How Christian Horner has thrived in the high-octane sphere of an F1 team (2024)

Managing pressure is an integral part of Formula One. At the sharp end of the sport it is the team principals who carry the responsibility and the burden and it is of considerable weight. Christian Horner is no stranger to dealing with it during a career marked by a focused and driving ambition that has delivered extraordinary success.

However Horner, the Red Bull team principal, is facing a week of scrutiny perhaps like no other he has encountered during his 20 years in F1, as the team’s parent company conducts an investigation into allegations of inappropriate controlling behaviour made againsthim.

He has very much learned his role on the job. Having joined Red Bull at the helm in the team’s first season in Formula One in 2005, Horner was the youngest ever team principal at the time at 31. Almost two decades later he remains with the team and is now the longest-serving principal on the grid. He has made the point that his team environment, and indeed his management, is unique.

“We are different at Red Bull. You won’t see anyone in a suit and tie here, it’s more jeans and T-shirt,” he said of the culture he has engendered. “We play our music loud, we don’t conform, we are not answerable to an engine manufacturer. We call it as we see it and we are not afraid to have anopinion.”

When he took over the team, which had been Jaguar, its personnel amounted to 450 staff. Today, having returned seven drivers’ championships and six constructors’ titles it employs 1,500 people within Red Bull Racing, Red Bull Powertrains and Red Bull Advanced Technologies, across all three of which Horner sits as CEO.

The days of running a team in an actual garage with a handful of mechanics have long gone. The team principal sits at the head of what is effectively a small industry and one that is quite singular. The team must be a design group, a research group, a manufacturing concern, a publicity machine, a sporting entity and nowadays also very much a corporate business. In its scale and complexity the F1 team is like no other sportingorganisation.

The demands are relentless and unforgiving, more so perhaps than any other similar-sized structure because success is measured beyond a balance sheet but in competition that is both fierce and very public. Horner, like all team principals, is more than aware that he is the forward-facing representative of the team, second only in interest and stature to the two drivers.

How Christian Horner has thrived in the high-octane sphere of an F1 team (1)

The role often attracts singular personalities and they are rarely shrinking violets. A level of assertiveness is a given, decisiveness too and often a streak of ruthlessness. Horner has demonstrated these traits repeatedly, not least when he chose to abandon his driving career at just 25 years old. Recognising with honest reflection he was not in the top tier he acted swiftly and decisively. It was an early example of his clear-sighted pragmatism as he chose instead to put his energy into developing the Arden racing team he had formed.

That he had real talent in that department was made clear as Arden proved swiftly successful and led to him being headhunted for the Red Bull job. It was an immense task when he began and one he turned around with striking speed. Five years after taking over he had secured the team’s first world championship and would go on to take four consecutive drivers’ and constructors’ doubles between 2010 and 2013.

In assessing the task Horner has always been explicit that the most important role a team principal plays is in people management, with the leader setting the tempo, the direction and the objectives.

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“It’s a people business,” he said. “It’s about understanding people and working with people, about getting the right people around you and giving them the right direction and trying to create the right environment for them.”

This requires both considerable management skill and, for all that clearly the scale of the organisation dictates an art of delegation, people skills as well.

It is unusual too in requiring a performative element and Horner has notably not shied from F1’s politicking when rivals are under pressure. Playing this game is part and parcel of the sport which further ratchets up the tension, and it was particularly notable how hard it became during the 2021 campaign as Horner’s driver Max Verstappen went toe to toe with Lewis Hamilton across the entire season.

Horner has said that pressure in F1 is simply inevitable, with which it is hard to argue, a facet of a complex and intricate role that makes demands like no other.

How Christian Horner has thrived in the high-octane sphere of an F1 team (2024)

FAQs

How did Christian Horner get the Red Bull job? ›

His success brought the young team owner to the attention of Red Bull co-founder Dietrich Mateschitz and when the company decided to field its own F1 entry in 2005, it turned to Christian to run Red Bull Racing. In doing so Christian became the sport's youngest Team Principal at just 31 years of age.

