Max link that can’t be ignored… and power vacuum behind his downfall: Inside Horner sacking

Just shy of six weeks ago, Christian Horner was asked about a rumour that he’d been contacted by Ferrari asking whether he’d be interested in moving to Maranello to become team principal.

Unlike so many of his answers about prickly subjects in recent years, Horner’s reply was unequivocal.

“My commitment, 100 per cent, is with Red Bull,” he said. “It always has been and certainly will be for the long term.”

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The answer was totally unsurprising. Horner was the only team principal the team had ever had. Every race win, every championship, had been scored on his watch, and from next season Red Bull Racing is set to become a works constructor thanks to a powertrains program he himself had spearheaded.

Now is not the time for wavering; now is the time for total commitment.

Evidently Red Bull didn’t feel the same way

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ess than six weeks after Horner’s definitive declaration, the long-time team principal and CEO has been turfed from his dual role in Milton Keynes effective immediately.

Laurent Mekies, the Racing Bulls team principal, will present at the Belgian Grand Prix later this month as the new Red Bull Racing chief executive.

‘CAME AS A SHOCK’: Horner exit speech leaked as sacked Red Bull boss speaks over blindsiding

Formula 1 doesn’t keep secrets well, and this bombshell was a real surprise. Staff were reportedly told on Wednesday that the axe had swung, and shortly afterwards the company made public that it had released Horner from his duties.

No reason was given. According to Sky Sports commentator Martin Brundle, no reason was given to Horner either.

Horner’s farewell speech to Milton Keynes, that leaked hours later, still offered no further insight, other than confirmation he was blindsided.

“It came as a shock to myself,” Horner said.

“A new CEO will be announced shortly. I trust him and give him my full support.

“My instruction to him is to look after all of you.

“I have fought hard, I’ve done my best, I’ve put in a big shift and it now comes to a close.”

But there’s no shortage of possible reasons that the man once integral to the team’s success has been so suddenly shuffled to the exit door.

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RED BULL GIVETH YOU WINGS, RED BULL TAKETH WINGS AWAY

The beginning of Red Bull Racing’s decline has a date: 22 October 2022.

It’s the day Red Bull co-founder Dietrich Mateschitz died.

Mateschitz was the eccentric Austrian businessman who found Thai energy drink Krating Daeng worked wonders for his jet lag. Together with the drink’s inventor, Chaleo Yoovidhya, he launched the Red Bull energy drink in the 1980s. It quickly became the market leader, and both Mateschitz and Yoovidhya became multibillionaires.

The structure they set when the company was founded in 1984 would be relevant to Red Bull Racing in 2022.

By agreement Mateschitz ran the business but owned only 49 per cent of the shares. Yoovidhya owned the same percentage, with his son, Chalerm, owning the 2 per cent difference.

When Chaleo died in 2012. Chalerm became the 51 per cent majority owner.

That made no difference while Mateschitz remained at the helm, but these became the seeds of Red Bull Racing’s decline upon his passing.

Mateschitz had ensured Red Bull Racing wanted for nothing, but he was otherwise a hands-off owner. He entrusted Horner to run the team from day one and contracted motorsport adviser Helmut Marko to liaise between them.

It was an ideal set-up that allowed the team to flourish, leaving the racing decisions to the racers without the need to justify themselves to administrators.

That changed in 2022, when Mateschitz’s unimpeachable authority died with him.

The power vacuum instantly factionalised the team.

In one corner was Horner, who had the backing of the Thai majority ownership.

In the other was Marko, Mateschitz’s right-hand man, who counted alongside him Dietrich’s son, Marko Mateschitz, and corporate projects and new investments CEO Oliver Mintzlaff, who has long been believed to have wanted to make changes to the team.

Marko also counted Max Verstappen as one of his party.

Verstappen’s rapid rise to Formula 1 came thanks to Marko’s total loyalty to his cause. When rumours spread that Marko was set to be axed from the business early last year, Verstappen intervened by tying his own future with the business to the Austrian’s ongoing tenure.

Marko stayed.

Verstappen’s allegiance became problematic for Horner last year, when he became embroiled in a scandal of inappropriate workplace behaviour.

He always denied wrongdoing, and two internal investigations led by external lawyers exonerated him.

The complainant has escalated the mater to a UK workplace tribunal for a hearing in 2026.

The vulnerability was ruthlessly exploited by Jos Verstappen, Max’s father, who almost immediately called for Horner’s head, declaring that the team was being “torn apart” and would “explode” if the Englishman remained in charge.

But Horner was safe with the backing of Red Bull’s majority ownership. It was the ultimate trump card.

That protection, however, was not unlimited.

Evidently the Yoovidhya family has withdrawn its support.

This is the most likely trigger, because with Horner having another half-decade to run on his contract as team principal and CEO, terminating him would not have been cheap.

It’s the sort of decision that would have to have been made at the very highest level of the business, which appears to have lost faith in his leadership.