GilesGuthrieThe problem with qualifying is that "the people" don't want what they think they want. See, people say "oh, the fastest car should do best in qualifying, and be on pole", but they also want to see a race on the Sunday, where someone storms from the back of the grid to take the win.
Thusly, you have a problem with qualifying, in that you have to configure it so that there's some semblance of a race on the Sunday, without making it entirely arbitrary, or cheatable.
Max Mosley (widely regarded as an idiot) has been saying this for years. You can't spend two days lining the cars up so that the fastest is at the front, and then justifiably complain when there's no overtaking.
ROAD_DOGG33JI wonder how things would look if they just reversed the finishing positions from the last race.
No it wouldn't. When actually fighting for a "championship", you can't just arbitrarily set the grid.danoffI was just wondering that very thing myself. But I don't think it would be very fair.
kylehnatNo it wouldn't. When actually fighting for a "championship", you can't just arbitrarily set the grid.
wfoosheeI saw the word "boring" in a previous post in this thread. Does nobody remember the boredom of watching an empty track for 48 minutes while the fast guys wait for the slow guys to clean the track? Then for sponsor satisfaction, they went to single-car, which absolutely sucked. Also boring.
You know, F1 is the only sport where teams deliberately find ways to keep the cars in the garage as long as possible. ChampCar has a similar format (30 minute open session), and it's usually quite entertaining, BECAUSE TEAMS LET THE DRIVERS GO! In Formula One, the driver is expected to go out, put one blistering lap in the books, and head back to the pits. Let's get rid of this damn engine rule, shall we?wfoosheeI saw the word "boring" in a previous post in this thread. Does nobody remember the boredom of watching an empty track for 48 minutes while the fast guys wait for the slow guys to clean the track?
kylehnatYou know, F1 is the only sport where teams deliberately find ways to keep the cars in the garage as long as possible. ChampCar has a similar format (30 minute open session), and it's usually quite entertaining, BECAUSE TEAMS LET THE DRIVERS GO! In Formula One, the driver is expected to go out, put one blistering lap in the books, and head back to the pits. Let's get rid of this damn engine rule, shall we?
dkstzYeah, I'm gonna be flamed, still I want to see what it turns out.
What if: Reverse order from the championship standings.
Promises a pass or two IN TRACK...
kylehnatYou know, F1 is the only sport where teams deliberately find ways to keep the cars in the garage as long as possible. ChampCar has a similar format (30 minute open session), and it's usually quite entertaining, BECAUSE TEAMS LET THE DRIVERS GO! In Formula One, the driver is expected to go out, put one blistering lap in the books, and head back to the pits. Let's get rid of this damn engine rule, shall we?
kylehnatYou know, F1 is the only sport where teams deliberately find ways to keep the cars in the garage as long as possible. ChampCar has a similar format (30 minute open session), and it's usually quite entertaining, BECAUSE TEAMS LET THE DRIVERS GO! In Formula One, the driver is expected to go out, put one blistering lap in the books, and head back to the pits. Let's get rid of this damn engine rule, shall we?
sausagesThis year's format is just far too intricate - try explaining to an F1 novice how it works and you just sound plain daft.
sausagesThis year's format is just far too intricate - try explaining to an F1 novice how it works and you just sound plain daft.