McLaren – Michmutters
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F1 news 2022: Ralf Schumacher calls for Alpine not to block Oscar Piastri, Daniel Ricciardo

German racing legend Ralf Schumacher has pleaded for Alpine not to block Oscar Piastri’s path to Formula 1, arguing the team only has itself to blame for losing the prodigy driver.

Australian star Daniel Ricciardo became embroiled in F1’s mid-year silly season following reports he will be replaced by young compatriot Piastri at McLaren next year.

Watch Every Practice, Qualifying & Race of the 2022 FIA Formula One World Championship™ Live on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

The messy contract situation erupted after two-time world champion Fernando Alonso blindsided the F1 world and jumped into Sebastian Vettel’s vacated seat at Aston Martin.

Alpine then announced Piastri would replace Alonso in 2023, only for the 21-year-old Melburnian to reject the seat — a bold move for someone who is yet to drive in F1.

The Enstone team asserts that Piastri, Alpine’s reserve driver for 2022, should respect the contract, but the Victorian believes the commitment is not valid because an option clause expired.

The matter could be settled to the courtroom – Alpine team principal Otmar Szafnauer threatened to file a civil lawsuit to recover the millions of dollars spent on training Piastri this season.

“I expected more loyalty from Oscar than he is showing,” Szafnauer told Spanish publication The confidential.

“I started in 1989 in Formula 1 and I’ve never seen anything like this. And it’s not about Formula 1, it’s about integrity as a human being.

“For me, the way I grew up, I don’t need to sign a piece of paper and then have someone say, ‘You’re lying, because you signed this’.”

According to French publication Auto Hebdothe FIA’s Driver Contract Recognition Board has found that both Piastri’s Alpine and McLaren contracts are valid.

speaking to Sky F1 in GermanySchumacher argued Alpine’s contract woes were self-inflicted, calling on the F1 team to respect Piastri’s wishes.

“Piastri has done everything right,” he started.

“Now we can only hope that the sore loser – in this case Alpine – doesn’t put obstacles in the boy’s path. Piastri was with them, they had everything in hand, all they had to do was give him a contract.

“I’m sorry. I like Otmar, but he will be disappointed in his own performance, that he did not see it coming with Alonso and that he does not have a plan B. That’s the embarrassing thing about the whole saga.

“Accordingly, he has to blame himself. Oscar did nothing wrong. At the end of the day, Alpine could have questioned Alonso earlier and made it clear to Piastri that they would be relying on him in the future.

“He won Formula 3 in his first year, and Formula 2 as well. What should he be waiting for? I would have done the same if I had been offered a job.

“One thing was clear; Alpine wasn’t interested in putting Piastri in the car next year at the beginning because they saw that young drivers need a certain amount of time (until they arrive in Formula 1).

“They wanted to put him somewhere else for one or two years. There was an option from Alpine to (put Piastri in the cockpit), but it wasn’t taken because they didn’t expect Fernando Alonso to leave.

“When you have such a jewel, it’s criminal to let him go. If you’re then unable to get the contracts right yourself, you can’t blame the young man.

“You also have to remember one thing; Piastri’s manager Mark Webber has a very, very close relationship with McLaren team boss Andreas Seidl.”

On Friday, FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem claimed the contract issue would be solved through their own means instead of in the courtroom.

“The FIA’s Driver Contract Recognition Board (CRB) was set up to deal with contract priority issues between drivers and F1 teams,” he tweeted.

“That’s why we rely on their decision to resolve any conflict.”

Meanwhile, Ricciardo is reportedly seeking a whopping $21 million payout to walk away from his contract with McLaren.

The 33-year-old is reportedly only party who can break his contract with the team, which expires at the end of 2023.

A payout would clear the way for McLaren to officially sign Piastri.

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Sports

FIA finally breaks silence on Oscar Piastri contract saga, Daniel Ricciardo

The FIA ​​has finally broken its silence on the Oscar Piastri contract saga, confirming the ongoing dispute between McLaren and Alpine will be resolved without having to go to court.

Australian driver Daniel Ricciardo became embroiled in F1’s mid-year silly season following reports he will be replaced by young compatriot Piastri at McLaren next year.

The news erupted last week after two-time world champion Fernando Alonso blindsided the F1 world and jumped into Sebastian Vettel’s vacated seat at Aston Martin.

