Eurosport - Thu, 25 Jun 15:38:00 2009
Controversy and intrigue go hand in hand with Formula One and Max Mosley's exit will not end that, even if the sport can hope for a less turbulent future.
Mosley, who will stand down as president of the governing International Automobile Federation in October while relinquishing immediately his day to day involvement in Formula One, has said he can depart knowing that the sport is set for peace and stability.
While the teams and FIA have put behind them the most serious crisis in the championship's 60-year existence with a breakthrough agreement on Wednesday, peace is a relative concept.
There will always be flare-ups and arguments, even without the damaging bickering of recent weeks which threatened to alienate so many fans.
Mosley's promised exit will bring down the curtain on the "Max and Bernie Show", a long-running double act with Formula One's commercial supremo and fellow Briton Bernie Ecclestone which has been behind much of the paddock friction.
However, in a sport as competitive and fast-moving as Formula One, it is only a matter of time before the next dispute comes along even if the technical rules remain stable until 2013 and the governance is more consensual.
Ecclestone, with no designated successor, will be 79 this year and the current teams have still to sign a long-term commercial agreement with him. Mosley's heir has also yet to be found.
There are some considerable egos around, on and off the track, as well as intense rivalries.
"The sport itself is intrinsically controversial, unstable, political," said one senior team source, recalling the days before Mosley when Jean-Marie Balestre ruled the FIA.
"I think it is the nature of Formula One that creates this situation."
The unity of the teams has been critical in securing what they wanted off the racetrack and that may not be so apparent once a new commercial agreement is signed.
In the short term, the FIA Senate will oversee Formula One under the leadership of Monaco's Michel Boeri but Mosley will remain a member of that body with considerable influence.
It will not be a case of Boeri running the show. Former Ferrari team boss Jean Todt, no stranger to controversy at the Italian team, is the name most often heard as Mosley's most likely replacement.
There are some, even now, unwilling to believe Mosley will not somehow manage a comeback.
"Only when I see the stake through his heart," the Times newspaper quoted one team principal as saying after Wednesday's announcement.
By ending the immediate threat of a rival series, both sides have broken a logjam and paved the way to a new, leaner future for the sport as well as one that hopes to give the fans a better show.
Mosley and the Formula One Teams Association have agreed to reduce costs within two years to the levels of the early 1990s, when a team like Benetton could win a championship on around $50 million a year.
That will mean heavy job cuts, or at least a relocation of staff where the teams are owned by manufacturers, as well as making the sport financially viable.
"Now everyone can look forward to a bright future where they can make good profits," said Mosley on Wednesday.
With a rival series being threatened, some teams had complained that the uncertainty had put sponsorship deals on hold or into jeopardy.
"Nobody is able to progress on the commercial front today because of the uncertainty," Ross Brawn, whose championship-leading team still lack a title sponsor, said recently.
The driver merry-go-round, usually a source of steady speculation at this time of year, has also been stalled until now with nobody able to commit until they knew who was racing where and under what rules.
Williams and Force India are likely to rejoin FOTA, having been suspended after siding with the FIA, while the three new teams can reassure potential sponsors that they will be competing against the likes of Ferrari and McLaren.
Comment 1 - 12 of 72
Yahooooo ! one down and one to go.Good ridance to bad rubish !Come on Bernie tender your resignation now !
superspex, I fully agree with you, but I think, and hope that the teams are fully aware of the "Gnomies" deceit. Perhaps now, without the absolute unquestioned support of the FIA through Mosley.
He will not be able to control F1 like he has in the past!
I believe the FOTA have also redressed this horrible little mans reign after 2012
Max is just the malignant head of a wholly corrupt body.
FIA's whole voting system will need to be restructured for a really fair vote!
Jean "Backstabber Todt should never be allowed anywhere near the FIA!
I was quite looking forward to seeing a new breakawy series that would have put F1 into the shade. At the end of the day, it doesn't really matter what the series is called - what matters is that it's the TOP level of racing. We are still going to see top level racing, but.... I'm not totally convinced the compromise reached is a good result.
Don't misunderstand me - Max had to go. I just feel it would be nice to see the sport without the other part of the duo that has had it's own agenda. Yes, I mean Bernie. Let's face it, his only interest in the sport is his financial interest.
Max, as they say, don't let the screen door hit you in the a$$ on the way out.
I think this was part of FOTA's deal, that Max had to go. I'm sure Bernie was in agreement to save his arse, for now...........Dave K.
slap the hamster
He will have more parties to go to eh eh
GREAT NEWS........ Goodbye and so long. Hope we never hear from you again.
Thankyou, Goodbey and Good Riddance Max! Stepping down is the best thing you have done for some time!
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Like a real circus as the ringmaster is gone, the annimals will attack eachother.....
Luckely they have still the tent of Bernie...
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