FORUMula1.com - F1 Forum

Discuss the sport you love with other motorsport fans

Formula One related discussion.
#186784
Considering there is not one definitive "new teams" thread I had to post this separately. Here Ferrari attack the FIA's Holy War (mainly started by Mosley) and the new teams.

The Horse Whisperer - For whom the bell tolls (time marches on... lol)

Maranello, 22nd February - Only less than three weeks to go until the ultimate form of motor sport, the Formula 1 World Championship, gets underway, while celebrating its sixtieth birthday this year. For many of the teams, this coming week is a crucial one, as the bell rings to signal the final lap, with the last test session getting underway in Barcelona. It is one last chance to run the cars on track, to push reliability to the limit and to try and find some performance. That’s the situation for many teams but not for all of them. Of the thirteen teams who signed up, or were induced to sign up, for this year’s Championship, to date only eleven of them have heeded the call, turning up on track, some later than others, and while some have managed just a few hundred kilometres, others have done more, but at a much reduced pace. As for the twelfth team, Campos Meta, its shareholder and management structure has been transformed, according to rumours which have reached the Horse Whisperer through the paddock telegraph, with a sudden cash injection from a munificent white knight, well used to this sort of last minute rescue deal. However, the beneficiaries of this generosity might find the knight in question expects them to fulfil the role of loyal vassal. All this means, it is hard to imagine the Dallara designed car showing its face at the Catalunya Circuit, with Sakhir a more likely venue to witness the return of the Senna name to a Formula 1 session.

The thirteenth team, USF1, appears to have gone into hiding in Charlotte, North Carolina, to the dismay of those like the Argentinian, Lopez, who thought he had found his way into the Formula 1 paddock, (albeit with help from chairwoman Kirchner, according to the rumours) and now has to start all over again. Amazingly, they still have the impudence to claim that everything is hunky-dory under the starry stripy sky.

Next, we have the Serbian vultures. Firstly, they launched themselves into a quixotic legal battle with the FIA, then they picked the bones of Toyota on its death bed. Having got some people on board, around whom there was still a whiff of past scandals, they are now hovering around waiting to replace whoever is first to drop out of the game, possibly with backing from that very same knight in shining armour whom we mentioned earlier.

This is the legacy of the holy war waged by the former FIA president. The cause in question was to allow smaller teams to get into Formula 1. This is the outcome: two teams will limp into the start of the championship, a third is being pushed into the ring by an invisible hand – you can be sure it is not the hand of Adam Smith – and, as for the fourth, well, you would do better to call on Missing Persons to locate it. In the meantime, we have lost two constructors along the way, in the shape of BMW and Toyota, while at Renault, there’s not much left other than the name. Was it all worth it?

Discuss.
#186807
sounds exactly like Montezemolo wrote that to me.


to you? :)

Not only he maybe wrote it, but he's right in the most part.

F1 'allowed' the manufacturers to leave (Honda, Toyota, BMW... almost Renault......) while at the same time making it easy for mom & pop outfits to enter. I've got nothing against the independent teams, in fact a true racing team may have much more competition hunger than a big organisation just looking for ad space... But from a pinnacle point of view, F1 should be where the BIG names race, be it big teams or big manufacturers. Not the big names mixed with the little boys... and then force the big names to 'detune' and cut down costs to make it more competitive.

What F1 needs to be is more profitable for everyone invlolved. Some budget/competitive controls to make the sport competitive and cost reasonable, but never cheap. I'll be very pissed off if a leading driver gets taken out by the loose cheap front wing from one of those Max mosley teams :banghead:
#186841
for all thous thinking it but hoped for the best



I can not see what Ferrari are trying to achieve by this outburst!?!
#186852
Man- is that straight from their site? Their still angry with the fia, there is somewhat of a point though - but why does incompetent competition bother them?


They obviously prefer beating 'tough' and credible competition. And they are a manufacturer team, so everything that doesnt benefit the manufacturers does not benefit Ferrari.

I can not see what Ferrari are trying to achieve by this outburst!?!


Me neither... maybe a bit of an "I told you so..."
But i dont think is something to post on a web-site in an outburst type article... but like Bud said, it was probably Monty.

Guess they are angre they weren't allowed the 3rd car to ride Schumacher, and now he went to their competition.....
#186894
"serbian vulture's" is abit questionable no need to bring up a teams nationality and at least he's actualy got a car that he can test.

There only upset because they want 3 cars and the FIA said no.

Yeah I thought that term of reference was a little harsh as well.
#186897
If those comments came from Luca (Montezemolo - not Badoer :P) then he must have broken some more tellies lately.

See our F1 related articles too!