
F1, Ecclestone Ordered to Pay £250k in Massa's 2008 Title Lawsuit
Felipe Massa's lawsuit against F1 and Bernie Ecclestone, concerning the 2008 world championship loss, advances as a judge orders them to pay £250,000 in costs. Massa claims the 'Crashgate' scandal cost him the title and seeks £64 million in damages, with the case now heading toward a full trial.
Formula 1 and former commercial boss Bernie Ecclestone have been ordered to pay £250,000 in legal costs to Felipe Massa as part of his ongoing lawsuit over the controversial outcome of the 2008 world championship. The case, which alleges a conspiracy cost Massa the title, is now set to proceed toward a full trial after a judge rejected attempts to have it thrown out.
Why it matters:
This lawsuit represents an unprecedented legal challenge to the finality of an F1 world championship result, directly questioning the integrity of the sport's governance. A successful claim by Massa could open the door to historical grievances being revisited in court, setting a significant legal and financial precedent for how sporting bodies handle past controversies.
The details:
- Massa is seeking approximately £64 million in damages, claiming he lost the 2008 title to Lewis Hamilton by one point due to the 'Crashgate' scandal at the Singapore Grand Prix.
- The case hinges on a 2023 interview where Bernie Ecclestone stated he and then-FIA President Max Mosley knew about Renault's orchestrated crash during the 2008 season but chose not to investigate to avoid a scandal.
- Ecclestone later claimed his comments were mistranslated.
- The pivotal moment occurred when Nelson Piquet Jr.'s deliberate crash triggered a safety car, leading to a botched pitstop for the then-race-leading Massa, who finished outside the points.
- Judge Robert Jay at London's Royal Courts of Justice recently denied motions by F1 and Ecclestone to dismiss the lawsuit, allowing it to move forward.
- The £250,000 payment covers part of Massa's incurred court costs to date, with his legal team now pushing for the disclosure of evidence and a full trial.
What's next:
The legal battle is poised to enter a critical evidence-gathering phase, moving closer to a potentially landmark trial.
- Massa's lawyers are arguing against any further appeals to delay the process, demanding the defendants produce full evidence related to the 2008 season and their knowledge of Crashgate.
- A trial would force a public examination of one of F1's darkest chapters and could result in substantial financial penalties for the sport's former leadership, regardless of the final verdict on the championship itself.