majki2111 wrote: ↑18 Jul 2021, 12:25
I was searching trough general F1 forum, but I couldn't find the general topic for F1 so I must open new topic because I want to hear others opinion on this. From my perspective (I am form Croatia, so country which is located in Balkans, southeast Europe), it seems F1 is largely focused on England and maybe even US. So primarily on Anglo-Saxon population trough TV coverages and political stands such as Black lives matter and even racism policy which is not recognized here to that extent like in western Europe. For fact, I know that a lot people here follow F1 and if they do not follow, they are surely familiar with it.
And not only for Balkans the talk is also rarely focused in Eastern Europe. I really don't know why. One argument I might have here is that market is not actually small. Half of population of Europe is Slavic.
So, is really F1 neglecting that part of Europe in their decision making process and is f1 even noticing Slavic population/fans of this sport?
Maybe I am wrong because this post is written solely on impression.
Any other thoughts?
F1 is focussed on England because most of the teams are here and most of the people in F1 are either British or have English as a second language to a high level. Of course, the language makes it easy for the US to join in although there is so much US-based sport that the US isn't that invested in F1. As for focus on Europe, F1 is sanctioned by the FIA which is based in Paris. So there is already a western Europe focus there - teams and FIA.
As for racism policies etc., they are driven by US / western European political changes. Some eastern European have taken political decisions in an entirely different direction as is their right. I would think that the FIA would make it a requirement for any new country on the calendar to at least allow the on-circuit and broadcasting messages, even if they make no changes to their own politics - this happens in other places already so it's nothing new.
It's also worth remembering that much of eastern Europe wasn't accessible for many years and new circuits generally only get added when existing ones stop being available - there are only so many races available each year. Any circuits applying to hold a race also need to meet FIA standards. Many countries have great circuits but they aren't certified to the correct level.
There's no inherent reason why Croatia, for example, couldn't host an F1 race. But there is a lot of work required to make it happen and perhaps no one in Croatia with the necessary political / financial power is interested enough to make it happen.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.