Yes, qualifying has been diminished hugely. The thing is I’d rather have watched regular qualy than the boring 17 lap “race” we had.Sieper wrote: ↑17 Jul 2021, 21:32Yeah, the biggest thing is that qualy is now not (to me) the gut wrenching excitement it was anymore. I am now more Kimi about it. There is also another aspect, for the midfield it is more fair. Everybody has equal chance to qualify where they qualify, and yes, they then still have to race for it and especially in the midfield a lot can happen, but then they all have the same tire, free choice. Otherwise nr 11 12 and 13 etc. Have an unfair advantage over 7 8 and 9 who have to be in slightly used tires that are less optimal compound usually.Mogster wrote: ↑17 Jul 2021, 20:31I was prepared to give it a go but the whole palaver feels unsatisfying. After the usual first lap hubbub I started to wish I was watching standard qualifying, Hamilton’s poor start and Alonso’s first lap antics were the only realinterest. Qualy on Friday evening just felt odd, almost meaningless.wesley123 wrote: ↑17 Jul 2021, 19:29
I was wondering the same thing.
Ever since Masi has been the race director they have been really selective with which rules they follow. I mean, the guy has to explain his motives regarding something every single weekend.
Rules are being selectively picked to aid the forced excitement.
As for the sprint race. Boy, was it cringe. The whole thing is so incredibly forced. And then the interviews afterwards.
The sprint race has seriously taken away the joy that I would normally feel from a race weekend.
As for the name FOM seem to be struggling with “stage one” and “stage two” seem ideal, like in NASCAR. I’m sure we’ll have “stage three” and even “stage four” when Liberty decide a couple of enforced red flags on a Sunday will make things so much more exciting…
I think a lot of the positive response Brawn is referring to is from the “anyone but Mercedes” crowd, for whom any race Mercedes doesn’t win becomes the… best race eva…