Early examples Such orders were legal and accepted historically in motor racing. In the early years of the
Formula One World Championship, it was even legal for a driver to give up his car during the race to the team leader if the latter's car had broken down. In 1955, the Mercedes team asked
Juan Manuel Fangio to let his teammate
Stirling Moss win his home Grand Prix at
Aintree. Fangio obliged, refusing to attack Moss in the closing stages of the race, and came home in second place, less than a second behind Moss. The
1964 season saw a dramatic finale in which
Lorenzo Bandini moved over for
John Surtees during the
Mexican Grand Prix, allowing Surtees to get the necessary points to beat
Graham Hill to the World Championship. In the
1979 German Grand Prix Clay Regazzoni was instructed by the
Williams pits not to attack his teammate
Alan Jones for the lead, despite Regazzoni being ahead in the championship. The status of Jones as number one driver at Williams lasted until 1981, when
Carlos Reutemann deliberately ignored team orders at the
1981 Brazilian Grand Prix and did not allow him to pass. This resulted in a long feud between the two that eventually led to Jones' retirement at the end of the season, with Reutemann missing out on the World Championship for one single point. At the
1982 French Grand Prix,
René Arnoux enraged
Renault by refusing to give way to his teammate
Alain Prost, who at the time was ahead in the championship. However, those three points had no impact, as Prost finished fourth in the championship that year, ten points behind eventual champion
Keke Rosberg. During the
1983 South African Grand Prix, the
Brabham-BMW team asked driver
Riccardo Patrese to cede
Nelson Piquet the race win if it ensured Piquet would win the driver's championship. However, this did not prove to be necessary as Patrese won the race while Piquet came third, enough to secure him the championship.
Riccardo Patrese found himself in a similar situation to what he did in 1983 again in 1992, when he waved his
Williams teammate
Nigel Mansell through during the
1992 French Grand Prix, which Mansell went on to win ahead of Patrese in second.
Negative media reception In the late 1990s, incidents of team orders began to be reported more prominently by the media, and public reaction to the more blatant examples became extremely negative. At the
1997 European Grand Prix,
Jacques Villeneuve, already with the title in the bag (after the controversial collision with Schumacher, which Villeneuve's Williams survived), was asked by his engineer via radio to let the
McLaren cars pass as "They've been very helpful", while at the
1998 Australian Grand Prix, the McLaren drivers
David Coulthard and
Mika Häkkinen caused a stir by switching position at the end of the race in order to respect a previous agreement. In contrast to prior examples, the
1997 Japanese Grand Prix saw a more sophisticated use of team orders, where
Ferrari driver
Eddie Irvine began the race light on fuel, allowing him to get ahead of the superior Williams cars and hold them up, to the benefit of teammate
Michael Schumacher. At the
1998 Belgian Grand Prix, the two
Jordans of
Damon Hill and
Ralf Schumacher found themselves unexpectedly in the lead after a collision between
Michael Schumacher and
David Coulthard. Ralf was subsequently ordered not to overtake Hill, to assure Jordan of a 1-2 finish. Following this, Michael angrily bought out his brother's contract for £2 million and told Eddie Jordan that Ralf would never race for Jordan again. At the
1999 German Grand Prix,
Mika Salo, driving for
Ferrari in place of the injured
Michael Schumacher, was leading the race when he was told to allow teammate
Eddie Irvine to pass. Salo complied, giving up what would have been his only Formula One victory in 109 career races. Irvine ultimately failed to win the championship that year, losing out to Mika Häkkinen. {{Quote box At the
2002 Austrian Grand Prix,
Rubens Barrichello was ordered to allow
Ferrari teammate
Michael Schumacher to pass to obtain the win. This received huge amounts of negative attention from the media, as the order was issued shortly before both drivers crossed the finish line. Both drivers were unhappy about the situation. Schumacher refused to take the top step of the podium and the centre seat, normally reserved to the winner, during the post-race press conference, and the team was punished for breach of podium procedure. At the
United States Grand Prix the same year, Schumacher appeared to have returned the favour by giving Barrichello the win by the record smallest margin of 0.011 seconds on the finishing line, though it is assumed Schumacher was trying to trigger a
dead-heat finish. At the
2002 French Grand Prix, the financially troubled
Arrows team had failed to reach an agreement with its sponsors, thus the team ordered both its drivers,
Heinz-Harald Frentzen and
Enrique Bernoldi to deliberately fail to qualify by posting times slower than the
107% rule.
Team orders ban After the 2002 season, FIA announced that "Team Orders that could influence the outcome of a race" were banned, although they were sometimes still implemented discreetly.
