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Why the asphalt-spec Rally1 monsters will be greatly missed

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Bagnaia undergoes successful arm surgery, targets MotoGP return at Silverstone

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Bedrin commands GB3's European leg to build sizeable points lead

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Aprilia moves up in MotoGP concessions as Ducati and Honda drop down

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Bortoleto: F1 hasn't lost its 'magic'; drivers need to "turn the page" on 2026 complaints

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Ecclestone suggests leading teams should help set future technical rules in new Concorde Agreement

Formula 1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone has suggested the future technical rules should be set by the leading teams, as he moves closer finalising a new Concorde Agreement

Although the current regulations are laid down after a strict process that involves the FIA's Technical Working Group, the Formula 1 Commission and the World Motor Sport Council, Ecclestone reckons that a new process could be agreed in the future.

In an interview with , Ecclestone made it clear that all teams - including Mercedes that had been holding out for improved commercial terms - were now on board with the new Concorde.

"Total agreement," said Ecclestone. "We are just talking to the lawyers - 'why have you used this word, that word'. Typical lawyers but everything's fine. Commercially it's done."

Speaking about the way rules could be framed going forward, he said: "Now what we've got to do is look at how the technical regulations are made. It should be the teams, though not all the teams, who do that.

"They are the people who have to come up with the money, not the FIA. It would be the established teams who are here to stay - Ferrari, McLaren, Red Bull, Mercedes and probably Williams as old timers - deciding what to do."

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