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7 Oct 2013, 16:08 (Ref:3314171) | #51 | ||
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The general lack of money of people in most developing nations means that most cannot afford to attend races frequently, yet alone compete! Countries should have to prove themselves to have interest and a good scene as well as an adequate economy before a GP is hosted. It's these reasons that I don't like Russia, the gangster state, being given a GP and the Winter Olympics, and a corrupt nation buying the football World Cup in 2022. |
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7 Oct 2013, 16:17 (Ref:3314174) | #52 | ||
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Skimming through this thread, anyone would think far eastern GPs were a new thing.
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7 Oct 2013, 16:55 (Ref:3314198) | #53 | |
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The only problem is that the new venues will largely only survive whist the government in power is prepared to keep writing the cheques, there is no commercial viability to them and no audience base to support them.
This is my main issue with them, they have spent too much money on the venues that will be barely used and paid an unsustainable fee to FOM to host the race. To me it seems such a waste, on many levels. |
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7 Oct 2013, 17:28 (Ref:3314219) | #54 | |||
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7 Oct 2013, 18:19 (Ref:3314239) | #55 | |||
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fair points though about the growth and size of the middle class in those other countries. i will give that aspect more though but i would have to think that being a member of the middle class in China is not the same (in terms of amount of disposable income or household earnings) as it is in a western nation and i doubt ticket prices reflect that reality. but maybe im making your point for you...i mean afterall if im saying that F1 is too expensive for the average joe then certainly having a pre existing interest in the sport means you are more likely to fork over that larger sum of money when asked for it. |
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7 Oct 2013, 18:58 (Ref:3314251) | #56 | |||
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7 Oct 2013, 19:02 (Ref:3314253) | #57 | |||
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To clarify I think new countries should start at the grassroots |
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7 Oct 2013, 19:13 (Ref:3314255) | #58 | ||
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7 Oct 2013, 20:25 (Ref:3314277) | #59 | ||
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If only some of these attributes were applied by FOM to F1 instead of chasing the dollar to the highest bidder, the legacy of F1 could be developing skills, engineering, academies, driver talent, etc..things that would last and potentially grow. Instead of which we see hundreds of millions for dollars spent on a venue that FOM and everyone else knows is going to gather dust for 12 months until they hold another GP, they can't afford to put on... the legacy of F1 in new countries could be so much better, IMO. |
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7 Oct 2013, 21:59 (Ref:3314311) | #60 | |||
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I happen to follow the Olympics extremely carefully and seriously. To give you an idea, I was the first person to update the Wikipedia page on the location of the 2020 Olympic Games. Aside from my passion for the Games, I totally agree with you. When picking new GPs (and perhaps when discarding old ones), we should figure out what went wrong. Perhaps we should invest more in the communities, cities, and nations in which are putting our racing in, and design our motor racing circuits like Olympic Parks, with stunning architecture, larger overall area, and more money invested. I guess I'm just repeating what someone else has said in a slightly different way; don't put a Grand Prix out in the middle of some squalid suburb (New Delhi) or sleepy industrial port away from any major activity (Yeongam). Personally I think GPs would be a far bigger success in many places around the world if it was visible just outside your office window in your city's CBD. I.e., tear down old Olympic Parks or old World Expo fairgrounds and build a sparkling new facility, or widen the boulevards and run a top-notch street race. |
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7 Oct 2013, 22:46 (Ref:3314320) | #61 | |||
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7 Oct 2013, 22:57 (Ref:3314324) | #62 | ||
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Well, not adjusting admission fees to local wage levels just means you are not in the game of marketing the GP to a new market. Pricing is marketing 101, it's not just an obscure part of the marketing mix.
It tells me the politicians are availing of an opportunity to hand out big contracts to their pals in the construction industry. The actual GP will take care of itself kind of attitude. It's a generalisation but it is the case with some of these new markets. Korea and India being at the top of the list of suspects. Some of them might be using a once off Olympic or World Cup model as well and don't have the expertise to promote a world event that reoccurs annually. Both the WC and the Olympics basically promote themselves, you need to do your homework with a GP though. Last edited by Paradise City; 7 Oct 2013 at 23:02. |
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7 Oct 2013, 23:09 (Ref:3314328) | #63 | |
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That might be the biggest problem with low attendance in China.
