F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Haas boss insists 'dirty laundry is done internally'

Haas team boss Guenther Steiner denied that he had publicly castigated Mick Schumacher following another crash by the German in Hungary, and insists he'll always air his grievances internally.

In Hungary, Steiner did go on record to state that his drivers' crashes this season have been "too frequent and too heavy", and the Italian singled out Schumacher who suffered last weekend his third costly encounter of the year with the barriers.

"Mick in the last five races had quite a few big ones. These accidents are quite heavy. It’s a lot of money and for no good reason," said a frustrated Steiner in the wake of the rookie's mishap in FP3.

But Ralf Schumacher, Mick's uncle, shot back at the Haas team principal, whom he said should vent his frustration "internally, not externally".

"If you look at it that way, we might as well go public [with this] – Haas have been lagging behind for three years," added the former Grand Prix driver.

"What is he doing as team boss? You don’t talk about that publicly either."

©Haas

In the wake of Ralf Schumacher's comments, Steiner stood his ground and made clear that he runs his team as he sees fit, regardless of what others may think.

"I do my stuff the way I do it," Steiner told Motorsport.com. "I do things the way I think is right. I didn’t speak badly about Mick at all. I just said it was getting too much.

"There have been a lot of accidents recently. It’s unnecessary, it doesn’t help anyone. That’s all I’ve said. But again, I run the house the way I want.

"I wouldn’t criticise publicly. You don’t do that. You say it internally. Dirty laundry is done internally."

The 56-year-old team boss was always expecting a rocky campaign with two rookies under his wing. But calling it as he sees it and forcing his drivers to face the facts is part of their apprenticeship, he insists.

"There hasn’t been much negativity," concluded Steiner. "But if there is something negative, we have to talk about it.

"We can’t say ‘oh, everything is nice, everything is great’, because then it gets really bad at some point.

"Formula 1 is a competitive sport and if you’re not honest with yourself, you’ll never be successful here."

Gallery: The beautiful wives and girlfriends of F1 drivers

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via Facebook and Twitter

Michael Delaney

Recent Posts

Antonelli won’t ‘nuke’ Mercedes team in title fight with Russell - Palmer

With Mercedes suddenly finding itself at the sharp end of a championship fight again, questions…

5 minutes ago

‘It’s time’: Schumacher delivers brutal Hamilton and Alonso verdict

Few figures in Formula 1 deliver uncomfortable opinions with quite as little hesitation as Ralf…

1 hour ago

Norris keeping a close eye on Verstappen’s Nürburgring challenge

Reigning F1 world champion Lando Norris will be among the most intrigued observers this weekend…

3 hours ago

The very genesis of Formula 1 on this day in 1950

It all started on May 13, 1950 at Silverstone Circuit, where Alfa Romeo's Giuseppe Farina…

4 hours ago

Hulkenberg tells F1 critics: ‘If you don’t like it, don’t watch it’

As Formula 1’s controversial new era continues to divide opinion, Nico Hulkenberg has delivered the…

5 hours ago

No backing down: McLaren ‘definitely wants to defend’ its world title

Despite a rocky start to his team’s 2026 campaign in F1, Andrea Stella isn’t backing…

6 hours ago