QPR chairman Tony Fernandes: 'F1 taught me how not to do things...' QPR owner and former Lotus chief Tony Fernandes tells David Tremayne why he is much happier to be out of the pit lane and focusing on the pitch David Tremayne Tony Fernandes, the colourful owner of Queenâs Park Rangers, Caterham Cars and AirAsia, does not regret his five-year adventure in Formula Oneâs âpiranha clubâ. âThereâs nothing wrong in trying and failing,â he says. âIâve had an unbelievable life. Iâm 50 years old, and I brought Lotus back. No one can take that away from me. And Caterham is a much better known car manufacturer now. Weâve doubled our sales. Iâve met some great people. And Iâve learned how not to do things. Iâve learned about focus.â A self-deprecating laugh is acknowledgement that he is harder to pin down than a frame house in a hurricane. âIâd rather get to 55 and say Iâm glad I did it, than wish I had. But we were just not good enough, and I enjoy football more.â He concedes that not being involved on a daily basis, or else not employing someone with the calibre of former McLaren chief Martin Whitmarsh, was his biggest mistake. Romain Grosjean Romain Grosjean during practice at the Italian Grand Prix âThatâs the lesson from all this,â Fernandes says. âIâm so meticulous with AirAsia. Iâm there and I know everything thatâs going on. Success! I spent a lot more time on football and we are better. I wonât say successful, but better.â Fernandes revived the fabled Team Lotus in 2010. But the dream soured when controversial entrepreneur Dany Bahar joined Lotus Cars in Malaysia and wanted Fernandesâ train set â Team Lotus â too. Founder Colin Chapman had separated the two entities as long ago as 1968, and Lotus Cars had been acquired by General Motors in 1986, but a lengthy legal case in 2011 proved inconclusive. In the end Fernandes rebranded as Caterham. âThat was the first massive chink in the dream,â he admits. âSelling the Lotus F1 brand was a major blow. I never said it to anyone, but it left me feeling that F1 was very nasty and vindictive. âThen Caterham didnât really progress, a lot of investments didnât come through and it started to get tough.â He had entered F1 believing former FIA president Max Mosleyâs promise of a $40m budget cap. But that was always doomed. âPretty soon the whole cost of F1 went the other way,â Fernandes reflects. âTyres were free when I came in, now we pay for them. Then there was the turbo-engine change, whose cost almost doubled.â In January he put his team on notice that his patience was not limited, and eventually sold it to a group of Swiss and Middle Eastern investors. Fernandes does not want to come across as a sore loser, but he does not pull punches. âThe economics of the sport is all wrong. Bar Ferrari, Red Bull, Mercedes and McLaren, everyone else is struggling. âI donât want to say how much we ended up spending beyond the cap Max talked of, but it was a lot. So youâve got to put your hands up and say, âWeâre beat. It doesnât make sense any moreâ.â He admits that felt like falling out of love, and that the system beat him. âEvery team talked about working together but it never happened. There should be enough money in the system for everyone to race. I donât believe I should have the same as Ferrari or Red Bull, but $60m, $70m, that should come from the prize money. âIf you get more sponsorship and you can raise your budget to $120m, so be it. But $40m was unrealistic unless people really wanted it, and they didnât. And the teams were not together, which was a major disappointment.â Tony Fernandes Fernandes in the Caterham garage in 2012 It did not help that he had also seen footballâs commercial model. âIn football the teams are much closer together. And yet they too are competing like hell. Whether youâre a top team or at the bottom, you get enough money to survive, and thatâs the major difference. We got £30m when we were relegated [from the Premier League in 2013], and then £60m when we came back up. Of course, Manchester United have more and Chelsea have more, but you have baseline prize money which enables you to compete.â And, as QPR proved in last seasonâs Championship play-off final against Derby County at Wembley, you still have the chance to win. Wouldnât it have been better to focus on one or the other rather than buying QPR and diluting the effort that should have gone into F1? âFair question,â he laughs after a long pause. âMaybe. Even then we were beginning to question F1, but if I had just stuck with F1 we would have been slightly better. Iâm not sure how much better.â In football there is no need to spend additional millions redesigning the ball for each match, either. âAnd thereâs a fairer distribution of money and a better control of spending. Thereâs a better dialogue. Thereâs a general understanding that we are in it together. Obviously there are differences; somebody wants a salary cap, and somebody else doesnât. But thereâs a clear voting structure. One team, one vote. No need for unanimity. In F1 I think there is some sensibility where people want to help each other, but not at the top. âBut Iâm not criticising motor racing. I love the sport. And I wouldnât have got involved in football or car making if I hadnât met Bernie [Ecclestone].â Fernandes has proved his mettle with QPRâs fightback after relegation last year. âWe didnât give up and die, we came back fighting hard. There arenât many teams that bounce back straight away. That was a fairy tale. But definitely I thought we had a chance.â He cites the motivation of the players as the crucial change at Loftus Road last season. âThere was such great camaraderie. Richard Dunne has been unbelievable, and Joey Barton has been great. Heâs a tough boy â but I donât think he realised how heavy I was when he got me up on his shoulders [at Wembley]. Bobby Zamora kept coming back and doing great things.â So now Fernandes will focus on QPR, AirAsia, exciting new projects with Caterham Cars, and his smaller race teams. âI love GP2 and Moto2,â he laughs. âI think Iâm a second division guy. What we should have done in hindsight was start a GP2 team, slowly learn the ropes, and then move on to F1.â Instead, he fell out of love with F1. But does he feel better to be out of it? âYeah,â he admits. âItâs a relief.â
Interesting insight. I genuinely like the guy and his desire to build a team ethic is just what you want as a supporter. With this in mind however it does make you wonder how he let things get so sour under Hughes.