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Marko finds closure – breaks silence on what comes next

Helmut Marko has finally drawn a firm line under a life lived at full throttle. After two decades spent shaping Formula 1 from the inside with Red Bull, the Austrian has made it clear that his time in the sport is not merely paused, but finished for good.

At 82, Marko’s departure at the end of the 2025 season closed one of the most influential chapters in modern F1 history. And now, any lingering notion of a comeback has been decisively dismissed.

For someone whose presence loomed over the paddock for more than half a century, the finality of Marko’s words carries weight. Speaking candidly about his future, he left no room for interpretation.

“Yes, it is 100 per cent out of the question that I will return to Formula 1,” Marko told Austrian broadcaster ORF.

The declaration brings an end to speculation that the famously blunt powerbroker might reappear elsewhere in the sport, particularly given the behind-the-scenes interest that has followed his exit.

“I have had very obscure and interesting requests and conversations at times,” he admitted. “But I have become successful in F1 with Red Bull and that should continue. Nothing else will take its place.”

That sense of loyalty – to what was built and where it was built – runs through Marko’s farewell. From Red Bull’s first steps in 2005 to six constructors’ championships and eight drivers’ titles, he was central to an empire defined by ruthless efficiency and fearless ambition.

As architect of the junior programme, he was the man who opened the door to Formula 1 for Sebastian Vettel and Max Verstappen – and demanded they prove they belonged.

Life After Responsibility

Away from the relentless pressure cooker of F1, Marko’s tone softens. The urgency that once defined his days has been replaced by something unfamiliar: calm.

“I’m not completely involved anymore, but I’m up to speed,” he said.

“The nice thing is that I don’t feel any pressure, so I don’t lie awake with thoughts like, ‘What if the engine doesn’t work, or something else doesn’t?’ and so on.

“I don’t have that direct responsibility anymore. Of course, I am interested in getting the best possible result for Red Bull, but the situation is much more relaxed now.”

©RedBull

Red Bull confirmed that Marko, a former Formula 1 driver and Le Mans winner, had “decided to step down” – language that reflected a personal choice rather than a forced ending. At the time, Marko himself framed the moment as one of reflection and emotional clarity.

“I have been involved in motorsport for six decades now, and the past 20-plus years at Red Bull have been an extraordinary and extremely successful journey,” he said at the end of last year.

“It has been a wonderful time that I have been able to help shape and share with so many talented people. Everything we have built and achieved together fills me with pride.

“Narrowly missing out on the world championship this season has moved me deeply and made it clear to me that now is the right moment for me personally to end this very long, intense, and successful chapter.”

For a man who thrived on pressure, confrontation and uncompromising standards, stepping away was never going to be quiet.

But with his door to Formula 1 now firmly closed, Helmut Marko leaves behind a legacy that is already woven into the sport’s modern identity – one that no return could ever meaningfully add to.

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Michael Delaney

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