DaveKillens wrote:
if Ferrari or anyone else does leave, Bernie will go after them with great determination. He has to, because if enough big name teams leave, then it is a real possibility that Bernie's entire financial house of cards will come crashing down.
Dave, I do not mean to skew your post by quoting just a small part of it, but I think the excerpt above does stand alone as a discrete statement.
IF this mutual suicide dance continues, lawyers will be involved. Ferrari has already made public that they are ready to go that route and are beginning to build the grounds for a legal action against the FIA:
The Board also expressed its disappointment about the methods adopted by the FIA in taking decisions of such a serious nature and its refusal to effectively reach an understanding with constructors and teams. The rules of governance that have contributed to the development of Formula 1 over the last 25 years have been disregarded, as have the binding contractual obligations between Ferrari and the FIA itself regarding the stability of the regulations. The same rules for all teams, stability of regulations, the continuity of the FOTA’s endeavours to methodically and progressively reduce costs, and governance of Formula 1 are the priorities for the future. If these indispensable principles are not respected and if the regulations adopted for 2010 will not change, then Ferrari does not intend to enter its cars in the next Formula 1 World Championship.
Ferrari is telling Max and Bernie: "bring it on."
I know nothing of EU rules and regulations regarding business practices and agreements, but other posters have suggested that the FIA probably would prefer that its practices and procedures NOT be examined in a court of law. Ferrari's senior management would not suggest legal action unless they have thought out the ramifications.
Enzo Ferrari was a great man. But he was not a good man. -- Phil Hill