BreezyRacer wrote:Ray wrote:How is this a loss or contributing to the collapse of Formula 1. They were habitual underachievers. I see no loss other than the poor bastards that worked at the factory no longer being employed.
Well, maybe it's just me that sees it as a loss. It's yet another car mfr stepping away from the sport after heavy investment. So now we have only Renault as a mass car mfr with it's own team. Of course we also have Ferrari, McLaren, and the upcoming Lotus, but all of them are specialty mfrs. And Mercedes are just doing engines. It seems the F1 sphere is shrinking towards what it was in the 70's. Maybe a few more years and they'll all be driving around in Cosworth V8s. Big sponsorships are going to be harder to come by IMO. And IMO Bridgestone backing out is a serious blow to the sport. But maybe there's a bevy of high tech tire mfrs out there just dying to get into F1. I'm not all sure about that though.
I see this probable news also as a loss for F1, and maybe this, combined with Honda's and Bridgestone's withdrawals may mean F1 is losing the japanese market, which is concerning, given that Japan is one of the classic big economies of the world. Sincerely, I believe that some of the new money coming into motorsport (from the middle east, India, Korea or Angola) is pretty uncertain in a mid- to long-term perspective.
I just hope Toyota is going to shift their efforts to endurance racing, the true circuit racing form that is traditionally the feud of car manufacturers, where the cost/profit ratio is more rational and where one can showcase their technological ability, instead of racing with standardized vehicles and where one's advantage is obtained with tricks invisible and incomprehensible to the average car costumer and of no relevance to road cars.
Maybe the recent news about Dome are meaning that some new Dome-Toyota cooperation for Le Mans is in perspective? Surely, if some endurance racing was done by Toyota still in 2010, a new chassis was not a possibility, given the new regulations coming in place in 2011. It would be great to see the true potential of the Dome S102, and 2010 could be the final chance...