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Cadillac F1 Team

F1 teams warned they will be furious if beaten by new rival next year

The clock is ticking on Cadillac's entry into F1, although initial expectations are not high

Graeme Lowdon believes his rival F1 team bosses will be "apoplectic" next season if Cadillac finishes ahead of their established organisations in the constructors' championship.

Following a two-year entry process after the FIA called for expressions of interest for an 11th team in February 2023, F1 finally gave the green light in early March, leaving Cadillac exactly 12 months to prepare for its debut in next year's season-opening Australian Grand Prix.

The initial entry launched by Michael Andretti was rejected by F1. It was only when he stood down as CEO of Andretti Global did the sport eventually approve the GM-supported bid, in tandem with TWG Motorsports, overseen by Dan Towriss.

Throughout the bid process, the team hired staff and sourced facilities, which at present are across four different sites in Indiana, North Charlotte, Michigan, and Silverstone, the latter comprising six units near Aston Martin's state-of-the-art $250 million campus.

Next year, the Silverstone site will focus on housing the technical, production and logistics centres, along with a machine shop.

The complicated global structure, which also includes Cadillac utilising Toyota's wind tunnel facility in Cologne, means initial performance and progress will be hard to come by.

As such, the team's expectations for year one are low, according to Lowdon, who was appointed team principal earlier this year, stepping up from a consultancy role as he guided Andretti, in particular, through the entry process, given his previous experience in doing the same with Manor over a decade ago.

"In talking with our shareholders, we have discussions about what expectations should be," said Lowdon, speaking to invited media, including RacingNews365.

"The easiest way I can describe it to them is to imagine if you own a Formula 1 team for 10 years, and then another team rocks up and beats you. You would be apoplectic, you would be so annoyed.

"So you have to assume any new team coming in is going to be last, otherwise something's gone wrong somewhere else. And to a large extent, that's the only way you can set the frame.

"What are we trying to do? We're trying to be as competitive as we possibly can, and we're realistic. We know how difficult it is. You've seen the timelines. They're super, super, super short.

"We have no idea at the moment, like none whatsoever, as to where we are. We can see the numbers. We're happy with our progress, but we just don't know, other than if we beat someone, then someone's going to be angry."

Lowdon - Never in doubt

Lowdon, who served as chief executive of Manor/Marussia before its exit after just six seasons, imparted a clear guideline on Andretti when he sat down with the American motorsports guru at the start of the bid process - quite simply, start building the team now.

Lowdon knew it was a major gamble he was asking of Andretti as there were no guarantees the FIA and, in particular F1, would consent.

But without putting the foundations in place, any confirmed bid would be too far behind the curve if it waited until the day its entry was confirmed. Lowdon, however, was absolutely convinced Andretti, and ultimately Cadillac, would be successful.

Asked whether he thought the bid would fail, and the team's advanced planning would come to nothing, he replied: "Never!

"I got frustrated because there were periods when it looked as if it would take longer. But for me, it was really straightforward.

"You just go back to the basics of what you know, what is it that we're bringing into Formula 1, and when you look at the value proposition that's coming in, there was just no way it wasn't going to happen. The problem was when.

"But I never doubted it, not once. Otherwise, I would have sat on a beach somewhere."

Also interesting:

Join RacingNews365's Ian Parkes, Sam Coop and Nick Golding, as they look back at the Austrian GP but also take a look ahead to Silverstone. Max Verstappen's title chances are a lead discussion, as is whether Lando Norris can for the first time this year secure back-to-back wins.

Rather watch the podcast? Then click here!

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