And Red Bull attracted staff from other teams, including Mercedes, in the last 12 months. That helps Mercedes's bottom line but not Red Bull's. More people doesn't automatically mean higher wage bills, of course. Fewer people paid more can be more expensive than more people paid less.Sieper wrote: ↑10 Oct 2022, 12:44Not that I know, in fact the original Paddock rumor was 3 teams. After that people started to talk only about AM and RB. Who team 3 is?
For me there are 3 big spenders in F1, Ferrari, with huge TV money bonus awarded always for being the historic team that they are, Mercedes, who for a decade have been the big spender (when there was no cap) and redbull. As far as I know Mercedes still employs the most FTE. Toto in his own words talked about letting go 40 employees but then they would still employ the most staff.
And that is problematic to me, are they better at bookkeeping, or is all this “paddock talk” just hot air? Today we should get some more information on the proceedings.
The daft thing about the cost cap is that the big teams get almost the budget cap money in prize money payments from the FIA/Liberty. They don't need a lot more from sponsors and they're sitting on an excess they can't spend on F1. Even Williams gets a nice chunk thanks to its historic payment.