Ferrari could leave F1 after 2020, warns Marchionne
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[November 03, 2017]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - Ferrari could quit
Formula One after 2020 if the sport's new owners take it in a
direction contrary to the Italian sportscar maker's interests,
chairman Sergio Marchionne said on Thursday.
Marchionne told analysts on a conference call that while he
supported cost-cutting, there were other strategic issues under
discussion that could force Ferrari to consider racing elsewhere.
"It (Formula One) has been part of our DNA since the day we were
born," he said.
"But if we change the sandbox to the point where it becomes an
unrecognizable sandbox, I don't want to play anymore."
Asked how he would feel about being the chief executive who led
Ferrari away from Formula One, Marchionne replied:
"Like a million bucks because I'll be working on an alternative
strategy to try and replace it. More rational one, too."
Ferrari are the only team to have been in Formula One since the
first world championship season in 1950 and also the most successful
and glamorous, even if they have not won a championship since 2008.
They have accumulated a record 228 race wins, 16 constructors'
championships and 15 drivers' titles.
It has long been accepted in Formula One that the Monaco Grand Prix
and Ferrari are the two central pillars of the sport's success, and
their current share of the revenues reflects that special status.
Ferrari, celebrating the company's 70th anniversary this year, first
made sportscars to fund their racing activities under founder Enzo
Ferrari and are a huge source of national pride in Italy.
Formula One has been under new ownership since January, however,
with U.S.-based Liberty Media taking over the commercial rights and
ousting the former supremo Bernie Ecclestone.
Liberty want to level the playing field and rebalance revenues once
the current agreement with teams expires at the end of 2020.
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Ferrari president Sergio Marchionne. REUTERS/Max Rossi
Proposals for a new, cheaper and simpler engine were presented in
Paris on Tuesday and there is another meeting of the sport's
Strategy Group next Tuesday to discuss other changes.
"Liberty has got a couple of good intentions in all of this, one of
which is to reduce the cost of execution for the team, which I think
is good," said Marchionne.
But he said Ferrari and Liberty appeared to be "somewhat at odds in
terms of the strategic development" after 2020.
"I think you need to be absolutely clear that unless we find a set
of circumstances, the results of which are beneficial to the
maintenance of the brand in the marketplace and to the strengthening
of the unique position for Ferrari, Ferrari will not play," he said.
Marchionne said, however, that he would not pre-judge anything.
"We're walking into this meeting next Tuesday with the best of
intentions, we'll see where it takes us," he said.
"I am attending those meetings on strategy because it's important,
because it matters a lot to this business," added Marchionne.
"The financial implications of the wrong choice for the moment going
forward are pretty significant to Ferrari."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Ian Ransom)
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