Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Recommended for you

Audi will eventually have one of the best engines in F1, says Gabriel Bortoleto

Formula 1
Australian GP
Audi will eventually have one of the best engines in F1, says Gabriel Bortoleto

2027 MotoGP bikes may not be slower at half the tracks, claims KTM

MotoGP
Thailand GP
2027 MotoGP bikes may not be slower at half the tracks, claims KTM

Question of the week: Has F1 gone too far with the complexity of new rules?

Formula 1
Australian GP
Question of the week: Has F1 gone too far with the complexity of new rules?

Formula E: 'F1 is trying to be like us, and that's a mistake'

Formula 1
Formula E: 'F1 is trying to be like us, and that's a mistake'

NASCAR, IndyCar Phoenix doubleheader generates TV ratings boost

NASCAR Cup
Phoenix
NASCAR, IndyCar Phoenix doubleheader generates TV ratings boost

"Brutal and hilarious": F1 fans recreate Oscar Piastri's Australian GP crash using RC cars

Formula 1
Australian GP
"Brutal and hilarious": F1 fans recreate Oscar Piastri's Australian GP crash using RC cars

Now begins the next act for Sprint Car legend Brad Sweet

General
Now begins the next act for Sprint Car legend Brad Sweet

F1 rival series throw shade at new rules: "We don't do that here"

Formula 1
Australian GP
F1 rival series throw shade at new rules: "We don't do that here"

Fred Vasseur to skip Sunday’s F1 Austrian Grand Prix

Vasseur travelled home ahead of today's Austrian Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring

Frederic Vasseur, Ferrari

Frederic Vasseur, Ferrari

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Sutton Images via Getty Images

Ferrari boss Fred Vasseur will not be at Sunday’s Austrian Grand Prix after the Formula 1 team announced he had travelled home for “personal reasons”.

The Frenchman will be replaced by Jerome d’Ambrosio on the pitwall in his capacity as deputy team principal.

It comes after Vasseur lashed out at the Italian media during the Canadian Grand Prix weekend, where he said journalists should remember they are dealing with “people and not things”.

This was in relation to reports that some of his squad were under pressure to deliver results, after a disappointing start to F1 2025 in which Ferrari has failed to challenge championship leaders McLaren.

Charles Leclerc, Ferrari

Charles Leclerc, Ferrari

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Sutton Images via Getty Images

The points were made by heavyweight Italian publications Gazzetta dello Sport and Corriere della Sera, while the impact made by Vasseur engineer Loïc Serra, who joined from Mercedes in the winter, was also debated.

Vasseur, whose contract with Ferrari expires at the end of the season, added in Montreal: “You have to understand that when a journalist is saying that Ferrari will recruit this name for this position, there is someone within this position and on the Sunday evening the guy says ‘OK, tomorrow morning I won't have a job anymore if what’s in the newspaper is true, I will have someone in my position’.

“We are in this situation on a daily basis now in Italy and it is too much. If they want to be successful, we have to be able to work in a clean environment and we are not in this situation.”

Ferrari has offered no further explanation for his absence in Austria, where Charles Leclerc starts in second with Lewis Hamilton in fourth after a positive qualifying session.

A Ferrari statement said: “Fred will not be at the track today, because he has had to return home for personal reasons. Deputy Team Principal, Jerome d'Ambrosio will stand in for him.”

Read Also:
Previous article F1 could take inspiration from tennis to tackle frivolous protests
Next article Austrian GP support race delayed after on-track incident with tow vehicle

Top Comments

Latest news