this post was submitted on 10 Jul 2023
28 points (100.0% liked)
Formula 1
9070 readers
39 users here now
Welcome to Formula1 @ Lemmy.world Lemmy's largest community for Formula 1 and related racing series
Rules
- Be respectful to everyone; drivers, lemmings, redditors etc
- No gambling, crypto or NFTs
- Spoilers are allowed
- Non English articles should include a translation in the comments by deepl.com or similar
- Paywalled articles should include at least a brief summary in the comments, the wording of the article should not be altered
- Social media posts should be posted as screenshots with a link for those who want to view it
- Memes are allowed on Monday only as we all do like a laugh or 2, but donโt want to become formuladank.
Up next
2024 Calendar
Location | Date |
---|---|
๐บ๐ธ United States | 21-23 Nov |
๐ถ๐ฆ Qatar | 29 Nov-01 Dec |
๐ฆ๐ช Abu Dhabi | 06-08 Dec |
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Seems like those alarm bells already should have been ringing. I think it's a bit of an indictment of their team's engineering that significant investments haven't been made. Stop pretending this year is salvageable, and begin prepping for the 2026 regulations with the new power units.
They sacrificed 2021 for the new regs in 2022 as well, see where that got them.
Sadly the owners donโt seem interested in funding the team in a way that will allow them to ever seriously compete in F1. People seem to like to shut on Steiner for this, but I think he is just managing with the tools he has.
I was optimistic when Haas joined. Their model of sourcing as much as possible from Ferrari looked like a good idea to start a team and built from there. But they never seemed to have the funding/ambition to evolve to a serious top team.
Really sad to see the only American team is not taking it serious, and itโs not making it easier for newer teams (ie Andretti) to get the nod of approval.
I would just hate to see that kill any chances for more US-based F1 growth.
I mean, sacrificing 21 led them leap Williams and AT in 22, and they have a genuinely decent car at the start of the 22 season. But as you say, Gene Haas unfortunately seems to be satisfied with the cars being little more than rolling billboards...