No one involved will ever admit that the departure not just of Andretti personally but also his family name were requirements to get it over the line, and there’s no hard evidence that they were specifically requested by F1 or Liberty.
However it’s obvious that things were much easier once that happened, and that in essence his earlier bullish approach had simply rubbed key people up the wrong way.
Meanwhile in the background an investigation into anti-trust infractions related to the initial rebuff was being undertaken by the US Department of Justice – something that moved the whole saga to a completely different level from the sport’s usual Piranha Club antics. With the entry now confirmed, presumably that now goes away.
To recap, in March 2023 the FIA launched an expression of interest process for potential 11th and 12th entries to start in 2025-2027.
Michael Andretti had been trying for years to find a way into F1. He came close to buying Sauber and also looked elsewhere. With no options available he decided instead to start from scratch, and negotiated a Renault power unit supply.
Told that the package wasn’t strong enough to justify an entry, and to find an OEM partner, he duly came back with GM and its Cadillac brand.
Initially it was going to be just a name on the car and some technical support from GM in Charlotte. However, it quickly ramped up into plans to build a complete PU at with 2028 as the likely starting point.
As the entry process unfolded FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem was keen to see a new manufacturer in the sport, and he took a close interest in the GM deal. An Andretti entry in partnership with Cadillac was duly approved by the FIA in October last year, which was the first step in the process.
F1 blocked initial Andretti bid
Agreement with F1 was the second stage. Given the organisation’s ongoing push in the USA you would have thought that the combination of Andretti and Cadillac would tick all the boxes, and that the FIA technical approval would in effect make that next step a formality.
However on January 31 F1 issued a letter explaining the reasons why it didn’t back an entry.
Among the most contentious points made was that “while the Andretti name carries some recognition for F1 fans, our research indicates that F1 would bring value to the Andretti brand rather than the other way around.”
F1 also poured cold water on the very principle of using a customer engine – despite it being an arrangement that works pretty well for the likes of McLaren – and generally made it clear that it was felt Andretti (and GM when its PU was ready) would struggle to be competitive.
The letter concluded thus: “We would look differently on an application for the entry of a team into the 2028 Championship with a GM power unit, either as a GM works team or as a GM customer team designing all allowable components in-house.
“In this case there would be additional factors to consider in respect of the value that the applicant would bring to the championship, in particular in respect of bringing a prestigious new OEM to the sport as a PU supplier.”
This was a curious conclusion in two ways. Firstly the entry bid made it clear that the plan was indeed to have Cadillac in the team name, and a GM engine by 2028, and that the customer PU seasons were just an interim step while the team found its feet.
And secondly the entry approved by the FIA covered arrival in 2025-’27 – so starting in 2028 would involve a whole different legal process.