When will people understand that Marussia actually can´t afford to go F1 racing?mrluke wrote:When the bottom 5 teams fold, how valuable do you think F1 will be to the remaining competitors? Ferrari are receiving payouts larger than the entire budget spent by Marussia for a years racing, meanwhile Marussia have gone bankrupt. How is that good for the sport?
Odd, I was sure we've had 3 new teams and 6 offers of new teams in the last few years.mrluke wrote:Maybe if Ferrari weren't gifted £200m per annum then they couldn't afford to go racing either.
Sponsorship is never going to be available for cars at the back of the grid, which compounds their issue of a lack of funds for development. But somebody has to be last every week, if the team that finishes last each season goes bankrupt and quits where will F1 be?
For the future of the sport it needs to be resolved.
Unlike the 1950s, no new teams want to join anymore.
Do we ignore HAAS or should we include that one?mrluke wrote:Unlike the 1950s, no new teams want to join anymore.
You mean the 3 new teams that hardly get any television time because they are right at the back? The ones that aren't taken seriously and are referred to as the back-markers? two of which have folded, although one of them against all odds is showing up at GPs despite being ignored on the broadcasts? I'm willing to bet that Manor at this rate won't be showing up much longer. Caterham is already gone. Who else is there? Yeah, Haas might be something, but it's still left to be seen what they will bring and how competitive they will be. If Sauber or F-I folds, or Torro-Rosso, I think they'll leave quite a void which would be a pity. Williams was nearly there too, if it weren't for their turn-around season in 2014 with the Mercedes motor. Lotus is probably right on the crisp of folding too...Moose wrote:Odd, I was sure we've had 3 new teams and 6 offers of new teams in the last few years.mrluke wrote:Maybe if Ferrari weren't gifted £200m per annum then they couldn't afford to go racing either.
Sponsorship is never going to be available for cars at the back of the grid, which compounds their issue of a lack of funds for development. But somebody has to be last every week, if the team that finishes last each season goes bankrupt and quits where will F1 be?
For the future of the sport it needs to be resolved.
Unlike the 1950s, no new teams want to join anymore.
I fail to see how RBR meet that requirement, yes they've been sponsors in the sport for about 20 years but they've only competed for 10.SectorOne wrote:
@Megz It´s not lengthy involvement but rather historical importance.
@SectorOne It's neither lengthy involvement, nor historical importance. It's whoever the capricious dictator happens to favor at the moment.SectorOne wrote:
@Megz It´s not lengthy involvement but rather historical importance.