Reaping the Whirlwind

On June 21, 2005, in Racing, by faisal

So it’s come down to this. Eleven years after Ayrton Senna‘s tragic death cast a pall over Formula 1 and made everyone rethink safety, Bernie Ecclestone and Max Mosley have put up a tent and made everyone rethink clown cars.


This weekend’s US Grand Prix was the ninth race of the season, the first season of the millennium to not be so boring as to serve as a prescription insomnia cure. All seven teams running Michelin tires did not race, giving Michael Schumacher his first “win” of the season.

The official reason for the withdrawal was that the Michelin tires were not prepared for the Indianapolis track, which is somewhat cobbled out of the oval designed for our “go fast, turn left” style of racing. However, rules changes were offered that would have let the race go on as planned — changes that weren’t accepted. This begs questions about Max and Bernie’s respective grips on (market) reality. Are they mad, power-mad, or just plain desperate for Ferrari to win? Since Bernie and Max have made careers — and billions of pounds — by running F1 (into the ground), we can’t assume they are idiots, but it’s worth looking at the series of events which brought us to this point.

In the mid-nineties, when Ferrari couldn’t win a race if their life depended on it, many people thought that Formula 1′s fortunes were rather tied to Ferrari’s. From all outward appearances, Bernie and Max joined the Ferrari team in an all-out attempt to make sure Ferrari was once again competitive, and by “competitive” we mean “dominant”. This may not actually be what the Formula 1 powers-that-be set out to do, but it sure looks that way from the outside.

At first, Ferrari could use all the help they could get — their car was actually less reliable than Jaguar’s. Yes, they had Michael Schumacher, but while he’s quite good, there’s a reason Wikipedia lists him with the passionless “statistically the most successful F1 driver ever”. He’s no Senna, and he’s certainly no Fangio. Some days he isn’t even a Damon Hill.

But, with Hill retired and the rest of the field relegated to teams who weren’t willing to pour nearly as much money into winning, Schumacher and Ferrari’s dominance was assured. Schumacher had a car he could drive the way he wanted, and Ferrari had a driver who would win races. Sponsorship revenues soared, fans went wild, and vendors started paying attention. And still, the F1 governing authorities seemed to do whatever was necessary to ensure Ferrari owned the field.

Over time, though, the shine faded. Who were the new drivers? Where was the excitement? Who cares? Of my four friends who would obsessively watch F1 at race time in 2000, only one still occasionally catches a race in replay. While he still makes the pilgrimage to a couple races a year, he now comes back with stories about the parties which are far more interesting than the stories about the race.

Still, the Ferrari-favoritism lived on, with no apparent end in sight. Yes, every year they rolled out new rules to make it look like Ferrari was at risk of losing, but every year Ferrari seemed to grow more entrenched.

Until, quite by surprise, this year. Suddenly, we were eight races into the season without a single Ferrari victory. Suddenly, Fernando Alonso was dominating the Drivers’ Championship, and Michael Schumacher was third behind Kimi R‰ikkˆnen. Suddenly, Schumacher was taking home over three million dollars per race he lost.

What went wrong? Fingers point everywhere. A month ago, Ferrari President Luca di Montezemolo blamed Bridgestone for failing to make competitive tires. Yet Ferrari’s tire problems were of their own making — after years of pressuring Bridgestone to pay more attention to Ferrari, Bridgestone wasn’t supplying any top-tier teams with tires. With this year’s more radical rule changes, Bridgestone had no other competitive cars on which to test tires, and Ferrari was suddenly running inadequately tested tires.

Fans joked that Montezemolo was blaming Bridgestone for making the season interesting, but suddenly the season was, yes, interesting. Which brings us to another question: is Ferrari still competitive? They clearly know how to dominate, and they know how to keep winning, but have they forgotten how to win in the first place? Is Schumacher past his prime? And can he win again now that people realize he isn’t invincible? It’s worth remembering that Schumacher has won the championship by a close margin in the past, and on some days that margin put somebody else into a tire-wall.

Which brings us, then, to this past weekend.

During qualifying, Ralf Schumacher’s tire blew in Turn 13, and Michelin realized that their tires were not safe for the speeds through that turn. Michelin is familiar with the United States’ reasonably prudent person standard for legal liability, and warned everyone that the tires were not safe.

[queue dramatic music]

Michelin teams wanted a chicane installed right before the turn.

Ferrari didn’t want the chicane.

The Formula 1 governing bodies — who usually seem willing to arbitrarily change the rules “for reasons of safety” whenever and wherever it furthers Ferrari’s chances of winning — engaged in professional hand-wringing.

Eventually it was decreed that drivers running Michelin tires should slow down in turn 13.

Having told professional race car drivers to maybe not drive so fast, the FIA sat on its thumbs and waited.

Every team running Michelin tires withdrew from the race, citing safety reasons.

Ferrari and Jordan engaged in the ritual of “hey, free points”. They were joined by Minardi, whose boss, Paul Stoddart, promptly went on Dutch TV and called the entire race “a farce”, apologized to the fans, expressed sympathy for the Michelin teams, placed the blame squarely on the FIA’s shoulders, and then switched to more colorful language.