China is one of F1's biggest TV markets, up there with Brazil, Italy and Germany. Of course the large population plays a part, but the lower incomes and large rural population balance that some. Still, China has 10+ times the TV ratings of USA with only 4 times the population, so the fans should be there to attract, even from just the Yangtze river delta region. Ticket prices seem like the most obvious problem. |
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7 Oct 2013, 23:20 (Ref:3314330) | #64 | |||
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8 Oct 2013, 00:02 (Ref:3314344) | #65 | |
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Profitable or not, the sponsors and manufacturers want a Chinese GP, point. That's why it's in the calendar. China is the biggest emerging market.
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8 Oct 2013, 01:39 (Ref:3314365) | #66 | |||
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Have a look at the 2013 calendar. Catalunya is the first European race, and the track is only 33.2 km away from central Barcelona by the shortest possible road route. The Monaco Grand Prix is obviously a street circuit directly inside a semi-major European city. Silverstone is only a little over an hour away from Birmingham, taking the M1 and M6, the shortest road route. Cologne is only a few minutes further to Nurburgring than Birmingham is to Silverstone, and the shortest road route from central Budapest to the Hungaroring is only 21.4 km. Monza is only 17 km outside of Milan CBD. Only Spa is truly out in the middle of nowhere, and they nearly lost their GP (not that I'm advocating that, but for the sake of the argument...). Really, it isn't so different with Asia - Yeongam is truly out in the middle of nowhere (if you call Mokpo a major city you're insane) and Buddh is a fair ways outside of central Delhi. Even Shanghai is a bit of a drive from Pudong, where I suppose most of the drivers stay. And Suzuka is over an hour out from central Nagoya. I don't see much of a difference at all between the two continents, to be frank. Perhaps I over-researched. |
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8 Oct 2013, 06:10 (Ref:3314421) | #67 | |
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Interestingly, when the Chinese GP was first announced, every sponsor broker and marketing man from the teams tore over there, some even opened offices, ready to sit back and soak up all the sponsorship cash that would come there way from Chinese businesses. How many have emerged - aigo at McLaren is the only one that immediately comes to mind....
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8 Oct 2013, 12:59 (Ref:3314591) | #68 | |||
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Having looked at Google Earth I would say the Hungaroring and Monza were the exceptions. Next year the German GP goes back to Hockenheim and the Austrian GP makes a return, neither of which is near a major city. If the French GP were ever to return and I hope it does, Magny-Cours is in the middle of nowhere. The main problem with an Olympic style park is where are you going to build it? If it's going to be outside your office window, a lot of nearby buildings will have to be demolished, unless there's a suitable inner city brown field site and what are you going to do with venue in the off season? At least with a real Olympic park like Stratford it can be used by Premier League football team. Last edited by bjohnsonsmith; 8 Oct 2013 at 13:06. |
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8 Oct 2013, 19:05 (Ref:3314756) | #69 | ||
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I guess my numbers are a bit out of date. China was the largest F1 TV market in 2008 with 119 million viewers. http://www.motorauthority.com/news/1...e-grew-in-2008 Since then it has declined badly and fallen back behind Brazil, but at 49 million last season it was still #2 (I think, it's not explicitly stated, but the biggest European markets and Japan are usually in the 30-40 million range) and 5 times larger than the US. http://www.theguardian.com/media/201...formula-one-tv |
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8 Oct 2013, 19:16 (Ref:3314764) | #70 | |
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I think Grand Prix's should go to countries that would make a larger effort than finding the funds to pay the cheques to fill Bernie's pockets. Formula 1 is an expensive sport and undergoing a decline in general interest. Do the empty stands in Korea, or instances like the 2012 Bahrain Grand Prix help regain popularity? No. Formula 1 needs to go to countries where there would be a large fan base, allow the average fan to be able to see the race first hand, and have smooth, world class organisation from all involved. The country should also have to have either a driver racing in F1 or a good local motorsports scene. This requires the country to have a stable and large economy, a stable government, and enough wealth in your average bloke for them to be able to afford a £100 ticket to enter with that having a very small impact (if any) on his general earnings. Countries with an elite rich organisation, on the whole, shouldn't be allowed a Grand Prix, unless the motorsport interest there is large enough (and the ticket price to be low enough) to allow the fans who aren't in that elite group to enter.
