That's totally untrue. As I said, if FOM is stealing money, it's from the FIA, not the teams. And the only reason I even entertain the word 'stealing' is because of the lop-sided arrangement Bernie worked out with his buddy Max.munudeges wrote:I'm afraid that is at the heart of it and unless you understand that then this thread is useless.Pup wrote:FOM doesn't "steal" any money, with or without quotes - at least not from the teams. Just because one party makes a disproportionate amount of money doesn't mean that they are obligated to share it with others.
Put simply, there is more than enough money in Formula 1. When you have a team like Lotus who've finished fourth in the constructors' for two years' running, have beaten teams like Mercedes and McLaren and are going out of business then that tells you there is something very wrong. CVC uses Formula 1 as a cash cow for its wealth, pension and hedge funds. You've got teams running around hunting for 10 million here and there and CVC syphons off billions. Completely disproportionate.
The FOM money is the teams' money.
And as I've said before, the economics of the sport might work under an arrangement where the promoter paid the teams to compete, but it would be a substantial and unprecedented change from anything the sport has ever seen. Likewise, you could imagine the teams themselves owning the sport, FOTA fashion, but again, that's a substantial change. Both ideas are worth considering as a solution to the problem, but neither address the question of why the sport can't find sponsors when other series can.
Look at it this way, if Bernie never came along, and the FIA never sold the rights, that money would either a) be going directly to the FIA, or b) not exist. And the teams' financial position would not have changed. In fact, by your argument, they would be worse off because they wouldn't be getting the 50% of FOM revenue they do today.
And you can also consider the opposite - what if FOM did in fact give all their money to the teams? That might initially seem like a good solution until you realize that the same economic dynamic that exists now would still be in place - that is, while every team would have x dollars from FOM, some teams would have x+major sponsorships and manufacturer backing. So we'd still be in a world of haves and have nots, just that everyone's budget is higher. The classic problem of subsidies.
As I've said in another thread, the problem isn't getting the baseline budget to get cars and drivers to the races - it's getting competitive cars and drivers to the races, where the level of competition is being set by a few teams with disproportionate budgets - those with major sponsorships and/or manufacturer backing.
I think the only way an FOM funded series would work would be if no outside sponsorships were allowed, in an effort to level the field. But then you'd end up with similar issues as you have when trying to fight the expense side of the equation - teams getting funding through parent companies, sponsors who aren't sponsors (marlboro), etc. So it's not as clean cut as it seems.
And we're still left with the basic question of why there aren't more sponsors in F1.
And as for Lotus, if they're going out of business, it's because they were mismanaged - trying to compete with the McLarens and Ferraris of the world when they simply didn't have the resources to do so, in a vain effort to attract a buyer before the money ran out.