
Meet Christian Horner's replacement at Red Bull: Goatee-sporting Laurent Mekies, 48, has a 24-year link with Max Verstappen's dad - and now has the mega-job he never really wanted
The Frenchman has been named as Christian Horner 's replacement as Red Bull CEO, filling the boots of one of the most successful men in the sport.
Red Bull dismissed Horner on Wednesday morning in news which hit the F1 world like an asteroid.
The need to move on with brutal efficiency was underlined when, within an hour of that bombshell revelation, Mekies was publicly promoted from his team principal role at feeder team Racing Bulls. The clock ticks. The next GP, in Belgium, looms in just over two weeks.
With his distinctive grey locks, moustache, goatee, and soul patch, Mekies brings an air of Albert Einstein about him - and you need some of his intellect to survive almost a quarter of a century in this cut-throat sport.
There's also a genuine and sanguine nature to Mekies - his media duties, conducted in good English, are often accompanied with a smile and contagious energy.
Grinning as he reflected on his Racing Bulls exit, he said: 'The last year and a half has been an absolute privilege to lead the team with Peter (Bayer, CEO).
'The spirit inside Racing Bulls is incredible, and I'm convinced this is just the beginning. Alan is the perfect man to take over now—he knows every bolt on that car and has been one of the pillars of our early successes.'
Onwards and upwards, then, for Mekies, who now has one of the highest-profile jobs in motorsport.
Mekies, 48, has spent 24 years in F1 working in a variety of roles with Arrows, Minardi, Ferrari, and Red Bull's consistently redbranded nursery team.
A winding path, but this wasn't always the destination he intended. In an interview last year he admitted that becoming a team principal had never been his 'dream' - to him, being a race engineer and having close contact with the drivers was the 'best job in the world'.
Mekies has a strrong educational background, having studied in Paris and Loughborough, and took his first professional role in motorsport in 2000 with Asiatech in Formula Three.
His first gig in F1 came with Arrows in 2001, where he worked in the background while Jos Verstappen and Enrique Bernoldi were out on track.
Yes, that's right - his first contact with Formula One came in the same team as Max Verstappen's father.
That 2001 campaign was gruelling and will have prepared Mekies for any hardship in the sport. Arrows finished 10th out of 11 teams on the grid and scored a solitary point in Austria, which happened to be the last in Verstappen's career.
From there he moved to Minardi, many fans' favourite underdog, and cut his teeth as a race engineer with Mark Webber, Justin Wilson, Zsolt Baumgartner, and Christijan Albers.
Again, there was not much glamour at Minardi. The Italian minnows only scored 11 points in their last decade in the sport until Red Bull bought them out in 2005 and rechristened them as Scuderia Toro Rosso.
At the time of that switch, Mekies was promoted to be the team's chief engineer, and in a spell spanning almost a decade he would rise to be head of vehicle performance.
The aim of the game at Toro Rosso was clear - rear talent for Horner's Red Bull outfit, which also entered the scene in 2005 and became a leading outfit inside half a decade.
In that era, Mekies worked alongside a wide variety of drivers, many of whom were tipped for big futures but fell onto the F1 scrapheap as the Red Bull conveyor belt churned them out.
Daniel Ricciardo is the main name from that era and the one whose legacy has survived.
The others, namely Vitantonio Liuzzi, Scott Speed, Sebastien Bourdais, Jaime Alguersuari, Sebastien Buemi, and Jean-Eric Vergne, will be less familiar to the new generation of F1 fans but recognisable to longer-term viewers.
In 2014, just a year before Verstappen burst onto the scene at the junior team, Mekies left and began a four-year spell with the sport's governing body, the FIA.
There, he was the safety director and deputy race director, before - you guessed it, there's another director title on his CV - he took up the post of Ferrari's sporting director in 2018.
Being a sporting director is one of the most hectic and high-pressured jobs in F1 outside of being a team principal.
It involves managing a team's logistics and travel, keeping in touch with the FIA over sporting matters, understanding and interpreting the regulations, and a whole host of other responsibilities. In other words, a decent trainign ground for the top job one day.
That's exactly the chance he got in 2024 when RB came calling, so back to his old stomping ground he returned.
It wasn't an easy season for RB - they finished eighth out of 10 - but he proved his brutality when he canned Ricciardo with six races to go, giving Liam Lawson a chance in the hotseat.
Mekies later admitted that they should have handled Ricciardo's sudden exit better. He was given no official send-off because his exit was only announced several days after the Singapore GP, and by rhe time the United States GP rolled around, Lawson was in place.
'We are not happy with ultimately how we handled it, and of course we are very conscious that we could, and we should, have done a better job at that,' said Mekies.
This season has been better, with RB placed seventh and in with a fighting chance of a top-half finish - about as good as they have ever been able to expect. In all their iterations, Red Bull's feeder outfit have finished as high as sixth, back in 2019 and 2021.
RB seldom grab headlines and, as such, Mekies has been little more than a peripheral name to most fans until now: an occasional voice on Sky Sports' broadcasts.
Yet he has been thrust suddenly into the big time at a moment of jeopardy for one of the sport's trailblazers.
Red Bull sit fourth in the Constructors' standings and only because of Max Verstappen's brilliance.
Yuki Tsunoda described his car as 'outstandingly slow' en route to coming 15th (last of all the finishers) at Silverstone.
It is a boost to Mekies that Max verstappen recently confirmed his long-term future at Red Bull in an exclusive interview with Mail Sport. Whether he did that with any knowledge of Horner's situation is unclear.
Mekies is tasked with rescuing Red Bull's most turbulent season in a decade and leading them into a 2026 campaign which will see sweeping rule changes and a power unit partnership with Ford.
Hashtags

