mario wrote:Horner is potentially in a very unenviable position though - with rumours that Ferrari has called Red Bull's bluff over their demands for a 2016 engine and have withdrawn from talks, Horner could well be staring at the prospect of losing his job before the year is out.
In some ways it would be a potentially unfair ending to proceedings - after all, it was Mateschitz and close ally Marko that did much of the public chastising of Renault, rather than Horner, who at times at least tried to use somewhat more diplomatic language to described the shortcomings in the powertrain.
In terms of connotation, calling them 'two or three years behind Mercedes' sounds damaging, and yet is absolutely correct - Renault simply will not bridge the gap until there is an overhaul of the engine rules, allowing them to start from a blank slate, or development is completely unfrozen.
All senior figures in the Red Bull empire were too easily baited by the media. Playing the fool and denying anything was amiss could have made them look inept to the Average Joe, but it would at least have left them space to manoeuvre behind the scenes and attempt a shift of suppliers while everyone was busy looking the other way. RBR seem to have forgotten the entire modus operandi of Formula 1 overnight; politics.