yep, and it was never "cheap", "equal", or "exciting" to casual fans.
yep, and it was never "cheap", "equal", or "exciting" to casual fans.
History isnโt a good argument I think , Grand Prix racing started with car manufacturers going for the local prizes for their countries. The real rise of the independent racing companies was only late fifties and sixties, possible because you could buy a Repco or Climax engine and later a Ford Cosworth.
Even then it wasn't good. Take Monza for example since its been around for that long.
There is also an argument that thatโs sport, one is better then another at something and wins. When Bolt dominated the 100m for over a decade nobody called running unfair or said that Jamaica should be banned. If you want a good show, you penalize winning, like they do in the NBA.dans79 wrote: โ04 Jun 2019, 21:22Even then it wasn't good. Take Monza for example since its been around for that long.
1958:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1958_Italian_Grand_Prix
Only 7 cars finished the race, and only 3 on the lead lap. Winning margin was 24.2s.
1963:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1963_Italian_Grand_Prix
Only 12 cars finished the race, and only 2 on the lead lap. Winning margin was 95.0s.
1968:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1968_Italian_Grand_Prix
Only 6 cars finished the race, and only 3 on the lead lap. Winning margin was 88.4s.
1973:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1973_Italian_Grand_Prix
Only 16 cars finished the race, and only 6 on the lead lap. Winning margin was 0.8s.
1978:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1978_Italian_Grand_Prix
Only 15 cars finished the race, and only 11 on the lead lap. Winning margin was 1.48s.
1983:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1983_Italian_Grand_Prix
Only 13 cars finished the race, and only 8 on the lead lap. Winning margin was 10.212s.
When you go back and look at individual races, you will see that for the most part they are almost always a driver or a team dominating the others.
Today Automakers aren't the problem, it's the FIA and the fans.
Personally, I don't care about the show, I care about the sport and the technology.
Not exciting to casual fans?? Do I need to post pictures of the thousands that lined the roads for those early City to city races and the early races like the French GP?yep, and it was never "cheap", "equal", or "exciting" to casual fans.
That would be a comment upon the qualities of the race? My intent in the OP was perhaps too vague. Don't mean to address driver spectacle. More about the technical side--vehicle design.
Free up the regs and cheaper cars might be fielded that can produce similar laptimes. Low budget + room to experiment might yield victory over high budget + established design.zac510 wrote: โ04 Jun 2019, 10:07It's hard to see how they're weakening the sport when they're getting record lap times most weekends. I agree that the extreme wealth of the manufacturers creates an imbalance across the field, but evidence is it's exactly that wealth that allows them to pursue an extremely fast single lap time.
I'm talking about the casual fans Liberty thinks aren't watching because the rules are to complex, or the racing isn't close enough.
This all makes very little sense.roon wrote: โ15 May 2019, 18:23F1 should break from car manufacturers. Road cars are heading toward automation and electrification. Forced marketing connections between track and road should be abandoned.
Ban automaker association, participation, and funding. Ban Ferrari, Mercedes, McLaren, and Renault. Leave motorsports companies only. Leave motorsport engine suppiers only. Williams, Sauber, RB, TR, Haas, RP, remain. New entrants will arrive.
This returns the racing cars to a singular focus: laptimes.
This eliminates automaker influence on funding and regulations.
This returns the spectacle to fans, away from pandering outreach to the general population.
I have been to the race with casual fans, the type that rarely even watch a race on TV, but only when the race is in a local city. Then it becomes a bit of a party weekend, easy access to both the track and then nightlife, good restaurants, etc afterwards. Camping in mud at Silverstone does not really lure casual fans, as much as it's also a party
One of F1's issues is that it's too big and there are too many people with large financial stakes (not just Liberty, but 3rd parties like sponsors, TV contracts etc too) to turn it into a regulatory experiment that may or may not work.
By taking a stand against the actions of Bernie Ecclestone, the FIA and the wider commercial aspects of Formula One, McLaren, Williams and Tyrrell lost both influence in the sport and income which they would have received as signatories. A compromise was reached and on August 27, 1998, the 1998 Concorde Agreement was signed which accommodated the three teams and which expired on December 31, 2007.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concorde_Agreement