Otmar Szafnauer has been away from the Formula 1 paddock since he lost his job as Alpine boss, but has been working behind the scenes on a new venture.
In the middle of the 2023 F1 season and over the Belgian Grand Prix weekend, Alpine unceremoniously announced the departure of Szafnauer who was shown the door along with the team's long-serving Sporting Director Alan Permane, both becoming scapegoats amid the French team's struggles.
Since then, Szafnauer has kept a low key, despite a few visits to the F1 paddock at some races, but as it turned out, the man has been busy.
However, speaking to
Motorsport.com's James Allen, Szafnauer revealed what he has been up to since he lost his Alpine gig.
The 59-year-old claimed he did not find a role within the existing ten F1 outfits that interested him, he said: "I'm a competitor and the one thing that I like more than anything is the competition.
"So, to come back in a role where I can't influence how well the team is competing, I don't think I'd be interested. If it was a role where I could help develop, build, attract the right people to improve a team's competitiveness, I'd be interested.
"But you know, there's only 10 teams. A lot of them have people in those roles already," he added. "So, I don't know how many opportunities there are out there."
Will Szafnauer succeed where others have failed?
Szafnauer's sentiments are understandable after his Alpine experience, where he
clashed with the Renault management on the timelines needed to get the team successful and was let go before being given the chance to implement his plan.
"But there's also the 11th and 12th team possibility," he went on. "So that might be something that would be interesting for me. I've been working with some organizations in North America that have the funding to start an 11th team.
"It's not Andretti," he clarified, referring to Michael Andretti's bid to join the sport that is currently on the rocks and doesn't seem to have any hope of success.
"Now we're just putting some of those building blocks in place to make sure that we have everything that's required in order to be successful to both start a team, but also get an entry.
"So, you know, that's interesting too," Szafnauer maintained.
Andretti got the green light from the FIA to start and 11th team, but their bid was blocked by Formula One Management who claimed the American organization
does not add value to the sport and are likely to fail.
Their bid got another hit when FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem
performed a U-Turn on his earlier stance of supporting the Andretti-Cadillac project.
Based on the only thing we can say to Szafnauer is: Good luck!