Former team boss Colin Kolles has pointed the finger squarely at F1's governing body over a "massive regulations problem" within the sport. Kolles, formerly in charge at
Force India and most recently
HRT, agrees with
Bernie Ecclestone that formula one needs to urgently rethink its engine rules.
The current turbo V6 'power unit' regulations are highly controversial: unpopularly quiet and complex, expensive for struggling teams, and restrictive in helping uncompetitive
Renault and
Honda catch dominant
Mercedes. "I think we have a massive regulations problem," Kolles told the Austrian broadcaster Servus TV.
"I was at many meetings, if not all the meetings, that were about this engine. The current FIA president was warned about the problems we have now," Kolles charged, referring to
Jean Todt. "He just refused to listen. Mr Ecclestone tried for years to stop it, but the FIA was stubborn in what is actually now a massive problem for everyone in formula one," he added.
Kolles also blasted Mercedes team boss
Toto Wolff for "denying and blocking everything" as proposals did the rounds about how to react to the problem. But his most hefty criticism is saved for Frenchman Todt, the FIA chief. "Today's FIA president intervenes hardly at all with formula one -- he has other priorities," said Kolles. "I think somebody needs to speak up." (GMM)
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