I think he difference between Renault and MGP is/were the two teams' management, how could you go wrong with Briatore and Gascoyne?munudeges wrote:The parallel is Renault. They took a few years to get into a winning position, and when they did.......their execs didn't know what to do with it! It wasn't selling any more cars. Once the inevitable decline occurred they couldn't wait to offload the team.
I agree the circle will be emerging by 2014, but it could go either way. Will it be a repeat of Honda or McLaren? They have the ingredients to make to the big time, but we have also seen that it is hard to buy success.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote: 2014 ... by that time my money is on Mercedes having gone full circle into a competitive team
A praise for Briatore from you, x??xpensive wrote:I think he difference between Renault and MGP is/were the two teams' management, how could you go wrong with Briatore and Gascoyne?
On the contrary, resource sharing is the cost effective thing to do in these times of austerity and all car companies are having to do it. 80 million a season and engines is small fry compared to what they will be pumping into their own team to get in to win even one race.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Continue the McLaren arrangement: Not when they are propping up an on road rivals coffers to the tune of 80 million a season plus engines. This would not wash with anyone, least of all Stuttgart.
I'm afraid they're going to have to put in a lot more than 100 million every season to get the team to where Mercedes needs it to be. Plus free engines.Go it alone: A championship winning team with full factory facilities made available at £100 million(a snip considering the cost of starting from scratch).
Instead they're going to be pumping in probably more than twice that amount every season to not win any races for many years? Great maths there.So Mercedes have in effect not changed anything with McLaren other than they arent pumping 80 million a year into it. Until 2014 at least.
The above has a strange deja vu about it, didn't another German outfit xperience something similar a few years back?munudeges wrote: ...
Stuttgart got their noses rubbed up the wrong way when they realised they couldn't just buy McLaren as they had Ilmor. I know people will perform all kinds of mental gymnastics about how cost effective this all is, but the fact is it is all about stupid short-term pride that is likely to quickly run out.
munudeges wrote: On the contrary, resource sharing is the cost effective thing to do in these times of austerity and all car companies are having to do it. 80 million a season and engines is small fry compared to what they will be pumping into their own team to get in to win even one race.
I'm afraid they're going to have to put in a lot more than 100 million every season to get the team to where Mercedes needs it to be. Plus free engines.
Instead they're going to be pumping in probably more than twice that amount every season to not win any races for many years? Great maths there.
Stuttgart got their noses rubbed up the wrong way when they realised they couldn't just buy McLaren as they had Ilmor. I know people will perform all kinds of mental gymnastics about how cost effective this all is, but the fact is it is all about stupid short-term pride that is likely to quickly run out.
It has always been argued that the incentive for paying an aging MS 20+ MEUR per annum for returning to F1 was for him to attract sponsorship. I get the firm impression that the pay-back from that money is not xactly earth-shattering, is it now?JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote: ...
When you calculate that Petronas invest 20-25 million a year, along with the smaller sponsorship deals making up around 8-10 million and the prize money making up around 50 million conservatively.
...