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Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Domenicali stands down as Ferrari Formula 1 team principal


Stefano Domenicali
Stefano Domenicali
Stefano Domenicali resigned as Ferrari’s Formula 1 team principal on Monday with the company’s North America President and Chief Executive Marco Mattiacci appointed as his replacement.
The Italian glamour team, the oldest and one of the most successful in the sport, have made a poor start to the season with two fourth places for Spaniard Fernando Alonso the team’s best results, in three races so far.
Ferrari have not won a driver’s world championship since Kimi Raikkonen in 2007, although they were constructors’ champions in 2008. At the most recent race in Bahrain, Alonso and his Finnish team mate were ninth and 10th.
“There are particular moments in all of our professional lives where you need the courage to take difficult and very painful decisions,” Domenicali, who had been Principal since January 2008, said in a Ferrari statement.
Marco Mattiacci
Marco Mattiacci
“It is time for a significant change. As the boss, I take responsibility, as I have always done, for our current situation.
“This decision has been taken with the aim of doing something to shake things up and for the good of this group of people that I feel very close to,” added the 48-year-old Italian.
Mattiacci will take overall charge of the Gestione Sportiva – the carmaker’s sporting activities including the Formula One team that has competed in every championship since 1950 – with immediate effect.
Ferrari had hoped to make a strong start to Formula One’s new V6 turbo-hybrid era this season but they and Renault – who power champions Red Bull – have been eclipsed by rivals Mercedes.
The German manufacturer has won all three races with a Power Unit that looks for more competitive and reliable than the French and Italian offerings.
Felipe Massa with Stefano Domenicali, Fernando Alonso and Luca Di Montezemolo
Felipe Massa with Stefano Domenicali, Fernando Alonso and Luca Di Montezemolo
Domenicali, who has been with Ferrari for 23 years in various roles, replaced Jean Todt as team principal when the Frenchman took on a more senior management role at the Maranello headquarters.
Todt, who presided over a golden era at Ferrari when Michael Schumacher won five titles in a row between 2000 and 2004, is now head of the sport’s governing International Automobile Federation (FIA).
Domenicali brought a friendlier, more open and less combative atmosphere to the team in a new era of greater collaboration with rivals at a time when global financial troubles were threatening the sport.
He was one of the youngest and most approachable principals but that landscape has changed considerably with Mercedes, Lotus and McLaren all revamping their management structures since the end of 2013.
Luca di Montezemolo with Stefano Domenicali
Luca di Montezemolo with Stefano Domenicali
Mercedes and McLaren have scrapped the formal title of principal, with Ron Dennis in overall charge, following the exit of Martin Whitmarsh.
Domenicali thanked Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo, who has been involved in Formula One since the 1970s, and the fans with the regret “that we have been unable to harvest what we worked so hard to sow in recent years.”
Montezemolo, who has strongly criticised the sport’s new rules, thanked Domenicali for his contribution and “the great sense of responsibility [that] he has shown even today in putting Ferrari’s interests ahead of his own”.

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