Daimler chief executive Dieter Zetsche, whose dominant Mercedes Formula
One team have been champions for the past two years, has taken issue with Bernie Ecclestone for
talking down the sport only days before the start of the new season.
Ecclestone, the sport’s commercial supremo and shareholder, recently told a UK newspaper that
Formula One was the worst it had ever been and he would not pay to take his family to watch
it.
The 85-year-old British billionaire subsequently told reporters that his comments were meant as
a wake-up call to teams ahead of a key meeting to discuss 2017 rule changes. “I wasn’t talking
down the sport at all, quite the opposite. I was trying to sort of explain that unless we did
something that’s the way we’d be going,” he claimed.
Zetsche told reporters at a Mercedes E-class presentation at the former Portuguese Grand Prix
circuit that he could not comprehend why Ecclestone would make such comments. “If he feels about
that, it should be discussed internally how to change it, but not as a sales pitch,” he added.
Ecclestone has been at loggerheads with Mercedes, whose British driver Lewis Hamilton is
chasing a fourth title this season, and their closest rivals Ferrari, accusing the manufacturers
of wanting to control the sport.
The two carmakers provide power units to eight of the 11 teams, meaning that their customers
generally vote in line with them in key meetings, sports commentators claim.