Watch Every Practice, Qualifying & Race of the 2022 FIA Formula One World Championship™ Live on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

Alpine then announced Piastri would be the man to replace Alonso, only for the 21-year-old Melburnian to reject the seat — a bold move for someone who is yet to drive in F1.

Alpine believes that Piastri should respect the contract, but the Victorian believes the commitment is not valid.

The French team threatened to file a civil lawsuit to recover the millions of dollars in training it has spent on Piastri this season.

“Going to the High Court is over 90 per cent certain that’s what we’ll do,” Alpine team principal Otmar Szafnauer told Reuters.

“If the CRB (Contract Recognition Board) says, ‘Your license is only valid at Alpine’, and then he (Piastri) says, ‘That’s great, but I’m never driving for them, I’ll just sit out a year ‘, then you’ve got to go to the High Court for compensation.”

McLaren Chief Executive Officer Zak Brown and Otmar Szafnauer. Photo by Andy Hone/Pool via Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

On Friday, FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem claimed the issue would be solved through their own means instead of in the courtroom.

“The FIA’s Driver Contract Recognition Board (CRB) was set up to deal with contract priority issues between drivers and F1 teams,” he tweeted.

“That’s why we rely on their decision to resolve any conflict.”

According to French publication Auto Hebdothe CRB has found that both Piastri’s Alpine and McLaren contracts are valid.

The CRB, a group made up of independent lawyers, was set up to determine the legality of driver contracts and settle disputes between teams.

The body was founded in 1991 after seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher signed for Benetton despite having agreed to discuss a contract with Jordan.

Oscar Piastri of Australia. Photo by Clive Mason/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

Szafnauer also hinted at a potential collusion between Piastri’s manager Mark Webber, Alonso and his manager Flavio Briatore.

Webber and Alonso are close friends after their time in F1, while Briatore, who was a former team boss at Bennetton and Renault, has been Alonso’s long-term manager.

“Look, I have no record of it, but this is Formula 1 and maybe in a couple of years someone says that they have evidence of shared information, I would not be surprised,” Szafnauer said.

“I always tell everyone that in Formula 1 you have to act as if everyone knows everything. That there are no secrets in these things. When you ask someone not to say anything, they act like everyone knows.

“That’s how I’ve run my business in Formula 1 for 25 years. And if this (information sharing) has happened, you should not be surprised.”

Meanwhile, former F1 driver turned pundit Christian Danner said Piastri’s tactics “clearly has the handwriting” of Briatore.

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Sports

F1 news 2022: FIA finally breaks silence on Oscar Piastri contract saga, Daniel Ricciardo

The FIA ​​has finally broken its silence on the Oscar Piastri contract saga, confirming the ongoing dispute between McLaren and Alpine will be resolved without having to go to court.

Australian driver Daniel Ricciardo became embroiled in F1’s mid-year silly season following reports he will be replaced by young compatriot Piastri at McLaren next year.

The news erupted last week after two-time world champion Fernando Alonso blindsided the F1 world and jumped into Sebastian Vettel’s vacated seat at Aston Martin.

Watch Every Practice, Qualifying & Race of the 2022 FIA Formula One World Championship™ Live on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

Alpine then announced Piastri would be the man to replace Alonso, only for the 21-year-old Melburnian to reject the seat — a bold move for someone who is yet to drive in F1.

Alpine believes that Piastri should respect the contract, but the Victorian believes the commitment is not valid.

The French team threatened to file a civil lawsuit to recover the millions of dollars in training it has spent on Piastri this season.

“Going to the High Court is over 90 per cent certain that’s what we’ll do,” Alpine team principal Otmar Szafnauer told Reuters.

“If the CRB (Contract Recognition Board) says, ‘Your license is only valid at Alpine’, and then he (Piastri) says, ‘That’s great, but I’m never driving for them, I’ll just sit out a year ‘, then you’ve got to go to the High Court for compensation.”

On Friday, FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem claimed the issue would be solved through their own means instead of in the courtroom.

“The FIA’s Driver Contract Recognition Board (CRB) was set up to deal with contract priority issues between drivers and F1 teams,” he tweeted.

“That’s why we rely on their decision to resolve any conflict.”

According to French publication Auto Hebdothe CRB has found that both Piastri’s Alpine and McLaren contracts are valid.

The CRB, a group made up of independent lawyers, was set up to determine the legality of driver contracts and settle disputes between teams.

The body was founded in 1991 after seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher signed for Benetton despite having agreed to discuss a contract with Jordan.

