r11co wrote:
Here's a fact, though, that might get lost on the coverage of the next few days. The Indy circuit was resurfaced 3 weeks ago to a new, high friction 'diamond cut' one for the Indy 500 race. Bridgestone (supplying tyres to Ferrari) got advanced warning of this new surface and could practice on it as they supplied tyres under their Firestone brand to many of the runners in the Indy 500.
Yeah, I heard that mentioned on the coverage. But here's another fact that didn't get mentioned at all. Those dodgy tyres that Michelin had... good for about 15-16 laps of racing Michelin said. Well, had they been on last years rules and changed tyres at pit stops like normal, no problem. That would have made it a 3 stop race for the Michelin runners, which it would have been for many of them anyway. It wouldn't have been more than a blip on the radar, but under 2005 rules it's turned into a prize balls up.

IMO the fingers should be pointing at the FIA here. Not Ferrari who said they were up for a race with a chicane or without it. Not even Michelin for turning up with a duff tyre and spitting the dummy out when they weren't keen on the options the FIA offered them. I think the problem goes back months. When the one tyre all race thing was proposed last year I knew it would bite them on the arse if they implemented it, and sure enough it did. They've had their warnings. Only two races ago at the Nurburgring Raikkenen's tyre got so bad it wrecked the wheel and blew his race on the penultimate lap. I'm no McLaren fan, but it was clear he was going to win, and would certainly have done so had he been able to change tyres at the pit stop. That wasn't the first warning that a one tyre race was a stupid idea, but I feel it was the loudest. They had two weeks to change the regs for Canada and the US, did bugger all and it's blown up in their faces as a result. And that's ignoring how silly it looked in the early races when cars roared up to the garages and about 16 of 20+ people had nothing to do but kneel there and look at it

. It hasn't even worked at slowing the bloody cars down, which was never going to happen with two tyre makers in the sport at the same time.
My tuppence worth: go back to tyre changes on scheduled stops, go back to a single tyre manufacturer supplying all teams, leave the V10s in place since the V8s are actually costing more to develop, use a rev limiter to prevent dangerously high speeds, and have Max Mosely and Bernie Ecclestone tarred and feathered.
Rant over. The soapbox is now vacant.
