logo
Red Bull fires F1 team principal Christian Horner after 20 title-filled years

Red Bull fires F1 team principal Christian Horner after 20 title-filled years

National Post3 days ago
Longtime Red Bull team principal Christian Horner was fired abruptly on Wednesday after a 20-year stint that included eight Formula 1 drivers' titles and a rise to celebrity status.
Article content
Red Bull did not give a reason for the decision in a statement Wednesday, but thanked Horner for his work and said he will 'forever remain an important part of our team history.'
Article content
Article content
Laurent Mekies of sister team Racing Bulls will replace Horner in his role as chief executive of the Red Bull team.
Article content
Horner had been Red Bull team principal since it entered F1 as a full constructor in 2005. He had performed his team and media duties as normal throughout the British Grand Prix last week.
Article content
His wife is Geri Halliwell — Ginger Spice of the Spice Girls _ and Horner himself became a celebrity figure through his prominence on Netflix's F1 docuseries 'Drive To Survive,' where his bitter rivalry with Mercedes' Toto Wolff was a key plot point. He and F1 champion Max Verstappen were booed at the season launch in London in February.
Article content
Horner oversaw eight F1 drivers' titles — four for Sebastian Vettel and four for Verstappen — and six constructors' titles during his time with the team.
Article content
But McLaren has dominated this season in F1, while Red Bull's performance has dipped, though defending champion Verstappen remains third in the standings and the team is fourth.
Article content
Uncertainty for the future
Article content
Horner spent much of last week fielding questions over Verstappen's future at the team after the Dutch driver declined to commit to stay with Red Bull for 2026. Zak Brown, boss of rival McLaren, told The Associated Press last week it would be a 'disaster' for Red Bull if Verstappen were to leave.
Article content
Article content
Horner is the latest in a series of high-profile executives to leave the team over the last year and a half. Car design great Adrian Newey joined Aston Martin and sporting director Jonathan Wheatley departed for Sauber, which is soon to become the Audi works team. All of these changes have followed the 2022 death of Dietrich Mateschitz, the billionaire co-founder of Red Bull who created its F1 project.
Article content
The team also shuffled drivers, dropping Sergio Perez at the end of last season before a brief failed experiment with Liam Lawson as Verstappen's teammate. He was in turn replaced by Yuki Tsunoda, who hasn't scored a point in five races.
Article content
'We would like to thank Christian Horner for his exceptional work over the last 20 years,' Oliver Mintzlaff, Red Bull's chief executive for corporate projects and investments said in a statement.
Article content
'With his tireless commitment, experience, expertise and innovative thinking, he has been instrumental in establishing Red Bull Racing as one of the most successful and attractive teams in Formula 1. Thank you for everything, Christian, and you will forever remain an important part of our team history.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘It has to get fixed now': Reconstruction set to begin on Dundas through Argyle
‘It has to get fixed now': Reconstruction set to begin on Dundas through Argyle

CTV News

time6 hours ago

  • CTV News

‘It has to get fixed now': Reconstruction set to begin on Dundas through Argyle

The reconstruction of Dundas brings reduced lanes and detours. CTV London's Bryan Bicknell shares why this may be worth the headache for commuters. The latest phase in Dundas Street East reconstruction gets underway next week. It means commuters and businesses alike could be faced with reduced lanes, detours and headaches for months. The ward councillor says it's short-term pain for long-term gain. 'Anyone can see, you know, we've tried to patch the best we can. Come winter, when the freeze-thaw cycle starts, those patches are not going to hold, and we're going to be back to huge holes in this road that sees 30,000 vehicles a day traveling on it, so it has to get fixed now,' said Shawn Lewis, Deputy Mayor and councillor for ward two. Lewis says the days of bumpy rides through Argyle will soon be over. 071125 Ward 2 Councillor Shawn Lewis points to a portion of Dundas Street in disrepair. (Bryan Bicknell/CTV News London) 'And so, we are ripping out all the asphalt, going right down to the aggregate base layer, making the repairs to the base layer, repaving, switching to the other side, and doing the same thing all over again,' said Lewis. Beginning Monday, Dundas Street between Burdick Place and Beatrice Street will have reduced lanes in each direction while the road is reconstructed. 'Two weeks notice, they give a letter and that's all you get,' said auto repair shop owner, James Patrick. While businesses along Dundas will remain open, Patrick worries it will be hard for customers to get to his shop. 'I think it's a terrible idea to do it this time of year when you have Oxford all ripped up. People can't get through at all. Shuts down the east end, a lot of businesses here. A lot of people that rely on traffic coming down Dundas. When they can't, it hurts them,' he exclaimed. 071125 Map of affected area. (City of London) 'It's going to be tough on us. I need to make the numbers and make it happen to pay the guys,' added Tom Stewart, who also owns an auto shop in the neighbourhood. The city says sidewalks will be temporarily closed at times, and pedestrians detoured. Drivers are encouraged to find alternate routes, where possible. 'It's not good, it's bad,' said driver Lloyd Youdell. 'It's been going on way too long. Way too long. Even the Highbury overpass, God knows when that will be open, they took the whole one side of it out,' he lamented. Work is expected to take eight to ten weeks and be completed in the fall.

