The Red Bull Racing empire, once a monolith of F1 dominance, is not just fracturing—it is crumbling from within. In a public explosion that has sent shockwaves through the entire sport, the team’s former architect, Helmut Marko, has launched an extraordinary, devastating attack on Christian Horner, the man who served as Red Bull’s long-time team principal. This is not the standard fare of paddock gossip; it is a full-scale civil war, and according to Marko, the consequences have already been nuclear, directly costing Max Verstappen his fifth consecutive World Championship.
Marko, the Austrian mastermind behind Red Bull’s legendary driver program and a foundational figure in the team’s history, went public following his own sudden departure. His accusations against Horner, who was sacked after two decades at the helm, paint a picture of Machiavellian ambition, calculated sabotage, and systemic deceit that began the moment Red Bull’s visionary founder, Dietrich Mateschitz, took his final breath.
The team that won six constructors’ championships and eight drivers’ titles since its F1 entry is now defined by the betrayal of its two most instrumental leaders. The dirty laundry being aired reveals a corporate thriller played out at 200 miles per hour, centered on a ruthless struggle for control that has ultimately shattered one of the most successful sporting dynasties in recent memory.

The Coup D’état: A Power Grab After the Founder’s Death
To understand the magnitude of this betrayal, one must go back to the source of Red Bull’s power structure: Dietrich Mateschitz. The founder, a singular force in Formula 1, passed away. But according to Marko, the plotting for the succession began months earlier, an act of shocking opportunism that Marco now recalls with chilling clarity.
In an explosive interview with a Dutch publication, Marko described a pivotal moment at a party ahead of the Austrian Grand Prix. Mateshitz was present, but his health was visibly failing. This vulnerability, Marko alleges, was the signal Horner needed. “Christian came up to me and said, ‘He won’t make it to the end of the year,’” Marko revealed.
From that point on, Marko claims, the game was afoot. Horner allegedly began “cozying up” to Chalerm Yoovidhya, Red Bull’s Thai co-owner. Yoovidhya, who held the crucial majority power stake in the company, was the man who would ultimately decide the team’s future. When Mateschitz passed away, the corporate knives came out. Marko stated: “Christian did everything he could to take control of the company with Yoovidhya’s support.”
This was no longer about tire strategy or aerodynamic upgrades; it was a hostile takeover. “On behalf of Austria, I did everything possible to prevent that,” Marko insisted. The struggle was for nothing less than control of the most successful racing operation in motorsport history, pitting the Austrian contingent (Marko and the Mateschitz legacy) against the emerging power bloc led by Horner and the Thai co-owner.
For years, the power structure had been clearly delineated: “In principal, the power was always in Austria. We made the decisions,” Marko explained. Marko had personally recommended Horner to Mateshitz, making him the youngest team principal in F1 history. The crushing irony, Marko now reflects, is that the man he brought in was the one trying to push him out, allegedly resorting to the darkest of tactics.
Character Assassination and the Lie that Almost Worked
Marko’s allegations quickly transitioned from corporate backstabbing to outright professional sabotage. He claims Horner didn’t rely on legitimate channels to seize power; he fabricated controversies designed specifically to destroy Marko’s reputation and credibility.
The first alleged fabrication reached the public sphere during Sergio Perez’s time with the team. Marko recounts the moment rumors circulated that he had made racially insensitive remarks, claiming Mexicans were less focused than Dutch or German people. “That was fabricated, possibly by them,” Marko said, directly pointing the finger at the Horner camp. If true, this was not just office politics or a simple misunderstanding; it was a deliberate act of character assassination designed to undermine Marko’s standing within the team and with the fan base.
The second, and perhaps more operationally critical, ‘dirty trick’ allegedly occurred, involving Red Bull’s vital engine partnership with Ford. Rumors began to circulate that Marko had spread stories claiming Red Bull’s engine development was far behind schedule, jeopardizing the crucial relationship with Ford.
“I never said that,” Marko insisted. Yet, he claims Horner sought to use the fabricated rumor as pretext: “Horner wanted to use it to have me suspended.”
This was the moment the internal civil war nearly climaxed, threatening to remove Marko entirely. The mastermind behind four-time champion Sebastian Vettel and the man who spotted the generational talent of Max Verstappen would have been unceremoniously expelled, all based on a lie.

