I think it’s time for you to look a bit deeper into the economics of teams, races and maybe in general.fritticaldi wrote: ↑25 Jan 2021, 00:19We are all going through uncertain times. This global pandemic hasnt spared anyone. The top level of motorsports , Formula One is no exception. Without revenue ( the races have no fans) How much longer can the sport survive? Any thoughts?
They make their money from television and the sponsors around the track ( Rolex, Heineken etc) . Still , zero attendance has to hurt the promoters of the race and to some the degree merchandise vendors . Just to give you an example, ticket holders of last years Canadian GP have not been reimbursed from the cancellation of the 2020 race.Jolle wrote: ↑25 Jan 2021, 00:24I think it’s time for you to look a bit deeper into the economics of teams, races and maybe in general.fritticaldi wrote: ↑25 Jan 2021, 00:19We are all going through uncertain times. This global pandemic hasnt spared anyone. The top level of motorsports , Formula One is no exception. Without revenue ( the races have no fans) How much longer can the sport survive? Any thoughts?
So, as a first step, find out where F1, the FIA and Liberty take the majority of their income. Small spoiler, it’s not the spectators in the stands.
Where did you get that from? My tickets got refunded...fritticaldi wrote: ↑25 Jan 2021, 00:56Just to give you an example, ticket holders of last years Canadian GP have not been reimbursed from the cancellation of the 2020 race.
That is a very insightful post. Never thought of F1 juxtaposed next to horse racing, but that makes complete sense. Thank you.notsofast wrote: ↑25 Jan 2021, 01:25Perhaps a more realistic scenario is Mercedes and Renault withdrawing from the sport. Not this year obviously, but over time. Ferrari would hang on for as long as possible, becoming the sole supplier of engines, until eventually F1 loses relevance and becomes something akin to horse racing. And even then it could be financially viable.
In the UK (at least?), horse racing is NOT considered to be a sport (taking particular note of the rules surrounding drinking alcohol en-route to sporting events), it exists purely for the sake of gambling and the book-makers are the ones making serious money from it (a bit like Bernie used to with F1!!). Football (soccer) is heading the same way - look at how the ‘pundits’ now express largely pointless statistics; thus paving the way for book-makers to extract from it.Chuckjr wrote: ↑25 Jan 2021, 02:21That is a very insightful post. Never thought of F1 juxtaposed next to horse racing, but that makes complete sense. Thank you.notsofast wrote: ↑25 Jan 2021, 01:25Perhaps a more realistic scenario is Mercedes and Renault withdrawing from the sport. Not this year obviously, but over time. Ferrari would hang on for as long as possible, becoming the sole supplier of engines, until eventually F1 loses relevance and becomes something akin to horse racing. And even then it could be financially viable.
Other racing series tried and failed that approach. Yes F1 is expensive but it is making a lot of money as well. At the moment it’s very healthy. The budget cap is making it even more profitable. The whole idea behind F1 is the battle of different brands/constructors.NL_Fer wrote: ↑25 Jan 2021, 13:09At the moment F1 is really expensive, even with the budget cap. But it could lower the cost and still be interesting for the fans.
Maybe at a certain point, it could look like LMDh/DPi class. Where all the parts we cannot see become standard designs and teams only design the outside bodywork.