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23 Mar 2007, 16:08 (Ref:1874580) | #1 | |||||||
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CCWS Owner Motivation to Running Series & The Way They Run It
We went off topic in this thread http://tentenths.com/forum/showthrea...35#post1874335, so I figued we could start a new one and continue the discussion. While there is some overlap on older topics, I think this one brought up some new ideas regarding the owner's motivation with the CCWS right now. I think it's important because it ends up impacting how drivers get to race and teams exist. Ultimately that impacts the on track action.
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The lease thing isn't as generous as they've tried to make it sound. From what I've read it sounds like it's a lease to own with a three year term through a bank. In other words if you want to spread out the costs, that's between you and a bank. For instance, if after one season you don't want to race anymore, the series will take your 1/3 car cost and your car. Quote:
Cutting the loses would be to sell TO, LB, Surfers and Mexico to the IRL, find a buyer from Cosworth and walk away. If there was no positive cash from that, they'd declare bankruptcy for CC and sell Cosworth. They don't because they want the series to work. Quote:
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If that doesn't make sense, think of Chrysler. They sell $60B/year and analysts believe their value is somewhere between $5B and negative (ie. Mercedes would pay someone to take it off their hands). Quote:
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23 Mar 2007, 20:06 (Ref:1874727) | #2 | |
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The 3 amigos threw down when no one else would in 2004. Like the judge said I choose life over death.
In hindsight I believe the pookfare checks where a mistake in 2003. Socialism has failed everywhere were tried and it failed here. The old CART may still be around if there had been a $50 million prize fund for 2003. That would have generated huge interest among drivers, teams, fans, promoters and sponsors. Instead we got pookfare, which in fairness did keep the series going after an attempt from within to kill cart, but we only got what we paid for. The current ownership of champcar has done the right thing by telling the teams the handouts are over, instead splashing out the dollars on a better tv package to help teams get sponsors in the future and on a new car which over 3 years costs significantly less to operate. From their actions, I think it's clear the owners of champcar are trying to make it a viable player in the motor racing landscape. People often focus on the failures like the ansan race we've heard endlessly about. But one thing is clear. They do listen to fans and are making an effort to have a good series. Some things work and some don't. Remember Road America is back because of the fans. I'm ready for Vegas. |
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24 Mar 2007, 00:04 (Ref:1874850) | #3 | |||
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24 Mar 2007, 00:48 (Ref:1874857) | #4 | ||
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On the way they run the series or why they do things-My Question is why would the Seires Owner take pay drivers?
I know they are spending a lot on the series, so are they try not to lose anything from their own teams? What postitves are coming from pay drivers driving for the series owners? I know Jani should be an okay(maybe great driver plus all that redbull money) but then Gomedy for the other car while Servia, Junky, Phillipe, & countless others walk. Doesnt pay drivers for an Owner send a bad message to the other owners, not to mention the fans? That was one of the reasons Adrian Fernandez left because Kevin and Gery both took mexican drivers and sponsorship that other lesser teams were looking to get and could have used(not to mentions that after that fiasco Bobby Rahal left right behind him). At least on the outside the onwers taking pay drivers and not running two cars does not seam to tick off any of the owners too much to leave. But then again some of those have put to much in to leave, and I dont see the IRL as a much better place to go to. Are they saving money on thier teams so they can save the seires else where? Is there any reason the Series owners talk about 1 car teams and take pay drivers that are good? Are they hoping for a little help with thier teams now so they can better their teams later. I guess I am just looking for logical explanations on these actions, but can not see any myself. I just hope they don't take pay drivers next year, that they run two cars and have deserving drivers, otherwise it sends too bad a message. |
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24 Mar 2007, 01:00 (Ref:1874860) | #5 | |||
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24 Mar 2007, 02:14 (Ref:1874883) | #6 | ||
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Keep your chins up, everyone....
