Red Bull should shut up and drive

By Bayden Westerweller / Roar Guru

The time-honoured threat to abandon Formula One in the face of defeat has arisen, with Red Bull – not for the first time – issuing the ultimatum “if we are totally dissatisfied we could contemplate an F1 exit.”

Following Mercedes’ dominant 1-2 at the season-opening Australian Grand Prix, where Daniel Ricciardo was forced to settle for sixth, and Daniil Kvyat a non-starter following a gearbox issue on a reconnaissance lap, motorsport advisor Helmut Marko has warned that the patience of the energy drink giant’s owner, Dietrich Mateschitz, is wearing thin.

“The danger is there that Mr Mateschitz loses his passion for F1,” the Austrian remarked, claiming the present 1.6 litre, V6 power units “are the wrong solution… we would say this even if Renault were in the lead.”

The Milton Keynes outfit is evidently struggling with the notion of their gradual decline from their halcyon days, having swept all titles between 2010 and 2013.

Failure to collaborate adequately with long-term engine supplier Renault has compromised the operation’s competitiveness since the current regulations took effect ahead of the 2014 season, yet there’s no excusing their repeated persecution of the French marque each time a Red Bull isn’t victorious.

Adrian Newey’s notoriously tight packaging doesn’t permit much scope for the powertrain, and perhaps it has reached a level where a fresh design philosophy needs to be considered – this might be the case as the technical guru takes a step back.

It is true that both parties share a responsibility to attain synergy, and for that to work transparency is essential. To that end, Renault’s resentment regarding the lack of credit received throughout the golden era – with praise lavished almost exclusively on Newey – is completely understandable.

Reports that Viry-Châtillon wants to restore their factory status – having retreated from ownership of the Enstone operation now known as Lotus in 2009 – through the purchase of a current outfit, with Red Bull-owned Scuderia Toro Rosso a front-runner, ties in with this.

Mercedes sacrificed short-term success for the fruits they are now enjoying, absorbing heat for recruiting ‘too many cooks’ in Toto Wolff, Paddy Lowe, Niki Lauda and Aldo Costa. Yet each has been crucial to their current prosperity, and the German marque has no reason to feel as though it needs to be supporting a push to equalise proceedings.

Ferrari parted with team principal Stefano Domenicali as well as his successor Marco Mattiacci, then with long-term chairman Luca di Montezemolo and ultimately with Fernando Alonso. Everybody was saying Ferrari were no longer relevant. One pre-season and a race into their new chapter, and the Italian marque is ostensibly the best of the rest – albeit a considerable distance behind Mercedes.

Newly appointed team principal Maurizio Arrivabene has been a breath of fresh air for Maranello. The former Philip Morris man has transcended expectations that he’d adhere to the beliefs of the old guard, that if Ferrari isn’t winning, it’s up to Formula One to change it.

In contrast, Arrivabene possesses a disarmingly realistic vision for success. He forecast two victories as success this season, rather than yesteryear’s tiresome “this year, we win” rhetoric. In the wake of Sebastian Vettel’s third place at Melbourne, rather than bemoan how far the German trailed behind the Mercedes duo and lodge some form of protest, Arrivabene has promised to take the fight to the Silver Arrows, stating “we need to start to be a bit more convinced about ourselves” rather than relying on incendiary measures to reign in the Brackley operation’s superiority.

Williams’ head of vehicle performance, Rob Smedley (formerly of Ferrari), is complimentary of Mercedes’ dominance, remarking “I’m not going to bitch and moan that they are quicker than us.”

The cynic would say that as a customer of Mercedes, Smedley is obliged to sign their praises, however the Briton readily acknowledges that he was once privileged to be in such a position, saying, “I think Formula Oneis about levels of excellence.”

This line epitomises the sport, at least what it should – it’s just a shame this is lost on those who are winding down from a sustained period of success.

Formula One is cyclical in nature, and seldom have teams whose long-term dominance has come to an end departed the sport. Williams is still here, approaching two decades since their previous title. McLaren is still here, despite only one title to show from their past sixteen campaigns. Ferrari is still here, for all of their sportscar posturing under the di Montezemolo regime.

As much as Red Bull’s primary motivation is to sell energy drink, this shouldn’t mean it’s time to bail the moment things get tough. They’d certainly win over many if they recommitted to the sport, especially in the midst of yet another set of regulation changes in 2017.

Newey arrived at Red Bull in 2006, yet it wasn’t until the revolutionary changes ushered in ahead of the 2009 season that they were propelled into race-winning status, and one year later, champions.

