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Huge News For Andretti & Perez After Secret Leaked!



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Huge News For Andretti & Perez After Secret Leaked!

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ļ»æYouā€™ve got to give it to Andretti, they sure know how to keep themselves in the public conscious! A huge coup has been achieved by Andretti in securing yet more personnel, however this time it appears that Andretti are going for the throat by securing not only a high profile ex member of Williams, Renault and Benneton, but the recently-available chief technical officer of Formula One itself! The very company whose commercial arm rejected Andretti not only saw itā€™s chief technical officer poached by the American team, but has also seen a public letter from the US congress calling on the President of the United States to initiate a probe into just why Andretti motorsport was rejected by Formula One, Liberty Media and the FOM. Surely the timing of all of this, as with the recent Miami Grand Prix Fracas that saw Andretti first announced its support from members of congress, is calculated and entirely intentional, and the pressure must surely be getting piled on by now. We said before that it seems that the only question to be answered is what will break first, Andrettiā€™s spirit or Liberty and FOMā€™s stubbornness, and if the past couple of weeks is anything to go by, then it seems Andretti isn’t going to be giving in any time soon! Want to know why Pat Symmonds joining Andretti is a massive step forward for the American team? Whether this move pays off, time will tell, but this mutiny could well kick start Andrettiā€™s bid to join the paddock! And stick around, because Sergio Perez might be biting off more than he can chew as the silly season continues to develop, and perhaps there could be a link between todays stories in the futureā€¦ So, where else to start but this. After seven years as F1ā€™s Chief Technical Officer, Pat Symmonds has decided to join Andretti Motorsport in a move that nobody could have seen coming. It was believed that Symmonds may step down upon the finalisation of the 2026 regulations ruleset, with Symmonds already being a huge factor in the current regulations between 2022 and 2026, however it was entirely unknown what his intentions would be following his departure. At 70 years old and with a plethora of experience, success and no shortage of controversy in his time, Pat Symmonds couldn’t be blamed for walking off into the sunset and enjoying a retirement, but it seems in this sport you can never truly walk away. Symmonds will be joining Andretti Motorsport as an Executive Engineering Consultant after fulfilling a required gardening leave, working at the recently opened Silverstone base of operations. Thatā€™s right, the Chief Technical Officer in charge of overseeing the current, as well as the upcoming, ruleset is going to be advising Andretti motorsport in regards to everything from aero to engine, which seems absolutely insane. Itā€™d be like taking an annotated copy of every textbook necessary into an exam. The excitement about the acquisition was palpable when Michael Andretti announced Symmonds as the new Executive Engineering Consultant: ā€œ"We couldn’t be more excited to welcome Pat to the Andretti family," "Pat’s keen understanding of aerodynamics, vehicle dynamics and Formula 1 power units will be instrumental as we continue to build a competitive team. "I believe his expertise has been pivotal in shaping the narrative of Formula 1 and his vote of confidence in joining our effort speaks volumes. I’m really happy with this next step as our work continues at pace.ā€ And that is the key thing here, this isn’t only a victory for Andretti from a technical point of view, as Symmonds will be joining up with his ex-benetton and renault colleague Nick Chester who fills the role of technical director at the American team, itā€™s also a massive PR win. What better way to demonstrate your competitive intentions than to bring aboard a guy who has not only won multiple championships, but was so trusted by the very sport trying to keep Andretti away that they hired him themselves. When Andretti received their rejection from F1 they were informed that theyā€™d be able to re-apply for entry when GM was ready, aiming for a 2028 entry into the sport, 2 years later than the originally intended 2026 at the latest. Since then the American team has opened up a facility far closer to home for F1, somewhere they can be a far greater nuisance and really get under the skin of F1, and what better way to do so than starting up a recruitment drive right at the heart of Formula One at Silverstone itself? Pat Symmonds is just the first major acquisition by the team. The objective for Andretti is clear at the moment and he is doing everything he possibly can to succeed in it. Push F1 to the point where it canā€™t say no, to the point where Andretti Motorsport as an F1 entrant is undeniable, and he is doing a pretty solid job of that so far. Andretti disclosed in an interview with Sky that the team still has an open dialogue ongoing with the FOM, and would double down on the importance that guaranteeing their entry has in regards to General Motors involvement in the sport: ā€œ"We are still working along with FOM and we will show that we are bringing a lot to the party," "General Motors is huge coming to the party. They are not just coming to be here, they are coming here to be a big part of our team, and I think it’s not been understood yet how big that is. "I think once everybody understands what we are really putting together it’ll be a point where they can’t say no.