
The US is irrelevant to F1 now that the manufacturers have gone. The US has enough of its own home-grown racing, why "waste" a GP when there are more worthy places to go?
Oh, yes, of course - Bernie will get lots of money. Silly me for forgetting...
http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2010/05/ ... rsey-city/flynfrog wrote:why put it on a street when we have some many great track here. That and NY sucks
There are still two manufacturers in F1 and all teams are eager to get US sponsors on board. The last man likely to profit from a US F1 race is Bernie. He knows that racing in the US is cheap and people will not pay what he wants to charge for the race. But with a destination such as NY he can easily fill 150.000 seats and not worry about transportation and accommodation for the fans. Last not least he will get other races together with the US race as he makes it a condition to expand races to accommodate a USGP or two.Just_a_fan wrote:Don't need a US GP. Don't want a US GP.![]()
The US is irrelevant to F1 now that the manufacturers have gone. The US has enough of its own home-grown racing, why "waste" a GP when there are more worthy places to go?
Oh, yes, of course - Bernie will get lots of money. Silly me for forgetting...
That as maybe but it was a crap F1 circuit. The races were boring as hell.ISLAMATRON wrote:Indy, (as much as I hate the city) is the perfect place for the USGP... The track can be improved but is not as bad as many think... the facilities are topnotch and it has the infrastructure already in place.
Very interesting, though logic has no place in Bernie's World -- just money.jon-mullen wrote:Um, for us, the fans? My research shows the US accounts for 29.1% of the traffic on this site (2nd being the UK with 14.1%) and we're 3rd on Formula1.com with 10.2%, so there are plenty of fans in the US. Funny, I didn't see South Korea on a single one of those lists and they're allegedly getting a Grand Prix, if they have the infrastructure and bank to build a track in time.
Upstate New York track eyeing F1 race
By Jonathan Noble Friday, May 21st 2010, 08:46 GMT
New York state could yet be the venue of a United States Grand Prix, after details emerged this week of plans to host a race at the Monticello Motor Club - 90 minutes from Manhattan.
Just a few weeks after a bid to hold a race in New Jersey was scuppered when the mayor ruled it out, it has been revealed that talks are underway for a race at the venue that is located at the foot of the Catskill Mountains.
American publication Autoweek has published a letter from Ari Strauss, the president of the Monticello Motor Club, who talks about meeting F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone and having hosted F1 track architect Hermann Tilke at the venue.
In the letter, Strauss says: "A few months ago, [MMC chairman] Bill McMichael and I met with Bernie Ecclestone, President/CEO of Formula One Management (FOM), and discussed the terms for an exclusive 10-year United States Grand Prix to be hosted at MMC.
"Shortly thereafter, Hermann Tilke, the chief engineer and circuit designer for F1, spent time at MMC and confirmed that our track and surrounding properties, with some expansion and minor track modifications, is an excellent location for a Grand Prix
"Since receiving a letter of understanding from FOM confirming their hope to bring the U.S. Grand Prix to Monticello, Bill and I have continued to secure the backing and support of local, state, and federal politicians and organizations."
Despite the hopes expressed by Ecclestone, Strauss does admit that it is far from certain an F1 deal can be pulled off.
"Securing F1 is like winning the Olympics, competition is fierce, and this is not a done deal," he added. "While the prospect of F1 at MMC is exciting, we remain focused on our core business: the club and its members."
The Monticello venue is 4.1 miles long, and features 22 corners.