The only candidate to take over the stewardship of Formula One has called for a change of culture after several high-profile clashes between drivers and International Automobile Federation (FIA) president Mohammed ben Sulayem.
Tim Mayer, who is running for FIA president, said that he wants to usher in a new era of partnership between officials, drivers and teams.
“It’s not about power, it’s not about controversy, it’s not about ‘how do we control things?’ It’s about ‘how do we serve?’” Mayer said.
Photo: AFP
Under Emirati Ben Sulayem, the FIA has frequently been involved in public spats, notably over whether drivers could swear over team radio, or a high-profile 2022 argument about clothing.
Ben Sulayem wanted to strictly enforce regulations about fire-retardant underwear and make drivers remove jewelry, setting him on a collision course with seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton.
The “underwear saga” sparked criticism that Ben Sulayem was power-crazed and intervening on matters of minimal importance when there were more pressing issues facing the sport.
“The fans really don’t want to hear about driver underwear,” said Mayer, who is seeking election in December.
“There’s a very simple way of dealing with that. You go to the drivers and you say: ‘Hey guys, it’s for your own safety, so please make sure you’re wearing the right stuff,’” Mayer said. “And you do that quietly in the drivers’ meeting.”
The 59-year-old Mayer, born in the US and educated in the UK, has motorsport in his blood.
Son of Teddy Mayer, once head of the McLaren racing team currently dominating Formula One, he has been involved in the administration of motorsport for 35 years.
He vowed to work more behind the scenes than Ben Sulayem if elected.
“The drivers are our stars, not the head of the FIA. Nobody ever bought a ticket to watch officials work,” he said.
What Formula One drivers do is “nothing short of miraculous,” he said, adding that “they don’t need to be treated like children, they need to be treated like partners.”
Mayer and Ben Sulayem had a very public falling-out when the FIA fired the American in November last year from his role as a steward. Mayer said the dismissal came via a text message.
He has accused Ben Sulayem of running the FIA as a “reign of terror,” but insisted his campaign was not driven by personal animosity.
“I was angry for about two weeks,” he said, reflecting on what drove him to be a motorsport administrator.
“For me, it was the opportunity to give back and really grow the organization that I’ve come to love over so many years,” he said.
However, he took a swipe at Ben Sulayem’s leadership style, mentioning an “unbelievable” high turnover of staff.
“They’ve hired some really good people and then they’re gone,” he said.
Mayer wants to put grassroots motorsport and a drive for greater diversity at the heart of his campaign.
Just back from an eight-country tour of Africa, he is open to the idea of hosting a Grand Prix on that continent.
“It’s not going to happen in the next 24 months, but ultimately, it’s 1.4 billion people who are essentially disenfranchised from open-wheel racing,” he said.
Mayer said he draws inspiration from sports such as rugby and soccer, which have sought to shed their male-dominated image with high-profile women’s competitions.
“We’ve completely disenfranchised women and minorities from entering into motorsport,” Mayer said, pledging to promote women in the sport “not just symbolically.”
“We have to get more women involved in engineering... It’s not just the symbology of getting a [woman] driver, it’s about changing the entire structure of how we think about the sport,” he said.
Mayer said he was confident of ousting Ben Sulayem in December’s election, but said the voting system was “completely stacked in favor of the incumbent.”
Mayer is crisscrossing the world drumming up support from member clubs, but also listening to their concerns.
“We need to put our ears on and close our mouth a little bit more... The next decade of the FIA should be a celebration of motorsport mobility,” he added.
Former European champions Celtic exited the UEFA Champions League in the qualifiers after a 3-2 penalty shoot-out defeat at Kazakhstan’s Kairat Almaty on Tuesday, following two goalless legs in the playoff tie. Kairat are to compete in the competition proper for the first time, while Norway’s Bodo/Glimt and Cyprus’s Pafos also secured debut appearances after coming through the playoffs. Celtic’s night ended in disappointment as they missed three penalties in the shoot-out, Daizen Maeda failing with the decisive spot-kick. The slugfest of a match went into extra-time with neither side finding the net and few overall chances, echoing the first
Rangers on Wednesday bowed out of the UEFA Champions League playoffs with a humiliating 6-0 defeat at the hands of Club Brugge which piles further pressure on head coach Russell Martin, while SL Benfica secured a place in the competition proper at the expense of Jose Mourinho’s Fenerbahce. The Glasgow giants traveled to Belgium right up against it after losing 3-1 at home in last week’s first leg, when they conceded three times in the opening 20 minutes. They never looked like turning the tie around as Club Brugge took the lead inside five minutes at the Jan Breydelstadion through Nicolo Tresoldi
Australian Alex de Minaur reached the second week of the US Open for the third year in a row with little fanfare on Saturday and said he intended to keep winning until the tournament organizers were forced to give him better billing. Despite being the eighth seed and a quarter-finalist last year at Flushing Meadows, De Minaur’s third-round match against German Daniel Altmaier was scheduled for Court 17 — the smallest of the four stadium venues in the precinct. “It is a little bit of a headscratcher for me. I’m not gonna lie,” he told reporters after progressing 6-7 (9/7), 6-3, 6-4,
Noah Lyles on Thursday warmed up for the upcoming athletics world championships by chasing down Olympic champion Letsile Tebogo to win the 200m at the Diamond League final. Lyles trailed Tebogo at the start, but gradually erased the deficit over the final 100m and pipped the Botswana sprinter to the line by centimeters. Lyles, the Olympic 100m champion and reigning world champion in both the 100m and 200m, clocked 19.74 seconds in a slight headwind. Tebogo was 0.02 seconds behind. It was Lyles’ sixth Diamond League title, a record for track athletes. “Six, that’s a big number,” Lyles said. “Shoot, that’s another record on