RTL doesn’t want to pay what F1 is asking for broadcasting rights... F1 is doing great and arguably better than everCarl Mccoy wrote:In Germany, RTL is giving up F1 after 30 years. Even there, everyone is bored with Mercedes wins.
'Who is interested in fighting in the middle'? Really?Carl Mccoy wrote: ↑01 Aug 2020, 23:10I think 7 years of domination is too much. F1 is dying. Who is interested in fighting in the middle?Mattchu wrote: ↑01 Aug 2020, 22:57Why do people care if one team is much better than the others? This has been the case in F1 going back years but still you/we watch the race for the teams battling it out for places, pit stops, strategy, etc, etc.
The winner is [imo] only a fraction of why we watch this sport...sure we would all love our favourite team or driver to be winning but it`s the whole package that makes it interesting. The races are certainly better nowadays than in some previous era, the trouble is we forget the past and just focus on the here and now!
I see.Carl Mccoy wrote: ↑01 Aug 2020, 23:39After this season and the titles as a gift from the FIA as part of the Black Lives Matter, viewership results will not be very encouraging
Trump et al brought the worst out of people.Carl Mccoy wrote: ↑01 Aug 2020, 23:39I do not agree with this opinion. The results come from previous seasons where sometimes someone managed to win a Mercedes. After this season and the titles as a gift from the FIA as part of the Black Lives Matter, viewership results will not be very encouraging
Why are you even watching F1?Carl Mccoy wrote: ↑01 Aug 2020, 23:10I think 7 years of domination is too much. F1 is dying. Who is interested in fighting in the middle?Mattchu wrote: ↑01 Aug 2020, 22:57Why do people care if one team is much better than the others? This has been the case in F1 going back years but still you/we watch the race for the teams battling it out for places, pit stops, strategy, etc, etc.
The winner is [imo] only a fraction of why we watch this sport...sure we would all love our favourite team or driver to be winning but it`s the whole package that makes it interesting. The races are certainly better nowadays than in some previous era, the trouble is we forget the past and just focus on the here and now!
I've been watching since 1994. But F1 is moving towards ecology, political correctness, rules that punish drivers for offenses that were once part of normal track fighting. It became terribly boring and predictable. For me, freezing the development of engines and the token system is a really idiocy idea on the part of the FIA. And apparently Max Mosley was such a bad bosswesley123 wrote: ↑01 Aug 2020, 23:55Why are you even watching F1?Carl Mccoy wrote: ↑01 Aug 2020, 23:10I think 7 years of domination is too much. F1 is dying. Who is interested in fighting in the middle?Mattchu wrote: ↑01 Aug 2020, 22:57Why do people care if one team is much better than the others? This has been the case in F1 going back years but still you/we watch the race for the teams battling it out for places, pit stops, strategy, etc, etc.
The winner is [imo] only a fraction of why we watch this sport...sure we would all love our favourite team or driver to be winning but it`s the whole package that makes it interesting. The races are certainly better nowadays than in some previous era, the trouble is we forget the past and just focus on the here and now!
Bro, how though?godlameroso wrote: ↑27 Jul 2020, 15:351:24.3 for Hamilton pole, Verstappen about a second slower. Then .5 seconds behind once again in race pace. Hopefully Silverstone 2 will be better.
It was Mercedes who found out what was going on with fuel flow and explained it to FIA. I am sure it was their idea to add another sensor. Mercedes themselves could have gone the Ferrari route in terms of exploiting the grey area and keep quiet, but they chose to do the right thing and brought in FIA to fix the loop hole. Now if any team doubts the credibility of W11, it's upto that team to do the hard work, find out what is illegal and produce it to FIA. Doubts and suspicion are always raised by teams and then joins the audience. Not the other way round. So until some team raises a doubt about the legality of W11, it remains absolute legal dominating machine.falonso81 wrote: ↑01 Aug 2020, 19:56Maybe FIA whistled the measurement timings to Merc?siskue2005 wrote: ↑01 Aug 2020, 16:19There was a rule change remember
TWO fuel flow sensors now, with measuring flow rates scrambled, only FIA knows what are its timings for measurement
That is a major regulation change, everyone struggling except Mercedes.
Everyone praising Merc for the unbelievable progress they made. I find it hard to buy into it, yet almost everybody is convinced the W11 is 100% legal.
I’ve enjoying midfield battles for the last 10 years, and I’m increasingly getting tired of it. Will I ever be able to enjoy a proper title battle in the near future? I don’t know dude, I’m right on edge of quitting and the worst thing is I’ll have to endure another season of it in 2021.Bsowles wrote: ↑02 Aug 2020, 03:01While some have commented that the Mercedes dominance has made F1 Racing boring, which I somewhat agree with, there are other factors which keep me drawn to it. I enjoy watching the midfield battles, and wish the cameras would pay more attention to them. I enjoy watching the progress of the sport’s “young guns” - Norris, Russell, Albon, etc. I enjoy following the potential technology upgrades, and the attempts by the other teams to bring the Mercedes cars “back to the pack”, so to speak. To me, there’s much more to racing than just the podium results. JMO as a relatively new (3 years) fan. Enjoy the race, gentlemen.
My feeling is we enjoy watching the progress of the young guns because secretly we wish and imagine that they will all fight for the championship one day. But there is a possibility that only one of them will be in a championship winning car. The rest might not even be in championship fighting cars.Bsowles wrote: ↑02 Aug 2020, 03:01While some have commented that the Mercedes dominance has made F1 Racing boring, which I somewhat agree with, there are other factors which keep me drawn to it. I enjoy watching the midfield battles, and wish the cameras would pay more attention to them. I enjoy watching the progress of the sport’s “young guns” - Norris, Russell, Albon, etc. I enjoy following the potential technology upgrades, and the attempts by the other teams to bring the Mercedes cars “back to the pack”, so to speak. To me, there’s much more to racing than just the podium results. JMO as a relatively new (3 years) fan. Enjoy the race, gentlemen.