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Asharq Al-Awsat
Asharq Al-Awsat
Sport
Asharq Al-Awsat

F1 Back to Racing as Questions Mount over Red Bull Spending

Australian McLaren F1 Team driver Daniel Ricciardo arrives in the paddock on horseback at the Circuit of The Americas in Austin, Texas, USA, 20 October 2022. (EPA)

Max Verstappen has already been crowned champion in one of the most dominant seasons in Formula 1 history. His Red Bull team is streaking toward the constructor's title as well.

And yet the big question looming over this week's United States Grand Prix is what to do about Red Bull's cost cap breach in 2021 and whether the team and its drivers should be punished?

While Verstappen struts as a two-time champion in a chase for a record-tying 13th win this season, rival teams and drivers say F1 must find a way to penalize Red Bull for breaking a critical rule that is supposed to reign in the big-spending teams and level the playing field from the front of the grid to the back.

Although the series governing body has called the spending breach "minor," it could still be several million dollars. The FIA has not announced any sanctions or disclosed how much money Red Bull overspent.

Red Bull's rivals want action.

McLaren team boss Zak Brown called any spending violation cheating.

Ferrari, the series' biggest legacy team and Red Bull's closest rival this year for the championship, has called for "maximum penalties" for overspending. Ferrari has also argued that any improper boost in car development impacts not just one season but several, as teams are in a constant arms race for the future.

Potential penalties for minor overspending range from a reprimand to reduced budgets or even deduction of driver and team championship points. But few think FIA would do something as harsh as stripping Verstappen's 2021 title, or re-open this season's championship.

Still, Alfa Romeo driver Valtteri Bottas, who was Lewis Hamilton's teammate last season at Mercedes when Verstappen won the championship over Hamilton on the last lap of the final race, said "harsh" measures are called for.

"It has to be something that hurts," Bottas told The Associated Press. "If you spend more money than other teams are allowed to spend, obviously you are gaining an advantage. It should be harsh."

Red Bull so far has said little other than the team believed it had stayed within spending limits in 2021, and that it was "surprised and disappointed" with the FIA's findings of violations.

Formula One first announced a budget cap would be implemented in 2019, and it started last season with a limit of $145 million. It was scaled down to $140 million for 2022 and drops to $135 million for 2023, excluding driver salaries and engine costs. By calling the violation "minor," the FIA indicated Red Bull’s overspending was under 5% of the total budget.

Even if the spending breach is considered minor, rival teams point to the razor-thin margin between Verstappen and Hamilton in last season's championship. Verstappen won 10 races, Hamilton eight.

In a letter this week to the FIA president and copied to F1 president Stefano Domenicali, McLaren's Brown said any team found guilty of overspending should be penalized that amount and face an equal reduction the next season.

Violating teams should also be penalized in competition, such as losing wind tunnel time for car and engine development, Brown wrote.

"The bottom line," Brown wrote, "is any team who has overspent has gained an unfair advantage both in the current and following year’s car development."

Haas team principal Guenther Steiner told the AP any penalties should carry well into the future, even for several years, if F1 expects to compel teams with a lot of money to stay within the rules.

"It needs to be not only financial (punishment), because just financial is too easy. You pay your way out of it. It needs to be competition-wise, you get deductions, something that needs to be more than money," Steiner told AP.

But, Steiner said, there's no point in taking a championship away from a driver.

"The celebrations have been done. Now to have a new champion? Who cares?" Steiner told AP. "The majority of the people already believe who they believe won."

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