Andretti team’s bid to enter Formula 1 for 2025 or 2026 turned down by the sport on commercial grounds | F1 News
Formula 1 has rejected Andretti’s bid to join the grid as an 11th team in the 2025 or 2026 seasons.
But the door remains ajar to a potential entry in 2028 for the American team.
Andretti’s bid, which has been headed up by former McLaren driver Michael Andretti and his father Mario, the 1978 world champion, had been passed to F1 for commercial considerations after its application had passed the first two stages of the application process, which were run by the FIA, the sport’s governing body, in October.
But Formula One Management, as the sport’s commercial rights holder, had the final say and, after several months of detailed analysis into the submission, has announced that Andretti’s application has not passed the final test for entry, at least for now.
In a lengthy statement explaining the steps it took to review Andretti’s case and the reasons for its conclusion on the matter, F1 said: “Our assessment process has established that the presence of an 11th team would not, on its own, provide value to the Championship.
“The most significant way in which a new entrant would bring value is by being competitive. We do not believe that the applicant would be a competitive participant.
“The need for any new team to take a compulsory power unit supply, potentially over a period of several seasons, would be damaging to the prestige and standing of the Championship.”
Andretti have since released a statement strongly disagreeing with the conclusions reached by Formula 1.
The statement said: “Andretti Cadillac has reviewed the information Formula One Management Limited has shared and strongly disagree with its contents.
“Andretti and Cadillac are two successful global motorsports organizations committed to placing a genuine American works team in F1, competing alongside the world’s best.
“We are proud of the significant progress we have already made on developing a highly competitive car and power unit with an experienced team behind it, and our work continues at pace.
“Andretti Cadillac would also like to acknowledge and thank the fans who have expressed their support.”
The door to entry has, however, been left open for 2028 by F1 on the proviso that General Motors, the American car giant whose Cadillac brand had been backing Andretti’s entry, joined the bid as a full works team or customer team.
“We would look differently on an application for the entry,” said F1 on such circumstances.
What lead to F1’s decision not to grant Andretti entry for now?
Outlining the process it went through to come to its final decision, F1 said that it “took account of the broad range of ways in which value could be provided, including value to fans, the prestige and reputational value of the sport, the competitive balance of the Championship and the sustainability goals of the sport”.
“Any 11th team should show that its participation and involvement would bring a benefit to the Championship,” read F1’s statement.
“The most significant way in which a new entrant would bring value is by being competitive, in particular by competing for podiums and race wins. This would materially increase fan engagement and would also increase the value of the Championship in the eyes of key stakeholders and sources of revenue such as broadcasters and race promoters.”
On the question of likely competitiveness, F1 said that with the sport’s regulations changing significantly in 2026, with a new rules packaged headlined by all-new engines, that “we do not believe that there is a basis for any new applicant to be admitted in 2025 given that this would involve a novice entrant building two completely different cars in its first two years of existence.
“The fact that the Applicant proposes to do so gives us reason to question their understanding of the scope of the challenge involved.”
What had the existing teams and Andretti said up to now?
A majority of F1’s existing teams had publicly opposed the expansion of the grid on commercial grounds, arguing that Andretti would not bring sufficient added value to the sport to negate the loss of income with the prize pot being split 11 ways instead of 10.
It is understood that F1’s existing 10 teams had no role to play in FOM’s deliberations on the matter.
Speaking to Sky Sports F1 at last October’s US GP, Michael Andretti said: “It’s a mystery to me in some ways, why they [the teams] are pushing back.
“They say we’re slicing the pie, but I think the point is, hopefully we bring in more than we’re taking away, and we really believe that.
“If you look at the fan support on all of the surveys that have been done, we think that we’re going to add to it, not take away.”
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