Extremely low? 35.000 people in Barcelona test in 2018, reliable data. I repeat 35.000 people with faces and names and there has been more visits in 2019 and 2020, specially dutch people (...wonder why) This not too shabby. On these test please include visits from local schools, disabled kids and all shorts of collectives. For this year's, there is people that already bought plane tickets and booked hotels. As I said, disgraceful disregard to European Fans.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 05:38
In the big scheme of things, the amount of people that actually go to testing is extremely low… The amount of people that actually watch testing (not read the recaps, lap times and pictures online) is very very low also… As a matter of fact, watching testing live wasn’t possible until F1TV, so it’s not like if it’s a long standing tradition.
So, yes there is probably a lot more money to be made from Bahrein paying a premium to have the rights to televised testing… For 99.99% of fans that even if it was open to the public, wouldn’t be able to be in Spain for the first 3 days of testing, we will still get to see the cars during their launch events, there will be pictures posted online of the cars on track and there will be timing at the end of the day (not that times during testing, specially the first 3 days, matters at all).
I don’t understand the upheaval from some fans regarding this… What I do agree with, is the BS form F1 to call it “3 days of shakedown”, like if the average fan doesn’t realize what is really going on… Call it like it is, closed doors testing.
He is talking tripe. If its a "shakedown" why the need for 3 days, it normally only takes a few hours for a team to carry out a shakedown.Oakstreet wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 13:51Yep, you are right. But there is a difference between adhering to your empoyer and replies such as this one below which is reaching levels of trump-like behaviour "I have my own truth!"
Oh well, I am just angry because I already planned my Barca testing trip.
Well… It’s a numbers game, right? According to F1 in 2020 (and despite having less races due to Covid), the average audience per race was 87.4 million… More interestingly is the number is unique viewers which was calculated as 433m… So yes, even if true that 35,000 fans attend testing in Barcelona (which seems like a very big number based on what can be seeing during broadcast, but I don’t have any data to argue it)… Even then, the amount of people attending F1 testing amounts to 0.008% of fans… As I said originally, in the big scheme of things it is an extremely low number.tonmeister wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 15:39Extremely low? 35.000 people in Barcelona test in 2018, reliable data. I repeat 35.000 people with faces and names and there has been more visits in 2019 and 2020, specially dutch people (...wonder why) This not too shabby. On these test please include visits from local schools, disabled kids and all shorts of collectives. For this year's, there is people that already bought plane tickets and booked hotels. As I said, disgraceful disregard to European Fans.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 05:38
In the big scheme of things, the amount of people that actually go to testing is extremely low… The amount of people that actually watch testing (not read the recaps, lap times and pictures online) is very very low also… As a matter of fact, watching testing live wasn’t possible until F1TV, so it’s not like if it’s a long standing tradition.
So, yes there is probably a lot more money to be made from Bahrein paying a premium to have the rights to televised testing… For 99.99% of fans that even if it was open to the public, wouldn’t be able to be in Spain for the first 3 days of testing, we will still get to see the cars during their launch events, there will be pictures posted online of the cars on track and there will be timing at the end of the day (not that times during testing, specially the first 3 days, matters at all).
I don’t understand the upheaval from some fans regarding this… What I do agree with, is the BS form F1 to call it “3 days of shakedown”, like if the average fan doesn’t realize what is really going on… Call it like it is, closed doors testing.
If I didnt know he was a journalist I would have thought this tweet was a joke about the situation. So they are labelling the Barcelona test a 3 day shakedown
He is trolling the situation and FOM! He is calling the first preseason test as a "mass shakedown", which is what it has been reduced to.
Sorry but you are comparing apples to oranges here. Maybe we are addressing a different problem.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 17:07
Well… It’s a numbers game, right? According to F1 in 2020 (and despite having less races due to Covid), the average audience per race was 87.4 million… More interestingly is the number is unique viewers which was calculated as 433m… So yes, even if true that 35,000 fans attend testing in Barcelona (which seems like a very big number based on what can be seeing during broadcast, but I don’t have any data to argue it)… Even then, the amount of people attending F1 testing amounts to 0.008% of fans… As I said originally, in the big scheme of things it is an extremely low number.
Furthermore, the “Testing” aren’t Formula 1 “events”… There is no reason for F1 to allow any fans and we as fans aren’t entitled to be there… I can understand that it is upsetting that you will be missing testing in Barcelona, but you can always attend Bahrain if you want to… Is it more expensive? Well, that’s something that everyone not in Europe already experiences (and pays for) if they want to attend testing.
It seems that indeed we were talking of different sample sizes, for what I’ve read online the uproar is not only by those that are attending the event in Barcelona, but also because it won’t be broadcasted or simply because they don’t like it (regardless if they were planning to attend or not).tonmeister wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 19:24Sorry but you are comparing apples to oranges here. Maybe we are addressing a different problem.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 17:07
Well… It’s a numbers game, right? According to F1 in 2020 (and despite having less races due to Covid), the average audience per race was 87.4 million… More interestingly is the number is unique viewers which was calculated as 433m… So yes, even if true that 35,000 fans attend testing in Barcelona (which seems like a very big number based on what can be seeing during broadcast, but I don’t have any data to argue it)… Even then, the amount of people attending F1 testing amounts to 0.008% of fans… As I said originally, in the big scheme of things it is an extremely low number.
