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Formula 1: Ferrari ‘living in denial’ over budgets – McLaren


McLaren have been lobbying for lower budgets in F1, which Ferrari oppose

McLaren say Ferrari are “living in denial” over their opposition to plans to lower Formula 1’s budget cap.

McLaren Racing chief executive Zak Brown rejected claims by Ferrari team principal Mattia Binotto that F1 should not “react in a hurry” to the coronavirus crisis.

“I’m almost at a loss as to what to say to that,” Brown said.

“We are going through the biggest crisis the world has seen. You have countries and industries shut down.”

He added: “To not hurry to address what is going on is a critical mistake.”

What is the row about?

F1 bosses are in the middle of intense negotiations over the level at which to set the spending restriction for teams when it comes into force in 2021.

A cap of $175m (£137.9m) was agreed last October and is in the rules, but teams have already agreed informally to lower that figure to $150m in 2021 and are now debating whether to reduce it further.

McLaren say they would be happy with a cap of $100m, pointing out that there are a number of major exemptions to the cap, such as driver and top executive salaries and engine costs that push it many millions higher.

But Ferrari have so far opposed any move to go lower, claiming it would dumb the sport down and cause it to lay off too many staff, which is especially complicated for them because of Italian employment law.

Ferrari have, though, sought to clarify comments from Binotto, in an interview with the Guardian,