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The man tipped to succeed Max Mosley as president of the FIA has spoken of his admiration for the man who is continuing to defy calls for his resignation after revelations about his part in a sado-masochistic orgy.
Jean Todt, the former team principal of the Ferrari Formula One team – he is still associated with the Scuderia – described Mosley as a hard-working, thorough and reliable individual of great intelligence.
Todt, who masterminded Michael Schumacher’s multiple world championships at Ferrari, also said that the scandal surrounding Mosley has not changed the way he does business with the FIA president and he hopes that he will carry on in his job for several more years.
The Frenchman did add, however, that he and everyone connected with the FIA would have to respect the rules of the organisation, which has been given the opportunity either to endorse Mosley or sack him at a general meeting of the 222 voting members in Paris on June 3.
“He is a true president,” Todt said in an interview with Le Journal de Dimanche, a Canadian newspaper. “He knows his business very well because he is a hard worker, thorough and reliable. He is very intelligent and with a rare elegance. He knows how to impose leadership when he has to, with an international authority.”
Todt said that Mosley had amassed an impressive record on safety in motor sport, which he believes his critics are ignoring. “He has worked very hard for safety,” Todt said. “When you see what motor racing was like 30 years ago, especially at the tracks, what he has accomplished is remarkable. The number of lives saved under his guidance is absolutely phenomenal. He has taken some courageous decisions sometimes against everyone. I’m therefore amazed to see that people are lingering on things which bear no relation to his position.
“I have a very good relationship with him. I regularly have conversations with him on the telephone and I do not see why that would not be the case any more. If you ask me, I’m happy with the actions of the president of the FIA since he’s been in office. I think he does a very good job.”
Todt’s effusive praise for Mosley, who has spoken of the Frenchman as an ideal successor to him in the past, is out of step with the private view of the majority of senior team figures in the Formula One paddock, who want Mosley to resign.
Todt’s long record in motor sport – both in Formula One and rallying – makes him ideally qualified to succeed Mosley when the Briton either resigns, is sacked or steps down at the end of next year. However, his unremittingly and unswervingly “Ferrari-focused” approach over the past ten years has led some critics to argue that he cannot now switch his focus to the disinterested role of FIA president.
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or, if not paul stoddart how about eddie jordan ?
both of them fully committed to motor sport and both with a sense of humour
david c, purbeck,
Not a surprise, since the FIA acts like a wholly owned subsidiary of Ferrari. That's about like the PM singing the praises of his government.
After the FIA's penalty on McLaren last year, very little about this organization surprises me.
Vote Paul Stoddart for FIA President!
Brian Tankersley, Knoxville, TN, USA
Jean Todt has just displayed his unsuitability to ever replace Mosley as president of the FIA.
He owes Mosley for the pathetic gift of the manufacturers world championship last year, something Ferrari could not achieve on merit, but to condone Mosleys' actions would indicate Todt' is dubious too.
Formula 1 seems to have more than its share of weirdos.
Dr.F.W.Knox, Duncan, Canada
What a surprise that Todt speaks in defence of Pervy Mosley it's not like he (Ferrari) have ever received any favours from the FIA is it?
Does this not prove that he is not fit to replace him as he clearly cannot see the bigger picture or cares about the views of the moral majority.
No after how hard one trys one can never put the genie back in the bottle can one?
Dale, Wokingham, UK
It is surely in the best interest of Formula 1 for the post to go to a free election where a number of candidates set out their stall and we, the sports fans, get to decide who we want to lead our sport for the next twenty years or so. And that brings in another question: do we want an elderly statesman, the classic "friend" of the few to sit out his retirement or should we look for a younger individual with fresh ideas and a new, more thoughtful and independent view of the way ahead? F1 has been dominated by Ferrari for much of the last decade and yet, at one and the same time has become, shall we say, less attractive to watch. Bringing in more of the same may well be a very attractive option for some; but is that the way the rest of us want to see our sport continue?
I very much doubt that.
Chris Coles, Medstead, Alton, United Kingdom
Ferrari is my favorite team but I strongly disagree with Jean Todt's position. I believe I understand where they're coming from but the ends never justify the means. After the Nazi orgy Mosley's duty to FIA was to resign, while he foolishly seems determined to stay on, to the detriment of all FIA sports.
It is no coincidence, at least in my mind, that the teams which spoke out against Mosley after the first revelations were all from the GPWC group, just as Ferrari, who are not part of this group, are now speaking in his favor. All teams (GPWC group or not) should take a united stance against this. The problem is that to many Mosley has time and again proved to be the lesser of two evils (Mosley and Ecclestone) but I don't believe this can justify defending him.
Tetsuya, Tokyo, Japan