With Andretti announcing plans for an F1 entry in the future, we’ve taken a look back at some infamous examples of teams who came and then vanished just as quickly…
The UK's Health and Safety Executive's report into Maria de Villota's fateful testing crash in 2012 highlights several failings that could have contributed to the Spaniard's injuries.
Former Marussia sporting director Graeme Lowdon says "it's still certainly possible" for the team to be saved, with Wednesday's auction of assets having been postponed
A run down of the combined lap times for the four day F1 test at Jerez - and a look at who managed to do the most mileage with their new 2014-spec cars
Kimi Raikkonen tops the first day of pre-season testing in Spain as teams work to come to terms with the new regulations in place in the 2014 F1 season
For the second Grand Prix in a row, Giedo van der Garde was out of the race almost before the dust had settled from the start. And he was not happy with Marussia's Max Chilton.
Race stewards have decided that no-one was 'wholly or predominately to blame' for the accident which removed Giedo van der Garde and Jules Bianchi from the Japanese Grand Prix.
Maria de Villota most likely died from natural causes resulting from the lasting effects of her 2012 F1 testing accident, medical sources have confirmed.