20.2 C
London
Monday, June 15, 2026

Horner thought he was untouchable – now he knows what comeuppance is

  • Horner reacted to scandal with a jubilant promise to ‘f*** them all’ – the timing of the sacking reveals why F1’s morals are so skewed
  • Unlock the best of our journalism with a Mail+ subscription, and get full access to our in-depth insight and analysis, brilliant exclusives and the finest writing 

To the very end, the vastly self-confident Christian Horner clearly considered himself cock of the walk, a big shot and master of all he surveyed.

Just a week ago, he was walking the wide acres at Silverstone’s annual clay shooting event, near his country pile in Oxfordshire, with an air of absolute invincibility.

You can see why the man felt so untouchable, despite the rank underperformance this season of the Red Bull Racing team he has been running.

It’s not much more than a year since hundreds of WhatsApp messages, sent by him to a female member of staff, many of a sexual nature, dropped like kryptonite on F1 and were brushed off as a mild inconvenience.

For most people in public life, a data drop creating such a grubby and deeply unattractive picture would have been terminal.

If an employer did not consider the act of sending them to have brought the business into disrepute and immediately sacked the sender, then that individual would have found the embarrassment insufferable and walked.

Christian Horner has been sacked as Red Bull team principal in a move that has shocked F1

The sacking comes a year after Horner was cleared of wrongdoing after a scandal involving alleged inappropriate messages sent to a colleague

Horner has been the longest-serving team principal in F1, taking over 20 years ago

His wife, the Spice Girl Geri, stood by him throughout the scandal

Not Horner. Wealth, power, adoration, a country pile and celebrity wife like his clearly made him feel untouchable. You hire an expensive barrister, wait for an independent inquiry to absolve you, and the rest is history.

Well, we know quite a lot more about sport’s priorities today. No problem when there are allegations of sexual harassment and coercive, controlling behaviour.

Big problem when Max Verstappen is made to look like a very ordinary driver and Red Bull start to backfire. There you have it. The skewed moral compass of elite sport, writ large.

Horner no doubt felt that he had ironed things out with Verstappen after their hour’s chat with him on the bottom floor of Red Bull’s hospitality area at the Silverstone paddock entrance last week. But it turns out Red Bull were not willing to tolerate another afternoon of failure, on the Silverstone track.

Verstappen’s father, Jos, made it perfectly clear last year how deeply inappropriate he considered Horner’s nocturnal messaging to have been.

He, for one, will not be mourning this departure. One suspects Verstappen won’t either. He skipped that clay shoot with a stomach bug.

To some extent, Horner’s conduct last year has come back to bite him. It left him with less credit when things began to unravel on the rack and has been part of the consideration now – despite the Red Bull PR’s insistence, last year, that there was nothing to see. Red Bull are perfectly aware that, for all the talk about the investigation’s ‘independence’, those emails were reputationally damaging.

But please let no one labour under the illusion that they are anything but a peripheral consideration here. Had Red Bull and Verstappen been flying this season, that conduct would have been put right out of mind. Valuable material for episode one of the next season of Drive to Survive. Nothing more.

The 51-year-old was made an OBE in December, receving the honour from the King with wife Geri alongside him

Max Verstappen has won the last four world championships under Horner's leadership, but the Dutchman now sits 69 points off standings leader Oscar Piastri, in third place

The move comes just three days after the British Grand Prix at Silverstone, where Geri (centre) joined her husband on the grid

Horner only survived as a result of F1's skewed moral compass, which protected him

As Horner goes, the PR operation swings into action once more, with Red Bull’s Oliver Mintzlaff thanking Horner today for his ‘exceptional work’ over the last 20 years and informing us that he will be ‘forever remain an important part of our team history.’

The eight drivers’ championships and six constructors’ championships he brought, through Verstappen and Sebastian Vettel, are certainly something. But the WhatsApp cache is the shadow on the wall. A very obstinate stain.

Horner, the big timer, was extremely sure that the negative press would quickly be reduced to dust. Verstappen’s win in Bahrain last season made him feel huge personal vindication.

‘That’s the best (way) to f*** them all,’ was his charming observation. ‘Shut the f*** up.’ Well, the past has caught up with him now. A year too late, he is discovering what comeuppance looks like.

Hot this week

Diana’s ex-hairdresser condemns ‘evil’ comments about Kate’s hair

Princess Diana's former hairdresser has condemned 'nasty' comments made about the Princess of Wales 's hair - as she stepped out with her newly blonde tresses.

Experts reveal how many tins of tuna is safe to eat a week

The NHS advises people to eat at least two portions of fish a week, yet a recent investigation revealed toxic metals, including mercury, could be lurking in cans of tinned tuna sold in the UK.

The best places to live in Britain’s idyllic national parks

Many of us toy with the idea of moving somewhere close to nature, with a friendly community, where the pace of life is more civilised. But where to find such a place? A national park could be the answer.

The unusual breakfast request Princess Lilibet asks Meghan Markle for

Meghan Markle revealed her children's favourite meals and that she 'doesn't like baking' on the second season of her lifestyle show With Love, Meghan.

Some people DO see ghosts – and medics say there’s an explanation

An astonishing third of people in the UK and almost half of Americans say they believe in ghosts, spirits and other types of paranormal activity.

Prince Louis, 8, steals the show on balcony as he reacts to Trooping the Colour flypast – while Prince George, 12, shows off his...

The youngest Wales child, eight, has long been known for his playful antics, and today was no different as he reacted to the acrobatic Red Arrows flying overhead.

Kate’s ‘supermum mode’ at Trooping the Colour: From quietly reassuring her children amid anti-monarchy protests to steering their balcony appearance

The Princess of Wales's connection with her three children was on full display from the minute they departed Buckingham Palace for the King's official birthday parade.

Odds of a storm forming in the Gulf of America increase as hurricane trackers put three states on alert

A tropical threat brewing in the Gulf of America intensified Monday as forecasters raised the odds that the disturbance could develop into a storm.

Is this the key to preventing a Super El Niño? Scientists want to dim the SUN to shield the oceans from heatwaves

As scientists warn that the coming Super El Niño could be the worst in recorded history, one group of researchers has proposed a drastic solution - dimming the sun.

NASA’s ‘Son of Concorde’ breaks the sound barrier: $247 million supersonic jet hits 713mph during test flight – paving the way for flights from...

NASA's 'Son of Concorde' supersonic aircraft has broken the sound barrier for the first time, paving the way for ultra-fast air travel.

Inside Iran’s brutal World Cup journey: Why horrors of the war have led to a fractured fanbase, the top striker axed over ‘act of...

It's been a brutally long road to the World Cup for Iran, with too much time in the early stages spent on a bus journey, from which the players witnessed the damage wreaked by the war.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img