Christian Horner, the Red Bull Racing team principal who built the Milton Keynes squad into a four-time championship operation, is circulating a part-ownership bid for Alpine F1 as Renault contemplates stripping the French brand from its struggling Formula One entry. The name change, first reported by sources close to the Viry-Châtillon engine facility, would mark the third rebrand in fifteen years for a team that has cycled through Renault, Lotus, and Alpine identities since 2010.
The timing is deliberate. Alpine finished sixth in the 2024 constructors' championship with 65 points, its worst result since the Renault rebranding in 2021. Team principal Bruno Famin departed in August. Flavio Briatore returned as executive advisor in June, his first formal role since the 2009 Singapore race-fixing scandal. Oliver Oakes, the former Hitech GP principal, took the team leadership role in September at age 36. Renault CEO Luca de Meo has made no secret that the F1 program's €250 million annual budget requires either commercial justification or structural rethink. A partial sale delivers both.
Horner's interest is unusual on two fronts. First, he remains under contract at Red Bull through 2026, where he earns a reported £8 million annually and holds equity options tied to team performance. His March 2024 internal investigation over alleged inappropriate behavior toward a female colleague concluded without sanction, but the episode strained relationships with Red Bull's Thai ownership and Austrian technical leadership. A move to Alpine would position him outside Dietrich Mateschitz's corporate architecture while keeping him in the paddock. Second, Horner has never held equity in an F1 team. His net worth, estimated near £40 million, suggests any ownership stake would require consortium backing. Names circulating include British private equity groups with prior motorsport exposure and at least one Middle Eastern family office that walked away from Williams in 2023.
The commercial logic is clean. Alpine's current structure—Renault as manufacturer, BWT as title sponsor, Castrol and Amazon Web Services as technical partners—generates roughly €90 million in annual sponsorship revenue, well below the €150 million median for midfield teams. A rebrand opens reset conversations with sponsors locked into three-year deals signed during the post-COVID spending surge. It also separates the F1 team from Renault's consumer brand at a moment when European auto sales are soft and electric vehicle margins remain compressed. De Meo has already moved the Alpine road-car division under a standalone P&L; the F1 team following suit is administrative efficiency, not drama.
Horner's involvement would signal ambition, not desperation. He knows the 2026 regulation changes—smaller power units, active aerodynamics, sustainable fuels—will compress the performance delta between factory and customer teams. Alpine runs Renault power, but Viry's engine program has underperformed for three seasons. If Renault exits power unit development, Alpine becomes a customer team shopping for Mercedes, Ferrari, or Honda supply. Horner managed Red Bull through a similar transition from Renault to TAG Heuer-branded power in 2016; his Rolodex includes every engineering director worth poaching. Worth noting: his wife, Geri Halliwell, sat two rows behind De Meo at the Monaco Grand Prix last May.
What to watch: Renault's board meets in early February to finalize the 2025 motorsport budget. If Alpine announces a name change before pre-season testing in Bahrain (February 26-28), Horner's consortium likely has exclusivity. Separately, watch for coordinator hires. Alpine's technical director, Matt Harman, joined from Red Bull in 2023 but reports to Briatore, not Oakes. If Horner takes a stake, expect Red Bull's aerodynamics bench to get calls. Sponsor announcements typically follow Bahrain; BWT's deal expires in 2026.
The race isn't to save Alpine. It's to decide who controls the reset.
The takeaway
Horner's Alpine bid pairs Red Bull operational DNA with Renault's factory exit strategy, rebranding ahead of 2026 regs.
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