feature-image

Reuters

feature-image

Reuters

2022 regulations have brought some drastic changes to the functioning of all teams. The primary motive of the new regulations was to close the gap between teams like Mercedes, Red Bull, and Ferrari to the rest of the grid. The FIA introduced another such rule to make racing more competitive in 2021, the budget cap.

Watch What’s Trending Now!

FIA put the budget cap in place to control the spending by the top three teams. The FIA even reduced the cap to $140 million in 2022, $5 million lower compared to 2021. However, after retaliation, reforms are introduced to factor in over 22 races and sprint races.

ADVERTISEMENT

The stringent cap, however, is creating additional responsibilities within F1 as explained by the Mercedes boss.

ADVERTISEMENT

“So we have a tracker with financial engineers that track every single process and every single part that comes into the car,” said Toto Wolff.

ADVERTISEMENT

Wolff added, “So when we take things out of the truck, the financial engineer notes, the value. When you utilize it’s being counted for. You are following this trend, like we have planned. We didn’t bring a lot at the beginning but it’s coming steady now.”

Read More: Mercedes Boss Makes Frustrated Confession Amid Unpredictable F1 Struggles

ADVERTISEMENT

Although the teams are working under a budget since the 2021 season, the FIA has introduced a new reform in the current season. The FIA has factored in inflation and rising costs for this season and increased the cap by 3.1%. A much-needed breathing room as teams try to cut costs on all fronts without compromising performance.

However, the biggest concern remains about how the FIA will penalize overspending.

ADVERTISEMENT

Mercedes boss Toto Wolff, confident about FIA’s ruling on overspending

There is still ambiguity surrounding the penalty levied on any team exceeding the budget cap. However, the Mercedes boss is confident that FIA will follow an honest procedure in their dealings, keeping in mind the inflation rebate.

ADVERTISEMENT

article-image

Reuters

He said, “It was last year already [when the cost cap came in] and we will have the results whether everybody adhered to the rules of last year and the reports are going to come out.”

ADVERTISEMENT

“So I think you know, you can’t get that wrong because if you’re breaking the rules, in the same way you do when breaking the rules on technical stuff,” concluded Wolff.

WATCH THIS STORY: How a Kitchen Rendezvous Prevented Lewis Hamilton-Toto Wolff “Divorce”

Whatever the penalty will be for overspending, it will definitely play a part in the championship. Especially because the likeliest overspenders would be the top three in the championship table.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Share this with a friend:

Link Copied!

ADVERTISEMENT

Written by

author-image

Mahim Suhalka

2,204 Articles

Mahim is a senior Formula 1 writer at EssentiallySports. With a Diploma in Sports Management, he ventured into sports journalism for his sheer passion for F1. Mahim has written over 2000 articles during his tenure at ES, and his expertise is in perspective pieces and core sports coverage. Mahim’s writing flair and meticulous research work have resulted in him contributing to in-depth analysis on teams like Red Bull and Mercedes as well as Team Principals Christian Horner and Toto Wolff. His support for Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 team and their #44 driver Lewis Hamilton came naturally after being awestruck by the brilliance during his foray into F1. You can follow him on X @MahimSuhalka.

Know more

Edited by

editor-image

Ranvijay Singh

ADVERTISEMENT