Any talk other than abolishing the sprint format is a waste of time
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Personally I just hate the format for the qualifying on Friday as I usually donโt get to watch as Iโm at work. Also when Iโve been to Silverstone the Friday was a nice chill day just walking round see some of the cars with it not being too busy. With the sprint Friday is a lot busier and just not so chill.
Also, I think the sprint races have just highlighted the really bad tracks for racing. Like youโre not going to make Monaco more exiting having an extra shorter race where no one can overtake.
I think Iโd rather see teams have enough time to get the best setup they can to allow the drivers to race the best they can.
I usually miss qualifying on Friday as well. Then it snowballs throughout the weekend trying to fit everything in. In the end I just give up and watch highlights after the race because I haven't invested any time yet to want to watch the race.
It's gone from watching an hour on sat and ~2 hours on Sunday. To 1 hour Friday, few hours sat and a couple hours Sunday. I just don't have that much free time to give up.
I agree, I really do. At the same time I do like the extra action on sprint weekends. I certainly care more if I miss a sprint session as compared to a free practice session.
I don't like how setups can be compromised by lack of practice, though. Tracks are very different and finding a good setup is not always quick and easy.
As today's sprint and a couple others this season show, the sprint can be a good show. The shorter duration reduces the effects of tire degradation on the racing, keeps the field bunched up and makes for more passing and extended duels, instead of on the full-length race where teams are playing a longer strategy game rather than fighting to hold position on the track, and smaller performance differences between the cars accumulate over time to spread the field out.
However, I think F1 needs to either make changes to maintain that level of intensity throughout the longer race distance (i.e., longer lasting tires that won't melt from agressive attacking or defending maneuvers, allow refueling to reduce weight at the start of the race, tighten up the rules more towards a spec series to keep car performance closer together) or accept that F1 is a different kind of racing from NASCAR or IndyCar, with a more tactical and cerebral presentation. Teams don't particularly like the sprint format and it takes away from the quality of the main event due to lost practice sessions.
They'll never reallow refueling during the race, it's much, much too dangerous for everyone involved.
Indycar doesn't agree - and rightly so.
Tell that to people who get set on fire.
I hope F1 never gets close to being a spec series (there are tight regulations obviously, but not many parts are spec. A big part of F1, for me at least, is car development.
I agree, but in general it's very hard to achieve close racing while also allowing broad freedom to engineer your car, particularly in a formula that is so aero-dependent. CFD and wind tunnel time is ruinously expensive, and the more permissive the regs are the larger the problem space you need to explore to find the fastest car design. Consequently, it's easier for a well-heeled team to just outspend everybody else to optimize their car into victory (see Merc until '21 and Red Bull since the new formula began).
WEC is having some luck with its "downforce design quota" approach, but even so they can't get really close racing over an endurance race without BoP adjustments, which is something I don't think the teams will countenance.
I quite like the sprint, so my rather boring opinion is to move the qualifying to Saturday afternoon, then slide the sprint race and itโs qualifying forward a slot. I would then have Parc Ferme kick in at qualifying at the some time as a normal weekend.
This would mean teams can and will play around with setup over the sprint quali and race, but Iโm ok with that given the smaller point allocation. Also neither the qualifying or the sprint itself are necessarily ideal places to be playing around with setup too much, especially since no one pits in the sprint, so doing too much setup change might be a risk for a team. It does mean those that got it terribly wrong after FP1 can gamble on some setup changes however. Ultimately coming out of the sprint youโd still need a car fit to go through the GPs qualifying and race, so thereโs still that to balance things a bit.
The reverse grid suggestion is interesting, but Iโm not sure how itโll work in practice and perhaps it needs to be a longer race then to allow more time to come through the field. If teams feel the sprint is too high risk already, I canโt see the top teams wanting to now come through a field every sprint session. If theyโre going to do this they need to pick tracks with high overtaking rates.
Fia going to keep trying to make this thing work, but there really isn't a good time for squeezing in more racing. If they move sprint race to Saturday before, and something happens that prevents teams from running qualifying, there will be hell complaints .
Okay, here's a crackpot idea I've been thinking about.
Quali for the sprint on Friday.
Practice Saturday AM Sprint Saturday afternoon, but it's not a race. Your quali sets your order to go out for 1 lap qualifying (fastest goes last) which sets Sunday's grid Sunday GP
It's rooted in my opinion that the only good part of the sprint is the extra quali session, which has been pretty exciting and turns into a 1 lap session in SQ3 anyway. It isn't 2 races, but it's action all 3 days
My issue with one lap qualifying with the fastest going last would be that during a quali like we've had this weekend, if you go last, you're screwed because suddenly the track is wet or you even get a red flag. Imo it's much more entertaining when everyone tries to poker with when they do their laps.
That's fair. I'm really reaching here to find something to do with the sprint format that is interesting