autogyro wrote:Montezemolo can bang on about what ever he feels like, few people take any notice of him any more. His time is limited.

Id rather have Honda Toyota and BMW over the mosley backmarkers
autogyro wrote:Montezemolo can bang on about what ever he feels like, few people take any notice of him any more. His time is limited.
It is pretty obvious where the battle lines were drawn in the Monte vs Max fight. Ferrari are mainly concerned to grab the money from FOM and want as few as possible top competitors to share it with them.autogyro wrote:So go tell the bankers and the car manufacturers.
It is they who went tits up and pulled the plug not Max.
That makes no sense what do you meanThe FiA under Mosley and clearly under Todt as well wants a semi open series with resource restrictions that can operate on lower budgets but on higher as well.
WhyThe credit crunch and the recession with the subsequent manufacturer pull out have clearly shown that the FiA concept is the right way to go.
Chaparral wrote:That makes no sense what do you meanWhiteBlue wrote: The FiA under Mosley and clearly under Todt as well wants a semi open series with resource restrictions that can operate on lower budgets but on higher as well.![]()
Dave Richards wrote:Formula One's fundamental ethos is about success coming to those with the most ingenious engineering and best organization, not to those with the biggest budget.
Because there are substantially only Ferari, McLaren and Mercedes left from the old elite. If they would have ruthlessly pushed out all other teams for their satellite teams F1 would already be on the brink of collaps. Mercedes future participation is as shaky as BMW's before. If the success they had with McLaren does not materialize they could be gone in two years. McLaren have a huge gamble on the commercial success of their road cars. Some people say F1 and road car business are not connected but I do not believe that. If the MP4-12C flops McLaren will loose their future. Investors and debtors alike will not favor them.Chaparral wrote:WhyWhiteBlue wrote:The credit crunch and the recession with the subsequent manufacturer pull out have clearly shown that the FiA concept is the right way to go.
You know, that would be great if MrM and BE weren't a part of the force that driven likes of Minardy from F1 in the first place.WhiteBlue wrote:As Dave Richards I believe that F1 should be open to a maximum number of competitors and not the privileged profiteering playground of very few super rich teams.
I sincerely doubt it. F1 was extremely successful before the Bernie and Max show started and it will be successful after they both disappear. If anything, they have nearly brought about F1s downfall with the talk of the breakaway series( [-o< ).autogyro wrote:Do not forget that Max and Bernie have built F1 into the biggest motor sport series in the world. A huge achievement.
If it was not for their input F1 would no longer exist. A smaller less well established formula of this type would have failed in the present economic climate.
I think these two are mutually exclusive.Giblet wrote:Bernie has no power. Once a team owns a spot
I also agree on that statement, although I reached my opinion via a different path.WhiteBlue wrote:In the interest of the continuity of the series fans should support the FiA policy of cost limitation and establishing full grids by licensing new teams.