Otmar Szafnauer is canvassing backers for a team ownership position in Formula 1 or IndyCar, fourteen months after Alpine terminated him mid-season. The search involves both direct acquisition conversations and equity partnerships, according to people familiar with the discussions. No term sheet has been signed.
Szafnauer spent twenty-four years in F1 operational leadership, twelve at Force India and Racing Point before moving to Alpine in 2022. Alpine dismissed him in July 2023 after sixteen months, citing performance gaps and internal friction over technical direction. He has not held a full-time role since. The former principal declined to comment on specific targets but confirmed his interest in team ownership during a recent industry event.
The timing matters for two reasons. First, the 2026 F1 entry window remains partially open despite FIA rejections of Andretti Global's application. GM and Cadillac are negotiating directly with Formula One Management for a manufacturer-backed entry, bypassing the Andretti partnership structure that failed regulatory review. If Cadillac enters without Andretti's operational control, the rejected application creates a leadership vacuum that requires someone with constructor credential and OEM relationships. Szafnauer has both. Second, IndyCar's ownership landscape is shifting as Penske Entertainment explores changes to the franchise model ahead of the 2025 hybrid engine rollout. Three existing teams are believed to be in quiet sale processes, with valuations between $15 million and $25 million depending on charter clarity and sponsor retention.
Szafnauer's challenge is capital formation. F1 team stakes now trade at $500 million minimum for back-of-grid positions after Andretti's $450 million anti-dilution payment offer became public. IndyCar requires less upfront equity but offers narrower commercial upside; the series' title sponsor Firestone deal expires in 2025, and broadcast rights renewals with NBC are uncertain past 2024. Szafnauer's value proposition is operational efficiency rather than checkbook scale. At Racing Point, he delivered fourth place in the 2020 constructors' championship on a budget 40 percent below midfield average, the kind of capital efficiency that appeals to private equity groups now circling motorsport.
The F1 path likely involves minority partnership in an existing team rather than outright purchase. Williams, Haas, and Sauber have all explored investor conversations in the past eighteen months. Williams is controlled by Dorilton Capital and recently installed James Vowles, making leadership change unlikely. Haas remains family-owned but Gene Haas has discussed retirement timelines. Sauber transitions to Audi factory backing in 2026, narrowing the window for independent operators. None of these teams has publicly retained an investment bank, but secondary market pricing for F1 equity stakes suggests sellers are positioning.
IndyCar offers clearer entry mechanics but murkier returns. The series drew 1.13 million average viewers across NBC platforms in 2023, down 7 percent year-over-year. Sponsorship revenue per car averages $8 million to $12 million, roughly one-fifth of midfield F1 levels. But operational control is absolute; team owners set technical direction without manufacturer veto rights, the autonomy Szafnauer lost at Alpine. Andretti Global itself could become an acquisition target if the Cadillac F1 deal excludes Michael Andretti's operational role, creating succession pressure on the IndyCar side.
Szafnauer's network includes Ford and Honda executives from his Force India and Alpine tenures, relationships that carry weight in both series. Ford re-enters IndyCar engine supply discussions for 2027 under the new hybrid formula. Honda remains the series' dominant engine partner and a potential technical ally for any new entrant. Both manufacturers prefer experienced operators over celebrity owners when allocating engineering support.
Watch for Cadillac's F1 entry announcement, expected before the 2024 Las Vegas Grand Prix in November. If the deal proceeds without Andretti operational control, Szafnauer becomes a credible alternative principal for American stakeholders who want F1 presence but lack motorsport infrastructure. On the IndyCar side, monitor team sale rumors around the Toronto race in July, when ownership groups traditionally meet to discuss franchise structure ahead of the following season.
Szafnauer's last team finished sixth in the constructors' championship. The teams he's looking at now would consider that an achievement.