- 18 Nov 10, 18:34#226252
So, uh, who said this guy would make for a bad FIA president?
I'm liking that the FIA will get involved in this, rather than just looking at the safety of the circuits as being the most important of criteria. Of course, this could lead to conflict between the FIA and Bernie, as Bernie seems to be more bothered about how much he can get from a circuit rather than how good the circuit actually is...
Todt: New tracks must create passing
By Matt Beer and Michele Lostia Thursday, November 18th 2010, 17:02 GMT
Overtaking was difficult in Abu DhabiFIA president Jean Todt says new circuits will have to prove that they provide adequate overtaking opportunities, and has suggested that changes to current tracks to improve the spectacle could be on the cards.
His comments follow the difficulty in passing at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, during which title contenders Fernando Alonso and Mark Webber could not get back through traffic following their pitstops.
"We need to favour overtaking," Todt told La Stampa. "It was impossible at Abu Dhabi."
Todt denied that his complaints were motivated by his former team Ferrari having missed out on the title because Alonso could not get back up to the fourth place he needed at Yas Marina - pointing out that McLaren driver Lewis Hamilton's shot at victory was also severely hampered by the overtaking problem when he was caught behind the yet-to-stop Renault of Robert Kubica.
"I speak as president of the FIA," said Todt. "Take Hamilton: he had fresh tyres, he would have lapped two seconds quicker than Kubica, yet he didn't manage to pass him.
"From now on, before homologating a circuit, we'll evaluate its spectacle potential, besides its safety."
He said the FIA was prepared to take rapid action on the overtaking issue.
"On 23 November we'll discuss the overtaking problem in the commission," Todt revealed. "It's the cars' and tracks' fault.
"We will create a report card with the circuits' competitiveness, and we'll see if we can make some modifications in 2011 already, if possible."
So, uh, who said this guy would make for a bad FIA president?

I'm liking that the FIA will get involved in this, rather than just looking at the safety of the circuits as being the most important of criteria. Of course, this could lead to conflict between the FIA and Bernie, as Bernie seems to be more bothered about how much he can get from a circuit rather than how good the circuit actually is...
