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Exclusive: Usain Bolt in shock talks to become Formula E team investor
racingnews365.com·

Exclusive: Usain Bolt in shock talks to become Formula E team investor

Eight-time Olympic gold medallist and one of the greatest athletes of all time, Usain Bolt exclusively revealed to RacingNews365 that he is pushing to become an investor in a Formula E team. Ahead of this weekend’s Miami E-Prix at the Miami International Autodrome, Bolt attended an event organised by title partner ABB on Thursday evening, which was also attended by RacingNews365.  The event saw the Jamaican light up the Miami Tower while seated in the cockpit of a Formula E car. The 100m, 200m and 4x100m world record holder is no stranger to the all-electric series, having driven one of its cars in Mexico City two years ago. Bolt is a huge supporter of the championship and an admirer of the work it does around sustainability. Asked for his thoughts on Formula E, Bolt exclusively told RacingNews365 at the ABB event: "Yeah, I’ve tried to follow it as much as I possibly can. "I mean, it’s really growing, and that’s something that is always great because, again, it’s big on the environment, and it’s great for clean energy. So that’s something that I’m happy to see growing and getting bigger." Talks held over possible Formula E investment In recent years, an increasing number of stars from the sporting world, celebrities and influencers have invested in motorsport teams, particularly across F1, MotoGP and Formula E. The most prominent new investor in Formula E is actor Idris Elba, who became a strategic investor in the Cupra Kiro outfit in February 2025. Bolt has held talks with his inner circle about investing in a Formula E team, although he would not name which team in particular, with the 39-year-old eager to make it happen. Discussing if becoming a Formula E team investor is on his radar, Bolt revealed: "That’s something that we’ve discussed. "There have been talks; it’s just about getting the right team and the right people together to really get it off the ground. "So my team and I will definitely talk about it. And as I said, it’s always a great initiative to get into something that’s really grown and is going in the right direction." Deciding which team to invest into is something Bolt is actively thinking about, with it all being about everything fitting together correctly. Pushed on whether it is something he is actively pursuing, the Olympic legend replied: "Yeah, that’s something that we’ve discussed. "And it’s just about getting everything together, getting it on the right track, and seeing if it will be the right move."

Why champion killers Audi can be a major threat in F1
racingnews365.com·

Why champion killers Audi can be a major threat in F1

A look at Audi's track record in motorsport shows why leading teams such as McLaren, Ferrari, Red Bull and Mercedes should be concerned, with the Ingolstadt concern's track record when it comes to entering new categories - and winning. For the first time, the four rings is entering Formula 1 in 2026 with a works team, having taken over Sauber, and unlike Cadillac (until 2029 at least), has created its own power unit.  And Audi is not coming into grand prix racing to make up the numbers, with the Le Mans 24 Hours exhibit A. An example of Audi's destructive efficiency comes in 1999, when it first visited the Circuit de la Sarthe, with the R8R and R8C, finishing third and fourth overall despite some mechanical gremlins.  12 months later, and Audi was not messing around with a historic 1-2-3 victory, headed by Frank Biela, Emanuele Pirro and, with his second victory, Tom Kristensen.  TK would go on to claim seven of his nine Le Mans wins at the wheel of an Audi between this first triumph in 2000 and 2013.  But it is not just on-track Audi has had success, with a dip into the Dakar Rally in 02 with an all-electric RS e-tron.  Stage victories followed in the first year, and by 2024, Carlos Sainz Sr, the two-time world rally champion, guided Audi to its first victory in the Dakar by over one hour after 7,900km of racing.  It was the first time an electric-powered machine had won the Dakar. Further success Keeping up with the electric theme, Audi was also one of the leading teams in the early years of Formula E, when the battery technology was still immature.  Lucas di Grassi won the first-ever FE race in Beijing, albeit helped by Renault's Nico Prost suddenly doing the best impression of his father at the 1989 Japanese GP against Nick Heidfeld just before the final braking zone of the final lap, launching Heidfeld into a flip.  The team finished third overall in the standings, before di Grassi went to the season two finale with a chance of the drivers' title against rival Sebastien Buemi, who emerged on top by virtue of the fastest lap two bonus points after a controversial collision between the two.  But in season three, Buemi's lightning start faded in the second-half of the year as di Grassi claimed the drivers' title for Audi, with a teams' title following in 2018 before the team withdrew at the end of the 2021 campaign.  In terms of F1, Audi is not underestimating the scale of the challenge, with CEO Gernot Dollner indicating that the team "want to win" but realise "you don't become a top team overnight" with 2030 earmarked as a the target for a championship challenge. For the leading F1 teams, the message is clear: Audi is coming, and its history proves that it is not coming to compete. It is coming to win.