JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:@mandrake and donskar
So, 2 posts and no opinion...
Can we move the thread forward by at least agreeing that FOTA is in disarray due to red bull and Ferrari leaving over resource restriction?
The rest is speculative debate which is what forum is for. Maybe we can hear what both of you actually think RE: the forum topic? Just a thought....
I understand that all the big 4 are in heathrow this morning trying to salvage something behind closed doors. Let's hope there is agreement.
My opinion? FOTA is in disarray because it attempts a practical impossibility: that is, it attempts to make allies and working partners of sworn enemies. F1 is not a sport; it is a business. Winners make lots of money. Losers become hazy memories.
Furthermore, there is a second divide, one that exists between Ferrari and (in differing degrees) all other F1 entrants. Racing is part of Ferrari's DNA or, in marketing speak, an integral element of its brand identity. If Red Bull's target demographic somehow became identified with quilting (to use a ludicrous example), then Red Bull would invest heavily in supporting quilting. For Red Bull, racing (of all sorts) is an excellent marketing tool to reach its target demographic (and there is nothing wrong with that). Ferrari also uses racing as a marekting weapon, but it is much more than that. Only McLaren approaches Ferrari in the ingrained nature of F1 racing in the corporate DNA.
Lastly, no organization can be hopeful for success when it is made up of competitors of vastly differing capabilities. Ferrari, McLaren, RBR, etc do NOT, can NOT, and must NOT concern themselves with the success or failure of the make weight teams like HRT, Marussia, Sauber, Williams et al. Sharks eat minnows or sharks starve. The teams that have the power and the money will work hard to MAINTAIN their advantage in power and money, NOT SHARE that advantage.
Enzo Ferrari was a great man. But he was not a good man. -- Phil Hill