Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Formula One to revert to 2015 qualifying format after teams reject new proposals

Teams expressed their greivances with the new system in a letter to FIA bosses

Phillip Duncan
Sunday 10 April 2016 15:16 BST
Comments
Lewis Hamilton drives past the Ferrari garage during qualifying at the Australian Grand Prix
Lewis Hamilton drives past the Ferrari garage during qualifying at the Australian Grand Prix (Getty)

Formula One is set to revert back to last year's qualifying format after team bosses knocked back the sport's latest proposal on Thursday.

The teams, in a united letter to FIA president Jean Todt and Bernie Ecclestone, the sport's chief executive, expressed their desire to return to the 2015 system as well as turning down Formula One's latest proposal based on aggregate times.

Both Todt and Ecclestone have been against such a change, but the unanimity among the sport's 11 teams has forced them into a re-think ahead of next week's Chinese Grand Prix.

A cryptic message on Ferrari's Twitter account read: "Unity is the only way to overcome difficulties."

The sport requires unanimity between the teams, Todt and Ecclestone for any rule change, so a return to the 2015 format would suggest Todt and Ecclestone have relented in the face of strong opposition.

Following a 90-minute meeting between team bosses, as well as Todt and Ecclestone, in the paddock ahead of last Sunday's Bahrain Grand Prix, a new format, based on the aggregate timings of two laps in each of the three phases of qualifying, was put forward for a vote on Thursday, where it was rejected by teams.

Reflecting on the aggregate proposal, Sebastian Vettel, the four-time world champion said in Bahrain: "It's time to go to the circus. It's a good idea if you want random things to happen but Formula One should be about racing. It's a s*** idea."

Red Bull driver Daniel Ricciardo added: "Qualifying is one lap, that one perfect lap. To have an aggregate it starts to sound more like endurance racing, or something. I wouldn't be too keen on that, no."

And speaking after the race on Sunday, Mercedes boss Toto Wolff said: "All the teams had the same opinion, to go back to the 2015 format, but there are various agendas and this morning's meeting proved that it is not an easy one."

Asked why the sport cannot reach a unanimous verdict on the correct path forward for qualifying, Wolff replied: "Simple explanation? Madness."

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in