timbo wrote:WhiteBlue wrote:It appears that they were deliberately set in a way to provoke rejection because thy are not a negitiation step, but an ultimatum.
Teams asked for a new Concord that binds them until 2012. Isn't that a step?
ISLAMATRON wrote:nobody likes Max... but that is besides the point that something needs to be done to save the small teams, get new teams in, and protect against a mass exodus of the manufacturers precipitated by Honda.
Max and the FIA is the only one with a plan
bhallg2k wrote:... Epsilon, USF1, Prodrive, etc., have no business being on a level playing field with Toyota, Ferrari, BMW, Mercedes, etc., because they aren't equal companies.
.....
WhiteBlue wrote:Sorry, but that makes no sense at all. In every sport a level playing field is the first requirement. The established teams have all started as small garagistas and even Ferrari started under very humble circumstances many decades ago.
Every team that can design a car and get a budget of 40-60 mil pound (like Super Aguri) deserves to race in F1 as much as a manufacturer who stumbles around without knowing what he does (like Hondo or Toyota did). Therefore every fan with some sporting ethos should support the budget cap of the FIA. With the offer of accepting a glide path Mosley was being perfectly reasonable only to be provoked again by the FOTA ultimatum.
ISLAMATRON wrote:And then what happens when these big companies to which F1 is merely just a billboard leave the sport like Honda has done(3 times) or Renault is threatening(for the 3rd time) or Ford(Jaguar) did, or BMW, or Mercedes, or Peugeot, Alfa Romeo, Lotus, MAserati, or several others.
And precisely why should Ferrari, or any other team that has the wherewithal, give up an advantage that, to your own admission, they spent years, even decades, building?
WhiteBlue wrote:bhallg2k wrote:... Epsilon, USF1, Prodrive, etc., have no business being on a level playing field with Toyota, Ferrari, BMW, Mercedes, etc., because they aren't equal companies.
.....
Sorry, but that makes no sense at all. In every sport a level playing field is the first requirement. The established teams have all started as small garagistas and even Ferrari started under very humble circumstances many decades ago.
Every team that can design a car and get a budget of 40-60 mil pound (like Super Aguri) deserves to race in F1 as much as a manufacturer who stumbles around without knowing what he does (like Hondo or Toyota did). Therefore every fan with some sporting ethos should support the budget cap of the FIA. With the offer of accepting a glide path Mosley was being perfectly reasonable only to be provoked again by the FOTA ultimatum.
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