- 25 Oct 15, 17:16#438592
Le coeur a ses raisons que la raison ne connaît point. 
ESPNF1:
[...]
In a worse-case scenario of losing Red Bull and Lotus, will F1 have three car teams?
TW: Even if we don't lose them, I'm still keen and optimistic that three cars would increase the grid to 26 or 28 cars, giving young drivers an opportunity to race in Formula One. You are not seeing any of the GP2 kids making it to Formula One and that's because there is a limited amount of spaces. Therefore, I think that a third car is a good possibility that would energise the driver market as well.
Can you understand the reservations midfield teams have about three car teams occupying so much of the top ten?
TW: I think there should be two different classifications. I think if there are three Mercedes and three Ferraris then there should be the main championship and a junior championship. If Force India, for example, finishes seventh behind three Mercedes and three Ferraris, they would still be classified fifth in terms of the points. On track it doesn't make a lot of difference, because if you are running fifth or seventh it doesn't make a lot of difference. The perception is being made by your kind of result and your result is being corrected by the junior factor.
[...]
Uh, no Toto: with a third car as a buffer for the leading big name duo, a midfield team will be robbed of the opportunity to attack the big team unless those junior drivers in the third car get to see blue flags as frequently as the back markers.
[...]
In a worse-case scenario of losing Red Bull and Lotus, will F1 have three car teams?
TW: Even if we don't lose them, I'm still keen and optimistic that three cars would increase the grid to 26 or 28 cars, giving young drivers an opportunity to race in Formula One. You are not seeing any of the GP2 kids making it to Formula One and that's because there is a limited amount of spaces. Therefore, I think that a third car is a good possibility that would energise the driver market as well.
Can you understand the reservations midfield teams have about three car teams occupying so much of the top ten?
TW: I think there should be two different classifications. I think if there are three Mercedes and three Ferraris then there should be the main championship and a junior championship. If Force India, for example, finishes seventh behind three Mercedes and three Ferraris, they would still be classified fifth in terms of the points. On track it doesn't make a lot of difference, because if you are running fifth or seventh it doesn't make a lot of difference. The perception is being made by your kind of result and your result is being corrected by the junior factor.
[...]
Uh, no Toto: with a third car as a buffer for the leading big name duo, a midfield team will be robbed of the opportunity to attack the big team unless those junior drivers in the third car get to see blue flags as frequently as the back markers.

