rediff.com
News APP

NewsApp (Free)

Read news as it happens
Download NewsApp

Available on  gplay

Rediff.com  » Sports » Ecclestone made Formula One a global business
This article was first published 10 years ago

Ecclestone made Formula One a global business

January 17, 2014 08:17 IST

Image: Bernie Ecclestone
Photographs: Mark Thompson/Getty Images

Bernie Ecclestone's eye for a deal has made him a fortune and turned Formula One motor racing into a global money-spinner, but a bribery trial threatens to end his long reign as the head of the business.

Ecclestone, who is 83, has been ordered to stand trial in Germany in a case relating to the sale of a stake in Formula One in 2005-06. He has denied wrongdoing in a complex case that has seen a German banker jailed for tax evasion.

Despite his advanced age, the former car salesman remains central to the commercial operations of a sport followed by millions of fans around the world and that considered a flotation on the stock market in Singapore in 2012.

Ecclestone has long dismissed talk of retirement but has acknowledged that a conviction in Germany would force him out, saying with typical bluntness that he couldn't run the business from jail.

Leading F1 shareholder CVC said in November that Ecclestone would be fired if he was found guilty of wrongdoing.

Ecclestone gained control of F1's commercial rights from the 1970s onwards

Image: Bernie Ecclestone (left) with Michael Schumacher during qualifying for the 2012 Belgian Grand Prix
Photographs: Mark Thompson/Getty Images

Ecclestone has been immersed in motor racing since moving into team management after failing to make it as a driver in the 1950s.

He gained control of the commercial rights to the sport from the 1970s onwards, profiting from a growing TV market and expansion into emerging markets.

After years as Formula One's public face, racing fans ask him to pose for photographs and sign autographs when he appears at race tracks alongside drivers like German world champion Sebastian Vettel and Briton Lewis Hamilton.

Interviews and conversations, at least around the grey paddock bus with blacked-out windows that serves as his control centre during the European races, tend to be quick and to the point.

Ecclestone has taken F1 to lucrative new markets in Abu Dhabi, Bahrain, China, India

Image: Bernie Ecclestone (right) with Prince Salman Bin Hamad Al Khalifa Crown Prince of Bahrain
Photographs: Clive Mason/Getty Images

Though there is no time for small talk or hesitation, Ecclestone always provides a headline.

He has had the haunting theme tune to 'The Good, the Bad and the Ugly' as the ringtone on his mobile phone for some years now.

Ennio Morricone's score for the classic 1960s Italian Spaghetti Western is just right for Formula One's stone faced "Little Big Man" and his endless quest for a few dollars more.

In the last decade that quest has taken Formula One to lucrative new markets in Abu Dhabi, Bahrain, China, India, South Korea and Singapore at the expense of older venues in Europe.

Ecclestone is rarely out of the news

Image: Bernie Ecclestone with his wife Fabiana Flosi
Photographs: Samir Hussein/Getty Images for StudioCanal

Known simply as Bernie, or just the 'Mr E' written on the car pass that allows his sleek Mercedes limousine access to the F1 paddock inner sanctum, the British billionaire is rarely out of the news.

The money has come rolling in, multiplied by amazing deals that have seen him sell Formula One several times over while retaining a tight grip on the top job.

Ecclestone married for a third time in 2012 to Fabiana Flosi, a Brazilian more than 40 years his junior.

The Briton has a private jet and one of the finest collections of classic racing cars in the world at his Biggin Hill airfield in south London but, apart from throwing the sort of parties that impress even the A-list celebrities attracted to the Monaco Grand Prix, is not personally ostentatious.

Money is merely Ecclestone's way of keeping the score

Image: Bernie Ecclestone with his daughters Petra (left) and Tamara
Photographs: Vladimir Rys/Getty Images

He likes a game of backgammon with young and old friends, including world champion Vettel, and a quiet night in.

His two socialite daughters from his second marriage often feature in the gossip columns of British newspapers, drawing criticism for their lavish lifestyles in a time of austerity.

For Ecclestone himself, money, as he has explained to many an interviewer over the years, is merely his way of keeping the score.

'I don't think democracy is the way to run anything'

Image: Bernie Ecclestone (right) with Sebastian Vettel
Photographs: Mark Thompson/Getty Images

Ecclestone has a reputation for being uncompromising and obsessively neat. The trucks in the paddock have to be lined up with mathematical precision and in showroom condition.

By his own admission he is a dictator - a man who does a deal on a handshake, has a fondness for the office shredder and an aversion to email and written contracts.

He surrounds himself with a small group of deeply loyal and well-remunerated employees, many of them dating back to the days when he owned the Brabham team in the 1970s and 80s, who know exactly what makes him tick.

"I don't think democracy is the way to run anything," he once said. "Whether it's a company or anything, you need someone who is going to turn the lights on and off."

Source: REUTERS
© Copyright 2024 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.