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F1 actually (shock!) interesting this year?


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A friend in the states sent me this in an email, sorry no idea who wrote it or where it is from but it makes an interesting read anyway.

 

 

Why did Michelin get it so badly wrong when they have raced at Indy for the past four years with no problems, and why didn’t Bridgestone get it wrong?

 

There are several reasons. First, the management of Michelin’s F1 programme has changed since last year. Nick Shorrock replaced Pascal Vasselon, whom the teams respected highly.

 

Second, the teams play a role in deciding, along with Michelin, which tyres to bring to races and it seems that some of them were being very aggressive in their choice. Michelin forgot to give themselves a safety net.

 

The problem was made worse by some teams running tyre pressures below the Michelin recommendation.

 

They did that because a floppier tyre will have more rubber in contact with the ground and that means more grip in the twisty infield section of the track where the most time is to be gained.

 

But the sidewall of the tyre then gets overloaded at high speeds on the banking. Hence Ralf Schumacher’s crash on Friday.

 

Bridgestone, through their Firestone US brand, have lots of experience of the Indy oval.

 

Also they are by nature a more conservative company, which is part of the reason why they have had a slow start to the year. Faced with new rules requiring a set of tyres to last through qualifying and a 200-mile race, they’ve played it safe, specifically to avoid sullying the company’s name with incidents like this.

 

Was the Indy farce really about tyres or is it part of the manufacturers vs FIA/Bernie/Ferrari battle?

 

You bet it is. The war between the manufacturers on the one side and Bernie, Max and Ferrari on the other has been getting increasingly savage in recent months.

 

Michelin’s cock-up merely provided the political opportunity for the most high profile power-play in the war so far. What happened in Indy was, to paraphrase Winston Churchill, “The end of the beginning.”

 

We have been heading for a showdown since the signing of the “new” Concorde Agreement by Ferrari, Bernie and the FIA in February.

 

 

Frank Williams warned at the time that there would be ‘confrontations’ during the year. There have been several off track confrontations already.

 

Sadly Indy was the first occasion on which it spilled over and affected what happens on the track. It may not be the last.

 

The teams say that it illustrates that Max Mosley’s position is untenable. The FIA say that it shows why they should have more control.

 

Wasn’t the farce of a six-car race avoidable?

 

Sadly not. You would think that the combined racing and marketing brains among the teams, Bernie and the FIA would have been able to sort out a workable compromise in the interests of the show, but the only conclusion you can reach is that the FIA would have avoided Sunday’s fiasco if they had wanted to.

 

The teams tried to double shuffle the FIA, but the FIA held firm and forced the Michelin teams to act when the race was due to start.

 

With Michelin saying the tyres were not safe to race on, the teams did what they did.

 

How close did the Sunday morning meeting come to finding a solution?

 

Not close at all. I understand that at one point it was suggested that the Michelin cars should drive “slowly” around Turn 13, even using pit lane speed limiters.

 

Considering that the Bridgestone cars would have been doing 190mph, that would surely have been more dangerous than exploding tyres!

 

If the debate was on that kind of level you can see why a load of vastly experienced men failed to see common sense.

 

If you’d had a dozen middle-aged women in there, the problem would have been sorted in 20 minutes.

 

What could have been done to get a 20-car race together?

 

The Michelin teams knew that they were not going to get anything out of the US GP. Their tyre supplier had messed up and there was no reason why Bridgestone’s teams shouldn’t take full profit from that. Fair enough.

 

I have no problem with Schumacher getting 10 points and Jordan scoring so massively as they did. They deserve it.

 

But what should have been avoided was the sham six-car race to decide how the Bridgestone teams should divide up the points, which brought so much shame on the sport.

 

A combination of higher tyre pressures and regular tyre changes would have got the Michelin cars through the race.

 

But Michelin seemed to panic. They talked of the tyres being good for only 10 laps. It was chicane or nothing as far as they were concerned.

 

This presented a confusing picture. Were the tyres safe or not? Why 10 laps, why not 20? Why were they safe to qualify on?

 

If they had said to the FIA categorically that the tyres were totally unsafe and that the event would have to be cancelled, then a different, more dignified, outcome would have ensued.

 

What happened on Sunday was that the Michelin teams tried to find an outcome which suited them and the FIA and Ferrari weren’t inclined to help them out.

 

They offered some options, which the Michelin teams didn’t fancy, such as regular tyre changes or reduced speeds in Turn 13.

 

The Michelin teams then decided not to start the race, which the FIA is interpreting as a boycott.

 

I sympathise with the view that you cannot suddenly install a chicane between qualifying and the race.

 

The past is littered with examples of chicanes installed for pragmatic reasons, like at Barcelona, Canada and Spa in 1994 after Senna’s death. But those were put in at the start of the weekend.

 

The FIA now says that there were legal reasons why a chicane could not be considered. Sadly no one explained that on Sunday before the race.

 

The Michelin teams did not see a legal problem with a chicane. One of the team principals assured me that the Michelin teams’ final offer was to race with a chicane, but for no points, but that was turned down by Mosley, who was on the phone during the meeting.