Fans – many many of whom paid over $100 per seat, took time off from work, and flew in for the event – walked out.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway owner Tony George refused to wave the checkered flag, took a bath on the proceeds, and may not allow F1 back next year.

Other fans are suing everyone in sight.

And now, facing a backlash, Max Mosley — who apparently learned his management skills from his father — has summoned all Michelin teams to explain why they dared to consider their drivers’ safety and the safety of the fans to be more important than the safety of FIA’s pocketbook.

The unanswered question is: why did the FIA not adjust the race rules so there would be an actual race and not a farce? History and appearances would suggest that Ecclestone and Mosley were desperate for a Ferrari win, any Ferrari win. But, that may not be the case at all, and the decision was so bizarre that it’s almost pointless to pontificate.

Instead we need to ask a different set of questions: why are the teams taking the heat for this? For all of the FIA’s historically tense relationship with the teams, why did Mosley think the solution to this problem was a giant game of safety chicken with 100,000 fans in the middle? Why does Mosley still have a job? Is F1 dead in the US? When will the FIA management relent from the WWF style antics, put fans first and let competitors compete? And will anybody still care by the time it happens?

The clock is ticking.

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3 Responses to “Reaping the Whirlwind”

  1. I’ve watched nearly every race (and most practice and qualifing sessions) for the last few years, and I even watched F1 months delayed when I could find it in the old days before the Speed Channel and Tivo.

    The blame should land squarely on Mr. Mosely and whoever else was responsible for this stupid “one set of tires for the weekend” bullshit foisted upon us this year in the name of safety.

    That rule has made the practice on Friday pointless… no one wants to wear out their tires. It’s made qualifing lamer too… some tires are good in the race some are good at qualifying. This has lead to lamer races too, since the good qualifiers get out fast then desperately try to hang on to their lead, and pit stops are especially boring now.

    If that wasn’t bad enough, the one set of tires rule is very, very unsafe. Ask Kimi Raikkonen. He experienced a shunt while leading the last lap of the race when his flat spotted tire finally shook the suspension to distruction. The rules are vague enough that Kimi had little choice but to continue driving an unsafe car.

    Now we get this weekend. If the teams could change tires, the Michelin teams could have come in every 10 laps or so and swapped tires. Sure they’d have been torched by the Bridgestones, but the racing would still be cool.

    The rules in F1 are becoming too arcane and narrowly defined. We are a few years away from some lame-ass spec racing series… with many millions of dollars going into optimizing within the very narrow ruleset instead of developing new technology. I long for the days of V12s racing against V10s and V8s… that was exciting. F1 should be taking lessons from NASA-X (National Auto Sport Association’s power-to-weight segregated, nearly unlimited technology racing classes) instead of IRL and NASCAR.

    They haven’t turned me off the sport yet, but they are pissing me off.

  2. Toby says:

    I think you pretty much nailed it here. If Bernie and Max hadn’t spent so much time siding with Ferrari against the other nine, then maybe they would get the benefit of the doubt this time. But any rational person has to assume that the FIA acted as they did to avoid annoying Ferrari.

    The immediate cause of the problem was Michelin’s failure to produce safe tires. But the FIA had 48 hours to find a solution. Of the three possibilities they offered, one was stupid (driving slowly), one reckless (keep changing your tires, and hope they don’t explode in the meantime) and one I admit to not fully understanding (use other tires but take a points penalty.) But, happy that they had offered choices, the FIA sat back and rejected all other alternatives, and we can only assume that the reason for this was that the famous chicane would have hindered Ferrari.

    The Indy circuit, with its high speeds and close concrete walls, is one of the more dangerous F1 circuits, with very little room for error or accident (if Ralph had suffered the same blowout on most other circuits, after all, he would have spun off onto gravel.) There, of all places, you can’t have some drivers either going 20mph slower or risking a blowout. Although the cars are so much safer these days, flying debris is still a risk to spectators and stewards, and you can’t ask drivers to go out on tires that they know will fail at speed before the race is half over. Michelin goofed, but FIA turned that mistake into a farce.

  3. So, no blame on Michelin for having no suitable tyres? What happens if Brembo doesn’t have suitable brakes? Or if Cosworth doesn’t have an engine that can safely last the race? If 7 of 10 runners on a 100 meter dash didn’t bring proper shoes, would you ask the ten to run barefoot? Changing the rules every time it feats the majority is ridiculous, unless you think F1 is entertainment disguised as a sport. This isn’t about safety is about control of the formula one. The teams want it so much that they are talking of a runway series in 2008. Remember what happened with Champ and IRL?
    I think your story about FIA and Ferrari is right, up to a point. I think FIA tried to change the rule to reduced Ferrari dominance, they didn’t succeed until this year, because the other teams thought the rule change was enough, it wasn’t. Ferrari wasn’t standing still. It isn’t now, it just have taken them longer. See them Dominate the end of the season. It’s just a question of money and will.