adrianjordan wrote: ↑18 Sep 2021, 23:31
I think whatever they do with Sprint Races, they need to be independent of the main Grand Prix.
I have no issue with the format used on Sprint weekends so far (though I could quite happily lose the contentious Lewis and Max crashes lol) BUT I think Sprint would be much more entertaining if it didn't affect the Sunday grid. I think we'd have seen more of an effort from Lewis to get past Lando in the Sprint if it wasn't for the risk of affecting the Grand Prix itself.
Maybe then we could have a longer FP1 on Friday morning. Quali Friday afternoon. FP2 on Saturday morning and then Sprint on Saturday afternoon with a grid decided based on fastest lap in practice or some such thing. Then Sunday stays as it is.
Completely agree. In Italy there was so little incentive for Hamilton to try and pass Norris unless it was an absolute slam dunk of a move. Why on earth would you put your car in any jeopardy in his position? (Likewise Verstappen had zero incentive to try and move on Bottas- one point is totally not worth it) Unless it's easy, you just consolidate rather than risk being back of the grid for the sake of moving up one spot. That's the huge issue with the sprints. Only those woefully out of position from Friday, or mid grid with literally nothing to lose will try anything bold. Other than that, by F1 standards it's basically tiptoeing around to preserve what you've got and staying out of trouble.
The whole sprint weekend is a s***** mish mash and compromise. They need to at least change things around to give it a bit more point. Maybe let them alter the setup of the cars from Friday to Saturday so we can see what they can do in pure 1 lap trim and in non compromised race trim. As it is now, Saturday practice is largely pointless as well.
The only real winners I've seen from it so far are those with a financial stake, who get more money. Corporate hospitality, TV, FOM. The only plus is that the circuits can make a bit more money for themselves. They are the only ones who really need it, and boy do they need it. Don't think it's a coincidence that the races so far were Silverstone and Monza- two tracks with problems. If it benefits them, then I'll live with it. Otherwise it's a stupid format. Are they really planning SEVEN next year? Pfft. It's just cynical money grabbing.