Szafnauer also hinted at a potential collusion between Piastri’s manager Mark Webber, Alonso and his manager Flavio Briatore.

Webber and Alonso are close friends after their time in F1, while Briatore, who was a former team boss at Bennetton and Renault, has been Alonso’s long-term manager.

“Look, I have no record of it, but this is Formula 1 and maybe in a couple of years someone says that they have evidence of shared information, I would not be surprised,” Szafnauer said.

“I always tell everyone that in Formula 1 you have to act as if everyone knows everything. That there are no secrets in these things. When you ask someone not to say anything, they act like everyone knows.

“That’s how I’ve run my business in Formula 1 for 25 years. And if this (information sharing) has happened, you should not be surprised.”

Meanwhile, former F1 driver turned pundit Christian Danner said Piastri’s tactics “clearly has the handwriting” of Briatore.

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Daniel Ricciardo: McLaren know it is cheaper to pay him off than to keep him for 2023 – this is why… | F1

Ricciardo has demanded £13.25m to bring an early end to his contract with McLaren, which is currently due to expire after the 2023 season, according to Speedcafe.

Only the driver has the right to end the contract early, not the team, the report says, which is why Ricciardo is negotiating a pay-off.

It is cheaper for McLaren to pay Ricciardo off, and pay the salary of his replacement Oscar Piastri, than it would be to keep Ricciardo for 2023, according to the French sports business website Sportune.fr.

That is reportedly because Ricciardo’s salary, on his current contract, is due to increase next season.

He penned a three-year deal with McLaren in 2020 – the agreement was for him to be paid an estimated £12.2m in each of the first two seasons. This year, that makes him the joint-fifth highest earner on the F1 grid.

That figure is due to increase for 2023, the final year on Ricciardo’s contract.

His teammate Lando Norris is already earning an estimated £20m per season, with four more years still to run on his current contract.

McLaren intends to pay Ricciardo a settlement equivalent to 50 percent of his contracted 2023 salary, Sportune.fr report.

In total, McLaren believe that Ricciardo’s pay-off, plus Piastri’s salary for 2023, plus compensation to Alpine (who insist Piastri is already under contract with them), would total an estimated €19m (£16m) – that is still less than keeping Ricciardo as their driver for next season.

The F1 2023 driver line-up currently has five vacant seats.

The likeliest landing spot for Ricciardo could be at Alpine, the team he represented when they were known as Renault.

Alpine have lost Fernando Alonso, who will move to Aston Martin for the 2023 season as a replacement for the retiring Sebastian Vettel.

Alonso, the fourth-highest earning driver of 2022, is pocketing more than Ricciardo this season which may mean Alpine have the budget to attract the Australian.

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Technology

Bugatti’s Next Hypercar is the ‘Opposite’ of What You Expect

A photo of a black and orange Bugatti Chiron hypercar.

The Bugatti Chiron: The last of its kind?
photo: Bugatti

french carmaker Bugatti has been synonymous with big, W16-powered hypercars for almost 20 years. But, since its acquisition by Croatian EV maker Rimacthe car world has been waiting with bated breath for the news that the brand will be going electric. Now, CEO Mate Rimac has confirmed that electrification won’t be the case for Bugatti’s next hypercar. adding, it won’t be what we’re expecting, either.

Bugatti’s first W16-powered Veyron rolled off the production line in Molsheim, France, in 2005. It went on to break speed records here and there, before being replaced by the similarly-powered but even faster Chiron in 2016.

Capable of reaching up to 304 mph, the Chiron was an impressive machine. However, andcome back when it launched, the gargantuan motor powering the car to its insane top speed was beginning to feel dated. Cars like the McLaren P1 and Porsche 918 were showing just what supercar makers could do when they put their faith in hybrid power.

And now, with the Chiron out of productionthe historic French brand looks to finally embracing a touch of electric power in its next-generation hypercar.

A photo of a green Rimac Nevera electric supercar.

Don’t expect Bugatti to start shipping re-badged Rimac Neveras any time soon.
photo: Rimac

Company boss Mate Rimac recently spoke with vlogger and part-time racing driver Nico Rosberg in a new video on his YouTube channel. As well as picking up his own Rimac Nevera EV, Rosberg quizzed Rimac about the future of Bugatti.

“For the last two and a half years, we are working on the successor,” says Rimac while the pair discuss an excellent blue Bugatti Chiron parked at the Rimac factory in Croatia. “I think you will like that a lot.”