ā€ Not only that, but Andretti is under no illusion that just turning up in 2028 and expecting to be competitive off the bat is ludicrous, hence why he is pushing for the team to be allowed access as soon as possible in order to be truly competitive as soon as possible with General Motors when they are ready to join the American team in their Formula 1 venture: ā€œ"They are currently building an engine. They are already registered to do it," he stated. "So we will have an engine in ’28, but obviously we need to build to get there. To just, all of a sudden, show up in ’28 with a new engine and no team, we need two years to build there to get there that when we do get our own engine the team’s ready to go and be competitive. "So we are not naive in any way in that way." And itā€™s not only trackside where the pressure is being ramped up on F1, as the assault by Andretti has multiple fronts. The other key one is the team being backed by US members of Congress, and following their open letter to Liberty Media and FOM before the Miami Grand Prix, the bipartisan group of congress members decided to take it up a notch. And by a notch, we mean to the President of the United States of America and his administration. The members of Congress sent an open letter to the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division and the Federal Trade Commission, calling on them to take a look at Andrettiā€™s rejection from the sport to ensure that they hadnā€™t been done dirty by a group trying to block out competition. The crux of Congresses argument is that the addition of another team, especially one with the proven track record of Andretti Motorsport in other disciplines and the backing of General Motors down the line, will only increase competitiveness in the sport, not reduce it. The letter even brings up the fact that F1 are in no way in the position to dictate who will be competitive and act like the bar is oh so high, given one team alone won every race bar one last year and that 4 teams have failed to do so in the past 4 seasons (including felon tax evader Gene Haasā€™s team who are yet to win a race and show no signs of changing that). The most potent argument provided in the letter however was that of Formula 1ā€™s hypocrisy, in wanting to be as American as can be while also keeping any actual American entrant as far away as possible for reasons that just do not add up: ā€œ"Most striking, however, was FOM’s [Formula One Management’s] determination that bringing Team Andretti-Cadillac into F1 would not ‘add value to the Championship.’ While F1 currently does not have an American-based team, F1 has been determined to increase its presence in the U.S. market,ā€ ā€œ"Over the past few years, more than 1 million Americans have tuned into each F1 race, more than doubling over the past few seasons. Last year, F1 hosted three races in America, in Miami, Las Vegas, and Austin, while no other country hosted more than a single race. Even individual teams, such as Red Bull, are courting U.S. fans by hosting events in U.S. cities to ‘get up close and personal with the marvel of Formula One engineering, bringing together F1 fans.ā€™ It should be noted here that Italy has hosted multiple races in recent years, however last year’s Imola Grand Prix was cancelled due to a natural disaster, however their point still stands that no other frontier has been expanded upon quite so aggressively as North America. The real mic-drop and accusation followed this, with the member of Congress finishing up the letter by saying: ā€œ"Clearly there is a financial incentive to adding an American team to F1’s roster, and there is no reason Team Andretti-Cadillac should be blocked unless FOM is trying to insulate its current partners from competition.ā€ To butcher a spice girl lyric, if you want to host our races, you gotta get with our entrant. Andretti will continue to pile on the pressure from both its recruitment drives, consistent and tactically spaced out media coverage as well as an outspoken and outraged congress who are making sure their support is as loud as possible. Itā€™d be interesting to see just how hot the antitrust accusations need to get before F1 are forced to blink first, or just how major of a technical backing Andretti needs to make F1 start to feel the brain drain to people they wont even let on the track. Either way, the question still remains about who will back down first, but we have a sneaking feeling that it won’t be Andretti Motorsport. In other news, Sergio Perez has been rebuffed by Red Bull upon requesting longer contract terms than the team has in mind. Perez supposedly responded to Red Bulls initial contract offer of a single year with an offer of his own, but according to Fox Sports Mexico, Red Bull werenā€™t exactly eager to take that on board: ā€œā€œThe team already has the contract, it is for one year,ā€ ā€œThey offered it to Checo and he said ‘mmm, we have to review itā€™… ā€œā€œCheco’s lawyers are in that process, but Checo submitted a two-year counterproposal to which, immediately, Red Bull said no.ā€ Which brought a scenario into our minds (tinfoil hats on everybody). Letā€™s say Andretti succeeds in getting their team up and running by 2026. What American drivers are actually available or suitable to join Andretti? Obviously their end goal will be all-american-everything, but Sergio Perez may prove to be the perfect stop-gap while American talent is developing. At every race currently held in the USA (given they are all in southern states) there is a large contingent of fans yelling Checoā€™s name, and Checo may well feel that an opportunity that is closer to home, with an exciting buzz around it, is the perfect place for him to be the main man in a way that he is currently dissuaded from being. Obviously that’s just a theory, but one that could prove a hell of a lot less crazy if Red Bull keep playing hooky with the driver, and Andretti keep their pursuit of F1 increasing in its intensity.

