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Max Mosley
Financial meltdown: Max Mosley said Honda's exit was sad but not surprising
Max Mosley Jenson Button Takeo Fukui John Surtees

Max Mosley issues warning to Formula One as Honda quit

Andrew Hodgson
5 Dec 2008


Motorsport supremo Max Mosley believes Formula One could lose a succession of teams after Honda quit the sport because of the global recession.

He said Honda's exit was sad but not surprising in the current financial climate and warned that other teams were facing financial meltdown.

Mosely, president of the FIA, motorsport's governing body, said Honda's decision, which leaves Jenson Button facing the possibility of being without a drive next season, should act as a significant warning.

He said it was imperative the sport slashed its soaring costs, with teams spending around £300million a year, or it could fall apart.

Teams have plans to cut back next season, which Mosely described as just "fiddling about". He wants to introduce a standardised, low-cost engine in 2010.

Mosley believes costs could be reduced from around £300m to £30m if they stop pointless, expensive developments.

He said: "If we don't cut costs we would lose one team after another and we would end up with no teams at all. If the teams don't notice now what's happened, you have to abandon all hope.

"If they don't wake up to it now, they'll probably get a nasty shock in the future.

"Our job is to take action. That's why we've sent out a letter to the teams this morning setting out our plans to get the costs right down."

While Mosley made his call for cuts, Honda Motors chief executive Takeo Fukui, who spent around £200m a year on F1, said they would be willing to sell the team after nine years in the sport.

The shock decision leaves Button without a drive, although he may find a berth with Toro Rosso. His team-mate Rubens Barrichello is now likely to retire.

In a statement, Fukui said the decision was made to preserve Honda's core business activities in a worsening global crisis.

He said: "We have come to the conclusion that we will withdraw from all Formula One activities.

"The decision is in light of the deteriorating operating environment facing the global auto industry, brought on by the problem in the United States, the deepening credit crisis and the contraction of world economies."

From high-speed legends to a final breakdown

February, 1964, marked the beginning of Honda's proud history in Formula One which saw the team power such legends as John Surtees, Nelson Piquet, Keke Rosberg, Ayrton Senna, and Nigel Mansell to legendary status in the world of grands prix.

The first Honda F1 car made its debut on the daunting Nurburgring in August, 1964, with Ronnie Bucknum at the wheel. The American held a top-10 position before he was forced to retire with suspension problems.

He underlined the promise of the Honda a month later by battling to fifth at Monza before encountering more technical problems.

The following season the team signed Richie Ginther to partner Bucknum and the Californian gave the team their maiden victory on only their 11th outing when he won the Mexican Grand Prix.

In 1967, Honda signed John Surtees, the only man to win the world title on both two and four wheels.

After a thrilling season duelling with Jim Clark and Jack Brabham, Surtees finished fourth in the drivers' championship.

Surtees also gave the team their first pole position at Monza a year later. The team withdrew from Formula One in 1969 and didn't return until 1983, but this time a decision was taken to be an engine supplier only and the team went on, via a brief spell as Spirit-Honda, to establish a successful partnership with Williams

Nigel Mansell joined the team and the Honda powered Williams became the team to beat. Honda engines powered Williams and Lotus in 1987 and these cars won 11 of the 16 races that year with Nelson Piquet winning the title.

Honda switched to McLaren at the end of 1987 and their engines helped Alain Prost and Ayrton Senna become champions.

In 1992, when a Honda-powered car failed to win the title, they quit the sport again before returning towards the end of 1999. In 2000, Honda supplied engines for BAR, and Jordan.

BAR became Honda Racing in 2006 but they failed to reproduce their glorious past and today's announcement sees them exit once more, probaby never to return.

Reader views (4)

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A one engine series will certainly cause an exodus of all other auto mfrs, because they are in F1 to show off their engineering prowess.

Then again, the most interesting period of F1 was the Cosworth era when constructors were getting incredibly creative with chassis designs. But today's chassis have all been regulated to the point where one can not tell them apart if they were all painted the same color.

I think this is the beginning of the end of F1. At least we can continue to look forward to reliving the glory years of the sport with historic car racing.

- Alfa Canguro, Los Angeles USA, 06/12/2008 03:50
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FORMULA ONE should stop all activities for a couple of years to prove that the motor industry is deserving of govt aid to stay in business

People are starving and its is obscene that they should have to view champagne fights between the victorious
participants after each race

- Alex Pomeroy, london, 05/12/2008 16:42
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Do you knpow I could live without Formula One....I could even struggle on without Max Mosely.99%of the time we are being encouraged to think about our use of & reliance on fossil fuels.Then we have the wicked waste of Formula One's extravagant consumption.

- Doff, filey uk, 05/12/2008 16:05
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"(Button)...may find a berth with Toro Rosso"

No he wont. The line-ups for next season, and possibly 2010 are set now. Besides, who would want him?

- Md, London, UK, 05/12/2008 13:29
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