Sunday 15 April 2012

F1 and The Bahrain Conundrum

Its Sunday afternoon on a racing weekend and this blog's subject is F1. I'd love to use this space to be talking about the brilliant race I watched this morning where 3 of the nicest guys on the circuit finished on the podium, but instead, like the rest of the F1 world, all the attention is on next weeks race. Should it go ahead on moral/political grounds? What about safety grounds?

When it comes to politics, sport should not be used to fix problems, because it can't. Whether the F1 goes to Bahrain or not there will still be civil unrest there, and a large percentage of the population will still be living below the poverty line. F1 still races in China and other parts of the far east despite their poor human rights and labour records. North Korea was still allowed to play in the World Cup despite their awful excuse for a government. On these grounds, F1 should carry on racing wherever the fee has been paid. So far, Bernie Ecclestone's view that 'F1 won't solve anything by not going' is a fair point.


Then you take into consideration that Ecclestone is one of the slimiest people in world sport. As the track was built by the Bahrain royal family, and they're the ones paying the fees, this is basically a huge show just for them. Unless the tickets are offered at 1/4 of the normal price for a grand prix ticket 80% of the population just wont be able to afford to go. By racing at the track, F1 risks creating civil unrest as the protesters look to disrupt anything to do with the royal family. F1 won't heal anything by not racing, but I'm pretty sure they'll cause more unrest by going. F1 shouldn't risk being the scene of protesters being killed just because Ecclestone wants even more money.

The sad thing is a lot of drivers are against it. The last thing they want is someone running onto the track when they're racing at 180mph. A lot of them don't want to go purely because of what they think they'll be supporting. But due to contracts drivers can't really refuse to race if they're teams go ahead with it. And the teams trust the FIA. And the FIA trust Ecclestone. One money grabbing idiot forces a lot of people to do what they don't really want to do. I think most of the drivers would rather just not bother with the Bahrain GP. Plus it's usually really boring anyway.

All in all I just think F1 gains nothing from going, but risks a lot by doing so. I don't like to wish ill on anyone, but the sooner the sport is not in the control of Bernie Ecclestone the better. F1 should not be going to Bahrain.

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