Rosberg pushes Rimac for more details of the new car, which he previously said would feature some kind of internal combustion engine.

He says: “The Chiron is amazing and is basically the successor to the Veyron, which revolutionized the hypercar market with the W16 engine – the first car with 1,000 horsepower. Amazing engine, and the pinnacle of engine development.

“The time has come now to go to the next step. And the next step is not going to be all-electric. We believe there is still a very important element to Bugatti’s future with the combustion engine. But very interesting combustion engines, and strongly electrified.”

MY 2000HP DREAM HYPERCAR ARRIVED!! | Nico Rossberg

After one final push for some juicy engine gossip, Rimac says that the new engine will be “going in the opposite direction of what everybody expects.”

So, the firm’s next hypercar is not going to feature another W16 and it’s not going to be powered by an electric motor. Somewhere in between might point to an engine similar to the AMG One’s F1-inspired powertrainor perhaps something derived from VW stablemate Porsche’s hybrid workings.

Either way, it’s going to be exciting seeing how Bugatti changes under its new leadership.

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Sports

Daniel Ricciardo told by McLaren he will be replaced – what teams may fight for him? | F1

Ricciardo’s future has been a hot topic in an underwhelming campaign and, despite telling Crash.Net “I have not forgotten how to drive” several months ago, he is set to be ushered out of McLaren.

His current contract expires at the end of the 2023 season but Zak Brown, the McLaren CEO previously revealed that clauses existed to end it early. That option will be taken at the end of this season and Ricciardo has been informed, ESPN report.

McLaren opted not to comment when asked by Crash.Net.

Piastri, the F2 champion who is at the center of a tug-of-war with Alpine, will step into Ricciardo’s seat.

It is the latest major move for a fascinating 2023 F1 driver line-up kickstarted by Sebastian Vettel’s retirement and Fernando Alonso’s move from Alpine to Aston Martin.

Alpine that announced Piastri, one of the brightest emerging talents in the sport, would replace Alonso but he immediately reacted “that is wrong”.

The FIA ​​contract recognition board has recognized Piastri’s deal with McLaren above a contract he has with Alpine which expires at the end of 2022, RacingNews365 reported.

McLaren are stalling on confirming Piastri as their new driver for 2023 until they have helped Ricciardo find a new drive, Racer.com reports.

Alpine are the obvious choice. The vacancy caused by Alonso’s move will not be filled by Piastri after all, so they need a driver.

They currently pay Alonso a reported £14.9m per season – the fourth highest salary among drivers for 2022 – so should be able to afford Ricciardo, who currently pockets £12.2m per season from McLaren.

Ricciardo spent two seasons with Renault before they rebranded and became Alpine.

Haas have not yet confirmed Mick Schumacher as their driver beyond the end of this season. Schumacher has veered between poor performances and flirting with the idea of ​​eventually moving to Ferrari, where his father was a legend, but Ricciardo’s availability will give Haas options at the negotiating table.

Williams have a seat vacant alongside Alex Albon. Nicholas Latifi has been tipped to leave although Nyck de Vries or Logan Sargeant are younger, likelier options.

Alfa Romeo have Valtteri Bottas signed up for 2023 but haven’t confirmed Zhou Guanyu’s spot beyond the end of this year. Yuki Tsunoda’s future with AlphaTauri, who also have Pierre Gasly, is also unconfirmed. Although Zhou and Tsunoda are among the lowest-earners on the 2022 grid so replacing them with the veteran Australian would be costly.

Ricciardo has previously been linked with a switch to IndyCar, too.

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Sports

McLaren to investigate Daniel Ricciardo-Lando Norris mismatch

Andreas Seidl has conceded McLaren “need to understand” why Daniel Ricciardo was unable to match Lando Norris’ performance at the Hungarian Grand Prix.

Ricciardo has endured a torrid 18 months at McLaren despite leading the team to its only victory in a decade at last year’s Italian GP.

The recent weekend at the Hungaroring was another example of his difficult season as McLaren put both drivers on the same strategy, with Lando Norris coming home seventh after starting fourth, and the Australian finishing 15th from ninth.

Assessing the dramatic differences again between his two drivers, team principal Seidl said: “[We scored] important points, obviously, for our battle in the constructors’ championship battle with Alpine.

