Hampster Gull
Well-known member
- Dec 22, 2010
- 13,465
I like F1 but having only 13 cars after lap one is not good. They need a wake up call that it has to be interesting for sponsors to be interested.
I've heard this all before - Red Bull, McLaren, Ferrari and Brawn have all dominated in the last decade and now it is the turn of Mercedes. Lotus and WIlliams have also returned from the dead and today Sauber had two in the points.
It is up to the other teams to catch up. What disappoints me is Bernie's contempt for the smaller teams, there needs to be more support because the sport needs 11 or 12 teams. As we saw today, fewer cars means less racing action on the track, so bad for the spectator.
I've heard this all before - Red Bull, McLaren, Ferrari and Brawn have all dominated in the last decade and now it is the turn of Mercedes. Lotus and WIlliams have also returned from the dead and today Sauber had two in the points.
It is up to the other teams to catch up. What disappoints me is Bernie's contempt for the smaller teams, there needs to be more support because the sport needs 11 or 12 teams. As we saw today, fewer cars means less racing action on the track, so bad for the spectator.
Thanks chaps, there's plenty to consider there, from the outside looking in.I doubt if Bernie would be too disappointed if the smaller teams disappeared because it could lead to the remaining teams having more drivers competing (3 drivers/cars per team) and then you may have a more competitive sport as a result (especially if 2 teams are fairly equally matched or no team orders and each with 3 drivers in a team capable of winning the title)
The fans go to see teams like Ferrari, Mercedes and Red Bull, i doubt than many care about who the lesser teams are and who is driving for them, especially as smaller teams are never going to compete for the titles - Bigger teams with more drivers could make it more competitive and therefore increase interest and therefore revenue streams, but main loss to the sport if that were to happen though is that the lesser teams are currently a good route in for younger drivers into F1 and the sport may well suffer in that respect if they were to go.
Is it racing or a sponsors procession?
- Just 15 cars start.
- Only 11 finish.
- No competition.
- Winning team half a circuit ahead of everybody else.
- Only 3 teams likely to be even close to the podium, all season.
It must have been a yawnfest.
Thanks chaps, there's plenty to consider there, from the outside looking in.
Shouldn't the sport be all encompassing?
What first attracted my interest to yesterday's result was the lack of actual cars starting, that can't be a good sign.
Although 3 Ferraris probably would be.
Then again Shirley a team ordered Mercedes 1-2-3 half a lap ahead of their nearest rivals would be even more 'boring'.
I wonder how long soccerball would last if the Champions League semi finals were always a closed shop between Real, Barca, Utd and Munich.
Reinvent the sport. Drivers should be armed with banana skins and torpedo turtle shells.
I've been a follower of F1 since I was 10 or so and I have to say, at 28 I'm DONE with it.
Don't get me wrong, I want Hamilton to win and I'll look at the results.....but I'm not wasting 2 hours of my Sunday to watch it anymore.
It's a shame because the coverage is often EXCELLENT but there is one HUGE flaw with the sport.
The WHOLE POINT of F1 is the SPEED, POWER and OPTIMUM abilities of machines being pushed to their LIMIT.
However, on TV this does not come across.....until someone crashes. So when sitting there, watching cars PLOD around a track in the same order as they started, you COMPLETELY lose any sense of the speed, driving ability and danger involved.
It sucks away the whole USP which is a shame because the drivers and the machines should be really respected. They say "oh the cars are faster this year". So what? On TV that doesn't matter. I would rather watch SLOW COMPETETIVE racing than a FAST PROCESSION.
I watched the qualifying for the Aussie GP and the moment it was obvious the mercs were the only cars challenging I switched off. The fact the tv coverage ALREADY referred to the "battle to be the best of the rest" was the final straw.
Finally?
I think that happened a long time ago.
We have an ERNEST wannabe why CANT you just WRITE normal SENTENCES?
The WHOLE POINT of F1 is the SPEED, POWER and OPTIMUM abilities of machines being pushed to their LIMIT.
However, on TV this does not come across.....until someone crashes. So when sitting there, watching cars PLOD around a track in the same order as they started, you COMPLETELY lose any sense of the speed, driving ability and danger involved.
It sucks away the whole USP which is a shame because the drivers and the machines should be really respected. They say "oh the cars are faster this year". So what? On TV that doesn't matter. I would rather watch SLOW COMPETETIVE racing than a FAST PROCESSION.
I watched the qualifying for the Aussie GP and the moment it was obvious the mercs were the only cars challenging I switched off. The fact the tv coverage ALREADY referred to the "battle to be the best of the rest" was the final straw.