1. I don't understand the criticism of the FiA with regard to the Toyota and USF1 licenses. How can the FiA be responsible for a licensee deciding not to fulfill the Concord contract? The licensee should be criticised!Fil wrote:Add to that, their procedures, that they claim need to be protected, are applied inconsistently too - Sauber received an entry with no tender process.astracrazy wrote:FIA contract are worthless anyway, Toyota signed the agreement and they pulled out. USF1 signed the agreement and now there not in it.
Is that not precedent for FIA being able to award StefanGP a 2010 grid slot?
(I meantioned this in the StefanGP thread, but it probably makes more sense here..)
2. Peter Sauber had been a Concord participant from 1991 to 2005 in his own right and with the same team a minority share holder with BMW 2006-2009. There were surely special conditions. Formally BMW had failed to sign the Concord agreement in time. This is why his application was technically treated as a new one (he lost all the points money from FOM) but the other Concord participants (teams and FOM) decided to recognize his special status.
3. Stefanovic has no racing pedigree, not even GP2 or in a spec series. His finances are dubious. His employment practises are provocative. So he cannot expect to be treated with the same priviledges that Peter Sauber has earned.