“But, of course, we need to understand why on Daniel’s side, with exactly the same strategy, we were falling off so much with the hard tires in the final stint which put Daniel out of the points.

“That’s what we need to analyze together with Daniel.”

McLaren encouraged by upgrade progress

McLaren started the season with a brake duct issue, dropping the team to the back of the field.

After bringing its latest upgrades to the track in France, McLaren is continuing to see improvement as it continues to fight to be the ‘best of the rest’ with Alpine behind the leading trio of Red Bull, Ferrari and Mercedes.

“In the end, P7 was a good outcome for us because we have to accept that when the cars of the top three finish a race without major incidents, they are clearly a step ahead,” added Seidl.

“Therefore, P7 for us was a good result for various reasons.

“I am very happy that we could also show in the race the encouraging signs we had already seen in Paul Ricard and also on Friday since we introduced our upgraded package in terms of performance.

“They have definitely made a good step forward which allowed us to score the P4 in quali and the P7 of Lando in the race.”

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Sports

Daniel Ricciardo deserves better than a push or a paid year on the sidelines : PlanetF1

Being paid $15 million to sit around for a year may seem like a dream job for most of us, but Daniel Ricciardo deserves better from McLaren.

If, and right now it is speculation based on a lot of hearsay and unnamed sources, Oscar Piastri has signed a letter of intent to race for McLaren next season, the Woking team has one too many drivers.

Ricciardo being the too many.

If McLaren today have a choice between keeping him or keeping Lando Norris it is a no-brainer given that, while the Aussie has the team’s only win since 2012, Norris has been the much more consistent driver.

One cannot argue against that. It is a simple fact as the numbers do not lie.

But pushing the 33-year-old out when he has just one year left on his contract, one year that could be his last in Formula 1 as it stands, is poor form from McLaren who themselves haven’t given him, or Norris, a race-winning car.

Ricciardo, though, has made it clear he wants to see out his contract, the eight-time grand prix winner convinced there is life in the old Honey Badger, he just needs to get his claws into that MCL36.

According to reports he does hold all the cards, the only person who has to say whether or not he is with the team in 2023. And he has until September to inform McLaren of his plans.

He’s already done that, at least in the statement he put out three weeks ago, making it clear that he wants to continue with McLaren, not sit on the sidelines.

Read more: F1 2022 driver rankings 11-20: Sebastian Vettel, Daniel Ricciardo and more

But even if Ricciardo takes up that option, insisting on staying with McLaren, that doesn’t necessarily mean he will be racing as the team could do what Ferrari once did with Kimi Raikkonen and pay him to sit on the sidelines.

Effectively his options are a push, the sidelines, or racing for a team that he knows doesn’t want him there.

It does, as many have pointed out, reflect badly on Zak Brown and McLaren as a whole if this is how they treat their drivers.

The company, already involved in one contract saga over IndyCar with Alex Palou and Chip Ganassi, are courting yet another in the space of just a few weeks.

McLaren not only need Alpine to back down on their claims that Piastri belongs to them, but they also need Ricciardo to willingly fall on his sword either by quitting the team to retire or join another, or take the money and sit on Vettel’s couch to watch the Formula 1.

Some may argue that $15 million and not racing in Formula 1 beats a pay cut and joining Alpine as, given the past few days’ happenings, it seems something is very wrong over in Enstone.

Read more: Embarrassing for Alpine but has Oscar Piastri started a game he may not win?

Losing the in-form Alonso because they wanted him to be a seat-filler for Piastri doesn’t say much about the team’s management but losing two drivers in one week says a lot, and what it says is not great, about the higher ups .

Alpine have opened the door to Ricciardo returning to the team that he quit after just two seasons, but given that he actually quit after just one as he signed with McLaren after his first year with Renault, it seems inconceivable that he would want back in.

What he wants, and has made abundantly clear, is to remain a McLaren Formula 1 driver. “I know what I’ve got. I know my future. I know my contract.”

And then he threw it back to McLaren…

“Give me a winning car and I’ll win. That’s the challenge for myself and McLaren. That is the confidence I have in myself. That’s why I wake up and still want to do this.”

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Sports

What next in F1’s messy Alpine/Piastri contractual tug of war?

It has been an extraordinary and tumultuous two days for the Alpine F1 team.

In the space of just 48 hours, the Anglo-French outfit lost Fernando Alonso and also appears to have lost their highly-rated junior driver Oscar Piastri in one of the most remarkable F1 rows of recent times.

