F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Horner: Outside pressure to remove Masi 'not right'

Christian Horner believes the FIA's decision to terminate Michael Masi as F1's race director is "harsh", insisting the governing body ultimately succumbed to pressure which "isn't right".

Masi paid the price for his botched handling of F1's title decider in Abu Dhabi last December, circumventing the normal Safety Car rules to hasten the race's restart and produce a final lap shootout between Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen that handed the title on a silver plate to the Dutchman.

The FIA's investigation into the race – the contents of which has yet to be made public – has led to a series of changes to the race direction's operations for 2022.

Two new race directors – Eduardo Freitas and Niels Wittich – will replace Masi while a new Virtual Race Control Room similar to football's VAR system will assist the FIA stewards in their decisions and calls over race incidents.

Furthermore, the late Charlie Whiting's long-standing assistant, F1 veteran Herbie Blash, will also be on site to support and advise F1's new race directors.

Horner welcomed Blash's presence and the introduction of new technology to help the stewards' decision-making process. But the Red Bull team boss still considers that Masi's exit is "harsh".

"It's a difficult one. It's the FIA's business. I think it is harsh; I think he was in a very difficult position last year," Horner told talkSPORT.

"When you look at what he has at his disposal in terms of resource, compared to what the teams have, it's such a massive difference.

"It's good to hear they are bringing in things like the VAR equivalent and one of the most experienced guys in Herbie Blash.

"I just think there was so much pressure put on the removal of Michael and that's not right. That's my personal feeling."

Horner reiterated his belief that Verstappen is a worthy F1 champion, the events of last December notwithstanding, insisting there has been "some hiding around the controversy" to try and devalue the Dutchman's merit.

"It was an intense period. You have to look at the season over the 22 races," Horner explained. "We had a lot of decisions go against us earlier in the year and penalties that weren't awarded and so on.

"We got a little bit lucky at the end and sometimes that happens in sport; it's not over until the whistle goes or the flag falls.

"Tactically, we were sharp at the end. When [Nicholas Latifi's] crash came five laps from the end we reacted immediately. We got Max in, pitted him for a new set of tyres, [while] Mercedes left Lewis out on what [were] 44-lap tyres at the end of their life.

"Max had to make that pass on the last lap, which he did. There has been some hiding around the controversy. The bottom line was that tactically we got it right. Max delivered the move and became the World Champion."

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

Michael Delaney

Recent Posts

Remembering the man who conquered F1's most thrilling win

Peter Gethin, the man who secured perhaps the most thrilling win ever witnessed in Grand…

11 mins ago

Aston Martin’s nightmare: Honda owns up to power unit meltdown

Aston Martin engine supplier Honda has publicly conceded what the timing screens in Bahrain had…

1 hour ago

Piastri explains management shake-up ahead of 2026 F1 season

As the countdown to 2026 gathers pace, Oscar Piastri has reshuffled his inner circle –…

3 hours ago

Aston Martin F1 secures naming rights in perpetuity amid turmoil

The Aston Martin F1 team will carry its name into Grand Prix racing’s future in…

4 hours ago

Vasseur encouraged as Ferrari hits mileage targets in Bahrain

Ferrari wrapped up a productive pre-season testing stint in Bahrain, leaving team principal Fred Vasseur…

18 hours ago

Antonelli sees fixes, Russell stumbles as Bahrain reveals issues

Mercedes’ pre-season testing in Bahrain wrapped up on Friday with a mix of promise and…

19 hours ago