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By EwanM
#87137
Richards rules out Honda buyout

By Jonathan Noble Thursday, January 8th 2009, 16:03 GMT


Prodrive boss David Richards has ruled himself out for now as a contender to buy the Honda Racing team, autosport.com has learned.

Richards had been linked with a potential bid to buy the Brackley-based outfit following December's announcement that Honda were to quit F1 with immediate effect.

However, sources have told autosport.com that despite Richards talking about a takeover with potential backers from Kuwait, plus the outfit's chiefs Nick Fry and Ross Brawn, he has now officially pulled himself out of the discussions.

It is believed that the high costs of becoming successful in F1, despite a raft of budget cutting measures being introduced, was one of the key factors in convincing him to put his plans on hold unless circumstances change dramatically.

Richards hinted at the Autosport International Show on Thursday that he was unconvinced that now was the right time for him to return to F1.

"All I can say is that I have made it very clear that the only terms (under which) I would ever consider a return or an involvement was if I felt we could be competitive - and nobody expects to win in their first year of Formula One," he said on the main Autosport stage.

"It has also got to be financially viable. You expect to (have to) invest but you also expect it to work. I just personally feel that the current environment is too unsettled.

"The cost-cutting process that has been put in place has not yet seen its full benefit, and I don't think it will be until 2010 that you will see those issues roll out properly. The teams have still got a burden of overhead that is unsustainable. So consequently, with the window of time for entry, I just question whether it is right at the moment."

Richards believes that the raft of cost-cutting measures agreed between the FIA and the Formula One Teams' Association (FOTA) in December, although hailed as a big success at the time, do not go far enough in helping the sport.

"I would regard those as modest inroads if I am honest with you," he said. "When you make changes to thing, and you have to make a radical shift to get back to a sustainable level, you make that one-hit, one cut very quickly to get it done and then move forward from that point.

"You don't do it by a series of 1000 cuts. If I was involved I would be pushed hard for a lot deeper cuts a lot quicker."

He added: "I think there are still many people in F1 (for whom) reality has not yet sunk in about just how bad the situation is out there in the world - in business, commerce and everyone's way of life at the moment.

"If Formula One does not reconnect itself with its fan base and with the man in the street, and bring itself down to earth, I fear for its future. I know some people at the top end of the sport are addressing that and are well aware of that...It is a bitter medicine that is required at the moment but it has to be done."

Richards said any plan for him to return to F1 would be decided on purely business grounds, and would not be influenced by any personal desire to potentially become champion after enjoying success with BAR back in 2004.

"We were runner up that year behind Ferrari, and everyone assumes I would be motivated to go back for the last push. That is not what motivates me at all.

"It will be a business decision. It will be a hard-headed business decision, not an emotive one when I make it."

Honda Racing CEO Nick Fry has claimed that more than a dozen parties are being looked at as potential buyers for the team. Sources suggest that the leading contender is Greek shipping tycoon Achilleas Kallakis.

http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/72672
#87138
An Earlier article though.

Dozen parties still in Honda talks

By Jonathan Noble and Mark Glendenning Thursday, January 8th 2009, 11:21 GMT


Honda Racing chiefs are now in discussions with their parent company bosses in Tokyo about which of the 12 serious parties interested in buying the team they should progress talks with, autosport.com can reveal.

Although it was previously thought that there were only a handful of candidates who had expressed an interest in buying the team, Honda Racing's CEO Nick Fry has revealed that there has been a far greater number of parties who have come forward.

Speaking from the Cleaner Racing Conference at the Autosport International Show about the progress of talks, Fry told autosport.com: "It's looking very positive at the moment. We had, as you might expect, a huge amount of interest at the start - probably well in excess of 30 groups came to us.

"We have narrowed that down to something in the region of a dozen, and we're currently talking to Honda about what is the best bet for the future."

Fry said that the progress of talks so far had increased his optimism about a deal coming off - with him confessing that he did not share the initial complete confidence others had in Honda finding a buyer when news on their pullout was announced in December.

"Right at the start of this process Bernie Ecclestone said that he was 100 percent confident that we'd be on the grid in Melbourne, and I have to say that I wasn't quite so sure where his confidence came from.

"But as we've gone through this process, my confidence based on what we've seen has increased - maybe not to 100 percent, but it's pretty close. And it has been very gratifying.

"We are in a very unusual situation at the moment. This is not a situation like some of the smaller teams that have fallen by the wayside, which frankly had an entry on the grid but did not have much in the way of technology, or in the way of engineering substance.

"The one thing that we have benefited from, to a level which is difficult to exaggerate, is the amount of money, effort and skill that Honda have put into this.

"We've got a team that have benefited from 75 million pounds worth of capital investment in the last three years.

"They have probably got some of the best automotive and other technology in the country, if not the world, and it has got an immensely highly-skilled technical staff, obviously led by Ross [Brawn]. So there is a huge amount going for it."

He added: "I think this is really, and many of the potential owners have been kind enough to talk about it as, an once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, to get something which does have the opportunity to do very well in the next couple of years. So far, so good.

"In this economic environment it is difficult, there is no doubt about it, and we've got to be careful that we look not just at 2009, which frankly is the least of our worries. It really is making sure that we have got a long-term future for the staff.

"Neither Ross nor I want to stand there and say that everything is fine if in one or two years' time we fall flat on our face again. So we are really looking towards a two, three, (even) five year plan for the team."


http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/72657
#87146
Damn. Richards running the team is probably the only thing that, in the short-term, would propel Honda high enough for the team to be worth keeping in the sport. :(


Richards would have also ran the team properly, for racing purposes.
#87162
That's not good, I was hoping somebody who really wants to race would take over. I really hope that Honda doesn't get bought out by somebody who doesn't know a single thing about F1 and is only interested in the team being his plaything.
#87166
That's not good, I was hoping somebody who really wants to race would take over. I really hope that Honda doesn't get bought out by somebody who doesn't know a single thing about F1 and is only interested in the team being his plaything.

Like Carlos Slim :yes: and I agree with you Mr. Richards is a racer and I had placed my hope's behind him acquireing the team.
#87194
Beggars cant be choosers so to be honest i do not care who ends up buying the team i just hope somebody buys the team for the grids sake!


This is true, but surely the buyer has to be someone with a proper long term plan.
I'd hate to have someone come in, and in a years time claim they had ran out of money and needed to sell.
#87195
Beggars cant be choosers so to be honest i do not care who ends up buying the team i just hope somebody buys the team for the grids sake!


This is true, but surely the buyer has to be someone with a proper long term plan.
I'd hate to have someone come in, and in a years time claim they had ran out of money and needed to sell.


from what i can gather Honda will only sell the team to someone with that plan in mind. and rightfully so!

cant have another Jordan Spyker Force India thing happen again!
#87197
Beggars cant be choosers so to be honest i do not care who ends up buying the team i just hope somebody buys the team for the grids sake!


This is true, but surely the buyer has to be someone with a proper long term plan.
I'd hate to have someone come in, and in a years time claim they had ran out of money and needed to sell.


from what i can gather Honda will only sell the team to someone with that plan in mind. and rightfully so!

cant have another Jordan Spyker Force India thing happen again!


I hope its the case Bud, but you never know :(
#87204
This is sad, but I'm not surprised at all.


Yup, I can't imagine anyone wanting to take over an unsuccessful F1 team with significant overheads, and probably a very poor 2009 car. :thumbdown:

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