further to the Super Aguri story it makes sense to revisit the customer car issue.
INTERVIEW-Motor racing-A1 boss scraps plan to buy F1 team
Wed Apr 30, 2008 1:32pm BST
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON, April 30 (Reuters) - A1 GP chairman Tony Teixeira said on Wednesday he had scrapped plans to buy a Formula One team after the sport changed its rules to ban the use of so-called 'customer cars'.
Teixeira told Reuters in an interview that A1, the self-styled World Cup of Motorsport that runs mostly during the European winter, had wanted to buy a Formula One team to promote the winners of his series.
"We wanted an A1 team in F1 where our winners from the A1 GP series would go and race in F1," he said. "The reason for that has always been that every kid's aspiration ultimately is to end up in F1."
Teixeira, whose cars will be designed and powered by Ferrari from next season, had talked to Ferrari-powered Spyker before that team were bought by Indian billionaire Vijay Mallya and renamed Force India.
He then switched his attention to Ferrari-powered Toro Rosso, co-owned by Austrian energy drink billionaire Dietrich Mateschitz and former racer Gerhard Berger.
Mateschitz said last month Red Bull would sell Toro Rosso before 2010 because of the change in rules forcing all teams to design and build their own cars. Teixeira said his talks with the team ended late last year.
"We wanted to be running at the top, and that means top 10," he explained.
"The only way we were going to achieve that was with the customer cars. In other words, we were going to be the Ferrari B team and that's why I was willing to buy Toro Rosso."
PROMOTING MACHINE
"Initially it was Spyker, because I already had a deal with Ferrari and that was the biggest thing that attracted me.
"I then made way for Vijay to buy Spyker because (F1 supremo) Bernie (Ecclestone) needed India and I said 'Fine, I'll make way and look more favourably at Toro Rosso', which had a similar agreement (with Ferrari)," continued the South African businessman.
"I sat with Toro Rosso and when we were close to a deal, F1 changed the rules: No customer cars. When they changed the rules, I was through.
"As you know, Prodrive walked away," he added, referring to that British company's decision not to take up the allocated slot as Formula One's 12th team.
"That was going to be the McLaren B team. It was going to be Red Bull running with Renault, Williams with Toyota and Aguri with Honda. That makes sense to us because there was no way we could go and develop our own chassis and be competitive.
"I don't profess to have that kind of money and even if I did I wouldn't put it into F1, it would be madness," added Teixeira.
"All we were looking to do was promote A1 through F1,
Teixeira was speaking before the final round of the A1 season at Brands Hatch and with Formula One facing the possibility of losing one of its 11 teams, struggling Super Aguri, before the next grand prix in Turkey.
Super Aguri are backed by Honda, with their car a development of last year's Honda. Toro Rosso and Red Bull Racing also run cars from a common design team but that will not be allowed after next year.
Teixeira said he had looked again at Super Aguri as recently as 10 days ago but could see nothing there of interest to A1.
"If the rules change, we will be the first guys to look for a team," he said.
"I think everyone knows that, Dietrich Mateschitz knows, while I have explained to Super Aguri that I can't be Honda and Ferrari.
"If the rules change, I would look for a spot in F1. If the rules don't change, there's nothing in it for us."
(Editing by Tony Jimenez)
so the ugly old problem of cost in F1 with the constructor restriction in place is emerging once again as the root cause of the minor teams going broke.
it looks like something needs to be done there very soon. the only initiative curently on discussion is the F1 budget cap. but how are they going to take the cost for competing down to say 100 mil $ plus driver and management salaries. are we seriously believing this will be done?
there is the added problem that the big five manufacturer backed teams can shift some basic research for expensive new technology as KERS and HERS to the road car division to circumvent that.
wouldn't it make more sense to look into customer schemes once again? in the end the whole point of criticism was based on distribution of price money and perhaps a solution to that could be found