yeh I sound about as realistic as if an Italian guy decided he wanted to start a (american) football team with italian players and join the NFLMoxie wrote:GitanesBlondes wrote:I also see Gene's little F1 toe-dipping as a way to raise his own profile for a little bit.
It has to kill him that in spite of owning a NASCAR team, Tony Stewart gets more recognition than he does in NASCAR. This is a good way to get out of the shadows for a little bit and raise his overall profile.
It makes little sense to get involved with F1 as it will not end well for Gene Haas...shades of Jaguar and every other high-profile losing endeavor in F1. He'd be better off saving his money and fielding an IndyCar team. There's nowhere but up for that series to go currently, and I'd rather get in on the ground floor now since the cost to play is far, far less compared to F1.
I agree with this for several different reasons. Frankly, I have serious concerns about the Haas F1 endeavor because of his lack of infrastructure, his lack of development program, and the lack of a team. For a fraction of the cost of F1, Haas can compete in several race series, allowing him to develop relationships with more sponsors, and suppliers. He can interact with more personnel with road racing experience, and poach a few. His team can build a cohesiveness, and plan for the future, by developing protocols ahead of the leap into F1. If he competes in an international series he can build the logistic infrastructure he will someday need to compete in F1.
langwadt wrote: yeh I sound about as realistic as if an Italian guy decided he wanted to start a (american) football team with italian players and join the NFL
Nothing wrong with that. If you have passion for racing and set sights on victories entering F1 is a good way for spectacular bankruptcy. That's how it's set up.60DShim wrote:I listened to the press conference and it became apparent that his main reason is to make Haas Automation global. I don't think winning championships is in the plans. It really seems like it's just a way to sell more cnc machines in the European/Asian market.
Stewart-Haas is set up that way. They buy chassis and engine from Hendrick Racing. It may be naive to think F1 could be a plug and play arrangement though. IMHO, an F1 car is far far more complex than a Sprint car.iotar__ wrote:They stress importance of technical partnership
Some aspects are, yes. But some aspects of stock cars are far more involved than in F1...countersteer wrote:IMHO, an F1 car is far far more complex than a Sprint [Cup] car
care to elaborate?Jersey Tom wrote:Some aspects are, yes. But some aspects of stock cars are far more involved than in F1...countersteer wrote:IMHO, an F1 car is far far more complex than a Sprint [Cup] car
Not to hijack the post, but...Jersey Tom wrote:Some aspects are, yes. But some aspects of stock cars are far more involved than in F1...