Click here to visit our sponsor Amalgam Side
Subscribe to the PITPASS newsletters:
NAME:
EMAIL:
 Weekly
 Grand Prix
 Hot News
 HTML
 Plain Text
 Subscribe
 Unsubscribe
Is it the wing test that's at fault?
Silly Season Goes All Sensible
The Pitpass Belgian Grand Prix preview
Why the WMSC must punish Ferrari
Team Orders

More Features...

Click here to visit our sponsor SysExcel

Ecclestone sceptical of teams' futures

28/07/2010

In a dramatic turnaround, Bernie Ecclestone has said that F1 only needs ten teams, warning that two of the current twelve teams could fall by the wayside before next season.

Following the debacle that was USF1, not to mention the problems which saw Campos Meta change hands at the eleventh hour, twelve teams still lined up on the grid in Bahrain for the season opener. However, while the big guns have made massive strides forward since then, their vast resources funding ferocious development programmes, the newbies have effectively stood still.

Added to this has been talk of financial difficulties, with Renault rumoured to have asked Ecclestone for an advance on its share of the F1 money pot and Hispania changing its drivers seemingly on a week-by-week basis.

Speaking to the Daily Telegraph, Ecclestone has clarified the Renault story, while admitting doubt as to the future of at least two of the current outfits - this at a time when the FIA is seeking a thirteenth entry.

"All that was was the fact that one of the shareholders didn't want to take money from another one of his companies because that would have meant convening a board meeting," said the Englishman, referring to Renault. "But I never gave them the money. And they got over the crisis so everything is fine.

"But I would not be surprised if one or two of them did not make the end of the season," he continued. "I think there are a couple of teams in Formula One who really shouldn't be there. They are a bit out of their depth at the moment."

Looking ahead, he added: "All we ever want is 10 teams. Lotus is a good name. I wouldn't want to lose them. But in general this year has been a bit of a nuisance because it has cost money to keep these teams in. It has cost a lot of money to pay for them to compete.

"The bottom line is they haven't really and truly given us value for being there. If suddenly these teams don't turn up at races then I don't think the crowds will get any smaller, or the TV sets will turn off, or the newspapers will stop writing, will they?"

However, what Ecclestone chooses to omit is that when the new teams entered it was on the understanding that there would be a budget cap which would go some way to levelling the playing field. Then, much like last week's race order, there was a volte face which meant that teams which might have had some sort of chance on £40m were now up against giants whose budgets were almost unlimited.

Furthermore, while Ecclestone might pour scorn of the newbies now, he was delighted to see new blood enter the sport at a time when three manufacturing giants had withdrawn, and let's not forget that two of his precious ten teams are owned by the same man.

As for the crowds getting smaller, despite Ecclestone's best efforts to keep the grandstands out of camera shot, it is clear that, for the most part, attendance at races is falling, save for Silverstone, the track he tried so very hard to eliminate from the calendar.

TV sets will turn off if fans come to believe that the results will be decided not on track but by team bosses or sponsors and then overruled by the race stewards or World Motor Sport Council.

And, despite Ecclestone's belief that all publicity is good publicity for F1, much of the time journalists are focussing on the negative side of the sport.

Not only will Ecclestone's comments be seen as a slap in the face for the new teams, they will be seen as confirmation that F1 is merely an elite club that exists for itself and doesn't want new members. That, is not the sort of signal the sport should be sending out right now.

Related Articles

Date Title

27/07/2010 F1's marketing man
25/07/2010 Ferrari will not appeal fine
25/07/2010 Force India reprimanded for tyre error
25/07/2010 Ferrari fined and referred to WMSC
25/07/2010 Race Stewards summon Ferrari
24/07/2010 Schumacher bemoans lack of testing
22/07/2010 Automobile Club de Monaco reacts to Ecclestone comments
21/07/2010 Hispania linked with Toyota
21/07/2010 Villeneuve clarifies Durango bid
20/07/2010 The real story behind the FIA's reversing revenues

Further Options

Click here to view a printer friendly version of this news item Printer friendly version of this news item
Click here to send this news item to a friend Send this news item to a friend
Click here to visit the Pitpass forum Discuss this news item in the Pitpass forum
Search the PITPASS news:
No punishment for Massa after 'jumped start'
FIA gives Koreans more time
Senna and di Grassi to contest Monaco triathlon
Q&A will Colin Kolles
Button: Vettel's car shouldn't have been on such a knife-edge
16-year-old Malaysian becomes youngest ever F1 tester
Wing flex debate takes a new twist
Hellmund unveils Austin track layout
All is not lost insists Alonso
Could Calder Park steal the Australian Grand Prix?
Another nice move by Webber
Teams aiming for 6 pre-season tests
Webber: I'm not getting too excited
Lauda denies making team order comments
Korea marks 50-day countdown
Who's nobbled EJ?
Amalgam releases Monaco winning Red Bull RB6
Belgian GP in Words, Stats and Pictures
Belgian GP: Fastest Race Laps
Belgian GP: Post Race press conference

More News...

Parente continues with Coloni
Spa - Sprint Race Quotes
Perez keeps championship alive
Driver & Team Standings after Spa
Spa: Sprint Race - Result

More News...

Click here to visit our sponsor GP2
GP3: Driver & Team Standings after Spa
Tambay drives the race of his life
GP3: Spa - Race 2 Result
GP3: Spa - Race 2 Grid
Five drivers penalised

More News...

  Click here for the Pitpass RSS Newsfeed