- 15 Mar 10, 14:55#189784
With stuff like this going on, compounded with the ridiculous 107% rule that Bernie wants to tighten even further to 105% and brilliant ideas like "shortcuts drivers could take up to three times per race" it seems like he's living in a fantasy world. Why not just let Bernie hand select which teams he wants to let in. I wonder if Stephan GP had made it in and been outside the 105% window if he'd be pushing for the rule the same way.
F1: Drivers Missing From Bahrain Pre-race Grid
Many F1 drivers were missing from the grid in the minutes before Sunday's season opening Bahrain GP.
Global interest in the new 2010 season had been sky high, but reporters, television cameras and VIPs searched hard to locate F1's most famous faces in the moments of preparation prior to the formation lap.
It turns out that the situation was triggered by Bernie Ecclestone, who tightly controls the distribution of pre-race grid passes.
With an apparent shortage for the Sakhir grid, the F1 chief executive decided that the drivers' physiotherapists and trainers would be the ones to skip the pre-race routine.
The drivers were unhappy with the decision but Briton Ecclestone, 79, refused to budge, meaning many of them opted to get out of their cars after the pit-to-grid lap and return to the garages for physical attention.
F1: Drivers Missing From Bahrain Pre-race Grid
Many F1 drivers were missing from the grid in the minutes before Sunday's season opening Bahrain GP.
Global interest in the new 2010 season had been sky high, but reporters, television cameras and VIPs searched hard to locate F1's most famous faces in the moments of preparation prior to the formation lap.
It turns out that the situation was triggered by Bernie Ecclestone, who tightly controls the distribution of pre-race grid passes.
With an apparent shortage for the Sakhir grid, the F1 chief executive decided that the drivers' physiotherapists and trainers would be the ones to skip the pre-race routine.
The drivers were unhappy with the decision but Briton Ecclestone, 79, refused to budge, meaning many of them opted to get out of their cars after the pit-to-grid lap and return to the garages for physical attention.
"I don't want to be part of a forum where everyone has differing opinions." Boom...