I would think we all would want him to succeed...has everyone seen some of the hacks forming the grid in recent years?
...and as for USF1, you "across the ponders" should be thanking us. That was funnier than a Chris Rock stand up routine

Tony Fernandes successful?PlatinumZealot wrote:+1.
People seem to forget that you had guys with no Formula 1 experience whatsoever that were successful in running a F1 team. Guys, like Tony Fernandes, Flavio Briatore, Christian Horner. I think Haas has what it takes. All he has to make sure of is to hire the right people.
By right people, there are some highly skilled free agents out there right now fresh for the picking. Martin Whitmarsh, Pat Fry, Luca Marmorini, Bob Bell, Nicolas Tombazis. Great guys who know how to build a team. Too bad he started off with Guenther Steiner however, that guys is like Collin Coles, anything they touch turns to dust.
Bobby Rahal had plenty of experience when he was running Jaguar, how'd that work out?Moxie wrote:Give me a break. I'll grant you that the F1 game is very different than NASCAR, and the challenges that lay ahead for Haas are large. However, he does have an advantage due to his racing history.GitanesBlondes wrote:Being steeped in racing means what as a predictor for success?
Nothing really.
He has a network of contractors, and suppliers. He already has people in place to generate non prize-money revenues (sponsorships, licensing deals, merchandise). He has an infrastructure, in-house and contracted, for the purpose of building and testing race cars. Finally he has hundreds of contacts within the racing arena, from whom he can draw to fill staff positions of all sorts.
While his outfit must make large adaptations and do a lot of learning, he is not just another A-hole showing up to the track with a big bank account.
=D> thisGitanesBlondes wrote:
Bobby Rahal had plenty of experience when he was running Jaguar, how'd that work out?
You also are significantly overestimating the ability of F1 to attract sponsors. F1 is not a sponsor friendly venture anymore as the costs are simply too great, and the benefits are far too little for most companies to get involved. Sure he can just put Haas CNC on the engine covers all he wants, but that's not generating any money to cover the overhead of running the team as he would just be paying himself.
Having contacts and suppliers means absolutely nothing since you want people who actually have real world experience applicable to F1 if you are looking to succeed. Hiring a moron like Gunther Steiner is a sign that you're not really that interested in making a serious effort to field the best possible team.
Talking about what your approach is, and claiming you're not going to make the same mistakes as those who came before you is all great sound bites for the PR campaign, but it doesn't actually accomplish concrete things.
If Haas really wants to field the best possible team, he would have simply taken over Marussia completely and paid off their debts. Why? You don't have to go through some silly auction to cherry-pick a few things. You get the tried and true staff who knows what the whole thing is about. They had the 2015 chassis so it's not as if a chassis had to be designed from scratch unless it was imperative. You get a starting point instead of this idiocy of talking about having Dallara build a chassis.
Proven team versus starting from scratch?
Hmmmm....
I'll go with proven team since I've got the cash and that was precisely what was missing.
Since you're supposedly getting all this help from Ferrari, the entire transition is seamless by taking over Marussia.
2015 is going to be a benchmark year of sorts, and the goal is really on 2016 as the first truly competitive season.
You know what you do for 2015?
You focus on building a Monaco-spec car. The only goal is to build the best possible car for Monaco that can be a serious contender. Once you get that down, you start building for Monza. Two races can make your season completely, and as such you focus on two for 2015. If you do well with one, or even both, you can build off of that for 2016. Thinking you're going to come in for 2016 and be competitive from scratch with no real world track time is a joke. It'll take you at least 2 years to have some good results if you're good, 3 years is more likely. If you haven't done it in 3 years, there's a strong chance you never will, and you may as well pack up.
Actually, he is worse.Moxie wrote:
However, he does have an advantage due to his racing history.
He has a network of contractors, and suppliers. He already has people in place to generate non prize-money revenues (sponsorships, licensing deals, merchandise). He has an infrastructure, in-house and contracted, for the purpose of building and testing race cars. Finally he has hundreds of contacts within the racing arena, from whom he can draw to fill staff positions of all sorts.
While his outfit must make large adaptations and do a lot of learning, he is not just another A-hole showing up to the track with a big bank account.
