FW17 wrote: ↑09 Jan 2023, 18:28
Vaexa wrote: ↑09 Jan 2023, 18:01
What a lot of people miss when the subject of ''team value'' in F1 comes up is the value inherent in having a current team.
The exclusivity drives up team value. If the only way for a prospective F1 entrant is to buy one of the 10 golden tickets on the grid, that makes the value of those 10 golden tickets go up massively. Conversely, printing an 11th ticket makes the value of the existing 10 go down.
This is constantly missed in conversations about marketing value, Andretti's pedigree as a racing team and addition to the quality of the product (hint: no one really cares about this one that much) and the value added by having a luxury sedan manufacturer written on the camshaft cover. Andretti being allowed on the grid as an 11th team seriously devalues the existing 10 teams. None of the existing 10 teams want that. Liberty Media doesn't want it. And there you go; accountants looking to maximise the left side of the balance sheet ruin everyone's fun.
There are currently 10 top class racers on the grid. They are absolutely fantastic and love seeing them year after year. Some I have been seeing them for 30 years others a little lesser. They are absolute class of the world.
And for no reason would I wish anyone of them to end their association with the Show/Circus. It is not about the money, these guys are here for the passion of racing. Why would it bother them what the value is? They dont wish to sell. I dont want them to sell and miss seeing these top class guys next year.
I rather see a new entrant coming in as the 11th team.
Every team is either (partially) owned or backed by someone who wishes to make a lot of money off their association with or ownership of an F1 team.
Mercedes - Daimler, Ineos, Toto Wolff himself.
Red Bull Racing - well... says it right there on the tin, doesn't it?
Ferrari - ditto, though they might be the closest to pure-blooded racers we can get in 2023
Alpine - entirely owned by Renault nowadays, who are notoriously fickle on actually wanting to own a team
McLaren - Bahrain's sovereign national fund.
Alfa Romeo - Longbow Finance. An investment firm.
Aston Martin - Stroll consortium.
Haas - says it right there on the tin
Williams - Dorilton Capital. An investment firm.
It doesn't matter how much gasoline flows through the veins of the folks running the teams. They have the specter of private ownership by people who like making lots of money hanging over them. Maximising the value of an asset like that is in their best interests; a more valuable team begets more valuable sponsor contracts and outside investment, and if they ever want to exit, they can do so at a tidy profit. Dorilton must find all the manufacturer interest in F1, and F1's insistence on not letting more teams in, absolutely mouth-watering.
This house of cards comes tumbling down the moment an 11th team comes in. It's like if there were only 10 chairs in the entire world, and everyone really wants a chair, so the people who have the chairs get to ask really high prices for them if they ever get bored of sitting down. Someone gets a hammer and some wood and builds an 11th chair. Of course the guys who can get rich off their existing chairs are going to light it on fire.
Contrived metaphor, but you understand my point, I hope. It's an abstract, somewhat extreme form of artificial scarcity, and if you're an accountant who likes seeing a number get bigger on the balance sheet, it all makes sense. Accountants aren't racers. We're long past the point of racing people like Frank Williams, Bruce McLaren and Peter Sauber wholly owning their own teams. Every team is now owned or backed by people who're really just in it for the money. Mister Dorilton or whatever his name is doesn't care how many titles Williams do or do not win, he cares about the number on the port side of the balance sheet. Lawrence Stroll is as close as it gets to a true petrolhead team owner and he's still reporting to a huge consortium of people who just don't really care about racing in its own little vacuum, but care far more about how the racing makes the line go up.