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Why Hamilton's race engineer bond shows F1 is a people's sport first

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Formula 1
Austrian GP
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Bagnaia to officially leave Ducati at end of MotoGP 2026

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Does Red Bull’s denial that Racing Bulls is helping it on-track stack up?

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Top five roles on Motorsport Jobs this week

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Audi surprises rivals as it ran upgraded F1 engine at Barcelona GP after ADUO verdict

Formula 1
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Audi surprises rivals as it ran upgraded F1 engine at Barcelona GP after ADUO verdict

How Verstappen almost conquered the world’s greatest circuit

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Intercontinental GT Challenge
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From simulator to stopwatch: The creative evidence teams have used to dispute F1 race results

Formula 1
Austrian GP
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FIA confirms 2027 F1 power unit changes

Formula 1
Austrian GP
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Bernie Ecclestone backs drivers' call for Formula 1 reform

Bernie Ecclestone has agreed with the drivers that Formula 1's governance is in need of urgent reform

On Wednesday, the Grand Prix Drivers' Association wrote an open letter stating F1's decision-making process is "obsolete and ill-structured".

In response, F1 supremo Ecclestone has sided with the drivers, but has also, in some respects, thrown the ball back in their court by suggesting how they would go about change.

In the letter, Ecclestone states: "It is not always easy to agree with you but you are correct in stating that the decision making process in the sport is obsolete and ill structured.

"We must, as you have stated, urge the owners and all the stakeholders of Formula 1 to consider restructuring its own governance.

"It is easy to analyse what is wrong so why not think and come back on this. At least it is better to think before you wish."

ANALYSIS: What's the GPDA's real motive?

Ecclestone has at least tried to interject a degree of humour into his response as he added: "I have been in Formula 1 for nearly 50 years in an active role and another 18 involved in some way.

"You state that every individual acts with the very best intentions. I am not sure if this is a misprint. If not, it should read 'with their very best intentions'."

Ecclestone feels the drivers had every right to voice their concerns as he told Autosport: "They're entitled to an opinion."

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