
McLaren boss says Formula One is a ‘healthier' place without Christian Horner
Horner was released from his position on July 9. The last 18 months of his reign were overshadowed by an accusation from a female colleague of 'coercive behaviour'. Horner always denied the claim and was twice exonerated.
The 51-year-old has been replaced by Laurent Mekies and Brown revealed he had met with the Frenchman ahead of Sunday's Hungarian Grand Prix.
'I'm happy Laurent's in the role he is in,' said Brown. 'I like Laurent, that'll be healthy, and maybe we can get back to focusing on competition on the track.
'There's always going to be some political aspects to the sport, but I think it is going to be healthier with Laurent. I'm a fan of Laurent, I have known him for a long time, and it'll be good to go racing against him.'
Brown and Horner did not get along and aimed a number of slights at each other over the years – both on and off the track.
Brown continued: 'It went too far. There's always going to be politicking in F1; let's try and shut down their flexi-wings and that stuff, but when you start getting into frivolous allegations, that's just going too far.
'If I look up and down pit lane now, I see us fighting each other hard politically, but the line is not being crossed, and that line got crossed before.
'So I think that we'll see a little bit of a change for the better. There's a higher level of trust that now if we sit down and have a conversation on a topic where we think there could be some confidentiality, and it's just not an automatic: 'I'm going to use that as a political weapon'.
'We're going to be in a better place, a little bit more unified, and a little bit more trusting that while we're fighting on track, we can have a conversation about what's good for the sport off it. And that won't get manipulated for political reasons and taken out of context.'
Horner led Red Bull to 14 world championships in two decades in charge and Brown, whose McLaren team lead both the drivers' and constructors' championships as the sport approaches its summer break, concluded: 'I presume he'll be back. He's young, he's a racer, and he's got pretty awesome credentials.
'But I'm looking forward to racing Red Bull, more like we race Ferrari and Mercedes and being more collegiate, because it's important for the benefit of the sport that we all can work together.'
Hashtags

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


BBC News
27 minutes ago
- BBC News
'Do not put him out on loan'
After another impressive pre-season perfrormance from Rio Ngumoha, we asked if you want to see the 16 year-old in Liverpool's first team this are some of your comments:Mark: Rio should be in the main squad. If you are good enough then you are old enough. But wrap him in cotton wool - he is going to be a I think Rio has an exciting future ahead of him. He is only 16 so I think Liverpool should send him out on loan to Tranmere. Go an help them in League Baby steps. We do not want him to think he is the finished article - I don't know his personality, some can handle it but most cannot. A lot of maturing and growing still to He glides past people with ease, you can see his football IQ is beyond his years, his positioning, passing, he has everything to be the next world beater. Hopefully Arne gives him a chance and with Diaz off to pastures new it opens up a slot for him on the left. Yes it's preseason but I think he is capable of doing that on a weekly basis in the Premier Do not put him out on loan. Keep him at the club. He should make substitute appearances in the league and perhaps play all League Cup and FA cup games.


Telegraph
27 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Harry Brook can end up as one of England's best batsmen ever
I have believed for a long time that Harry Brook could be one of the great middle-order players of this generation. Players like him do not come along too often and he could end up in the same batsman bracket as Wally Hammond and Denis Compton, who are regarded by everybody who saw them as among England's greatest. Harry has that special quality of somehow making batting look easy. Let me tell you, it is not. He is tall and that gives him long levers so when he hits the ball he has a lot of power and takes the game away from bowlers without slogging. In this era, compared to everyone else around, he is above them all. I defy anybody to tell me another No 5 in world cricket, or middle-order batsman, who has his talent, his ability to take the game by the scruff of the neck and have bowlers running in, not knowing what to bowl. They run up in hope not knowing what line or length to hit because he is smacking them everywhere. He is playing a different shot to every ball and when bowlers minds are scrambled and can't think straight, you have them by the balls. Brook has such a wide range of strokes that when he gets going, he dominates bowlers, scoring in all areas. They are not sure where to bowl at him and that is a wonderful situation to be in as a batsman. Three consecutive shots of Harry Brook brilliance 😍🏴 — Sky Sports Cricket (@SkyCricket) July 13, 2025 Harry is a dream middle-order player, especially when he has Joe Root at the other end, because they are totally opposite. Root is technically correct and undemonstrative. He just sets about his work by caressing the ball into the gaps. Joe rotates the strike comfortably which means that if you are at the other end, you are always getting some balls to face. Brook has such power and a force of personality in his batting which enables him to take bowlers apart. Root uses the rapier, Brook the sword to carve teams open. He does it so bloody quickly that in no time at all, the game is rushing away from the bowlers. That is what happened at the Oval. India kept looking up at the scoreboard and it was going mad. That is the danger with him. As a bowler, you have to try and get him out, but if that fails he is then very difficult to keep quiet. The ball races around and in no time at all he has spread the field. Bowlers want slips and people catching, but are terrified by the ball disappearing to all parts. England are lucky to have an ideal middle order of two different types of players. That is exactly what you want as a team. Captains and bowlers are always having to do something different and think on their feet. I found it mesmerising watching them bat. I enjoyed it. It taxed the bowlers and the captains. Yes, occasionally, because he is living in the moment, he will play a shot that gets him out like the cross-batted swipe on Sunday. Sometimes he does something you think is a bit silly, but you have to accept that. Akash Deep breaks the partnership at last! What a knock from Harry Brook, 111 from 98 deliveries 👏 — Sky Sports Cricket (@SkyCricket) August 3, 2025 I have always believed that every team needs one genuine, unpredictable batsman who can do extraordinary things. Yes, they do daft shots occasionally but we have to accept that because what you get in return is such a huge bonus. When it is their day they are match-winners. Harry has a special gift and has scored 10 hundreds in 30 innings. The best players are normally one hundred in four to five innings. He is one in three. You can talk all you want about bats being bigger, and the pitches better than ever. True. I get all that. But the fact is, you have to judge people in the era they play. Technically, Brook stays back a lot like Joe Root giving him more time to see the ball, judge the length and let it come to him. He takes the ball at the top of the bounce and then, if it is his day, he destroys teams. I don't think he will be able to tonk Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood quite so easily. He will have a chance against Mitchell Starc because he bowls magic deliveries but also gives you a lot of four balls. I just hope Harry is going to be intelligent enough not to change his game, but just assess the situation and be a bit more careful. That is all he has to do. There will be times when Australia are bowling well and trying to butcher them will not be the smartest thing to do. He has a good defence on both the front and back foot so it is not as though he cannot stay in. He can let the moment pass when the bowlers are on top. It's like playing chess. There are times when you have to sit in and wait for your moment, then explode. If he comes running down the pitch at people like Hazlewood and Cummins then he will be asking for trouble but if he assesses the situation, he can be successful in Australia.


BBC News
27 minutes ago
- BBC News
Why sell Dewsbury-Hall?
The sale of Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall is particularly important as Uefa's recent punishment for financial control violations suggests Chelsea must sell players from their last Conference League squad to ensure a "positive transfer balance" this not, they can't register new signings like Joao Pedro, Jamie Gittens and Liam Delap for the Champions League by are also still looking to strengthen their midfield options for next season, with talks ongoing for RB Leipzig's Netherlands international Xavi Simons.