You’d love to believe they’d back themselves to achieve these heights again, but ultimately it’s their call if two or three seasons on the receiving end is too much to handle.

What’s more, we’re one race into a nineteen, perhaps twenty-event season. Enough of the insurrection from day one – if this is the philosophy now, imagine how it’s going to be at the mid-season break should this defeatist mentality be upheld for the duration?

Red Bull – shut up and drive!

The Crowd Says:

2015-03-20T21:52:05+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


The Australian GP was the most boring spectacle and F1 will be the same in 2015 as it was in 2014 (if they are lucky), but then again I can't say as I didn't watch only dribs and drabs of it as my beloved Rabbits vs the Roosters game would have taken the most fantastic and the greatest F1 GP (which never ever has or will happen) to beat the NRL game that was on at the same time as the Australian GP. The PETRONAS Mercs will dominate 2015 and unless the FIA introduce a handicapping system of any kind F1 is doomed as a boring spectacle.

AUTHOR

2015-03-19T09:29:22+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


It should be pointed out that I am no Mercedes fan. I was to an extent whilst Schumacher was there - but it was almost exclusively for the man and not the team. Since this time, I've been a Ricciardo & Räikkönen supporter, with the former driving for the team in question here. I don't agree 100% with some of the regulations which are now present, but respect must be given to Mercedes for their innovations - they satisfied the new interpretations to the optimum level.

AUTHOR

2015-03-19T09:14:35+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


I respect your opinion - but the point I am making is entirely different. Red Bull are indicating that they want out solely due to the fact they're not in a winning position for the first time in seven years, one race into an extremely long campaign. There were many dubious (and admittedly ingenious) innovations from Red Bull circa 2010-13 which were rightly nullified. Mercedes' only sin was to grant themselves as much lead time as possible to pioneer the new era regulations - which were announced several years before taking effect, and subsequently constructing a powerunit & chassis reflective of their commitment. For RB to say essentially "we didn't give the same dedication, but instead of striving to match Mercedes, we'll simply ask to nullify their hard work" is a cop out...

2015-03-19T08:51:17+00:00

Jawad Yaqub

Roar Guru


The FIA went 'out of their way' to stop Red Bull between 2010 and 2013 because the majority of their main competitors were quite vocal about it. So far only Red Bull have been vocal about Mercedes AMG's dominance, whilst their rivals such as Ferrari have gone and undertaken a complete overhaul of their operation without complaining (under their new management that is). Williams too as Rob Smedley said are focused on closing the gap. One thing that Red Bull couldn't deliver that Mercedes AMG did in 2014 was a competitive championship between it's two drivers. If Red Bull could have put a driver that could match Sebastian Vettel in that machinery, then this argument might not be valid. But because he and he alone seemingly walked away with the 2011 and 2013 championships, their competitors wanted to bring them down. If Ferrari, Williams or McLaren decide to join Red Bull in their threat to bring down Mercedes AMG then by all means the FIA should do something. However considering they all seem content for the moment, it's best to sit and see if Mateschitz will follow through on his threat.

2015-03-19T07:30:53+00:00

Kaks

Roar Guru


Bayden, again you're not seeing my point. You could copy your comment, go back in time and paste it on a post from three years ago in defence of Red Bull. Problem is that the FIA went out of their way to change the rules for the sole purpose of slowing down Red Bull. It is hypocritical of the FIA to now allow Mercedes to have such an advantage after their treatment of Red Bulls dominance. Now everyone is coming out saying "Red Bull werent complaining when they were ahead" - of course they werent, but every single other team was and even though Red Bull had an advantage due to the hard work they put in, just like Mercedes currently, they were unfairly treated by the FIA for their ingenuity and creativity so that the F1 could be more 'exciting'. The same should be done now that Mercedes is so far ahead otherwise their is a clear bias being shown here.

AUTHOR

2015-03-19T04:50:09+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


The point is, that the moment the team is no longer at least in contention for top spot that they've had enough - even as an energy drinks company, no other team which dominates for years pulls the plug five seconds after somebody has surpassed them - (unless you're Brawn GP and go out on top - look how that turned out). Red Bull has to at least try, bringing Mercedes back to their level rather than pushing to achieve the Silver Arrows' standards isn't the way to go about business. Besides, Hamilton has a point when he says at least with Rosberg in close check most weekends, there is some competition to the end - we rarely had this in the RB era for one reason or another.

