ispano6 wrote: ↑11 Oct 2022, 19:14
214270 wrote: ↑11 Oct 2022, 19:05
ispano6 wrote: ↑11 Oct 2022, 18:53
It's a legitimate question. Just because Mercedes hasn't been "caught" doesn't mean something behind the scenes is happening.
If at all relevant, it’ll be in next years submission.
If Allison stepped back in July 2021, would the salary for the rest of the season not have counted toward the cap? Take Newey for instance, he wasn't the Chief Aerodynamicist for the RB16b right? I thought Dan Fallows was?
Fallows was announced in June of 2021 as moving to Aston Martin and was subsequently put on gardening leave. Is a staff salary that has been placed on gardening-leave still part of the remaining season's cost cap? What I want to know is how Red Bull's submission of being below the 2021 cost cap as they had interpreted it was in breach according to FIA's interpretation? Are staff like Allison and Fallows who are "moved out of the capacity of contributing to the F1 team directly" outside of the cost cap calculation?
It should. That’s how it’s handled in American sports. It’s called “dead cap space”. If the teams don’t want to get a hit with dead cap space, then buy them out or don’t give them crazy gardening leaves.
If you don’t want the guy to go to a new team, or at least restrict his competitiveness there by extending his time home, then that’s on you to take the hit.
If you move them outside and they don’t work on the car, or they do on a consulting basis, that’s fine too, it’s per hour. That said, I bet Newey’s hours are wayyy more than Allison’s. Merc has many pots in the fire now.
Also, guys, as we have said again and again, this stuff plays out in engineering, law, accounting, IT, consulting firms everyday and a lot of us are seeing the same stuff we see being played in F1 played there. The fact that RB thought they could get away with some of these games is silly. These aren’t new tricks.