
Tim Mayer accuses FIA president Ben Sulayem of ‘reign of terror' after announcing candidacy
Mayer, the son of the co-founder of the McLaren F1 team Teddy Mayer and a former longstanding FIA steward, with 15 years in the role in F1, maintains he was sacked at Ben Sulayem's behest. He issued a withering assessment of the president's tenure as he aired his platform for the vote, which will be held on 12 December.
'If you look at the number of people who have resigned from the FIA who have gone in with the best intentions but cannot effect change, or say 'No this is a bad idea, Mr President'. It is a reign of terror,' he said. 'You are wondering when the next scandal is.'
The 59-year-old American, who enjoyed a long career in motorsport organisation, gave a damning verdict on a highly controversial period of leadership by Ben Sulayem that has been publicly criticised by many in F1, including the drivers.
Ben Sulayem has presided over rifts with drivers and a string of high-profile departures from the sport's governing body, including most recently the deputy president for sport, Robert Reid, who left citing a 'breakdown of governance standards' in April, which Mayer also addressed.
'We have been left with illusion of progress and illusion of leadership while the most senior team he has appointed has departed,' Mayer said. 'The illusion of inclusion, while capable voices, women and people from diverse backgrounds, were pushed out when they spoke out.
'We have had the illusion of transparency and engagement. And perhaps most corrosive, the illusion of integrity. We have witnessed wave after wave of statute amendments ushering in the greatest centralisation of power in the FIA's history.'
Mayer left his role as an F1 steward last November, claiming that he had been let go by text message amid fallout from an issue relating to the United States GP in which he held a different role. He insisted revenge was not the reason for his candidacy.
The FIA structure heavily favours the incumbent against a challenger and Ben Sulayem recently received a letter of support from 36 member clubs, about which Mayer was also scathing.
'When a letter is shoved under your nose and you are told 'sign this, or else' anyone is going to sign it,' he said. 'But the only vote that counts are in December, that process will still have full democracy.'
Ben Sulayem and the FIA have been contacted for comment.
On track, Silverstone basked in warm sunshine with huge numbers turning up for practice. They were rewarded in the first session when Lewis Hamilton, in his first run for Ferrari in the UK, topped the timesheets. He has won here a record nine times before, including a remarkable victory last year but with the Ferrari off the pace admitted that he was 'hoping and praying' to make the podium.
He has yet to have a top-three finish since joining the Scuderia this season, the longest he has gone into a year without a trophy, but he at least opened well, just quicker than McLaren's Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri in second and third.
In the afternoon running Norris continued his run of form after his win at the last round in Austria, going quickest, two tenths clear of Ferrari's Charles Leclerc and Hamilton, with Piastri fourth and Red Bull's Max Verstappen in fifth.
The McLaren was expected to be strong through Silverstone's sweeping high speed turns but Ferrari too will be pleased with their performance, suggesting the upgrades to the floor they brought to Austria have delivered a genuine step forward.
Hashtags