The Verstappen Factor: The Champion Intervenes
The crisis point was reached during a major race weekend. It was here that the team’s star, Max Verstappen, stepped into the political fray to protect his mentor. The multiple-time world champion reportedly intervened personally to prevent Marko’s premature exit from the team, a direct challenge to the authority Horner was trying to consolidate.
Marko credits Verstappen’s support for saving his job: “Because of Max’s support, that didn’t happen.” The image of the team’s golden boy, the figure of unity and success, being forced to use his influence to halt an internal purge speaks volumes about the toxic atmosphere Horner allegedly cultivated. Verstappen found himself navigating a minefield of corporate deceit just to keep his most trusted confidant in the garage.
The Ultimate Cost: The Title That Got Away
The most staggering and emotionally charged element of Marko’s exposé, however, is his claim regarding the World Championship. That season, Verstappen came agonizingly close to securing his fifth consecutive title, ultimately finishing just two points behind McLaren’s Lando Norris.
Horner was eventually sacked. Marko claims this was because “More and more often we were able to prove that Horner lied about all sorts of things… once Yoovidhya realized that too, he changed his mind.” The dismissal, therefore, came not just from declining performance but from the owner’s discovery that he had been systematically deceived by his own team principal.
But the damage, Marko claims, was already done. He now makes a stunning, definitive assertion: Horner’s presence cost Red Bull the title.
“If we had done it earlier, we would have got things back on track sooner and Max Verstappen would have been world champion this year. I am absolutely convinced of that,” Marko declared.
Think about the weight of that statement. Marko is explicitly saying that Horner’s position—the alleged lies, the toxic work environment, the distraction caused by the power struggle—created a deficit that the team could not overcome, even after Horner’s departure. The presence of Christian Horner at the helm, in the eyes of Helmut Marko, directly sabotaged Verstappen’s ultimate dream of winning five consecutive titles with the “best driver we’ve ever had.” The dream allegedly died because the team didn’t act quickly enough to remove the source of the rot.
“Those final years with Horner were not pleasant,” Marco summarized, painting a vivid picture of a team paralyzed by “dirty games” and internal warfare. The very partnership that forged Sebastian Vettel into a champion and nurtured Verstappen into an all-time great had devolved into a cesspool of “lies, fabrications, and sabotage.”

Marko’s Cryptic Exit: More Mysteries Than Answers
The drama did not end with Horner’s sacking. Marko’s own departure was equally fraught with confusion. Red Bull’s official press release suggested the long-time figurehead had chosen to step away, perhaps in light of Verstappen’s title loss. Marko, however, quickly dismissed this narrative.
“I don’t want to go into too much detail but I didn’t read that press release full of nonsense,” he stated, adding a cryptic final note: “Let’s just say that a lot has changed at the team in a short period of time. You think you know people well but in the end that turns out not to be the case. I really won’t say more.”
Who are these ‘people’ he thought he knew well? Does this imply a new enemy or a continuation of the old guard’s betrayal? Was Marko forced out despite his efforts to prevent Horner’s power grab? The statement leaves more questions than answers, hinting at an even deeper layer of deceit and distrust at the heart of the Red Bull organization.
The Ashes of an Empire
When one considers the staggering timeline of events, the depth of the implosion becomes undeniable. In a single season, the two architects of Red Bull’s success—the youngest F1 team principal in history and the mastermind behind their legendary driver program—are both gone. The leadership structure has been completely dismantled.
Now, Max Verstappen, the man who stood by Marko and protected him during the alleged suspension attempt, finds himself without his two biggest historical supporters at the team. His contract situation, his relationship with the new leadership, and his future loyalty to the team are all hanging in the balance, shrouded in uncertainty.
The Red Bull Racing that dominated Formula 1 for two decades, defined by its fierce unity and unwavering success, no longer exists. In its place stands a team in turmoil, desperately trying to rebuild while processing the stunning revelation that its final years of supreme dominance were actually marked by lies, calculated power plays, and insidious internal warfare.
Whether Helmut Marko’s allegations are completely accurate or colored by the bitterness of a man pushed out of the dynasty he helped create, one thing is certain: the Red Bull civil war has indeed gone nuclear, and its devastating fallout is already shaping the landscape of Formula 1 for the foreseeable future. The sport is left to wonder: Could a two-point margin, and a world championship title, truly have been lost to the ambition of one man and the deceit he allegedly perpetrated from within the walls of a racing empire? The ultimate cost of the internal sabotage is a question that will haunt the Milton Keynes garage for years to come.