Christian Horner admits that respect among his fellow team bosses is "a little lacking these days" having entered Formula 1 when trailblazers like Ron Dennis and Frank Williams were still around.
The Red Bull boss got his job back in 2005, which was the team's first year, and rubbed shoulders in the paddock with the icons who ran McLaren and Williams. Ferrari were then led by Jean Todt, leading to an all star cast.
Former F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone was the man running affairs but nowadays and landscape has changed dramatically with Horner the only man still present from what some may describe as the glory days of the sport.
Now Horner's rivalry with Mercedes boss Toto Wolff are well documented, especially during the 2021 world championship fight. This year, with McLaren a force again, their CEO Zak Brown has traded verbals with Horner as they go head to head.
The Red Bull chief admits things are different now with teams led by management figures, rather than individuals who were owners, and the dynamic has suffered as a result.
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He told PlanetF1: “You had Ron Dennis running McLaren, Frank Williams at Williams, Jean Todt at Ferrari, and Flavio Briatore running Renault. Eddie Jordan was still around when I first started, and they were big personalities and big characters. Yes, there were always disagreements, but there was a commonality of agreeing on what was right for the business, and what was right for the sport, because they were all relatively entrepreneurial.
“Whereas, nowadays, you look around the room and, save for a few, it’s largely a bunch of managers, as opposed to perhaps that entrepreneurial spirit that existed previously. There were always rivalries; I mean, Jean and Ron never particularly saw eye-to-eye, but there was always respect that, sometimes, I think is a little lacking these days.”
The sport has evolved with any friction highlighted by Netflix in the Drive To Survive series, which has taken the sport to new heights. In recent years it has been a platform that highlighted Red Bull's dominance with Max Verstappen claiming four straight titles.
Mercedes, McLaren and Ferrari have all tried in vain to chase down the Austrian outfit. Ferrari's last title dates back to 2007 when Kimi Raikkonen bought home the title and they don't look like ending their drought this year with Fred Vasseur in charge.
The storied Italian outfit have been linked with a move for Horner, whose CV boasts eight drivers' titles since they last ruled the sport. However the Red Bull boss has put to bed the idea of any switch.
He said: “There are so many rumours, I’m not going anywhere. I’m fully committed to Red Bull. We’ve got so much good stuff coming through the pipeline. We’re on the verge of launching our own engine for 2026, which has been a massive project and undertaking. Of course, it’s always flattering to be associated with other teams, particularly teams like Ferrari. But no, I’m not going anywhere."
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