Professor wrote:nipo wrote:Maybe I am not following this closely enough, but didn't FIA say that teams can miss 3 matches and still keep the entry? Why am I reading an FIA press release in this thread, dated 10th Feb, that said teams must participate in all races?
Honestly, I'd love to see these guys who boast about transparency and only want to go on TV replaced with serious people who really want to go racing.
There are two provisions in the Concorde agreement that deal with this. Provision 4.xx? says that the teams must appear, undergo scrutineering, and attempt to compete in every race for the duration of their agreement. Some factors may be allowed to obviate this requirement, such as force majure (a fire in your shop, a hurricane, other natural disasters, etc).
Elsewhere, the Concorde agreement says in provision 13.xx?, "if a team has failed to participate in more than three events in the same FIA F1 Championship it is considered to have withdrawn from the championship."
Interpretation? I don't really know considering the FIA's obfuscation!
Thank you for the information.
If so, could something be deduced from the difference in wording? I am reading it like you must "attempt" to participate, but if your attempt failed, it is ok... until the 3rd time, when you will be excluded from the Championship. That said, it seems failing to participate 3 times won't really mean violation of the Agreement itself, but withdrawal from the season instead.
If my interpretation is correct, I would suppose the least USF1 have to do is to pass the crash test, bring their cars to Bahrain, and show that they are race-ready. Then, they can choose to walk away claiming a technical problem (or safety issue like the 2005 US GP). But obviously I cannot see why in such case they won't go ahead and just complete the race itself.
On the contrary, if they can't get their cars ready by the first GP, they wouldn't have "attempted" to race, and will consequently be considered to have broken the Concorde Agreement. The 3-race "grace period" doesn't seem to apply this way.
Does that make sense? Anyone?