Mercedes prepared to accept different income distribution
- Published on 03 Nov 2014 16:50
-
1
- By: Rob Veenstra
In short, the boycott threat is still alive -- not only for Interlagos, but also for the crown in the 2014 finale, the title-deciding Abu Dhabi race. "We want to see solutions next week in Brazil," Lotus team owner Gerard Lopez told Auto Motor und Sport, "and an agreement by the finale in Abu Dhabi."
That sounds like an ultimatum. Undoubtedly, Ecclestone came out with his lengthy and earnest comments on Saturday to make clear his willingness to right the wrongs of the contracts he signed. That puts the ball in the court of the big teams that are receiving the lion's share of the income.
"I said to people getting a chunk of money that I would like to take a percentage of their performance-related payment," Ecclestone said. "I would put that money together to divide among the three or four we know are in trouble and then I will put in the same amount of money."
The big problem is that the big teams, predictably, have refused to agree. Red bull's Christian Horner, although close to Ecclestone, said the F1 supremo's proposal is "unfair" given the existing agreements that are in place. In an FIA press conference in Austin, McLaren's Eric Boullier was asked if he was prepared to give up some money. "No," the Frenchman simply answered.
Mercedes' Toto Wolff defended Boullier. "We laugh about Eric's answer," he said, "but this is why he's paid. He's paid to bring performance to the team, sporting performance and financial performance."
With the smell of Caterham and Marussia's death in the air, however, combined with the persistent boycott threat, Wolff may now have had a change of heart. On Monday, Germany's Auto Motor und Sport quotes him as saying: "For the benefit of the sport, we would waive a few per cent if Ferrari and Red Bull also do." (GMM)
Trending news
-
Former Ferrari driver fears Hamilton has broken Leclerc's confidence
Charles Leclerc is facing a crisis of confidence at Ferrari, according to former Scuderia driver René Arnoux, ...
23 Jun 2026 12:15 -
Why Vowles believes both drivers will commit to struggling Williams
James Vowles has declared his confidence that Carlos Sainz and Alex Albon will remain with Williams through 2027, eve...
23 Jun 2026 15:20 -
Bortoleto says Audi chassis strong but engine costs over a second per lap
Gabriel Bortoleto has delivered a candid assessment of Audi's first season as a Formula 1 factory team, revealing...
23 Jun 2026 16:22 -
Why Cadillac is standing firmly behind Sergio Pérez
Sergio Pérez is receiving strong backing from Cadillac team principal Graeme Lowdon, who has praised the Mexic...
23 Jun 2026 14:19 -
Why Antonelli refuses to be called 'the new Senna'
Andrea Kimi Antonelli has pushed back against early comparisons to Ayrton Senna, despite a strong rookie campaign wit...
23 Jun 2026 13:17
Azerbaijan Grand Prix
Local time
-
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Azerbaijan Grand Prix
Local time
-
Friday
-
Saturday
-
Sunday
-
Friday
-
Saturday
-
Sunday
Test calendar
Circuit de Catalunya - Winter testing
Bahrain International Circuit - Winter testing
Bahrain International Circuit - Winter testing
World Championship standings 2026
Related news
Give your opinion!
Formula 1 Calendar - 2026
Formula 1 Calendar - 2026
Team profile
- Team name McLaren
- Base Woking, United Kingdom
- Jenson Button 1
- Lewis Hamilton 1
- Fernando Alonso 1
- Niki Lauda 1
- Stoffel Vandoorne 2
- Lewis Hamilton 2
- Lewis Hamilton 2
- Gerhard Berger 2
- Daniel Ricciardo 3
- Jenson Button 3
- Lewis Hamilton 3
- Kimi Räikkönen 3
- Mika Häkkinen 3
- Lando Norris 4
- Lewis Hamilton 4
- Jenson Button 4
- Kimi Räikkönen 4
- Jenson Button 5
- Sergio Perez 6
- Kimi Räikkönen 6
- Kimi Räikkönen 6
- Niki Lauda 8
- Alain Prost 8
- Kimi Räikkönen 9
- Fernando Alonso 14
- Kevin Magnussen 20
- Jenson Button 22
- Lewis Hamilton 22
- Gerhard Berger 28
- Stoffel Vandoorne 47
- Carlos Sainz jr 55
- Oscar Piastri 81
305,583 comments on McLaren
163 members have this team as their favourite
Tweets about McLaren

Replies (1)
Login to replyPosts: 204
Christian Horner and Eric Boullier are team managers, whose annual compensation very likely entails a bonus calculated in part on their team's awarded shares of the championship pot for teams. So, of course, they don't want any reduction of those or other payents to be earned through racing performance. Toto Wolff, on the other hand, is half-owner of the Merc team, so his comment and agreement to revised sharing has more meaning in this situation. Now, if Bernie can just get the other "owners" to agree.