Price money re-think.
#1
Posted 07 May 2014 - 12:42
Its just bonkers that the richest teams grab the most money....My suggestion...make it equitable.
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#2
Posted 07 May 2014 - 12:54
It's not about the richest teams grabbing the most money. It's about the difference.
If the first team in WCC gets twice as much money, as the last, I'm relatively OK with that.
But if first gets 2,5 times as much as fourth, and 15 times as much as the last, then it's horrible. Especially if big part of this is completely independent of results and smaller teams can do nothing to overcome that difference.
I'll perhaps not watch this any longer if it is not solved within next 2 or 3 years.
#3
Posted 07 May 2014 - 13:01
Katie Price?
Vincent Price?
The Price is Right?
WTF
Jp
#4
Posted 07 May 2014 - 13:48
I think that out of the total money given to the team, 110M should be doled out based on championship standings. 20M for 1st, 18M for 2nd down to 2M for 10th. The rest of the money should be distributed equally among all teams. If the remainder is 615M, and there are 12 teams, each team gets 51.25M in addition to their standings money.
So first place would get 71.25M, and 12th place would get 51.25M.
#5
Posted 07 May 2014 - 13:53
I think that out of the total money given to the team, 110M should be doled out based on championship standings. 20M for 1st, 18M for 2nd down to 2M for 10th. The rest of the money should be distributed equally among all teams. If the remainder is 615M, and there are 12 teams, each team gets 51.25M in addition to their standings money.
So first place would get 71.25M, and 12th place would get 51.25M.
The thing is that if Ferrari gets 70 million and a new useless team like HRT get 50 million it wouldn't be fair either. I agree that numbers need to be leveled more but not that much
#6
Posted 07 May 2014 - 13:54
Abso-fookin-lutely.
Its just bonkers that the richest teams grab the most money....My suggestion...make it equitable.
How is it bonkers that the winners get more than the losers?
A fairer distribution would seem sensible, but I don't think it will change a lot.
The richest teams will still be the richest teams by a considerable margin.
The subject of how to diminish the advantage of expenditure, whilst still fostering innovation is the more interesting one.
#7
Posted 07 May 2014 - 13:59
Bernie's biggest weapon to divide and conquer.
Not going to change without EU intervention.
#8
Posted 07 May 2014 - 14:00
I think that out of the total money given to the team, 110M should be doled out based on championship standings. 20M for 1st, 18M for 2nd down to 2M for 10th. The rest of the money should be distributed equally among all teams. If the remainder is 615M, and there are 12 teams, each team gets 51.25M in addition to their standings money.
So first place would get 71.25M, and 12th place would get 51.25M.
I favour a system that works in that sort of way. You keep a small incentive for improving your championship position, if winning itself isn't enough, but the majority of the prize fun should be shared equally amongst all the teams.
#9
Posted 07 May 2014 - 14:02
I think that out of the total money given to the team, 110M should be doled out based on championship standings. 20M for 1st, 18M for 2nd down to 2M for 10th. The rest of the money should be distributed equally among all teams. If the remainder is 615M, and there are 12 teams, each team gets 51.25M in addition to their standings money.
So first place would get 71.25M, and 12th place would get 51.25M.
A large portion of the F1 income, driven by its global appeal, can in percentage terms be attributed far more greatly to Ferrari, than Marussia.
Its unfair to give Ferrari the same share as Marussia for taking part, when the size of the pot that Marussia are taking a share of, has been generated largely more by Ferrari.
No sense in Ferrari agreeing to that - and they have all the other teams over a barrel on this issue anyway.
I think the heritage values they give the teams is a good mechanism, its a bit out of kilter, but not flawed.
#10
Posted 07 May 2014 - 14:08
Ferrari already get a premium for being Ferrari, it's called sponsorship and merchandise.
Equally distribute the money earned by the group(TV rights, trackside sponsorship, etc). Let the money earned individually(team sponsorship) be kept individually.
#11
Posted 07 May 2014 - 14:12
Ferrari already get a premium for being Ferrari, it's called sponsorship and merchandise.
Equally distribute the money earned by the group(TV rights, trackside sponsorship, etc). Let the money earned individually(team sponsorship) be kept individually.
