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Monday, June 20, 2005 |
| Indianapolis Star sportswriter on the U.S. Grand Prix Let me roll out the thesaurus. It was a fiasco. It was a debacle. It was reprehensible. Unless you're a lawyer, in which case, it's a godsend. He was right on the last one: Fan Sues Over Grand Prix 'Race' Larry Bowers, a Colorado resident, has filed a class action lawsuit
against the Federation de l’Automobile (FIA), Formula One Group,
Formula One Administration, Michelin Tires and the Indianapolis Motor
Speedway following Sunday’s United States Grand Prix. FIA (the F1 governing authority) is going after Michelin and the teams that they supply: Deserters face bill for life in farce lane THE seven teams that boycotted the US Grand Prix
could be forced to pay millions in compensation to the 120,000 fans who
walked out of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway here, shocked and angry
with a sport that has been decried throughout the United States. The
repercussions of the explosion of disgust at a debacle of a race, in
which only six cars took part, will ripple through Formula One for
months. The punishments could start next week, when all seven teams and
Michelin, their tyre supplier at the centre of the farce, will be
called in front of the FIA, Formula One’s governing body, on charges
that amount to bringing the sport into disrepute. Banning the teams is
not an option, given that future races would be wrecked with 14 cars
out of the sport, but Max Mosley, the FIA President, raised the
possibility yesterday that the teams could be forced to pay back the
fans, many of whom had spent hundreds of pounds on travel and hotels,
as well as an average $100 a ticket (£54) to get into the Indianapolis
Motor Speedway. “I think Michelin and the seven teams should
compensate the fans,” Mosley said. “What about the American fans? What
about Formula One fans worldwide? Rather than boycott the race, the
Michelin teams should have agreed to run at reduced speed. The rules
would have been kept, they would have earned championship points and
the fans would have had a race. As it is, by refusing to run, they have
damaged themselves and the sport...
I can't see how the teams can be blamed for this. If Michelin
comes out and says they have a tire that is unsafe for the race
conditions, then the teams realistically can't race without
modifications. Had the teams gone out anyway and one of their
cars suffer a severe or fatal accident that team would be open to
massive liability (The Williams team was put on criminal trial for the
death of Ayrton Senna in a crash; the circumstances were nowhere near
as clear cut as they would be in this situation).
Jackpotzrebie comment []11:04:19 PM   |