Chris Gotterup pounds his way to a 61 and leads the Scottish Open
Chris Gotterup pounds his way to a 61 and leads the Scottish Open

National Post

time8 hours ago

  • National Post

Chris Gotterup pounds his way to a 61 and leads the Scottish Open

The hardest task for Chris Gotterup was waking up Friday. Once he got going, he never really stopped until he tied the course record with a 9-under 61 and wound up with a two-shot lead going into the weekend at the Scottish Open. Article content Gotterup rolled in three long putts and was long as ever off the tee, seizing on a spectacular day of sunshine and very little wind in the morning at The Renaissance Club. Article content Article content Article content Harry Hall (64) was two shots behind, and a refreshed Ludvig Aberg (65) led a group that was three shots back. Article content Aberg is coming off just the break he needed — a trip home to Sweden for the first time in a year, a chance to see friends and eat his mother's special sausage and get refreshed. Article content He overcame a bogey-bogey start with eight birdies over his next 15 holes. That made him the only player from among the top five who played in the afternoon, when the wind kicked up along the Firth of Forth and the course became firm and bouncy enough to frustrate Scottie Scheffler and plenty of others. Article content Scheffler, the world's No. 1 player, had a pair of three-putts and at one point after watching a putt bounce off line he extended his arm with his thumb up in mock celebration. It wasn't all that bad. He still shot 68 and was six shots behind. Article content Gotterup, the Rutgers star who finished his final season at Oklahoma, was at 11-under 129. Article content Rory McIlroy had five birdies on the back nine (he started on No. 10) and turned that into a 65 to join the group at 7-under 133. Xander Schauffele, who defends his title next week in the British Open, was five shots back after a 66. Article content Article content Schauffele rarely gets frustrated by anything, much less a score like 66. This was different. The weather was as ideal as it can get in these parts, not so much a full blue sky and a bright sun, but only a wee breeze. Article content 'It was there for the taking,' Schauffele said. Article content That's exactly what Gotterup did. He's still a little jet-lagged and struggled to deal with a 5:15 a.m. alarm when he would have rather slept in. But then he saw a 45-foot birdie putt drop on the second hole. He hit it close for a few more birdies. He made a 30-footer on the tough seventh hole. And he closed out the front nine at 29 after making birdie from 20 feet. Article content Three more birdies over the next five holes got him to 9 under. Two more birdies — one hole was a par 5 — would have allowed him to break 60. Article content 'That didn't cross my brain at all,' Gotterup said. 'I thought 10 (under) would be cool. I think it's still my lowest round in tournament golf. I have no complaints.' Article content Gotterup, along with leading the tournament, is leading the way to grab one of three spots available for the British Open. It would be nice to stay an extra week — he played the last two weeks and is scheduled for a flight to California on Monday to play the PGA Tour event in Lake Tahoe — but that's not why he came over.

Expected record-breaking transfer a pivotal moment in women's soccer
Expected record-breaking transfer a pivotal moment in women's soccer

Globe and Mail

time12 hours ago

  • Globe and Mail

Expected record-breaking transfer a pivotal moment in women's soccer

England forward Lauren Hemp has praised the expected record-shattering one-million-pound ($1.35 million) transfer of Canadian forward Olivia Smith, saying it highlights the growth of the women's game. Arsenal has tabled that offer for Liverpool's Smith, according to British media, which would make the 20-year-old the first female to reach the seven-figure barrier. It would eclipse the 900,000 pounds fee Chelsea paid to sign Naomi Girma from the San Diego Wave in January. 'It's the direction the women's game is going in, and it's great to see,' Hemp said from England's base camp at Euro 2025. 'It's proof that women's footballers are great, and that is the way the game is going, so long may that continue.' European champions England can clinch their place in the quarter-finals with a win over debutants Wales on Sunday. While Hemp said the huge fee was worth applauding, it remains miles off the record in men's football of 200 million pounds for Neymar's transfer from Barcelona to Paris Saint-Germain in August 2017. While professionalism in women's football is on the rise, and the game's fan base continues to grow – the European Championship that runs through July 27 is drawing record crowds – FIFA recently reported a wide discrepancy in pay, contracts and attendance across women's football globally. The average annual salary for a female professional soccer player globally is only US$10,900, FIFA said in March in its annual report on the women's game, a figure skewed by a small number of top clubs. Among the teams FIFA designated as Tier 1 in their report, the average salary was around US$24,030, although 16 of those top clubs paid an average gross salary of over US$50,000, with the highest of those salaries approximately US$120,000.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store