Furthermore, the “Testing” aren’t Formula 1 “events”… There is no reason for F1 to allow any fans and we as fans aren’t entitled to be there… I can understand that it is upsetting that you will be missing testing in Barcelona, but you can always attend Bahrain if you want to… Is it more expensive? Well, that’s something that everyone not in Europe already experiences (and pays for) if they want to attend testing.
I am talking about people that go personally to the circuit to live the F1 experience. Very comitted fans. TV audience is another matter altogether.
http://e00-marca.uecdn.es/assets/multim ... 318342.jpg
This is the total attendance for the 2017 season. My mistake on the previous post for quoting the 2017 season.
Under your point of view it would be equal to dismiss the 35.700 atendees for the test as it would be to dismiss the 177.984 that came to the race. I mean, if we are talking about percentage compared to TV coverage, right? So if some dude comes and lays down the dough he could buy the right to cancel entrance for the Monaco GP...is only a matter of someone with enough money to do it, isn't?
Another point in which you are very wrong is that Barcelona testing has been indeed a F1 event for at least 17 years (the ones I have attended). That's what it said on the ticket when I paid. A gathering point and a tradition if you will, for F1 maniacs.
If I'm upset? of course! Futhermore I also don't see your point about buying a ticket to go to Bahrein. It's going to happen here, walking distance and I'm not going to watch it precisely because some dudes in Bahrein decided that I shouldn't. So no Bahrein for me, thank you. As for the fans in europe, please ask the people in France, Netherlands and even the UK what's more convenient...
That is not so simple to do really.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 21:47
In regards to the plane tickets, you were the one that mentioned that people already bought ticket planes and booked hotels, if that was the case, it is as simple as changing them to Bahrain if attending is so important.
Again, I don't think this is the right analogy. The right one would be "would they dismiss 177k fans but still do the race if somebody paid for it to be closed doors?" Because testing is going to happen.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 21:47
F1 is first and foremost a business… Making a decision to give Bahrain the exclusive rights to “Public Testing” is no different than negotiating for an F1 race to take place at certain location… If tomorrow the Catalunya Circuit doesn’t pay what F1 wants to host an F1 race, there will simply not be an F1 race (like has happened with the German GP for example)… To your question if they would dismiss 177k fans attending the Spanish GP? If it makes sense from a business perspective, I’m sure they would… It is also not different than when F1 decides to cut a deal with certain broadcaster for the rights to the races, in certain countries it was “free to watch” and because someone (like Sky for example) came in and as you well said it “lays down the dough” it automatically switched to “behind a paywall or subscription required”.
I am not entitled to anything at all. Indeed, testing IS going to be performed in a location comfortable to me. I have just been denied the entrance for whatever reason. And please stop with the TV vs In Situ percentage comparison.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 21:47
I can understand that you are upset if you think you are entitled to be in testing and that such testing needs to be performed in a location that is comfortable for you… The fact remains that F1 is a business, they are going to do what makes sense business wise and that for 99.992% of fans of F1 this is a non-issue.
He's trolling no one - he's employed by FOM/Liberty.
Testing “will happen” and it “will be available to the public”… It will just be the portion in Bahrain.tonmeister wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 22:54That is not so simple to do really.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 21:47
In regards to the plane tickets, you were the one that mentioned that people already bought ticket planes and booked hotels, if that was the case, it is as simple as changing them to Bahrain if attending is so important.
Again, I don't think this is the right analogy. The right one would be "would they dismiss 177k fans but still do the race if somebody paid for it to be closed doors?" Because testing is going to happen.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 21:47
F1 is first and foremost a business… Making a decision to give Bahrain the exclusive rights to “Public Testing” is no different than negotiating for an F1 race to take place at certain location… If tomorrow the Catalunya Circuit doesn’t pay what F1 wants to host an F1 race, there will simply not be an F1 race (like has happened with the German GP for example)… To your question if they would dismiss 177k fans attending the Spanish GP? If it makes sense from a business perspective, I’m sure they would… It is also not different than when F1 decides to cut a deal with certain broadcaster for the rights to the races, in certain countries it was “free to watch” and because someone (like Sky for example) came in and as you well said it “lays down the dough” it automatically switched to “behind a paywall or subscription required”.
I am not entitled to anything at all. Indeed, testing IS going to be performed in a location comfortable to me. I have just been denied the entrance for whatever reason. And please stop with the TV vs In Situ percentage comparison.SmallSoldier wrote: ↑27 Jan 2022, 21:47
I can understand that you are upset if you think you are entitled to be in testing and that such testing needs to be performed in a location that is comfortable for you… The fact remains that F1 is a business, they are going to do what makes sense business wise and that for 99.992% of fans of F1 this is a non-issue.