SlowSteve wrote: ↑26 Nov 2014, 16:01
This may be off-topic, but I will ask it anyway.
Wouldn't a simpler method be for each time to be allocated a fixed, standard amount of funding from a central pool - lets say $80. They are free to raise any additional amount via sponsorship.
Anything over the $80m gets kept by Bernie/CVC/Promotors etc etc
This brings some balance to the sport, provides a baseline, reduces total costs to CVC (they would save $100m if Joe Seward is correct) , rewards innovation by having better sponsership inflows, and and incentivises FOM to go crazy with extracting money from whoever will give it to them, but without risking the teams themselves - which are the goose that lays the golden egg.
Simples no?
Yeah, sounds like a great idea. Let give them $80 million and they are free to raise any additional amount via sponsorship. That's gonna make F1 competitive for sure.
Why do they even need more? Will that the racing make any better? No. Will that stop development? No. Will that bring the field closer? Yes. The problem is that Mercedes, Ferrari and Red Bull don't like to give up their advantage. This has been the same story for ages now. What will happen? Not much probably, we'll get the same boring races after 2020. Liberty already acts like a scared little Labrador puppy, cute but completely clueless.
People in here always act like there isn't going to be any development when the teams don't spend 400 million dollars. It's a joke really. They just run six different projects and hope one of them is going to result in a small advantage. Less money makes you creative.