Rossifumi wrote:Where to start - I disagree with pretty much everything you've said. F1 has learnt the lesson of trying to be a 'technological showcase' for manufacturers; it's too expensive - Honda, Toyota, BMW and Renault all quit - and it produces poor entertainment and falling audiences both at the circuits (France, Austria, Holland, Portugal, Nurburgring amongst others couldn't make it financially viable even China is struggling and was rumoured to be pulling out) and TV audiences were falling too. F1 saw the light and has taken the 'lazy, non-technological way' - engine development freeze and equalisation, rev limits, spec ecu, banned electronic aids, banned active suspension etc etc there is more technology banned from F1 than used! and is now well ahead of MotoGP in terms of the spectacle.
It's a about finding a balance. F1 is still relatively high tech compared to most other motorsport series. The reason that Toyota, Honda and BMW got out was that they simply couldn't match the F1 chassis and aerodynamics skills of the independent teams like Mclaren, Red Bull etc.
As for 'the whole world is moving to smaller engines' - what market do you think motoGP is aimed at? do you think that seeing Honda in motoGP will sell Honda cubs in Asia? I just don't see that having any relevance to motoGP and as I said earlier it didn't work for the car manufacturers.
Honda Cubs?? I am talking about smaller, high performance engines, which is what the entire motor industry is developing. And already we are seeing electric motors in motor racing.
Again I disagree - to rule out Rossi and Pedrosa is pretty short-sighted and to have 4 genuine title contenders at any one time is, historically, a very good situation.
We shall soon see. Sure Pedrosa will be in the mix, maybe Rossi, Spies and a couple of others, but it is still most likely that Stoner and Lorenzo will dominate the season.
Again, what do you think motoGP is all about? the 4 races in Spain are 4 of the best attended races on the calendar. And where is the interest in Asia for motoGP? Qatar is pretty much empty and I was at the last Shanghai motoGP for which again, there was little interest - getting hold of a ticket was a nightmare as no one in the city seemed to know it was even taking place, even in the tourist information office in the centre of the city. MotoGP is about racing and there is little interest in motorcycle racing in Asia and so Dorna should concentrate on it's core business and core market and that is producing close, exciting racing at a sustainable cost in countries where there is an interest in motorcycle racing.
International sponsors couldn't care less about the local crowds in Spain or Qatar. What they care about is international television coverage. MotoGP is supposed to be a world championship. It needs a worldwide TV audience to attract the big sponsors. Who wants to sponsor something that is mostly seen in the relatively small market of Spain? As for Asia, in a region where hundreds of millions of people ride motorcycles everyday, ask yourself why it is that MotoGP is so poorly known and promoted. That's a problem with the organizers and promoters of MotoGP, not with Asia itself.
If you want to take such a narrow view of MotoGP you are guaranteeing that it will not get the sponsorship it needs to be a genuine world series.
NOT!! as I said before, the 'technological showcase' model didn't work for cars and it definitely won't work for bikes. F1 realised this eventually and is now itself 'a dumbed down series' and is all the better for it. MotoGP should be about the riders and producing racing that people want to watch not a science fair.
F1 is still perceived as high tech. Designer still have a fair degree in freedom in certain areas. The engine freeze was partly a cost control measure and partly a temporary measure while F1 decided its future direction, which is to be 1.6L V6 turbos. And world championship motor racing is NEVER just about the riders or drivers. It is always the combination of humans and machines. If it just about the riders then MotoGP should be a one make series, and no-one will bother to watch it. Just imagine: no technical discussions about the various makes...All we could ever do is debate the relative merits of the riders, the kind of debates that already causes complaints from some people in this forum.