Formula 1 drivers' union gets '100%' membership due to concerns over future
Formula 1
drivers have unanimously signed up to their union because of concerns over the
future of the sport.
Alexander
Wurz, chairman of the Grand Prix Drivers' Association, said the organisation
had 100% membership "for maybe the first time in history".
Wurz said
all drivers had now joined the GPDA because "F1 is entering a period of
evolution, change and perhaps even a degree of turmoil.
"They
recognise they must be united and represented to face that challenge."
World
champions Lewis Hamilton and Kimi Raikkonen were among those who had not
officially joined the GPDA in recent years.
Wurz, a
former F1 driver for the Benetton, McLaren and Williams, said the drivers
wanted to "prevent any politics or power fights from ultimately
compromising on-track performance. The drivers believe unity is fundamental for
the sport's success".
F1 is
entering a period of intense political negotiations as the teams come to the
end of the contracts that bind them to the sport, which for the large part
expire in 2020.
The end of
the F1 season was marked by increasing concern about the plans of new owners
Liberty Media, the US group that bought the sport's commercial rights in
January.
The teams'
income has dropped, they are being asked to take part in promotional events at
their own expense, Liberty has been unclear about where it wants to take the
sport and the car manufacturers in F1 have objected to plans to use a
different type of engine from 2021.
Wurz said
the drivers had been pleased about the effects of rule changes for the 2017
season, before Liberty took over.
These made
the cars faster, harder to drive and more dramatic, and the tyres more durable
so the drivers can race harder for longer. The drivers were instrumental in
pushing for these changes.
"We are
all particularly proud that the new cars, with their faster cornering speeds,
had such great effect," Wurz said. "The drivers love them and we have
seen an instant increase in viewership and followers.
"The
GPDA pushed for this rule direction for the last three years. Happy drivers are
F1's best sales tool."
But the
drivers continue to have a number of areas of concern. Among these are:
The
increasing use of asphalt run-off areas and subsequent abuse of track limits
The rise of
pay TV and fewer viewers/followers as a result
Over-regulation
and the penalty system
The
difficulty of overtaking and lack of track action
Negative
press spirals due to political fights via the media
The lack of
noise from engines
Badly
thought-out television camera angles that do not portray the speed and drama of
the cars
The
differences in the budgets between the leading and other teams and the
resulting gaps in performance
Wurz said:
"We are glad that Liberty and their technical research team followed the
GPDA's suggestion from more than a year ago, where we wished for a less
sensitive airflow concept of aerodynamic-related rules in order to be able to
race closer. That's just one example and one of many the drivers have in
mind."
He added:
"We don't need a seat at the table, because the drivers are in the driving
seat anyhow. Besides, I would be surprised if any of the key stakeholders would
invite the drivers to the F1 decision-making table.
"The
GPDA demands only that the sport remains the centre of attention and we want to
hold everyone in the decision-making process accountable for their actions and
decisions.
"All
adjustments to the sport should only be done and conducted in the best interest
of the sport and not of any one individual. This is what unites the drivers;
the sheer will to keep F1 as the pinnacle of motor racing."
The drivers
intervened with the sport's bosses at the end of 2015 because of
concerns that the tyres Pirelli was supplying at the time were preventing them
racing properly, as they needed extreme levels of management.
The more
resilient product supplied by Pirelli for this season after governing body the
FIA set the company targets for tyre behaviour has made the racing more
authentic in 2017.
The drivers
also pushed for increased head protection, which is being introduced next
season - a year later than initially planned - with the controversial 'halo'
device.
But the
drivers are still wary about the purity of the sport being diluted if rule
changes go in the wrong direction.
Wurz said
the drivers saw the biggest risk as being "mainly diminishing the key
values of F1: a sport, a motor race where the best driver wins and battles it
out in the fastest race cars on the coolest tracks in close-fought
competition".
He added:
"We have so many - and now too many - contributing factors which dilute
this simple core value, and every day the list of threats to F1 grows.
"Thank
God the underlying product is so strong, but previous business decisions and
political power battles have already scarred the sport, so it needs very
careful and considerate adjustments to the sport and its rules.
"But
also F1's business model cripples the sport's progress and would need
readjustments."
Wurz said
the drivers wanted to see "on-track competition, but not artificially
created".
He added:
"We can't be naive about the situation F1 is in, with its complicated
governing rules and agreements between various key stakeholders.
"Business
decisions and political power fights have damaged the sport enough at exactly
such vulnerable times over the last decade.
"But
the GPDA has repeatedly said that the on-track action needs to be better, more
closely fought and authentic."
FROM bbcnews/sports.com

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