Ferrari team orders at the 2010 German Grand Prix For example, this has sometimes been achieved as easily as a team getting on the radio to the slower driver and pointing out that his teammate is quicker. The slower driver then lets the quicker driver through without the need for an overt "directive" from the team. This happened, for example, at the
2010 German Grand Prix,
Felipe Massa's race engineer
Rob Smedley was heard to say to his driver "
Fernando [Alonso] is faster than you. Can you confirm you understand that message?". Moments later, Massa eased back and allowed Alonso past. At the
2012 United States Grand Prix, Ferrari broke the FIA seal on the gearbox of Felipe Massa's car in order to trigger a 5-place grid penalty. This moved him behind Fernando Alonso and shifted both cars onto the "clean" side of the race track, to ensure Alonso the fastest start possible on the slippery asphalt of the brand-new
Circuit of the Americas. At the
2013 Malaysian Grand Prix,
Red Bull Racing driver Sebastian Vettel was criticised for passing his team-mate Mark Webber to win the race against
"Multi 21", an order from his team to hold position. At the
2017 Hungarian Grand Prix, the Mercedes team ordered
Valtteri Bottas to yield his third position for
Lewis Hamilton, who had a better chance to attack second-placed
Kimi Räikkönen. When it was clear that Hamilton was not able to overcome Räikkönen, Hamilton gave back the position to Bottas in the last corner of the race, costing him three points in the Drivers' Championship. Those three points did not matter in the end, as Hamilton won the title by 46 points. At the
2018 German Grand Prix, after Vettel crashed and brought out the safety car, Hamilton inherited the lead, with team-mate Bottas behind him on fresher tyres. When the safety car period ended, Bottas initially attacked Hamilton for the lead, before being told by Mercedes' team strategist
James Vowles to hold his position, handing Hamilton the win. Bottas continued to play second fiddle to Hamilton at the
2018 Russian Grand Prix, where he qualified on pole and subsequently led the race until being ordered to yield the lead to his teammate, who was ahead in the Drivers' Championship. At the
2019 Australian Grand Prix, Ferrari ordered
Charles Leclerc to hold position after he attempted to overtake team-mate Vettel. Two races later, at the
Chinese Grand Prix, Leclerc was ordered by Ferrari team principal
Mattia Binotto to let Vettel pass him. Binotto later said the team made the “right choice” by making the call, as Vettel finished on the podium in third whilst Leclerc finished fifth. At the
2022 Spanish Grand Prix,
Red Bull ordered
Sergio Pérez to give up his lead to his teammate
Max Verstappen. Pérez stated that he was happy with the team but at the same time he demanded an explanation from the team regarding the team orders given to him. Red Bull would again be accused of using team orders during the
2022 Azerbaijan Grand Prix with the team radio telling Pérez not to fight his teammate Verstappen in the main straight, however Red Bull team principal
Christian Horner denied the accusation of giving team orders and Pérez defended the team decision as he experienced tyre degradation in the main straight (where Verstappen had crashed out the previous year due to a tyre failure) while some speculated the order was given to avoid another
2018 Azerbaijan Grand Prix incident (where Verstappen and then-teammate Daniel Ricciardo collided entering turn 1). Later, in the
2022 São Paulo Grand Prix, Max Verstappen controversially refused to obey team orders to let his teammate Sergio Pérez pass. With Pérez falling down the order after the second safety car restart, his Red Bull Racing teammate, Verstappen, was given permission to pass him in order to overtake
Fernando Alonso's
Alpine. After failing to overtake Alonso, Verstappen was told by his engineer,
Gianpiero Lambiase, to give the position back to Pérez, to assist Pérez in taking second in the Drivers' Championship. Verstappen refused to comply with team orders and told Lambiase not to ask him to do such a thing again, stating that he had his "reasons" to defy such orders, and that he had discussed those reasons with the team before. At the
2024 Hungarian Grand Prix,
McLaren driver
Lando Norris was ordered to give up his lead to his teammate
Oscar Piastri, after the team boxed Norris first, resulting in him
undercutting the then-leading Piastri. Norris initially was hesitant to give up his lead as he was looking to gain his second win in Formula One, as well as an advantage in the Drivers Championship. However with three laps remaining, Norris gave up his race-leading position to his teammate after much convincing from his race engineer William Joesph. Norris finished second, while his teammate won his maiden Grand Prix. This decision by McLaren created quite a controversy as some believed that Piastri was handed the win by Norris and that Norris deserved to win as he was fighting for the drivers championship. However others believed that Piastri deserved the win as McLaren should have
pitted Piastri first, avoiding the undercut altogether which would have most likely resulted in Piastri winning the race. McLaren would again issue team orders at the sprint race for the
2024 São Paulo Grand Prix, where Piastri qualified on
pole position, and Norris qualified in second. The cars were ordered to switch positions on lap 22, and Norris went on to win the sprint race. The decision was made in an effort to gain as many points as possible against Norris' championship rival,
Max Verstappen. Team orders involving McLaren, Piastri and Norris would again be invoked again the following season at the
2025 Italian Grand Prix. Team orders were invoked in this instance because Norris, who had been the ahead of Piastri in second place, suffered a slow pit stop having allowed Piastri, who had been running in third place behind to pit first to enable to avoid being undercut by the
Ferrari of
Charles Leclerc. Norris had agreed to allow Piastri to pit before Norris after McLaren promised Piastri would not undercut Norris through the stops. However, a slow pit stop for Norris meant he came out behind Piastri and team orders were invoked. Piastri was left unhappy with the order but reluctantly complied. The move to have Norris and Piastri swap positions was seen as particularly controversial by some fans as both Norris and Piastri were considered direct rivals competing for the 2025 drivers' championship. In the end, the team orders ended up playing a key role in the outcome of the championship, with Norris gaining 3 points thanks to them, and he ended up winning the championship by only 2 points from Max Verstappen. However, team principal
Andrea Stella said the decision for team orders was due to being Norris's own choice to pit second due to being guaranteed by the team that he would not be undercut by his team mate and that the decision made was consistent with the one made in Hungary the previous year where the roles of Norris and Piastri were reversed. == Team orders in NASCAR ==