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6 Oct 2016, 15:58 (Ref:3677866) | #1301 | |||
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Ceterum censeo GTE-Am esse delendam. |
6 Oct 2016, 17:05 (Ref:3677878) | #1302 | ||
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6 Oct 2016, 17:27 (Ref:3677884) | #1303 | ||
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With Rebellion leaving P1, I could see a demise of P1-L, and why not, a place for the DPi at Le Mans.
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6 Oct 2016, 17:40 (Ref:3677889) | #1304 | |
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Most Manufacturers just wanted to choose one of the four P2 chassis and put their engine in it.They want the engine in the 600hp range and be able to race at Le Mans either in P2(except ACO/FIA BOP) or P1 Subclass.
Only GM/NASCAR wanted the NASCAR Bodykits on the P2. |
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6 Oct 2016, 19:40 (Ref:3677916) | #1305 | ||||
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No. No they weren't.
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It's one thing to subsidize an entry or two(IMSA is still subsidizing AXR and SoD to a limited extent), it's quite another to subsidize a significant chunk of the field. Subsidizing the majority, or entirety, of a field is the clearest sign of a weak class/championship. It was a bad thing for Champ Car and it was a bad thing for Grand-Am. Subsidizing entries is a drag on the pocketbook of the championship, making it even harder for the series to profit. Since the need to subsidize a field usually comes from insufficient interest to turn a profit in the first place, it only compounds the loss of money and things recovering even harder. Grand-Am could get away with it because they had NASCAR money to do it with. It was still a very bad thing - instead of spending that money on subsidizing a class that had insufficient interest to stand on it's own, they should have been looking into other options to boost interest in participation in their series. |
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6 Oct 2016, 20:09 (Ref:3677927) | #1306 | ||
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6 Oct 2016, 21:25 (Ref:3677941) | #1307 | ||
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7 Oct 2016, 14:21 (Ref:3678132) | #1308 | |
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7 Oct 2016, 14:50 (Ref:3678140) | #1309 | |
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IndyCar subsidizes the field through Winner's Circle payouts ... and that series has come back from near-death to actually doing pretty well.
F1 subsidizes teams through shares of media money---so do most major sports leagues (like the obviously failing, tottering along, about-to-die NFL .... ) Subsidizing teams to get a series going when it isn't offering enough income through sponsor dollars and purses: (IndyCar)---worked. Subsidizing teams via a a share of the income of the whole league (NFL, etc) works really well. The reason Grand-Am's subsidy program failed is that its product was not one the fans wanted ... but given what USCC looked like for the first two years and given who has won the championship each year ... one could honestly say that NASCAR's subsidizing of Rolex was pretty successful. Further ... given that The France family put in the start-up money for Camel GT and all the series which grew out of that ... then switched over to Grand-Am/Rolex ... and considering the France family is still in control of North America's top-tier sportscar racing series ... I'd say that all those subsidy dollars have benefited both NASCAR and sportscar racing fans. |
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7 Oct 2016, 15:37 (Ref:3678148) | #1310 | ||
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Maelochs : As relates to your last paragraph I may be wrong but I seem to recall John Bishop going to the France family asking for some help to start that series . The inner circle talk at the time was France Family ISC etc ; was in at 75% of cost to float the series in the first year pending talks with T Wayne Roberts from RJ Reynolds to confirm and bring in " Camel " the following year .
Maybe not the right word here but the France family did NOT want the WINSTON dollars used in the Sportscar Series even though technically they were coming from the same Corporation . Co-Mingling of said funds VIA the various Racing Corp's set up by the France Family is somewhat Unique in Essence we will never really know which corp's were writing checks to whom ? |
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7 Oct 2016, 17:03 (Ref:3678173) | #1311 | ||
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I can't remember seeing this posted here, but Marshall had some more info on the Nissan DPi program.
http://www.racer.com/more/viewpoints...ripple-effects pretty much what was expected, but has actual material from the folks involved. The engine is the big part of the program and the Ligier bodywork will be "breathed on" slightly. |
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7 Oct 2016, 17:32 (Ref:3678184) | #1312 | ||
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7 Oct 2016, 17:33 (Ref:3678185) | #1313 | ||
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7 Oct 2016, 17:39 (Ref:3678188) | #1314 | ||
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7 Oct 2016, 17:40 (Ref:3678190) | #1315 | ||
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7 Oct 2016, 17:48 (Ref:3678194) | #1316 | |||
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L.P. |
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Probae esti in segetem sunt deteriorem datae fruges, tamen ipsae suaptae enitent |
7 Oct 2016, 18:20 (Ref:3678199) | #1317 | |
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Who is building the best powerboat DPi, and can Chris-Craft or Donzi get in on testing?
https://twitter.com/LE_Collectibles/...34747040788480 |
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7 Oct 2016, 18:49 (Ref:3678206) | #1318 | |||
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http://autoweek.com/article/nascar/h...ytona-speedway L.P. |
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7 Oct 2016, 19:05 (Ref:3678213) | #1319 | |||||
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A subsidy in the world of motorsports is an additional payout to guarantee participation on top of the normal expected race earnings - generally, the race purse. F1 and IndyCar's payouts are not subsidies because they're the expected payouts and they are done in line with the series' respective incomes(in theory in the case of IndyCar and it's tight budget). To put it more simply, under the logic of what you've said, my local dirt track subsidizes entries by having a payout structure that gives competitors money. Money coming from the series/organizers/whoever else is not automatically a subsidy. Grand-Am and CCWS subsidized the field by paying teams EXTRA money specifically to take part - the payouts were NOT part of the structure of the championship. This is why subsidies are a drag on the series pocketbook - there is no income that directly recoups the cost of the subsidy, meaning that only a massive surge in the series' overall income can offset the expense, and if a series is struggling enough to need the subsidized entries then getting that surge in income is generally going to be quite an uphill battle. Quote:
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7 Oct 2016, 19:14 (Ref:3678216) | #1320 | |
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Lots of series have paid "appearance" money to drivers/teams. Anyway ... you need to be right, so you need to find definitions and descriptions which suit your view. I am cool with that.
I like racing more than I like pointless bickering on the Internet. Testing at Daytona in mid-November .... hopefully a first look at the new DPis at speed. Oh, wait ... am I allowed to post stuff about DPis in this thread? |
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7 Oct 2016, 19:18 (Ref:3678219) | #1321 | |||
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I cannot wait as well. |
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7 Oct 2016, 21:10 (Ref:3678242) | #1322 | |||
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Appearance fees are more often than not part of the established payout structure.
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Where are both of those championships, now? That's right, both merged with another series and found themselves under the control of people who DIDN'T pay teams extra money just to be part of the field - though the ultimate ownership situation of each merger is VERY different, the people in charge of the series in both cases ended up being the ones who stuck to giving money to the teams within the confines of their championship's payout structure. This is the issue I am getting at. If you want to regard a subsidy in a different light, go right ahead. But you're still missing the ponit if you're going to try to debate the nuances of what exactly a "subsidy" is. I am referring to a specific problem that is NOT anywhere near as common as you're trying to make it out to be. One that is a VERY clear sign of a weak championship. You want to call it something else, go right ahead. But don't try to act like it never happened - even Felix Sebates admitted to this matter. |
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11 Oct 2016, 12:29 (Ref:3679282) | #1323 | ||
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11 Oct 2016, 14:42 (Ref:3679315) | #1324 | |
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12 Oct 2016, 14:02 (Ref:3679566) | #1325 | ||
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