F1 back to digging its own hole again…

WELL, that didn’t take long.

After a few months of unity as the sport re-engineered itself following the Coronavirus shutdown, Formula 1 has reverted to type and is back to bickering, politicking and arguing over stupid things that shouldn’t matter.

Take, for example, the argument over brake ducts on the Racing Points.

I’ve followed F1 for 30 years and loved discussing things like the 1995 introduction of higher cockpit sides following Senna’s death and Mika Hakkinen’s Adelaide accident, changes that completely changed the shape of the cars.

I vacillated over the various engine changes from V12s to V10s and the screaming V8’s. I argued with friends whether Williams’ Renault V10 was better than Benneton’s Ford V8 in 1994.

I liked pouring over the details of the shift to the high-nose era of the mid 1990s and the switch from slick tyres to grooved and back. I love nothing more than a top-10 list of the best looking F1 cars of all time. And on it goes.

Therefore I feel like I am, what most would define, a reasonably well informed and interested fan of such things in Grand Prix Racing.

But brake ducts? Negative. Nope. Could not care less.

That a small, relatively benign carbon fibre component could such shape the narrative of the sport in the past few weeks, putting even the issues around race and Coronavirus on the back burner, is an indictment on everything currently awry with the biggest show in motorsport.

It is very, very cliché F1 and for the love of everything motorsport, it has to stop – especially if the sport is ever to move forward to the much-heralded new era so vaunted by Ross Brawn & co in 2022.

Of course, the real issue surrounding the current dramas with Racing Point versus almost everyone else isn’t so much about the brake ducts themselves, rather the philosophy that saw the Silverstone-based team basically copy and paste last year’s Mercedes AMG F1 car to design their 2020 pink rocket.

They claim it’s within the rules and the brake ducts were part of the listed parts provided by Mercedes F1 in their deal with the team, while others, led by Renault, say they’re blending the definition of what it means to be a constructor.

And the fact that McLaren, to be powered by Mercedes-Benz next year, and Williams, who use Mercedes’ engines now and also their gun driver George Russell, have both pulled their protests is just F1 to a tee.

Whatever. I don’t care. I am literally more interested in watching the recently applied paint to my outdoor area dry than I am discussing brake ducts on F1 cars.

What I do care about, however, is there being hard, competitive racing and a group of cars heading into every race with a chance to at least get on the podium, if not win.

Right now it’s Mercedes miles in front, Red Bull capable with one car if it’s hot and the rest fighting out an immense mid-pack fight.

A mid-pack fight, by the way, that is a prime example of what the entire Formula 1 field should be like; a bunch of good teams, evenly matched and having a big crack with whoever executes best on the day or in the conditions coming out on top.

Imagine if that midfield fight was for the race lead! It would be remarkable.

Now I consider myself an F1 traditionalist and I love the concept of the best team and best driver winning in any given season and everyone building their own things to achieve that. It’s the way it has always been and I don’t want that to change too much.

But as I have grown older and hopefully (though some would disagree) wiser, the more I watch F1 the more I want a series where more often than not, there are multiple potential winners on any given day. The last time F1 truly delivered that was probably the epic 2010 season, though I could be wrong.

The point of all this is that in the last week F1 as an industry teams has made the brake ducts the hill on which they are going to die on, and in doing so have completely missed the point.

It shouldn’t be about that and more about producing a sporting product that delivers a more open playing field and better racing.

If one team using another brake ducts makes for more competitive racing, then for crying out loud, let them have it.

The technical anoraks love the discussion and hardcore F1 fans froth over such details, but if the usual 150,000 spectators were at Silverstone at the weekend, how many of them do you think would have really cared if Racing Point pinched Mercedes-AMG’s designs for a brake cooling device?
Yeah, I don’t think it would be many either.

If F1 is going to charge into the bright, exciting, more competitive future that Ross Brawn has envisaged for 2022 and onward, ridding itself of ridiculous debates around components like brake ducts and focusing more on the actual sporting side of the competition must to be a priority.

Working full time in the motorsport industry since 2004, Richard has established himself within the group of Australia’s core motorsport broadcasters, covering the support card at the Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix for Channel 10, the Bathurst 12 Hour for Channel 7 and RadioLeMans plus Porsche Carrera Cup & Touring Car Masters for FOX Sports’ Supercars coverage. Works a PR bloke for several teams and categories, is an amateur motorsport photographer and owns five cars, most of them Holdens, of varying vintage and state of disrepair.

http://www.theracetorque.com/

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