I'd love that but this isn't the NFL. Ferrari is responsible for a big part of all this TV rights and sponsorship money coming in to F1
#12
Posted 07 May 2014 - 14:21
No team is bigger than the sport. The teams need each other for the show as a package. Ferrari is also very much dependant on the F1-brand.
The thing is that if Ferrari gets 70 million and a new useless team like HRT get 50 million it wouldn't be fair either.
With today's regime, you don't even give them a chance to overcome the status of being useless as you call it. A term that I completely disagree with btw.
#13
Posted 07 May 2014 - 14:21
Well,given that the hot topic as of now is about cutting costs,...presumably to make the tail end Charlies catch up the big boys so make a fairer play ground...Yes?How is it bonkers that the winners get more than the losers?
A fairer distribution would seem sensible, but I don't think it will change a lot.
The richest teams will still be the richest teams by a considerable margin.
The subject of how to diminish the advantage of expenditure, whilst still fostering innovation is the more interesting one.
#14
Posted 07 May 2014 - 14:31
I'd love that but this isn't the NFL. Ferrari is responsible for a big part of all this TV rights and sponsorship money coming in to F1
I think if we wanted to go full NFL we'd take the money set aside for the teams(say 600m) and divide it between 12 teams. Everyone gets 50m a year to race on. No team sponsorship, that's your budget. Design a car, hire a driver, race 20(ish) times.
You've automatically got a budget cap* and with that artificial limit you could even open the tech rules up a lot. The car has to fit in a certain box and have some basic rules but as long as you stay inside your 50m...
*The first thing you'd do is race on 30m for a few years until you have 50-60 in the bank, then add it to your annual 50, but I never said it was perfect
It probably wouldn't work for F1 given Ferrari and other works team issues, but it'd be an interesting format. Unfortunately F1 is the only series that could really pull it off, since they have a large enough income.
Might work in NASCAR actually, they're almost F1 sized in income. Give every team X-dollars, and they buy their cars/engines from the manufacturers and go racing.
#15
Posted 07 May 2014 - 14:34
you would need the big teams to mess up massively, or a small team to suddenly luck into a uncopyable big advantage otherwise. giving the teams more equal money should also tighten the field, rich will get slower and the poor get faster...
the odd situation is f1 has become so huge, that teams cant really look to run elsewhere now, unless they get maybe a works deal for wec or maybe wrc, and would still shed staff for that probably. and the teams are more tied to bernie as the sponsorship situation seems pretty darn bare :/
#16
Posted 07 May 2014 - 15:08
Price money ...
Katie Price?
Vincent Price?
The Price is Right?
WTF
Jp
Always nice to see a mention for one of Brucie's shows!
#17
Posted 07 May 2014 - 15:35
Always nice to see a mention for one of Brucie's shows!
It's a good game, good game.
#18
Posted 07 May 2014 - 15:41
Ok. I was thinking about that and I think I came to the solution which is a pretty good balance between promoting those, who contribute the most, and giving smaller teams their fair share of income.
I've assumed the whole amount of money to share is 725m and I divided it into 5 colums:
- Equality column: 65% of the whole money go to the all teams equally.
- Historical column: 10% of the whole money go to the teams with the most success over the F1 history.
- Technologic contribution column: 5% of the whole money go to the teams that are using their own solutions rather than buying it from others.
- WCC results column: 15% of the whole money is shared on the basis of place of the team in WCC in previous year.
- WCC points column: 5% of the whole money is shared on the basis of the amount of points scored by the team in WCC in previous year.
More detail:
Equality column: the whole column is shared equally to all teams, so each team gets 42,841m through this.
Historical column:50% of all column is shared per WCC title in F1's history (I've counted Brawn's title to Mercedes, and Renault's titles to Lotus, but didn't count previous Team Lotus' titles), 30% of all column is shared equally to all teams, that are in F1 for at least 20 years (Ferrari, McLaren, Willaims and Sauber), and 20% of all column is shared equally to all teams that won at least one race in the last 5 years.
