I'd love to see a peaceful compromise solution, becaue right now I see a lose-lose situation. But I don't think this will work.
Mosley claimed that the best way the teams could help mould the future of the sport the way they wanted would be to drop the conditions attached to the entries they had made to the 2010 championship.
Best way to make changes is to agree to everything you want to change . . .
In fact, he reckoned it would be 'simple' to find a solution to FOTA's concerns about new rules if all the teams lodged unconditional entries and signed up for a budget cap - before helping create new regulations.
"Simple"?
"Under the International Sporting Code (Art. 66) we cannot now change the published 2010 rules unless we have the consent of all the competitors who have entered," wrote Mosley in the letter, a copy of which has been seen by AUTOSPORT. "However once we have a list of confirmed entries, we can make changes provided we have the necessary unanimous agreement. . . .
"It is of course up to you, but the simplest way to ensure that all entrants run under the same rules would be if everyone entered under the cost-cap rules as published and then all entrants cooperated to agree modifications to those rules which would make the proposition workable for all parties."
So, Max seems to be saying, "sign up,
agreeing to accept rules and regulations you are opposed to. THEN, if
all the teams
who have signed up because they wanted those rules agree to run under different rules, everything will be OK."
Correct me if the following scenario is unrealistic:
Assume FOTA trusts Max to keep his word. [-X OK, assume it anyway. The FOTA teams sign up unconditionally. Some weeks thereafter, all the teams sit down to set up "new" rules and regulations. One key is the budget, of course. FOTA says they want a graduated budget reduction. ANY team (whether influenced by Max or not) can veto that proposal-- and any other change.
All Max has to do is accept
one new team who he influences and he can use that team to block ANY change, right?
I
hope I'm missing something here . . .
Enzo Ferrari was a great man. But he was not a good man. -- Phil Hill