2026, was a long way off the pace, finishing FP2 over a second behind Norris. But the four-time champion also found himself in trouble with the stewardsafter a bizarre incident during the second session, where he slowed down on track and started rummaging around his cockpit. He then pulled to the side of the road and chucked away what appeared to be a towel or a rag, which ended up on the tarmac, before he got on his way again. 'It was just a towel that you normally wipe your face with when you come back in,' Verstappen later clarified to Sky Sports. 'It was still in the car when I went out, so instead of it maybe flying between my feet, which is the dangerous part, I drove off the line and got rid of it in the safest way possible. I think the stewards understand that.' Have you ever seen anything like this before?! Max Verstappen is under investigation after throwing a rag onto the track in practice! 👀 — Sky Sports F1 (@SkySportsF1) August 1, 2025 Unsurprisingly, the 27-year-old and Red Bull were summoned to the stewards to explain the incident and after a brief investigation they concluded he had done the right thing and would not be penalised. They did however issue a formal warning to the team, with an FIA statement reading: 'The driver explained that while in the garage, the face towel had slipped from his lap to the side of the seat and the team was unaware that it remained in the cockpit. 'When the driver realised it was there, he moved to the far right of the track and attempted to throw it as far away from the car and the track as possible. 'The stewards determine that the towel had the potential to have become lodged in the footwell and to interfere with the driver's ability to fully control the car and that, therefore, the car was released in an unsafe condition. More Trending 'The stewards consider this case to be distinguishable from a case where a hard (and therefore potentially dangerous) object is left in the cockpit and to be less severe than such a case, hence a warning to the team is imposed.' The news will come as a relief to Verstappen on a 'bad weekend' for the reigning champion, who added: 'Today was very tough, just a really low grip feeling. 'There wasn't really a balance in the car so it's even difficult to say what the exact problem is. Nothing really worked, so it's something we have to investigate overnight.' For more stories like this, check our sport page. Follow Metro Sport for the latest news on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. MORE: All change in Formula One as Red Bull begin life after Christian Horner and Lewis Hamilton tells Ferrari 'it's crunch time' MORE: Kneecap slam 'outrageous' ban ahead of major music festival MORE: F1 star criticises Christian Horner decision after Red Bull snub

Won't matter once we're all dead – Lando Norris plays down F1 title battle
Won't matter once we're all dead – Lando Norris plays down F1 title battle

Glasgow Times

time27 minutes ago

  • Glasgow Times

Won't matter once we're all dead – Lando Norris plays down F1 title battle

Norris arrives for the concluding round before Formula One's three-week summer shutdown 16 points behind McLaren team-mate Piastri in the standings. The title momentum swung back in Piastri's favour at last weekend's rain-hit round in Belgium. Norris started on pole position but allowed Piastri to swoop past in the treacherous conditions. Lando Norris topped both practice session at the Hungaroring on Friday (Bradley Collyer/PA) Norris was unable to stop Red Bull's Max Verstappen from taking his fourth consecutive championship last year, but such is McLaren's superiority, it is team-mate Piastri who has emerged as his sole rival for this season's crown. Piastri has six wins to Norris' four but when asked if he needs to get under the Australian's skin to land his maiden F1 title, Norris replied: 'I don't enjoy that. In 200 years no one is going to care. We'll all be dead. 'I am trying to have a good time. I still care about it, and that's why I get upset sometimes and I get disappointed and I get angry at myself. And I think that shows just how much I care about winning and losing. 'But that doesn't mean I need to take it out on Oscar. I just don't get into those kind of things.' Historically, intra-team title battles rarely end well in F1, but Norris continued: 'Yes, he (Piastri) is the guy I want to beat more than anyone else. Oscar Piastri holds a 16-point championship lead over team-mate Norris (Bradley Collyer/PA) 'But if I don't beat him, then that's just because he has done a better job. I will do it the way I believe is best for me, and just because one person did it a few years ago, it doesn't mean you have to do that, too. I don't really care about those things.' At the Hungaroring on Friday, Norris completed an impressive practice double – beating Piastri by just 0.019 seconds in the first session before extending his advantage to nearly three tenths later in the day. Norris has never been out-qualified by a team-mate on his six previous visits here, and he will be encouraged by his showing in practice. Over at Ferrari, Lewis Hamilton has won a record eight times in Hungary and has secured nine pole positions. But the 40-year-old, who remains without a podium in Ferrari colours, struggled for pace on Friday. Lewis Hamilton finished sixth in practice for the Hungarian Grand Prix (Bradley Collyer/PA) In the first session, he complained his car didn't 'feel good' and ran off the road at the first corner following a major lock-up. He ended the day in sixth, three tenths and as many places behind team-mate Charles Leclerc. Verstappen ended speculation he could leave Red Bull at the end of the year by committing his future there for at least another season. However, he finished a distant 14th in practice, 1.1 seconds slower than Norris. 'I don't know what is going on,' said Verstappen over the radio. 'It is just undriveable.' Verstappen is also facing a stewards' investigation after he threw a towel – seemingly left in the Dutchman's cockpit by accident – out of his car.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store