AUTHOR

2015-03-19T04:44:02+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


Red Bull in unison with Renault had years to prepare for these changes, it's not as though the regulations were announced two weeks prior to 2014 commencing... and with the advantage RB enjoyed in the previous era, they hardly needed to dedicate so many resources to retaining superiority. Bravo to Mercedes for sacrificing short-term glory, they shouldn't be penalised now because their predecessor's at the top don't like it now they're doing the chasing.

AUTHOR

2015-03-19T04:41:48+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


I'd just prefer them to either follow through on their threat or get down to business and make inroads - enough blowing smoke up everybody's rear, especially after the first race...

2015-03-19T02:11:13+00:00

Tinfoil Hat

Guest


So red bull dominance was boring but even greater dominance by Mercedes is not? This is even more boring than the vettel years, as you know the first two positions for every race in advance. No one can compel red bull to spend the vast sums of money that f1 requires. If they aren't even competitive and have no chance at closing the gap because in-season testing is so restricted, why put good money after bad?

2015-03-19T01:49:54+00:00

Kaks

Roar Guru


The hypocrisy of the situation is the FIA's willingness to slow down Red Bull and yet do nothing about Mercedes. If i was at Red Bull i would be saying the same things they are saying.

AUTHOR

2015-03-19T00:36:32+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


Yes, however Red Bull were firmly against such changes whilst they were dominating, and now that they are on the receiving end, they are up in arms about the inequalities. It's the hypocrisy of the situation, rather than the outright fact that there is a dominant team which has ostensibly not resorted to any dubious measures leading to legitimate success.

2015-03-18T12:10:04+00:00

Kaks

Roar Guru


Have people simply forgotten all of the rule changes by the FIA when Red Bull were dominating so that the rest of the teams could catch up? In the years of Red Bulls dominance rules were changed every year to make the races "tighter and more exciting", it would be hypocritical of the FIA to not do the same now that Mercedes is leading.

2015-03-18T09:30:20+00:00

Adam Smith

Guest


Red Bull are sore losers. Their dominance with Vettel was boring, but I still watched as there are plenty of other battles going on, it's still an exciting sport. Now they're complaining because they aren't winning? Lol that's pathetic. On another note, look at how Williams came from nowhere (worst season in its history just recently) to be running at the front end of the pack. Mercedes is dominating because they're got 2 extremely talented drivers, and guys like Lauda consulting. If Red Bull aren't flexible enough to adjust to the new regulations that's their problem. They may as well leave, don't like their attitude anyway.

AUTHOR

2015-03-18T06:23:08+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


You'd like to think Sebastian would be up for the challenge and to have the opportunity to level the scores. If Kimi retires following 2016, this ties in with the conclusion of Ricciardo's RB contract - and if they do move on from F1, DR to Maranello could be the logical outcome. Then, Bottas is fancied too - who knows, three car teams by then - both?

2015-03-18T05:49:39+00:00

Steve

Guest


I can see him at Ferrari also, Kimi wont be there for much longer, question is, after Dan smashed Sebastian last season at Red Bull, will he agree to possibly being upstaged by Ricciardo again?

AUTHOR

2015-03-18T04:34:00+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


Ricciardo is made for Ferrari one day - hopefully the RB situation doesn't leave him in the lurch, based on his efforts last season, he is champion material.

AUTHOR

2015-03-18T04:32:00+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


You can certainly say transparency between Red Bull & Renault exists when it comes to the former directing criticism at the latter. They aren't afraid to let them know how appreciated their efforts towards four consecutive titles were... no the other thing! Yes first since of dissent in Italy and the person in question would be history.

2015-03-18T04:19:35+00:00

Steve

Guest


My understanding of the situation is that it seems as though Red Bull and Renault have had a frosty relationship for years. Even with all the success they have had. I am massively disappointed for Daniel Ricciardo. From what the Red Bull and Renault have shown at the Gran Prix its gonna be a long and disappointing season for him. it seems as though a new engine supplier is the only way forward for Red Bull at this point. Renault don't seem to have their heart in it anymore.

2015-03-18T03:51:49+00:00

Benjamin Conkey

Editor


Interesting to hear Horner publicly bag Renault. Imagine if that happened at Ferrari. Goooone.

AUTHOR

2015-03-18T03:25:26+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


Thanks again, just my thoughts re-2017 regulations. Red Bull would be wise to put everything towards this - with almost two years to prepare, they could easily emerge once again as a powerhouse, as long as they're willing to spend a couple of years in the midfield as other teams have.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar