Then why does it seem to make you so happy?Diesel wrote:Suprise suprise, I hate to say I told you so
Then why does it seem to make you so happy?Diesel wrote:Suprise suprise, I hate to say I told you so
I was fortunate to live in Austin for a few years. You're not exaggerating how cool it is. It's an odd cultural pocket in the middle of Texas that is dissimilar to everything around it.bhallg2k wrote:Moreover, Austin is a really cool town. (Unofficial motto: "Keep Austin weird.") I'm convinced that all involved with the F1 "circus," from teams to journalists, would walk away from this event with raving reviews that would do nothing but enhance American stature around the world. The good publicity would enable this event to more than pay for itself.
This isn't Formula 1 doing it, it's Bernie doing it. He has his own agenda and it has little to do with F1...Jeffsvilleusa wrote:What a shame! It seems irresponsible of Formula 1 to announce a prospective race that isn't a sure thing, and then to cast blame on the race organizers.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/formula ... 766613.stmBernie wrote:"We had an agreement with Full Throttle Productions," Ecclestone explained.
"Everything was signed and sealed, but we kept putting things off like the dates, various letters of credit and things that should have been sent, but nothing ever happened.
"Then these other people (Cota) came on the scene, saying that they wanted to do things, but that they had problems with Tavo.
"They said they had the circuit, and that they wanted an agreement with me. I told them they had to sort out the contract with Tavo, which they said they would.
"But that has gone away now because we've cancelled Tavo's contract as he was in breach.
"We've waited six months for him to remedy the breach. He knows full well why we've cancelled. He's happy.
"But these other people haven't got a contract. All we've asked them to do is get us a letter of credit.
"We are looking for security for money they are going to have to pay us. That is via a letter of credit, normally from a bank.
"If people don't have the money they find it difficult to get the letter of credit, and so we don't issue a contract."
Without his direct connection with Bernie as an old friend, I seriously doubt he would have even come close to entertaining the idea of an F1 race in Texas. New York yes, there's alot of exploiting for money Bernie could do there. Texas not so much. Tavo is the only connection to Formula 1 Bernis has in Texas, and it looks like Tavo couldn't pay his friendship dues so Bernie has left him and his reputation in shambles. Tavo doesn't appear to have done anything wrong other than associate himself with investors that can't get a woman that won't lie to them. The investors are only pressuring Tavo about Susan Combs because she lied about having the Texan taxpayers front the money they didn't want to. That's where all the shadiness comes in, the investors want other people to front the bill and the woman that said they would lied to everyone involved on multiple occasions and is now deflecting everything onto everyone else after she made a commitment. I see Tavo as the entirely innocent fall man here.richard_leeds wrote:Reading this made me feel a little more positive. Seems like people want to squeeze out Hellmund, he strikes me as a middle man claiming a cut but not actually contributing much (if at all).