With the 2014 F1 calendar in mind, the countries whose places are under attack are as follows: Malaysia Abu Dhabi Mexico Brazil and the countries who'd lose their GPs: Bahrain China South Korea Russia And I'd be seriously considering losing one of the USA venues here... |
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8 Oct 2013, 19:18 (Ref:3314765) | #71 | ||
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8 Oct 2013, 21:04 (Ref:3314810) | #72 | |
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Biscuit, what a bunch of socialist and elitist non-sense. By this "standard", F1 shouldn't be racing anywhere but in Europe in North America? China is the world's biggest car producer and a market. Brazil, India, and Russia are some of the biggest and fastest growing. (Ever heard of BRICs?). It seems ridiculous to say that F1 should not go to market where millions of people can afford an F1 ticket, but not an average farm worker. So what? Should people who can afford the ticket be punished for this? If F1 wants to grow fan base, it should certainly go to new places, places where perhaps there aren't enough fans right now. And most of below does not make any sense to me.
Abu Dhabi - One of the biggest spenders in motorsports and the creator of the Ferrari world theme park. I just don't see this GP being in danger. Mexico - a growing fan base due to Gutierrez and Perez. Huge market. Huge emerging economy. More than enough people to afford the ticket prices if there is any interest. Brazil - Are you joking? Same as Mexico, but with a fanatical fan base, and a long history of F1 driver participation. Advanced manufacturing economy that builds anything from jet planes to cars. China - Great racing in the last few years. World's biggest manufacturer and market. More than enough people who can afford tickets. Sponsors want F1 to stay there. Chinese have a strong drive to succeed in sports, and have many sponsors. I think it's a matter of time before some of Chinese will try to get into F1 racing too. Russia - Another BRIC. Big market and a producer of cars. Decent fan base even though no GP ever. Urban population fairly affluent. Anyone and their dog travels to Egypt, Turkey, etc (when there are no local wars there) to spend a summer vacation. What is $100-200 to most of them? Government is probably writing cheques for now. Growing local motorsport scene with their national touring, rally, junior formula, and whatnot racing. Russians now regularly drive in Le Mans and WRC, and Petrov was in F1 just last year. USA - Worlds biggest GDP and a huge market. If it wasn't for the greed of the F1 organizers, F1 would still be racing at Long Beach and Watking Glen. But they kept asking for more and more money, until those popular events close, and the USA GP had become a joke of a long succession of unpopular and ineptly organized GPs in streets of Dallas, Phoenix, and Las Vegas. Indy was _very_ popular event until Bernie asked too much money again. Bahrain - Racing in the middle of huge internal political strife is very controversial, but something is telling me that they pay Bernie well enough that he want to overlook that. On TV it looks like one of the most beautiful venues. I wish it says as long as they don't have civil wars. Korea - Those who can't afford it, will eventually lose their F1 race. Which is unfortunate. The race track is very challenging, for drivers and cars. The best criteria for having the GP is set by the free market. Those who can afford a GP, have it. Those who don't, lose it. It always has been like that and will continue this way. Now, can we set the political agendas aside, and talk about racing? Last edited by JacobP; 8 Oct 2013 at 21:16. |
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8 Oct 2013, 22:23 (Ref:3314852) | #73 | ||
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Eccelstone wants to see a country project a half decent image, he wants a government that can at least half maintain social peace and to seal the deal, he wants big cash.
I dunno. I don't see that equation ever changing. If F1 erodes in popularity in some post-Eccelstone dystopia maybe the 'big cash' equation will be tweaked but other than that.... I don't think these guys spend too many sleepless all-nighters down at the UN anguishing over development league tables, democratic indexes or corruption charts let's put it that way. |
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9 Oct 2013, 13:31 (Ref:3315203) | #74 | ||
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That's a good reading so far, good laughs also... looks like the cosmetics are the most important thing here.
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9 Oct 2013, 14:17 (Ref:3315221) | #75 | |||
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An interesting synopsis though, of the various countries regarding GPs. I don't agree with you on China. The GP has made a loss since it's inception and post season 2008 the organisers considered cancelling it. It wasn't until February 2011 that a new deal was done, after the organisers refused to pay the sanctioning fee but Bernie insisted that from 2011 onwards the F1 season have 20 races and reduced the fee and extended the race until 2017. People may very well be able to afford tickets, however, the reality is there are empty stands and it still continues to make a loss. As far as I can see it's Bernie who is setting the criteria for hosting GPs, not the freemarket. |
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