This weekend at St Petersburg is behind closed doors and Long Beach has been cancelled.
This weekend at St Petersburg is behind closed doors and Long Beach has been cancelled.
The teams might have to talk nicely to sponsors but, on the plus side, they don't have the expense of going to the race every other weekend so it's probably not an issue in that regard. The payments to the teams are based on the season's results so this year should be ok. Next? Good question. The teams also pay an annual entry fee which is based on the previous year's points so all will benefit from a lower total tally this year.Unc1eM0nty wrote: ↑13 Mar 2020, 15:15What happens to the finances of the smaller teams - could any go under ? Do they get part payments race by race or is it all at the end of the season
And the same for the race tracks and promotors, are they insured aginst this type of thing
The teams still have to pay their staff and that would be the biggest overall expense.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑13 Mar 2020, 15:20The teams might have to talk nicely to sponsors but, on the plus side, they don't have the expense of going to the race every other weekend so it's probably not an issue in that regard. The payments to the teams are based on the season's results so this year should be ok. Next? Good question. The teams also pay an annual entry fee which is based on the previous year's points so all will benefit from a lower total tally this year.Unc1eM0nty wrote: ↑13 Mar 2020, 15:15What happens to the finances of the smaller teams - could any go under ? Do they get part payments race by race or is it all at the end of the season
And the same for the race tracks and promotors, are they insured aginst this type of thing
The 25k and 9m are for Germany alone in 17/18 ... GER so far has like 2.5k corona cases and 6 deaths, which puts the death rate exactly at the same rate of the flu back then (~0.2%).astracrazy wrote: ↑13 Mar 2020, 13:59You realise it's not about how many people have died from something which makes it worse than something else? It is how many people could.
Flu has a death rate of under 1% yet Corona is ~3% but up to 7% in some countries.....
Using your numbers:
9 million infected
Flu deaths = ~25,000
Coronavirus deaths = ~270,000
Germany has good health care, and hasn't reached critical volumes of cases. Cases present before deaths. Many of those 2500 cases are active without resolution (recovery or death); some will resolve by death, meaning the current CFR isn't accurate.RZS10 wrote: ↑13 Mar 2020, 16:27The 25k and 9m are for Germany alone in 17/18 ... GER so far has like 2.5k corona cases and 6 deaths, which puts the death rate exactly at the same rate of the flu back then (~0.2%).astracrazy wrote: ↑13 Mar 2020, 13:59You realise it's not about how many people have died from something which makes it worse than something else? It is how many people could.
Flu has a death rate of under 1% yet Corona is ~3% but up to 7% in some countries.....
Using your numbers:
9 million infected
Flu deaths = ~25,000
Coronavirus deaths = ~270,000
When it's happening the projected deaths are what counts, yes - that's why, if you had read carefully, you'd see that i wrote "once it's done and dusted" ... In retrospect the hard numbers are all that counts, in ten or so years no one will care about whether the virus had the potential to kill X or Y people.