BBC Sport's Andrew Benson assesses Christian Horner's £52m severance deal with Red Bull and how it will reflect on the team and their former F1 supremo.

Alpine, Aston Martin and Ferrari will all note that Englishman agreed a reduced pay-off in order to be allowed to join a former rival

Christian Horner formally leaves Red Bull after agreeing a severance deal following his sacking as team principal in July.

Er war schon Red Bulls Teamchef beim Einstieg in die Formel 1 im Jahr 2005. Unter ihm feierte der Rennstall mit Sebastian Vettel und Max Verstappen große Erfolge. Dann stolperte…

Christian Horner ha concordato una buonuscita multimilionaria (di 80-100 milioni) con la Red Bull, e ottenuto di poter di tornare in Formula 1 con un'altra scuderia già nella…

Terms of departure could permit return to Formula 1 next year for controversial team boss

Christian Horner has officially left Red Bull with what is understood to be an £80m settlement following his dismissal in July as team principal

BBC Sport's Andrew Benson assesses Christian Horner's £52m severance deal with Red Bull and how it will reflect on the team and their former F1 supremo.

It is hard to believe a return to F1 is not on the cards for one of the most successful team principals, but where will he go?