There is a "plan" and the "proof is in the pudding," as KK himself said before the Earth-shattering announcements from Laguna... Be patient...we'll have an 18-car field at Vegas... Smile... All is well in the world Viva Las Vegas |
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Finally... One American Open Wheel Series! |
24 Mar 2007, 02:43 (Ref:1874904) | #7 | ||
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Remember adrian's problems with tecate, quaker state and others had to do with his own actions. No one was poaching his sponsors from him! Honestly, I don't see much point though talking about what happened 3 years ago. Roll on Las Vegas. |
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24 Mar 2007, 11:15 (Ref:1875001) | #8 | |
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Snrub, have read your post twice now and it's thought-provoking.
Basically, it would seem that this year, CC is in a different mode. The past three years, the projection or image has been to build the series. This year, the projection seems to be not losing as much money. The change in mode has been rapid. The "no subsidies" edict doesn't seem to have borne fruit. Some of those teams only existed because of Pookfare in the last year of CART. Pettit, Gentilozzi and Forsythe running one car each (at present). KK taking $2.5 million of Gommendy's money, then the guy falling out of the race car halfway through the first test day. Bear, Stearns was hired to find potential buyers for CART when it was a public company and found no interest other than The Amigos. At the bankruptcy hearing, as someone pointed out, TG showed up with interest in three events and other than that, no one but The Amigos showed up for even a lesser price to take the thing on. Time will tell where it goes.......but it's certainly "whoa-ed up" from three years ago. |
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24 Mar 2007, 11:52 (Ref:1875009) | #9 | ||
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Thank you for starting this thread, Snrub. It gives those of us who wish to an opportunity to discuss this without derailing another thread and those who do not wish to discuss don't have to worry about being forced to read through after a thread gets "borrowed." (Hijacking is such a negative term!)
Now, to your post Snrub. You make valid points and to be honest, I am not sure which came first: the "chicken" of defensive buying to preserve the series or the "egg" of the purchases (Cosworth, promotion etc) to fit into the long term goals of their plan. I think it likely to be the latter but I am just speculating, as we all are here. As far as your comment about "violating a business tenet." Hmm, well they could cut their losses by selling, couldn't they. But to who? Right, TG. And just like in '03/'04 when they picked up CART in the bankruptcy, they got it cheap as they were the only bidders for the whole enchilada. I would put forward that they want to sell the whole thing - including all those DP-01s - and so TG, who really only wants certain events is not compelled to make an offer. As IC points out, Bear Stearns (admittedly a few years ago now) could not find any interested parties and I see nothing that has changed. The Amigos have, imho, painted themselves into a corner. They are in to far to sell piecemeal and the George family didn't get to be mega-wealthy by being foolish. They can wait it out - or at least they perceive they can wait it out for now. boom boom - nice post! How quickly we forget that the Amigos began poaching pay drivers for themselves! Yes, Honda $$ were a factor, but the Amigos made it more of a factor by plucking pay drivers with $$. |
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24 Mar 2007, 16:21 (Ref:1875098) | #10 | ||
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While the series itself likely doesn't have any potential suiters (other than TG paying a say a couple milion to stop anyone from running a competitor series), there are some assets that other series would be interested in.
Surfers, LB, TO, Edmonton (I forgot about that one!) and Mexico city would be viable races for other series. Look at St. Petes, CC dumped a bunch of money into a race to get it going, the IRL ran there and now ALMS! In other words, some of the less successful races might have value too. I suspect that the Frances would be interested in a number of those for Grand Am or Busch, particularly Edmonton and TO for the later. ALMS could certainly race at any of those too. I suspect that for Surfers only the IRL would be interested, but the race itself would probably continue with just the V8s. While people might be interested, how much would they be willing to pay for an existing contract? Probably not a lot, so evidently I agree with what JohnSSC has said about there being little value in those "assets." It also appeared that Cosworth was bought for a song, in part because the generous employee pensions were maintained. Ford publically admitted as much (ie. that the purchase price was not the largest offer). I suspect that with the loss of the F1 business the value has dropped significantly. As for the defensive vs. vertical integration purchases. Name one that was the later. TG was interested in TO and LB. IRL-related interests wanted Cosworth and CC needed engines. Some of the other self promoted races were unsuccessful and it made perfect sense that no one was going to pay CC for the priviliage of promoting. At the time it seemed that Fernandez was concerned with the lack of stability (no promise of subsidies, etc) and the lack of trust in the new ownership (significantly due to the Mexican thing). Of course Honda money made it safe for the team to move to the IRL. I know at the time I didn't hold anything against Fernandez. |
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24 Mar 2007, 21:07 (Ref:1875233) | #11 | |
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I don't know why we are talking about selling champcar when the current owners have no desire to do so.