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


The Independent
20 minutes ago
- The Independent
Chelsea reach Club World Cup semi-finals as late own goal downs Palmeiras
Chelsea scored a fortuitous late own goal to snatch a 2-1 victory over Palmeiras and reach the Club World Cup semi-finals. Extra time was looming at Lincoln Financial Field when Malo Gusto's cross took deflections off Agustin Giay and goalkeeper Weverton and ended up in the back of the Brazilians' net in the 83rd minute. The London side had led early on through Cole Palmer but were pegged back by a superb strike from Estevao Willian, the 18-year-old winger who will join them after the tournament. Palmeiras had been threatening to finish the stronger but Gusto's late stroke of luck ensured it was Chelsea who went through to face Fluminense in the last four. The contest was played in vibrant atmosphere with the crowd, perhaps helped by the dynamically-priced tickets having dropped as low as £8 earlier in the day, an impressive 65,782. That was despite the counter-attraction of a free Independence Day concert and firework display in downtown Philadelphia – albeit one for which headline act LL Cool J pulled out. The soundtrack to the evening was provided by the constant drumbeat and singing of Palmeiras' sizeable following. It was a noise Chelsea could not silence but, despite being forced into a late reshuffle after captain Reece James was injured in the warm-up, they settled the quickest. Pedro Neto started despite having considered missing the game following the death of his Portugal team-mate Diogo Jota, the Liverpool forward, and he held up a shirt bearing his name, and that of his brother Andre Silva, during a pre-match moment's silence. Palmer had already forced a good save from Weverton when he opened the scoring following a fine run and finish on 16 minutes. The England international wrong-footed a defender with a quick turn and he then swerved past another challenge before delivering a left-foot shot into the bottom corner. Chelsea could have increased their lead as Marc Cucurella and Enzo Fernandez tested Weverton and Trevoh Chalobah and Christopher Nkunku missed the target. With Cucurella giving Estevao a tough time until this point, Palmeiras struggled to create openings. They finally threatened just before the interval but Robert Sanchez comfortably saved Vanderlan's header and Bruno Fuchs nodded over after the restart. It proved the start of a good spell for the Sao Paulo side and the equaliser came as Estevao took a pass from the right and lashed in a shot from a tight angle. It was a stunning finish and Chelsea immediately responded by sending on Joao Pedro for his debut following his £60million move from Brighton. Chelsea had a scare when Allan drove narrowly wide and Levi Colwill needed to make a last-gasp interception prevent another Palmeiras chance. But they had a good opportunity themselves when Cucurella shot over and then edged in front when Gusto's cross took a ricochet and fooled Weverton. It was a decisive blow and Noni Madueke almost added a third when his late shot was tipped onto the post by Weverton. Liam Delap and Colwill will miss the semi-final after being booked.


Reuters
29 minutes ago
- Reuters
Adrian Houser tosses a gem in White Sox win over Rockies
July 5 - Adrian Houser tossed a season-high eight innings, Edgar Quero hit his first major league home run, and the Chicago White Sox beat the Colorado Rockies 3-2 in Denver on Friday night. Houser (4-2) allowed two runs - both unearned - and struck out six. He has not allowed an earned run in his last 15 innings. Mike Tauchman had two hits against his former team, Miguel Vargas also contributed two hits and Grant Taylor got the final three outs for his third save for Chicago. The White Sox snapped a three-game skid. Chicago's Colson Montgomery made his major league debut at shortstop, and had an eventful first game. In his first big-league at-bat he reached on a catcher's interference, the first player in the Expansion Era (since 1961) to do so in his first plate appearance, according to and Elias Sports Bureau. He then made an over-the-shoulder, sprawled out catch of Ryan Ritter's broken-bat blooper to left field to rob Colorado of a run. Mickey Moniak had two hits for the Rockies, who have won only one opener of a home series this season. Antonio Senzatela (3-12) allowed three runs on seven hits in 5-2/3 innings. Quero's solo homer in the sixth put Chicago ahead 3-2 and Houser and Taylor maintained the lead. Houser allowed just a walk over his final three innings, and he erased that runner with a double play. Taylor gave up a two-out single to Moniak in the ninth but struck out Ryan McMahon to end the game. The White Sox grabbed the lead in the fourth inning. Andrew Benintendi and Vargas led off with singles and moved up on a sacrifice bunt by Brooks Baldwin. Quero walked and following a lineout, Michael A. Taylor singled to right field to bring in two runs. Colorado got even in the fifth. Michael Toglia doubled with one out and Ritter reached on a two-base error by third baseman Josh Rojas, which allowed Toglia to score. Tyler Freeman tied it with a two-out double to left. -- Field Level Media


Reuters
29 minutes ago
- Reuters
Trump says there could be a Gaza deal next week
WASHINGTON, July 4 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump said on Friday it was good that Hamas said it had responded in "a positive spirit" to a U.S.-brokered Gaza ceasefire proposal. He told reporters aboard Air Force One there could be a deal on a Gaza ceasefire by next week but that he had not been briefed on the current state of negotiations.