The chaotic events have seen the 2023 driver market explode into life and led to a messy public dispute. But how did we get here?

making sense of madness

Ahead of the Hungarian Grand Prix – the final race before the summer break – Sebastian Vettel announced his retirement from F1 at the end of the 2022 season.

Naturally, thoughts quickly turned to who might replace the four-time world champion. Alonso, whose contract with Alpine was expiring, seemed like a dream statement signing for Aston Martin.

Although the Spaniard refused to completely rule a switch out, everything pointed towards him staying put for 2023. That’s what Alpine also believed, with Alonso assuring the team he had not signed with anyone else as the team prepared to leave Hungary on Sunday night.

The following morning, Aston Martin confirmed they had signed Alonso on a multi-year contract beginning in 2023, sending shockwaves through F1.

The bombshell news took Alpine by surprise, with team principal Otmar Szafnauer telling reporters in a press conference on August 2 that he first learned of Alonso’s departure when he read Aston Martin’s official press release.

Just hours later on late Tuesday afternoon, Alpine announced that Piastri, who won last year’s F2 championship, would make his F1 debut in 2023 “in line with the commitments made by the team to the young Australian”.

But Piastri responded by tweeting that he had “not signed a contract with Alpine for 2023 and will not be driving for them next year”. The 21-year-old said the announcement was “wrong” and had come “without my agreement”.

Prior to Alonso’s shock exit, Alpine had been looking to find Piastri a spot on the grid, with Williams at one stage appearing to be Piastri’s most likely destination.

The nature of Piastri’s public condemnation of Alpine’s announcement suggests he is confident about having another deal already lined up. Piastri, who is managed by ex-F1 driver Mark Webber, is understood to have an agreement with McLaren.

What happens next?

The dramatic stand-off, which appears to have been orchestrated by Alonso – who, just minutes after Piastri’s tweet, posted a video of him sticking his thumb up on Instagram – is set to rumble on.

Both parties believe they are in the right and a contractual tug-of-war looks set to follow during what is meant to be F1’s quietest period since the season began.

The unraveling contract saga echoes a similar motorsport dispute that is ongoing between Chip Ganassi Racing and McLaren over the destination of reigning IndyCar champion Alex Palou.

Ganassi has issued a lawsuit against Palou after the Spaniard denied the team’s announcement that he is under contract for 2023 and beyond. Hours later, McLaren issued their own press release claiming that Palou had signed with them.

A similar situation occurred in F1 back in 2004 when BAR-Honda and Williams were both convinced they had legitimate deals with Jenson Button, who had tried to quit BAR to rejoin Williams.

BAR ultimately won their fight with Williams for Button to drive for them in 2005 after F1’s Contract Recognition Board (CRB) ruled in their favor.

Intriguingly, Szafnauer, then vice president of Honda Racing, was also involved.

Should the Alpine/Piastri dispute end up in a legal battle, the outcomes are seemingly two-fold; either Piastri stays and races for Alpine in 2023, or some kind of settlement deal with McLaren is reached.

Where does this leave Ricciardo?

The complicated tussle leaves question marks surrounding the future of Daniel Ricciardo, who is under contract at McLaren until the end of the 2023 season.

Should Piastri get his way, he will replace his compatriot at McLaren.

Ricciardo’s future has been the subject of intense speculation ever since McLaren boss Zak Brown admitted the under-performing Australian’s time with the team had not met expectations.

However, on July 13, Ricciardo issued a statement insisting he would not walk away from F1 and underlined his commitment to seeing out the rest of his McLaren contract.

If McLaren end up fielding Piastri alongside Lando Norris next season, they will have to pay off Ricciardo, and that won’t be cheap.

While Alpine hopes that Piastri will fill the seat vacated by Alonso, alternative options will be considered should the team not be able to keep the highly-rated youngster, who is considered a future F1 star.

As an eight-time grand prix winner, Ricciardo would be the most attractive and obvious option on the market for Alpine, despite the fact he left the Enstone team after just two years to join McLaren in 2021.

It would be a potentially awkward move, given Ricciardo’s decision to quit did not go down well with the Renault hierarchy. However, Alpine’s team management has since changed and they could be left facing a driver market limbo if they lose Piastri.

Speaking prior to the Piastri development on Tuesday, Szafnauer did not rule out a return for Ricciardo.

Plenty more twists and turns are likely before this driver market drama is resolved.

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