Actually cosworth never made money or much money on Formula 1 in recent years. The benefit from F1 was development of technology for use in other areas and from having the name out there associated with F1. |
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24 Mar 2007, 22:19 (Ref:1875288) | #12 | |||||
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The intent of the TV contract is to build a larger audience and attract more fans to attract more sponsors. Sponsors for the telecasts. Sponsors for races. Sponsors for race teams. Maybe, even, a sponsor for the whole series. So it is not so much a decision to not lose as much money at this point as using the money they are losing for a different purpose. That is all part of the 5 year business plan. Quote:
Maybe it is just too soon to remove all of the subsidies. Maybe they will have to wait another year, until there has been more and better TV exposure to help attract more sponsors. I could see management restoring some, but not all, of the subsidies for one more year. That isn't part of the business plan, but it may be what they need to do. Quote:
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This year the series has a new chassis, a new TV contract, and six new racing venues. Four venues that lost money for the series last year are gone. Not every new venue is an instant success, so we'll have to see where that goes. Usually it takes 2 or 3 years for a new venue to grow to success, with Edmonton being a notable exception. All of that says the series is investing in its future. I don't consider that to be anything like "whoa-ed up" from three years ago. Even through they have made a large commitment of resources to TV the Amigos may have to extend at least a portion of the subsidies. I'm betting they will do that, if they have to, to get at least 16, and likely 17 or 18 cars on the grid in Las Vegas. And that won't look significantly different than last year or the two years before that. It all depends on how much the three amigos want to invest and how they think it is best invested, as it has for the past three years. After the question of the size of the field is determined, the real question for 2007 will be whether or not Champ Car can gradually attract a larger TV audience throughout 2007. And it will take most of the year to really know that. |
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24 Mar 2007, 22:39 (Ref:1875309) | #13 | |
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DaPix, I can understand your points about accounting for spending in different areas, and I can certainly see last-minute spending to shore up the grid, but you talk a lot about it being "part of the plan."
I really doubt that The Amigos planned to blow this much money to start with as part of the plan. Case in point: It's taken three years for them to realize that the Spikes and the Speeds aren't going to get it, TV-wise, and extra money must be spent on that this time. As far as "no subsidies" go, there's more of a stalemate now than in past years, probably because of the new cars. The last few team owners are waiting for sponsors and/or drivers with money. Sponsors haven't been drawn, competent drivers without money have been turned away and drivers WITH money haven't come forth in enough numbers to matter and the ones who have some are looking to cut their best deals. That leaves the series to fix it, or run a smaller grid with lesser talent. As for venues, don't get me started on not having a finite schedule by March 24. In order for a team to approach a sponsor and answer the question, "what markets will you race in?", a team needed to know that last fall. It's a Catch-22 and it's all about money. |
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25 Mar 2007, 04:32 (Ref:1875478) | #14 | ||||||
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Going back to the Fernandez topic. Notice how years later there are two really good pay drivers (in that they have big $$$) in the series and they're both on a series owner's team? The other teams have to be a little frustrated by that. What makes even less sense to me is why Jani is on PKV when Forsythe or RuSport would obviously been preferable, or Minardi for that matter. One wonders why Petit isn't annoyed by that? Last edited by Snrub; 25 Mar 2007 at 04:35. |
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25 Mar 2007, 11:09 (Ref:1875694) | #15 | ||
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[QUOTE=mountainstar]: "I don't know why we are talking about selling champcar when the current owners have no desire to do so."