25 Comments

  1. Great move! But I still say Liberty Media and F1 should be boycotted in United States, and that U.S. Congress should go full steam ahead on very possible violations of antitrust law violations. Lastly, to say that Andretti/Cadillac would not bring value to the series is absolutely ridiculous! I say, BOYCOTT F1 and Liberty Media!

  2. Perez wouldn't be a bad option for Andretti if Red Bull don't renew his contract. Another option I'd like to put forward is Logan Sargeant. Williams seems to be on the cusp of dropping him in favor of either Kimi Antonelli or potentially Carlos Sainz. Sargeant does bring with some big money, and traits that Andretti desire: an American driver with F1 experience.

  3. it is not fom holding back andretti, it are the teams, more teams is less income that is all, im all for more teams, but if andretti/gm does thiss way, then they need to build there own engine and powerunit! otherwise they need to shut up

  4. If Perez was hired by Andretti no one in America would bat an eye. We have so many Europeans and former F2 racers in IndyCar it doesn't bother us. I'd love to see Sergio Traction Control Perez in an Andretti car. Red Bullies always treat their drivers like dirt.

  5. Iā€™d bet there will be some kind of deal between GM and Honda on engine/development. They already partner with Andretti in Indy car.

  6. There is also a certain Mr Newey who will be free to consult in 2025 on a well paid part time basis.
    Now that would make a very competitive team plus as Andretti arenā€™t a player yet there is nothing to stop them building a car and refining it more or less straight away.
    They could still deliver with Alpine until the new engines come out as they do actually make a decent motor. WEC shows that! The current Alpine isnā€™t short of power itā€™s too heavy and the aero isnā€™t well refined.

  7. Simple, North Americans helped liberate their European cousins from Germany. Why Europeans are not helping their Italian cousin? Why so much hate towards each other? I know, šŸ’°.

  8. There's more F1 interest in Southeast Asia. Expand where the real interest and money are. F1 doesn't need Andretti or BS from US Congress. The USA can't strong arm F1 because F1 doesn't need America and it never has. F1 is about technical superiority. And that trickles down to supercars which are sold in higher numbers outside of America. Ferrari, McLaren, Mercedes and soon to be Audi don't race in F1 because of America. They sell their products elsewhere just fine.

  9. Why would GM spend million of dollars building a PU without ANY guarantee of entry into F1? All that has been said is that FOM would consider it again in 2028 if GM had a power until ready. GM has also said it would be with Andretti or no one so that eliminates any other F1 team from bringing GM into F1 without Andretti. And as far as Symonds goes, he's just another F1 money grabber that will take Andretti's money with no guarantee that he will ever have to deliver anything of importance with no guarantee of Andretti ever gaining entry in F1. With the US Government looking into Anti Trust laws in regard to F1, this will only make the members of FOM dig their collective heals in more to make sure Andretti never makes it to the grid.

  10. I did not have Pat Simmons to Andretti in my May card! Wow!! And Checoā€¦.would be a fantastic team!! We have boycotted watching full F1 races, until they let AG in!

  11. If Andretti actually gets the US Congress involved, two things will happen. 1) Liberty media will relocate off shore. 2) F-1 will pull the 3 US races from the calendar. There is a waiting list to host a race. F-1 is exploding. Lawrence Stroll paid $130 Million (Counting assumed debt) for Force India team in 2018. Team Williams was sold for $180 Million in 2020. Today the average value of an F-1 Team is $1.8 Billion according to Forbes. Suddenly everyone wants in. GM was asleep at the switch, while FORD partnered with Red Bull to produce engines starting in 2026. GM/Andretti is a day late and a dollar short. They have a better chance of landing an NFL franchise.

  12. Perez just finished last in the Monaco quali. The more I hear about this the less I want Andretti in F1.
    This is the worst that can happen to the series. They are going to destroy it.

  13. Please, nobody wants racist Americans in Formula One stay with the good old boy network in NASCAR please. Well, you can keep flying your confederate flags!

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