I would also add, for any newcomers, the racing is not "great" in F1. There are moments, but its not a lot of lead changes on the track.
I love the engineering aspect of F1 - teams having to balance everything to line up the engine, the aerodynamics, the tires, etc. I also enjoy watching qualification on Saturdays, where many races are won or lost. And the opening lap of any race is always exciting as the cars race to that first corner.
(Singapore 2017 - this was the race that re-ignited my interest in F1. Ferrari and Vettel had momentum in the season championship, Hamilton and Mercedes were fading and had not qualified well for this race. This race was on early in the morning East-Coast time, and I was switching around while waiting for a soccer game to start, I just happened to catch the start almost by fluke - and I have not missed many race weekends since.)
To F1's credit, they are trying to make things more competitive on the track, and a confluence of things might make this year the most competitive in recent times.
Teams were limited this off-season in how much they could change from last year's cars. F1 is an expensive sport - and teams like Mercedes, Red Bull and Ferrari have a distinct financial advantage over the other teams. But, with limited changes allowed that should narrow the gap.
Also, last year F1 made a mid-season change that will limit some of Mercedes' effectiveness on race weekends - teams are now only permitted to run one engine mode from Qualifying through the race. It might seem minor, but Mercedes had such a finely tuned/reliable engine that they could dial up the power for a qualifying lap, but then put the engine into a proverbial cruise control for long stretches of the race - giving them the best of both worlds - powerful short-term, reliable long-term. So, this effectively will cut back on Mercedes advantage in qualifying (as engines can't run an entire race in that mode).
This year F1 will also try a new qualifying format in three races - they will hold shorter sprint races to set the grid. They had toyed with a reverse grid set-up, but ultimately the big teams balked at that as unsporting.
Red Bull aside, I think F1 really needs Ferrari to become a factor in the championship. They have such a large and passionate world-wide following that F1 wants/needs that fan base fully engaged (and spending money).
I love the engineering aspect of F1 - teams having to balance everything to line up the engine, the aerodynamics, the tires, etc. I also enjoy watching qualification on Saturdays, where many races are won or lost. And the opening lap of any race is always exciting as the cars race to that first corner.
(Singapore 2017 - this was the race that re-ignited my interest in F1. Ferrari and Vettel had momentum in the season championship, Hamilton and Mercedes were fading and had not qualified well for this race. This race was on early in the morning East-Coast time, and I was switching around while waiting for a soccer game to start, I just happened to catch the start almost by fluke - and I have not missed many race weekends since.)
To F1's credit, they are trying to make things more competitive on the track, and a confluence of things might make this year the most competitive in recent times.
Teams were limited this off-season in how much they could change from last year's cars. F1 is an expensive sport - and teams like Mercedes, Red Bull and Ferrari have a distinct financial advantage over the other teams. But, with limited changes allowed that should narrow the gap.
Also, last year F1 made a mid-season change that will limit some of Mercedes' effectiveness on race weekends - teams are now only permitted to run one engine mode from Qualifying through the race. It might seem minor, but Mercedes had such a finely tuned/reliable engine that they could dial up the power for a qualifying lap, but then put the engine into a proverbial cruise control for long stretches of the race - giving them the best of both worlds - powerful short-term, reliable long-term. So, this effectively will cut back on Mercedes advantage in qualifying (as engines can't run an entire race in that mode).
This year F1 will also try a new qualifying format in three races - they will hold shorter sprint races to set the grid. They had toyed with a reverse grid set-up, but ultimately the big teams balked at that as unsporting.
Red Bull aside, I think F1 really needs Ferrari to become a factor in the championship. They have such a large and passionate world-wide following that F1 wants/needs that fan base fully engaged (and spending money).
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