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


BBC News
25 minutes ago
- BBC News
The next Miovski? Your views on Lazetic's Aberdeen arrival
We asked for your views on Marko Lazetic's Aberdeen 21-year-old forward has signed for the Pittodrie side from AC Milan for an undisclosed what some of you said: Paddy: He may not have made the grade at Milan, but he was there for a reason. Hopefully Aberdeen can bring him on like Bojan Miovski. We need a striker badly let's hope this is the Like Leighton Clarkson and Ante Palaversa, they showed great potential when younger, so there is obviously something there. Let's hope that the Dons coaching staff can bring the best out in him. A great opportunity for Lazetic to become a Dons legend, so let's hope he takes Fingers crossed his goal scoring will come. He hasn't exactly been prolific but he's young and hopefully just coming into his game. Thirty goals a season would be We seem to be signing players for the future on long contracts, not sure if it will help the club if they need a lot time to settle. Would be fine to see some Scottish players for He is not tried and tested but presumably the recruitment team see something in him that inspires hope. I must admit I still think we need a seasoned scorer with Scottish Premiership Could be a right bargain signing, the fans will warm to any player if they put the effort in on the pitch, hopefully he hits the ground running and becomes a Dons legend.


BBC News
25 minutes ago
- BBC News
'Most important thing to a good start to a season is early recruitment'
Without early recruitment "you are always trying to play catch-up", says David Moyes' former assistant Steve season got off to a difficult start on Monday as they lost 1-0 away to promoted side were out-played in the first-half as manager Moyes tries to contend with a high turnover of players this summer."The most important thing to a good start to a season is early recruitment," Round told BBC Radio 5 Live Breakfast."You get the chance to work for six weeks of pre-season with your team - getting them in shape, in the way you want to play and with your identity, that stature and structurer you want to get in place."But, if you don't get new recruits in until the last week [of the transfer window] - and you saw that with Jack Grealish against Leeds - you can't really embed them into the way you want to play. You are always trying to play catch up and it's very, very difficult."The Toffees have brought in seven new faces so far this transfer window, but that comes off the back of a campaign where a starting XI's worth of players left the had been vocal during pre-season about the need to bolster the a thin squad, saying after a 3-0 defeat by Bournemouth that they needed at least six more players."Everton are starting to get one or two better players through the door, and I think they'll get two or three more before the end of the window. But, it will have been really frustrating for David not having them at the start of the transfer window so they can work with the team," Round added."They need cover at left-back. Probably need a right-back to cover Seamus Coleman there. They also probably need a really good central midfielder and another centre forward. A quality striker to be the real number nine."Listen back on BBC Sounds


The Sun
25 minutes ago
- The Sun
Tyson Fury teases major announcement after pulling yet another retirement U-turn as £300m Anthony Joshua fight looms
TYSON FURY has teased that a major announcement is on the horizon amid his continued tooing and froing from retirement. The Gypsy King kicked up a fuss in the aftermath of his second straight defeat to Oleksandr Usyk last December and announced his FIFTH retirement from boxing. 4 4 But he performed a public U-turn in April as he campaigned for a trilogy fight with the two-time undisputed heavyweight king. The Wythenshawe warrior, however, dashed the hopes of fans excited to see him fight again earlier this month by claiming he will " NEVER" set foot inside the ring again. But he's once again left the boxing world on tenterhooks by revealing he's set to make a big announcement. He said on his Instagram story on Monday: "I've got the biggest announcement of the year incoming. Stay tuned." Fury, who celebrated his 37th birthday earlier this month, has arguably the biggest payday of his career awaiting him if he does decide to lace up his gloves again. A lucrative and long-overdue battle with Brit rival Anthony Joshua is in the offing for the dad-of-seven. But the former two-time king of the heavyweights could seemingly care little about fighting again, telling Sky Sports when asked if he'd return to the ring: "Never. Really! "[I'm] too old, look at my beard, all grey. Boxing 's a young man's game." Fury's latest comments on a return to the squared circle are in stark contrast to the admission he made about fighting last month. Speaking ahead of Usyk's rematch with Daniel Dubois at Wembley, he said: "I do miss it. Tyson Fury, 36, claims he will 'NEVER' return to boxing just weeks after announcing comeback and hints at new career "Every single day I wake up in the morning and miss it. "I've been away seven months, missed it every day. I'm open to offers at the moment. "I'm not going to be doing any comebacks this year, that's for sure. "I'm busy, as you can see, I've got Netflix here. I've got the biggest announcement of the year incoming. Stay tuned!" Tyson Fury on Instagram 4 "And then next year, the big GK is going to make a f***ing comeback. "The takeover! I'm gonna be 37 in about three weeks. "I'm going to be the oldest swinger with all these young boys coming up.