The big deal is yet another chance for the haters to bash any American effort and the attempt kill it and throw dirt on it before it's even born.Good grief, what's the big deal?
Haas is comparable to HRT, Lotus/Caterham or Virgin/Marussia at the same stage.Manoah2u wrote:And that's the same HAas has; nothing but thin air.
Swap the countries and supplier names, it's identical to Haas isn't it?Mike Gascoyne wrote:The longer-term vision is to create a centre of technical excellence at the Sepang circuit which we have already started planning together with Tony Fernandes and his associates. Naturally this takes time, so we have opted initially for a UK base at the RTN facility in Hingham from where we will run the F1 operations while we establish our Malaysian facilities. Ultimately, the team will be headquartered in Malaysia, but we will keep a small UK base which will give us a logistical advantage when we are racing within Europe.
We have been working with Fondtech to develop the aerodynamics, as well as with gearbox specialists Xtrac. We have an engine supply deal in place with Cosworth and we also have the support of engineering and composites teams in Malaysia who will play an integral role in developing the car.
I knew you were gonna comment on that! hehe.. I think Tony was fairly successful in the context of surviving for five years.GitanesBlondes wrote:Tony Fernandes successful?PlatinumZealot wrote:+1.
People seem to forget that you had guys with no Formula 1 experience whatsoever that were successful in running a F1 team. Guys, like Tony Fernandes, Flavio Briatore, Christian Horner. I think Haas has what it takes. All he has to make sure of is to hire the right people.
By right people, there are some highly skilled free agents out there right now fresh for the picking. Martin Whitmarsh, Pat Fry, Luca Marmorini, Bob Bell, Nicolas Tombazis. Great guys who know how to build a team. Too bad he started off with Guenther Steiner however, that guys is like Collin Coles, anything they touch turns to dust.![]()
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Caterham went bankrupt. That's not successful.
You're missing the whole point though, it's not about lack of F1 experience, it's about how the team is being setup. You have a better chance for some success if you take over an existing outfit as opposed to trying to start from scratch.
Regarding Flavio, he benefited big time from having John Barnard, and then Rory Byrne as TD at Benetton. Benetton does not have the success it had in the early to mid 90s without having had those TD's successively.
Except if your goal is to just survive and tread water for a couple of years, you should consider an alternative line of motorsport that is far less costly.PlatinumZealot wrote:I knew you were gonna comment on that! hehe.. I think Tony was fairly successful in the context of surviving for five years.GitanesBlondes wrote:Tony Fernandes successful?PlatinumZealot wrote:+1.
People seem to forget that you had guys with no Formula 1 experience whatsoever that were successful in running a F1 team. Guys, like Tony Fernandes, Flavio Briatore, Christian Horner. I think Haas has what it takes. All he has to make sure of is to hire the right people.
By right people, there are some highly skilled free agents out there right now fresh for the picking. Martin Whitmarsh, Pat Fry, Luca Marmorini, Bob Bell, Nicolas Tombazis. Great guys who know how to build a team. Too bad he started off with Guenther Steiner however, that guys is like Collin Coles, anything they touch turns to dust.![]()
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Caterham went bankrupt. That's not successful.
You're missing the whole point though, it's not about lack of F1 experience, it's about how the team is being setup. You have a better chance for some success if you take over an existing outfit as opposed to trying to start from scratch.
Regarding Flavio, he benefited big time from having John Barnard, and then Rory Byrne as TD at Benetton. Benetton does not have the success it had in the early to mid 90s without having had those TD's successively.
strad wrote:The big deal is yet another chance for the haters to bash any American effort and the attempt kill it and throw dirt on it before it's even born.Good grief, what's the big deal?
And Toyota had more money than Haas did.SectorOne wrote:The thing about HAAS that´s different from Caterham, Marussia, HRT etc is "dollar dollar bills ya´ll".
Now money is no guarantee for success but you are guaranteed no success without money.
I think you just don't get it (the critisism pointed out here repeatedly)strad wrote:Maybe you can find him on Twitter or Facebook and explain how stupid he is and offer yourself as advisor.