Motorcycle Racing

Domenicali doubts Formula 1 needs 11th team amid Andretti push

F1 boss Domenicali was speaking with Liberty Media CEO Greg Maffei (centre) and Motorsport Network's James Allen in Monaco on Friday

American racing marque Andretti is currently pushing to join the F1 grid in 2024. But its plans have received a lukewarm response from the rest of the field thus far amid concerns over prize money dilution.

Only McLaren and Alpine have appeared to support the push by Michael Andretti to establish an 11th F1 team, having seen his bid to take over Sauber – which operates the Alfa Romeo team – fall apart last year when a deal was almost finalised.

Andretti met with FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem in Miami to discuss his plans, and revealed he is going ahead with construction on an F1 facility in Indianapolis starting this summer.

But F1 chief Domenicali has now questioned the need to add an 11th team to the grid, noting the health of the existing field amid the seriesā€™ current boom.

Speaking at the Business of F1 Forum organised by the Financial Times and Motorsport Network in Monaco on Friday, Domenicali said it was ā€œthe first time in my lifeā€ that every F1 team was healthy and no-one was struggling financially.

ā€œThey are very solid, and this is something that is a big reward for them,ā€ Domenicali said.

ā€œTheyā€™ve invested in us, and thatā€™s the reason why we do believe that the community of the teams has to be respected.

ā€œToday, itā€™s not a problem of having more teams, because we have a list. Some of them are more vocal than the others, but we have a lot of people or a lot of investors who would like to be in Formula 1.

ā€œBut we need to protect the teams. This is really another sign of a very healthy system.ā€

F1 boss Domenicali was speaking with Liberty Media CEO Greg Maffei (centre) and Motorsport Network‘s James Allen in Monaco on Friday

Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images

Asked if he thought F1 had the right number of teams at the moment, Domenicali replied: ā€œI think so.

ā€œAnd if anyone wants to come in, it has to be really significant.ā€

Any new team wishing to join the F1 grid must pay a $200m anti-dilution fee that is…

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