Russian motorsport join other 24 clubs who think Max should go now..
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/67831
where did you get the information that there is a 5 hour unedited video and that it was send to the FIA? I believe that is a myth.gcdugas wrote:....
BTW, are these clubs that are issuing calls for Max to resign the same parties that received the whole 5 hour unedited video?
Ciro Pabón wrote:Who has more shame? NOTW or Mosley? Difficult call...
I just find it strange Ecclestone being so magnanimous now to his 'friend', when it is pretty clear it has been Ecclestone all along leaking all sorts of embarrassing details to the times.
Even as late as yesterday they were quoting him as an unnamed 'authoritative voice' but couldn't help but use such a typical Ecclestone turn of phrase 'poor old' - google it, it's practically Ecclestone's favourite phrase.
CVC and the CRH are in a financial pit, in order to sell F1 for anything resembling a profit the 100 year deal needs to change. That is what this is about, not sex, not sport and certainly not reputations.
It's money and it's always been for Ecclestone.
Posted by Aaron James on May 31, 2008 9:15 AM
good to see some peole can see the wood for the treesAaron James is spot on. Bernie knows that Max is
not going to allow him to change the 100 year
agreement in a way that will increase CVC's
profits. So Mosley has to go - in a flood of
crocodile tears.
Problem is that it's the FIA clubs, not Bernie who
will decide whether or not Max goes. And they
are likely to defend the FIA's interests rather than
Bernie's.
Bernie thinks Max is damaged by all this but
Bernie grew up in an era when they jailed gays.
He's nearly 80 and probably does not understand
that things have changed. No modern person
would be reluctant to deal with someone just
because they did not like his or her taste in sex.
I can't wait for the moment when we learn who
set Max up.
Posted by Mike on May 31, 2008 2:21 PM
Kudos to Bernie for struggling through an incredible experience seemingly intact. I sure haven't seen him being interviewed like that before, with a deference so unfocussed and incompatible that it was actually disarming. The interviewer's approach was as intractable as I've ever witnessed, esp. given his subject. Ecclestone seemed to move from being taken by a surprise to a sort of a bemused and horrified (but courteous, and at times even sage) resignation. If he ever needed proof of a Divine existence, this must be it - there is no way that an Earthly production meeting can result in such an experience. No way, no how.WhiteBlue wrote:everybody should watch this interview with Bernie. its worthwhile.
This could perhaps be a mechanism that could still pressure Max Mosley into a compromise deal for November this year if it were based on facts. The idea of a confidence vote goes back to a letter from FIA's deputy president Franco Lucchesi who proposed the compromise in the name of the mobility clubs.In order to win the vote Mosley needs half the votes plus one. In the case of a confidence vote, abstentions must count as votes against for the simple reason that they are not for the motion. Mosley could find a large number of clubs abstaining, as they do not want him to stay but do not want to be seen to vote against him. Thus, if Mosley gets 60 votes in his favour and 40 against, he could still lose if there are 40 abstentions.
The statues of the FIA are complicated and there is no information in the public domain about the agenda. If the original agenda had a confidence vote I would be surprised.Franco Lucesi wrote: Though acknowledging the worries expressed and the proposed solution, President Mosley reiterated his intention of requesting a confidence vote for reasons already summarised in the recent letter he sent to all the FIA Club Presidents. We could do nothing but take note of his determination.
[-o< totally agree Scotracer!! If the FIA splits the fighting between teams, the CRH, the governing body of the day and the manufacturers could start from scatch. F1 could end in a Champ car scenario of chaos and decline or with total control by the CRH which would be equally bad.Scotracer wrote:I just hope some good will come of this. Changes to the technical regulations and the direction the sport is taking are the #1 priority here. Fans of the sport should not be wanting badly for the regulations/situation of just a few years ago.
As much as it's unlikely, the removal of Max should allow the sport to take a positive step towards what it used to be -- a loud, fast spectacle rather than a regulated castrated mess. I doubt it will happen but I pray to that it does.WhiteBlue wrote:[-o< totally agree Scotracer!! If the FIA splits the fighting between teams, the CRH, the governing body of the day and the manufacturers could start from scatch. F1 could end in a Champ car scenario of chaos and decline or with total control by the CRH which would be equally bad.Scotracer wrote:I just hope some good will come of this. Changes to the technical regulations and the direction the sport is taking are the #1 priority here. Fans of the sport should not be wanting badly for the regulations/situation of just a few years ago.
[-o< [-o<WhiteBlue wrote:I think Mosley will be gone this year one way or the other. If the mobility clubs desert the FIA and start a new Federation they can realistically offer Bernie and the teams a new home at equal or better conditions. they can pull so many people from the FIA that the FIA will simply collaps as an empty shell. I think they will threaten Max with this and he will sooner or later see that they mean business. They can pull this off I believe.