Just_a_fan wrote:mrluke wrote:I think Bernie is playing a game (when is he not!), there's an ulterior motive to keep this qualy format for another week.
Bernie is fighting for his grip on F1. He's desperate.
The sport is being run as it clearly is, by an out of touch business savvy octogenarian.
Bernie is the latter day Joao Havelange, a man who took credit for growing a sport that had popularity in the first place. When really, what they both did was commercialise it and grow rich from the proceeds.
The facilitation of the product is their legacy, but the reality is that they both controlled their respective sports for too long. F1 is now in the image of the man himself, and when it goes wrong he blames others.
Mercedes, Ferrari, Jean Todt, Drivers, Race organisers and even fans themselves have invoked Ecclestones' ire.
The complete disregard for social media is a case in point.
I'm not interested in tweeting, Facebook and whatever this nonsense is. I tried to find out but in any case I'm too old-fashioned. I couldn't see any value in it. And, I don't know what the so-called 'young generation' of today really wants. What is it?
The man leads F1, and does not know what the grass roots want.
If we look at new sports like UFC, they garnered their value by utilising social media. The sport's worth is now in the region of 4 billion despite the fact that Boxing dominated the fighting scene for a century.
At it's current expansion rate, and the decline rate of boxing it could be in the next decade that UFC is bigger than boxing. I blame Mayweather...
After a fight, there is an official forum, facebook, twitter to let the fans engage.
F1 is lost to this, because as Bernie says he's too "old fashioned".
It goes further, unravelling Ecclestones' charming side...
Young kids will see the Rolex brand, but are they going to go and buy one? They can't afford it. Or our other sponsor, UBS — these kids don't care about banking. They haven't got enough money to put in the bloody banks anyway. That's what I think. I don't know why people want to get to the so-called 'young generation'. Why do they want to do that? Is it to sell them something? Most of these kids haven't got any money.
Red Bull? Renault? Puma? Hugo Boss? HP? Telecoms companies? Clothing companies? Tech companies?
Just a walk outside to the local shops sees a teenager wearing £100 Nike huarache's, £200 True religion jeans, £80 Ralph Lauren shirt and £200 stone island jumper. This would not be complete without a £600 Samsung S6 edge.
The reason kids don't roll Rolex is cos they never did in the first place, and they got better things to spend their cash on.
Then this qualifying debacle with Bernies' fingerprints all over it, one of many. A bloodless coups d'état should be in the works if not in full motion already. The drivers' are immune to an extent, hence their standing up to this rubbish.
The saving grace for BE is that all the teams will never agree, Bernie dangles too many carrots for there to be complete agreement.
It's the only reason he's still there.
But for how long will this remain?