Horner Would Support F1 Returning to V10 Engines 

Red Bull Racing team principal Christian Horner looks on during the second day of the Formula One pre-season testing at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir on February 27, 2025. (AFP)
Red Bull Racing team principal Christian Horner looks on during the second day of the Formula One pre-season testing at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir on February 27, 2025. (AFP)
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Horner Would Support F1 Returning to V10 Engines 

Red Bull Racing team principal Christian Horner looks on during the second day of the Formula One pre-season testing at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir on February 27, 2025. (AFP)
Red Bull Racing team principal Christian Horner looks on during the second day of the Formula One pre-season testing at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir on February 27, 2025. (AFP)

Red Bull Formula One boss Christian Horner has expressed support for an eventual return to V10 engines despite his team spending heavily on designing their own power unit for the new era starting in 2026.

The naturally aspirated V10s, which disappeared from the starting grid in 2006, are far louder than the current V6 turbo-hybrid units but are being mooted as a future option with sustainable fuel.

The governing FIA said last week that discussions were ongoing with stakeholders over the sport's technical direction from 2030 and a working group was likely to be set up to explore all possibilities.

"Personally, from a sporting perspective, looking at what the future engine of Formula One should be beyond this next generation, particularly with the way that sustainable fuel is going, it does open up all kinds of opportunities," said Horner.

"Inadvertently, we've ended up with a very, very expensive, very complex engine from '26 onwards.

"The purist in me would love to go back to a V10 that was done responsibly with sustainable fuel that reintroduced the sounds of grand prix racing," he added at pre-season testing in Bahrain.

"It's an interesting concept and one to certainly look for after this current set of regulations."

Red Bull, who will be partnered by Ford from 2026 after a split from Honda, have built a powertrains plant next to their Milton Keynes headquarters.



Granollers and Zeballos Break Duck with French Open Men's Doubles Crown

Spain's Marcel Granollers (C-L) and Argentina's Horacio Zeballos (C-R) hold their trophy after winning their men's doubles final match against Britain's Joe Salisbury and Britain's Neal Skupski on day 14 of the French Open tennis tournament on Court Philippe-Chatrier at the Roland-Garros Complex in Paris on June 7, 2025. (Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP)
Spain's Marcel Granollers (C-L) and Argentina's Horacio Zeballos (C-R) hold their trophy after winning their men's doubles final match against Britain's Joe Salisbury and Britain's Neal Skupski on day 14 of the French Open tennis tournament on Court Philippe-Chatrier at the Roland-Garros Complex in Paris on June 7, 2025. (Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP)
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Granollers and Zeballos Break Duck with French Open Men's Doubles Crown

Spain's Marcel Granollers (C-L) and Argentina's Horacio Zeballos (C-R) hold their trophy after winning their men's doubles final match against Britain's Joe Salisbury and Britain's Neal Skupski on day 14 of the French Open tennis tournament on Court Philippe-Chatrier at the Roland-Garros Complex in Paris on June 7, 2025. (Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP)
Spain's Marcel Granollers (C-L) and Argentina's Horacio Zeballos (C-R) hold their trophy after winning their men's doubles final match against Britain's Joe Salisbury and Britain's Neal Skupski on day 14 of the French Open tennis tournament on Court Philippe-Chatrier at the Roland-Garros Complex in Paris on June 7, 2025. (Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP)

Fifth seeds Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos bagged their maiden Grand Slam trophy as a pair by battling past British duo Joe Salisbury and Neal Skupski 6-0 6-7(5) 7-5 in the French Open men's doubles final on Saturday.

Playing in a fourth Grand Slam final together, Granollers and Zeballos looked on track to quickly break their duck when they blanked their eighth-seeded opponents in the opening set before being dragged into a dogfight in the next, Reuters reported.

Salisbury and Skupski, who won the only previous tour-level encounter between the two teams in the Rome quarter-finals last month, edged the second set tiebreak and were close to building a 4-3 lead in the decider before a moment of magic.

Zeballos hit the shot of the match to level at deuce in the next game, chasing down a dipping ball and squeezing it around the post at ground level to draw loud cheers from a small crowd on Court Philippe Chatrier.

Salisbury and Skupski, who became the first British men's doubles finalists at Roland Garros since 1936, were in no mood to fade away on the historic occasion as they fought on before being caught off guard in the 12th game.

Granollers and Zeballos broke to love to secure victory and fell to the ground in celebration.