Technologic contribution: for simplification I've assumed 50% of all column is shared equally to all engine's manufacturers (this gives a chance to some independent manufacturers, like Cosworth, to get the part of the income and increase their capabilities thanks to that) and 50% of the whole column is shared equally to all teams that design their own gearbox. Of course we can use more sophisticated method.
WCC result column: I've assumed the prizes are:
1st: 24,556m
2nd: 19,294m
3rd: 15,786m
4th: 12,278m
5th: 10,524m
6th: 8,770m
7th: 7,016m
8th: 5,262m
9th: 3,508m
10th: 1,754m
WCC points column; The whole column is shared per point scored in the previous season.
Final outcome:
1. Red Bull: 86,993m
2. Mercedes: 75,098m
3. Ferrari: 87,789m
4. Lotus: 67,957m
5. McLaren: 72,345m
6. Force India: 53.066m
7. Sauber: 56.371m
8. STR: 48,727m
9. Williams: 63.843m
10. Marussia: 44.595m
11. Caterham: 42,841m
+6,041m to Ferrari, Mercedes and Renault as engine manufacturers.
I think fair enough to the all parties. Of course we can disagree on how to count the historical success or technologic contribution of all teams, or we can modify some % slightly, but I wanted to show the overall concept and I think it's pretty OK.
To assure some teams won't come for an easy money and exit after one or two year we can introduce the rule:
- In your first year you only get 50% of what would you get normally. (you have to participate in all weekends if you want to get the money)
- This amount is increased to 75% in second year if you manage to qualify to at least 80% of races in your first year. (you have to participate in all weekends)
- Again the amount is increased to 100% if your third year if you manage to qualify to at least 80% of races in your second year.
#19
Posted 07 May 2014 - 15:49
It has been mentioned a million times, but not in this thread:
If Lotus had somehow managed to win the F1 championship for drivers in 2013, it still would have gotten less money from Bernie than Ferrari and Red Bull. That Lotus-boss Lopez therefore raised the topic, is very poignant.
Anderis list is fine, as long as it is arranged that if this year Mercedes wins, it gets that amount. Not that some secret deal between Ferrari and Bernie and Red Bull, they still will get less for whatever reason.
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#20
Posted 07 May 2014 - 16:30
It takes every single team to put on the show. The proceeds should therefore be distributed evenly. Sponsorship and marketing reward success.
If there is more demand for places on the grid than supply, the last placed team should bid of the slot in an auction with the prospective entrants. .
#21
Posted 07 May 2014 - 17:31
#22
Posted 07 May 2014 - 20:39
When we are talking about money I think it's strange that F1 do not take any responsibility for what they are putting out. Like a swarm of grasshoppers they come in, suck the place dry and have zero care for the damage caused. Why don't work together with race promoters to make shure it's sustainable? Splitting ad-space, ticket revnnue etc.
Edited by ollebompa, 07 May 2014 - 20:42.
#23
Posted 07 May 2014 - 20:47
Blame Ferrari for killing FOTA and taking all the money Bernie gives them, even though they already have Marlboro bankrolling them.
#24
Posted 07 May 2014 - 21:02
Blame Ferrari for killing FOTA and taking all the money Bernie gives them, even though they already have Marlboro bankrolling them.
I would love to blame Ferrari but I can't blame them for taking care of their own interests.
I blame FIA they're not firm enough to enforce solutions that would bring more fair competition between teams and I blame Bernie that he would rather give $100m to one team than $10m to each team.
#25
Posted 07 May 2014 - 21:28
I would love to blame Ferrari but I can't blame them for taking care of their own interests.
I blame FIA they're not firm enough to enforce solutions that would bring more fair competition between teams and I blame Bernie that he would rather give $100m to one team than $10m to each team.
I could blame them, and I would go even further and blame them for selling FOTA out and not even taking care of their own interests. Had the teams (and the FIA) stuck together, they could of achieved a much larger pay-out from Bernie and everyone, including Ferrari, would be earning more. Instead, they decided to come to a secret arrangement that led to them earning a few million more than the other teams, but still less than they could of achieved fighting for a more equitable distribution. You could say Ferrari care more about being the special snowflake than the income.
It's hardly surprising Bernie has ruled F1 for so long with geniuses like Monty around.