 

The FIA ran the clock down to the start of the race and the Michelin teams then had to put up or shut up.

 

What role did Jordan and Minardi play in this?

 

This is the most interesting aspect of the story for me. They held the key really, because if they had held solid with the “Michelin seven”, then there is no way Ferrari would have gone out there alone to race and something would have been sorted out.

 

Paul Stoddart says Jordan broke ranks first and as his main opposition he had to follow. It was a perfect illustration of the self-interest of the team bosses, which is destroying this sport.

 

Where do we go from here?

 

It could go two ways. Either the warring parties realise the damage that was done on Sunday, come to their senses and get around a table to sort things out, or the whole thing could explode into chaos.

 

Much will depend on how the FIA World Council acts next Wednesday.

 

They have summoned Michelin and their seven teams – five of whom also happen to be the GPWC teams – to appear before them to answer charges such as “wrongfully refusing to allow cars to start a race” and “combining to make a demonstration damaging to the image of F1.”

 

BAR will be especially nervous as they are under a suspended sentence following the Imola fuel tank scandal.

 

The FIA has indicated that the teams and Michelin should offer financial compensation to the US fans. If they do not do that, then fines and a deduction of constructors’ championship points looks likely.

 

It will virtually hand the constructors' championship to Ferrari, penalising McLaren, Renault and Toyota in particular.

 

With Mosley already committed to a single tyre supplier in the future, Michelin know that after this, they are finished in F1.

 

They have no defence against a disrepute charge and they may choose to invite the FIA to heap all of the punishment on themselves, rather than the teams.

 

If Michelin withdraw from F1 at the end of this season, it will put everyone on Bridgestones for 2006 and guess which team would have a head start in that relationship?

 

Is this the end of F1 in America?

 

The Americans were already very angry about the Schumacher shuffle at the end of the 2002 race, which handed victory to Barrichello.

 

The Speedway has not built its reputation over the last 100 years by confusing the public and cheating them out of a show.

 

Even though everyone knows that the 2002 scandal and last Sunday’s farce were not the fault of the circuit, they did happen there and will always be part of what is otherwise a magnificent history.

 

The management will be concerned that F1 has come along and tarnished the Indy brand and I don’t think they will be very forgiving.

 

The race was in trouble anyway, it seems, as Tony George and Bernie Ecclestone had different views as to what the event is worth. At the start of the weekend, Bernie accused the Speedway of "letting America down" by failing to promote the race more aggressively.

 

An offer of financial compensation to the fans from Michelin and the teams would help, but it’s probably curtains for the sport in the USA anyway.

 

So who’s to blame for what we saw in Indy?

 

Well in the first instance it is Michelin of course. They ignored the explicit FIA instructions, repeated by Mosley after the Nurburgring, to ensure that at least one of their tyre options at each event should be safe for qualifying and the race.

 

Beyond that I think that all the key players in F1 must take a share of the responsibility, because through their egotism and selfishness over a long period of time they have created a situation where all trust between them has been destroyed.

 

It’s like the Israelis and the Palestinians. You just can’t get them to see a bigger picture and start to trust each other. So that creates a vacuum, which is exploited by those who are intent on wrecking the sport we all love.

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 Quote:
Originally posted by Curt:
Whats that Thunderpants?
GPWC is Toyota, Mercedes, Renault, BMW and honda's proposed new racing series that is hopefully going to happend after 2008 when the current agreement on F1 runs out. The Manufactors are fed up with FIA and Max Mosley, Bernie ecclestone and his moneygrabbing. they want a bigger slice of the cake.
The carmakers have the backing of 9 of the 10 teams currently running in F1, Ferrari not included.
Of course there is a risk of seeing a repeat of the IRL/CART thing from the US. IRL broke away from INDYCAR some years ago, and American singleseater has not been the same since. there are 2 semi weak series there now.
I believe that GPWC (Grand Prix World Series) will be a succes, and we vill see the huge revenues generated by racing going back to the teams so they will be able to provide us with better and more competitive racing and hopefully some more racingcars on the grid.
Ferrari will sign up (again) sooner or later. how much fun is it to only race against..Ferrari?
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  • 1 month later...

I'll be watching, if I can stay awake. Best season in years, thanks to the one tyre rule.

 

Qualifying is problematic. The one car, one lap shoot-out is supposed to be good TV, but it punishes any mistake, and the real problem is the start position carry over from the previous race. Perhaps they should use free-practice times instead, with no refueling. Then we could reatian the nice mix of short fueled sprinters, vs marathon men.

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I took a look and was bored. Again. I keep on giving it those extra chances \:\) It might be more interesting than the last few, but I'm just not into any of the characters there now so it's hard to get too excited.

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  • 2 months later...
  • 2 weeks later...

If contracts in F1 are anything like they are in football, basically they mean not much at all. He can either retire early or some other team will buy them out.

 

How's he taking being beaten?

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Sato is out of contract after China, so no problem there. He's being quite philosophical about it, and claiming he has "other options". They all say that.

 

Trulli had a go at him after Suzuka, on the lines of "he's a great guy, etc etc, but when I saw him in my mirrors, I thought "oh shit......"."

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