We aren't. We are speculating on how long they will continue putting money into the business and what forms the support by the Amigos is taking currently. After all, these guys have been touted as veritable lead-pipe cinches to make this work because they are Captains of Industry. Why? Well, let's see: the Amigos have been touted as successful business men. They have a 5 year-plan. They have the acumen to have become multi-million if not billionaires (KK/GF, not PG). Now, let's suppose for a moment they want to put their enjoyment of racing on a "business footing." They would have a business model that is integrated into the plan. They would, as part of that, have financial projections for: capital costs, advertising, wage costs, revenue, taxes, legal fees, travel, property leases and anticipated profit/loss, etc. Now, presuming these guys are as savvy as we have been led to believe, part of the "plan" would also be to determine at what point you need to sell. In other words, just as you want to determine the point at which you anticipate the business being viable you also have a stop-loss point where continuing to pour money in will result in no commensurate return. Part of the formula to business success is not only knowing when to latch on to a good idea and growing it but also knowing when it is time to get out. Now, the point to the thread here (I think) is to discuss where the remaining Amigos are in this continuum. It has been an interesting one so far! Last edited by JohnSSC; 25 Mar 2007 at 11:12. |
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25 Mar 2007, 12:15 (Ref:1875765) | #16 | |
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I believe Pettit is an Amigo now, too, correct?
.....and this sounds pretty definitive about merger for now..... http://www.sportsline.com/autoracing/story/10085713 Last edited by indycool; 25 Mar 2007 at 12:18. |
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25 Mar 2007, 13:07 (Ref:1875798) | #17 | ||
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I would have to agree, IC that Pettit is one of the Amigos at this point with PG being an "Amigo-Lite" or no longer one.
TG stated as much during his time on "Windtunnel" which is hosted by Dave Despain. The Beta Fish all want to continue to want to fight to the finish, do they not? |
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"He's still a young guy and I always think, slightly morbidly, the last thing you learn is how to die and at the end of the day everybody learns every single day." - The Ever-Cheerfull Ron Dennis on Lewis Hamilton. |
25 Mar 2007, 13:11 (Ref:1875801) | #18 | |
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Best semi-educated, heavily qualified guess I've heard is that PG still owns 2.5 percent for his initial investment.
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25 Mar 2007, 14:34 (Ref:1875822) | #19 | ||
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Some where in this thread it was suggested that CC owners didnt have the desire to have strong drivers and were only interested in making the series profitable.
Was talking about such an assertion with a few buddies today and one made a point about the CC Atlantic program. I think this is a fine example that the owners do care about developing quality drivers and dont have long term plans of accepting pay drivers from the world over. |
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25 Mar 2007, 14:59 (Ref:1875839) | #20 | |
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I don't think anyone has said the owners didn't have the desire to have strong drivers. I think people have said some owners don't want to or can't pay for them right now.
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25 Mar 2007, 15:51 (Ref:1875878) | #21 | |||
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Is that money they save from pay drivers helping in other areas? I think it hurts more than helps, unless they are getting more money then we imagine which I dont think is the case. I think in shoring up the TV and other areas of the series, they really dropped the ball on Drivers and in the image that portrays. So do we think next year the Series owners will have 2 teams each and no Pay drivers next year, or do they need that money elsewhere next year as well? |
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25 Mar 2007, 15:57 (Ref:1875883) | #22 | ||
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[QUOTE=JohnSSC]
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As I've been told, champcar doesn't even lose money on it's time buys on tv. |
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25 Mar 2007, 20:56 (Ref:1876151) | #23 | ||
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Well, I was not asserting that anything I or anyone else writes here is Gospel. Nor, as I recall, am I making anyone else read it, respond to it or otherwise pay any attention to it.
When I am with friends and the conversation turns to a subject that does not interest me, I simply move along to one I like better - at worst I see if there is anything new on the snack table! boom boom, everything I have seen indicates that the time buy will initially cost them money, perhaps an amount that is close to what the subsidies have been in the past. There is an opportunity for that to be offset by advertising, but what that will represent when all is said and done is an unknown. |
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"He's still a young guy and I always think, slightly morbidly, the last thing you learn is how to die and at the end of the day everybody learns every single day." - The Ever-Cheerfull Ron Dennis on Lewis Hamilton. |
26 Mar 2007, 17:24 (Ref:1876875) | #24 | ||
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Solid logic DaPix and well delivered.
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26 Mar 2007, 17:34 (Ref:1876894) | #25 | |||
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They use to call that B.S. but that was in the old days before 'W' started running things. |
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