For a formula so worried about top teams dominating it doesn't make much sense to give the most money to the top teams.
I cannot see a single good reason for the money not to be split evenly between all of the teams. Period.
Good post.emaren wrote:Well, running the numbers....
I looked for some data on exactly how much money a race 'makes'.
In 2014 F1 managed to bring in $1.6B and it 'gave' $700M to the teams.
Even if that $700M was distributed evenly, that is 'only' $58M each. Which is just a little over half of the recognised minimum entry ($100M).
If the entire $1.6B was distributed, that is 'only' $80M each.
I presume that F1 has to make a profit, pay taxes, pay Bernieetc.
So even if the $700M was raised to $1B and the distribution was even, then the $83M still is not enough to run a back marker team.
However, the BBC feel that
So the last few teams got 1/12th of $350M or ~$30M. Some teams - Ferrari/RedBull etc then got the lions share of the other half. Which actually seems reasonably fair.Last year, F1 generated around $1.6 billion in commercial revenues, of which $700 million was distributed to the teams. Roughly half of this cash fund is shared equally with the other half allocated according to where the team finished in the championship.
So, if we assume that the $100M is a true estimate of running a back marker, it is obvious that it is pretty much impossible to put a car on the back of the grid and stay within the 107% rule without finding $70M or more from somewhere.
The company that I work for sponsors an F1 team, I know what we spent on 2014 putting our name on the car, on the team website, on the team outfits. It is a considerable number, it would employ me all the way deep into my retirement. The number is apparently rather good value according to marketing due to the teams performance this year compared with last year when the deal was worked out. Incidentally we looked into putting our name on a back marker too this year, but they wanted such a significant percentage of the current front-running team rather that we declined.
Given the numbers we pay, and basing the surface area that we cover, I figure that the team we sponsor must be pulling in at least $250M in sponsorship. Plus of course the $30M - so they probably have a budget of $280M or more.....
So really any team that is going to enter needs to have sponsorship in place that will pay them $200M /year just in order to compete. Also they would need start-up capital sufficient to design and build their car, their wind tunnel, their team. I have no real idea of just how huge this number is, but my guess is at least $200M.
So I guess that the entry cost is pushing half a billion USD.
Thanks for that post, it's usually really hard to find information like that.emaren wrote:The company that I work for sponsors an F1 team, I know what we spent on 2014 putting our name on the car, on the team website, on the team outfits. It is a considerable number, it would employ me all the way deep into my retirement. The number is apparently rather good value according to marketing due to the teams performance this year compared with last year when the deal was worked out. Incidentally we looked into putting our name on a back marker too this year, but they wanted such a significant percentage of the current front-running team rather that we declined.
Given the numbers we pay, and basing the surface area that we cover, I figure that the team we sponsor must be pulling in at least $250M in sponsorship. Plus of course the $30M - so they probably have a budget of $280M or more.....
So really any team that is going to enter needs to have sponsorship in place that will pay them $200M /year just in order to compete. Also they would need start-up capital sufficient to design and build their car, their wind tunnel, their team. I have no real idea of just how huge this number is, but my guess is at least $200M.
So I guess that the entry cost is pushing half a billion USD.
I guess the problem is that spending the 10th place prize money doesn't get you even close to 107%. Heck, if that's 24 mega$, it barely pays for the engines! So starting an F1 team has the implied bet of trying to be at least midfield, plus investing in that. If you don't fight with, say, sauber in a few years, then the pit becomes deeper and deeper, and the only wise solution is bailing out.FoxHound wrote:Quite clearly Bernie is not interested in having teams ten and eleven.
What strikes me as bizarre, is that these teams are fully aware of what they are going to get in terms of prize money.
I'm not advocating this payout as sufficient, but why spend more than you earn, then complain you don't get enough when you know what the figure is?
Bernie is basically telling them to up sticks elsewhere.
Is that different from any business?Miguel wrote: It's a big problem, where even a fully equitative distribution (~60M$/team) of the prize money would require substantial sponsorship money in order to cover the budgets of even the more modest teams. Given that scenario, you end up having to endebt yourself in order to climb the grid, so that you get better sponsorship that pays for last years' debts. Even if you play that well, that's no guarantee of success, as Lotus can attest.
The question should have been, had they got extra $100 million would they have spent it on racing. The answer YESMOWOG wrote: There are still some teams who do it for the love of the sport. Ferrari and McLaren come to mind, Probably Williams and Sauber fall into that camp as well. But the rest? If any of them got that extra $100 million that Ferrari gets, would they be any more competitive? In all honesty, the answer is "Probably not."
Eight well funded competitive teams fielding 3 or more cars each, is, in my view, considerably better than watching no-hopers that are multi-seconds a lap off the pace poodle along at the back.WilliamsF1 wrote: 8 teams is not a world competition.
I've always been a fan of the underdog.pob wrote:I think your view on whether 3 car teams or B teams are better for F1 than having struggling underfunded teams at the back is coloured mainly by whether you routinely support the underdog. Just occasionally these teams will have a gem of a race/season, and without the backmarker teams there is less chance of a romantic performance (e.g. Bianchi's points in Monaco) and F1 is worse off without this possibility.
Would Panis's '96 Monaco victory have been so special if Ligier had been officially called "Benetton B team"?
Noteworthy performance of smaller teams in recent years would be Canada 2007 (Super Aguri), Monza 2008 (Torro Rosso), Spa 2009 (Force India) & Monaco 2014 (Marussia). Only Torro Rosso won out of these four, but nowadays even a points scoring finish or a podium (like in Force India's case) would be considered a good performance, sadly.emaren wrote:I've always been a fan of the underdog.pob wrote:I think your view on whether 3 car teams or B teams are better for F1 than having struggling underfunded teams at the back is coloured mainly by whether you routinely support the underdog. Just occasionally these teams will have a gem of a race/season, and without the backmarker teams there is less chance of a romantic performance (e.g. Bianchi's points in Monaco) and F1 is worse off without this possibility.
Would Panis's '96 Monaco victory have been so special if Ligier had been officially called "Benetton B team"?
Pierre-Luigi Martini's exploits at Minardi were extremely interesting to me.
But watching 2-3 teams fight over 19th place, it seriously dull.
any 'giant killing', more-with-less performance is awesome to watch, but what has Caterham achieved in the 55 races in which it has competed since it began ?
- No Poles,
- No fastest laps
- Two 11th places
- 22 retirements (20% failure rate)
- 1 DNS
Of the small teams, Damon Hill leading the Hungarian GP in 1997 in the horribly uncompetitive Arrows was an incredible 'show'. Had he done it in a Minardi, it would have been even better......
But we have not seen this in the last few years.....