
Also, here are a couple of new articles about recent events:
http://houston.culturemap.com/newsdetai ... -on-track/
http://www.statesman.com/news/local/for ... 19279.html
Well, that sounds pretty much as predicted.Founding partner Bobby Epstein suggested that while Wednesday's news is good for the event, it was also a victory for Ecclestone.
"Mr. Ecclestone is a masterful negotiator. He fights hard for his company's best interests," he said.
Only the 6 cars using Bridgestone tires participated in the 2005 USGP because the Michelins were failing in practice, and they were considered too dangerous to use in the race.WilliamsF1 wrote:Mr Alcatraz wrote: (which btw I blame on Michelin for not anticipating the demands on the tires at that venue but that is another topic altogether).
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Which you just couldn't help but introduce. Really, how long has it been?Mr Alcatraz wrote:...but that is another topic altogether.
You're mistaking me for someone that has a fixation over this matter. My point was that it gave f1 a black eye yet the fans still came back in mass. But let me apologize for giving the reason for the debacle.Pup wrote:Which you just couldn't help but introduce. Really, how long has it been?Mr Alcatraz wrote:...but that is another topic altogether.
Just...let...it...go.
Mr Alcatraz wrote:Only the 6 cars using Bridgestone tires participated in the 2005 USGP because the Michelins were failing in practice, and they were considered too dangerous to use in the race.WilliamsF1 wrote:Mr Alcatraz wrote: (which btw I blame on Michelin for not anticipating the demands on the tires at that venue but that is another topic altogether).
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Total fail on Michelins' behalf for not providing a tire sufficient for the demands of the USGP venue!!
Precisely, Michelin went with a sidewall that after they did run in practice and had several failures, they could not guaranty the FIA 16 racing laps per set.The Bridgestone Company got it right. The idea of going with a chicane, that changes their options as well have to waste all data they had going in. Plus it has to count as a win. I wish that Kimi Button and Alonso would have gone on out and just drive around the issue they can maintain. But they held out.WilliamsF1 wrote:WilliamsF1 wrote:Mr Alcatraz wrote: (which btw I blame on Michelin for not anticipating the demands on the tires at that venue but that is another topic altogether).
Michelins did not got to test on the new track surface as Bridgestone did. Alternatives to a 6 car race was proposed by the teams but the FIA and Ferrari thought them laying down the rule and winning a race in 2005 was more important than the fans sitting in the grand stand.
Exactly. But I don't think Tavo really has to be involved. Just Bernie taking advantage of the situation to renegotiate the deal, and being willing to screw his "longtime friend" in the process. Of course, it would certainly help to have a friend in a position to default on the contract for you.Scorpaguy wrote:If BE and Tavo orchestrated a fake "lets push Tavo out" tiff....leading Epstein to think, "Heck, I dont need Tavo with his zero dollar contribution, I'll negotiate with BE myself...I've got the cash".....then:
1. Tavo gets his race...with no outlay
2. BE gets his real cash....embellishes his nefarious rep/negot skills...and gets to stick it to the "Yanks" (which he really wanted to do since he had already secured his preferred NY skyline venue)
3. America gets its GP / F1 a new fan base
...I guess there are no losers sans Epstein. IF IT IS TRUE...an afterlife of fire and brimstone is nothing compared to Epstein's current plight of having to read/reread his checkbook balance.
This is the strangest theory that I have read in a long time. The known facts make it completely clear that until the Korean GP (Oct. 16th) Hellmund and Ecclestone applied no active control over the process. This went on for three months. Epstein could have provided advance finance for the first race fee. Normally that would have been only for one months until the METF money would have been payed out. This would probably have cost just $100k. And even if the METF had been delayed as it is now it would have cost him perhaps $1.5m to put the 25m up for 13 months. Compared to a 300m price tag for the total investment this is pocket money. So why did Epstein refuse to finance the fee and failed to close the preferential deal thereby?Pup wrote:Exactly. But I don't think Tavo really has to be involved. Just Bernie taking advantage of the situation to renegotiate the deal, and being willing to screw his "longtime friend" in the process. Of course, it would certainly help to have a friend in a position to default on the contract for you.Scorpaguy wrote:If BE and Tavo orchestrated a fake "lets push Tavo out" tiff....leading Epstein to think, "Heck, I dont need Tavo with his zero dollar contribution, I'll negotiate with BE myself...I've got the cash".....then:
1. Tavo gets his race...with no outlay
2. BE gets his real cash....embellishes his nefarious rep/negot skills...and gets to stick it to the "Yanks" (which he really wanted to do since he had already secured his preferred NY skyline venue)
3. America gets its GP / F1 a new fan base
...I guess there are no losers sans Epstein. IF IT IS TRUE...an afterlife of fire and brimstone is nothing compared to Epstein's current plight of having to read/reread his checkbook balance.
People can try to keep spinning this as Epstein screwing up Tavo's special-buddy deal with Bernie, but really - when have we known Bernie to offer a favor to anyone? If they'd take a step back and look at the personalities involved and who stood to benefit, I think they'd reach the same conclusion as you and me.