The comparison between USF1 and the Haas effort is actually not totally irrelevant, USF1 also tried to keep it simple;
I sure wouldn't.countersteer wrote:If the race Pirellis aren't available, would they use the Indy spec Firestones given the obvious differences?
[takes the podium with an esteemed flourish]xpensive wrote:But the point esteemed moderator, is that Haas has already earned megabucks worth of market value from this publicity stunt.
For free.
I still believe that is all there is to it.
I do not believe the 'for free' statement is true. Or at least not entirely.xpensive wrote:But the point esteemed moderator, is that Haas has already earned megabucks worth of market value from this publicity stunt.
For free.
I still believe that is all there is to it.
How does "they had people watching in the streets" 30 or 40 years ago relate to "But we're the most advanced country on the planet."??If you ever watched some of the older movies like Grand Prix and whatever, they actually had actual footage of some of the Grand Prix races. They had people watching in the streets. They watched the cars go by at 180 miles an hour. Things have changed a lot since the last Americans have been involved in there. I think you get the impression that sometimes people think that the European way of racing is so much more advanced than the Americans. But we're the most advanced country on the planet.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LJUrkUYlJ_Erichard_leeds wrote:Can anyone interpret this? Perhaps something has been lost in translation?
How does "they had people watching in the streets" 30 or 40 years ago relate to "But we're the most advanced country on the planet."??If you ever watched some of the older movies like Grand Prix and whatever, they actually had actual footage of some of the Grand Prix races. They had people watching in the streets. They watched the cars go by at 180 miles an hour. Things have changed a lot since the last Americans have been involved in there. I think you get the impression that sometimes people think that the European way of racing is so much more advanced than the Americans. But we're the most advanced country on the planet.
Do tell how big Williams Grand Prix is as a corporate entity outside of their race operations...flyboy2160 wrote:They are a less than $US1B company. How are they going to do this when Ferrari at several times their size is floundering?
My point was that they're going to have to go after sponsors - they're not large enough to fund it all, or even a big portion of it, on their own. Whereas I could see them on their own as sponsors partially funding other F1 teams with either cash or machine tools or both.Jersey Tom wrote:Do tell how big Williams Grand Prix is as a corporate entity outside of their race operations...flyboy2160 wrote:They are a less than $US1B company. How are they going to do this when Ferrari at several times their size is floundering?
I admire your idealistic view of people's appreciation for "fair play", but Gene Haas was in jail for tax-fraud only six years ago, something which I would think should have hurt far more than some lame xcuse like "we misjudged F1's marketing impact."flyboy2160 wrote: ...
X, yes, Haas certainly got some free publicity, but won't he lose some of that when he backs off? Won't people say: "Ha! Told you so! You just shot from the hip before you knew what you were really getting into. Not very confidence inspiring."
They are a less than $US1B company. How are they going to do this when Ferrari at several times their size is floundering? Where are they going to get all the cash? From sponsors like the other non-factory teams?
I'd like (pay even) to see Gene and this plan on Shark Tank.
Like this valued moderator;richard_leeds wrote: ...
How does "they had people watching in the streets" 30 or 40 years ago relate to "But we're the most advanced country on the planet."??