Who is the highest paid team principal in F1? ›

Christian Horner's net worth is an estimated $50 million (£40m), with his salary also reportedly above $10m (£8m) per year as team principal of Red Bull Racing. His estimated salary makes him the highest-paid F1 team principal.

Was Christian Horner a racing car driver? ›

Driving career

Having started his racing career in karts, Horner's career in car racing started after he won a Formula Renault scholarship in 1991. He competed in the 1992 British Formula Renault Championship with Manor Motorsport, finishing that season as a race winner and the highest placed rookie.

How old was Christian Horner when he became Red Bull team principal? ›

Youngest team principal in history

In doing so, Horner became the sport's youngest Team Principal at just 31 years of age. In the 19 years since, he has taken over as CEO of Red Bull Racing and is also the longest-serving team principal on the grid.

How important is Horner to Red Bull? ›

Horner is the team principal of Red Bull, a scrappy little terrier of a man whose cars have utterly dominated the sport for the past two years. In his 19 years in the job, he has delivered six constructors' championships and seven drivers' championships to his bosses at the energy drinks giant.

Who is the lead strategist for Red Bull F1? ›

Hannah Schmitz (née McMillan; born May 1985) is a British engineer, currently working for Austrian Formula One team Red Bull Racing as Principal Strategy Engineer.

Who is the richest F1 driver? ›

Max Verstappen's achievements on the track translate into substantial financial success off it. Forbes estimates his 2023 earnings, including salary and bonuses, at a remarkable $70 million, solidifying his status as the wealthiest current F1 driver for the second consecutive year.

Who is the most successful team principal in F1 history? ›

Toto Wolff - 15 F1 world championships (eight constructors, seven drivers) Wolff's Mercedes team has broken many records, like winning the most consecutive constructors' championships with eight.

Who will replace Hamilton at Mercedes? ›

March 27 (Reuters) - Max Verstappen would be top of Mercedes' list of possible replacements for seven times Formula One world champion Lewis Hamilton in 2025 if available, according to team boss Toto Wolff.

What does Max Verstappen's sister do? ›

Does Horner own Red Bull? ›

Red Bull was founded by Dietrich Mateschitz and Chaleo Yoovidhya, a Thai pharmacist, and Horner was close to both. But Mateschitz died last year and although his son, Mark, runs the company, the family holds only 49% ownership of Red Bull.

Who is the Red Bull girl? ›

Hannah Schmitz loves the uncertain. “That's the really exciting thing about strategy,” she tells Females in Motorsport. “It's never a right or wrong answer.” After all, one of her fondest memories was born from the pinnacle of uncertainty: Red Bull's triumph at the 2019 Brazilian Grand Prix.

What F1 driver is married to Spice Girl? ›

Christian Horner: The Red Bull F1 Drive to Survive star married to Spice Girl Geri Halliwell.

Who is the youngest F1 team principal ever? ›

Christian Horner made history when he became the youngest F1 team principal after joining Red Bull at the age of 31.

How much do you get paid to drive the Red Bull car? ›

As of Apr 25, 2024, the average hourly pay for a Red Bull Driver in the United States is $21.78 an hour.

Who did Red Bull buy to get into F1? ›

Red Bull, an energy drinks company, agreed its purchase of Jaguar Racing on the final day of the sale, 15 November 2004.

How did Horner and Halliwell meet? ›

A drive-by meeting while Horner was still married to his ex

The pair first met at the Monaco Grand Prix in 2009, when Halliwell was brought down into the pit lane by former Formula One CEO Bernie Ecclestone.

Who did Geri Halliwell have a child with? ›

Halliwell gave birth to her daughter in May 2006. The child's father is screenwriter Sacha Gervasi with whom Halliwell was in a relationship in 2005; Victoria Beckham and Emma Bunton are godmothers. Halliwell began dating Christian Horner, the team principal of the Red Bull Racing Formula One team, in February 2014.

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