LewTheShoe
Seeking Skill-based Meritocracy... More HP Less DF
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... They were F1 and Nascar. Are you surprised at this distribution of the sponsorship wealth? I am.
... They were F1 and Nascar. Are you surprised at this distribution of the sponsorship wealth? I am.
There are a lot of obvious accounting questions one could ask, and I have no answers to any of them. For example, F1 also has a couple of feeder series associated with it. So does MotoGP, which from the chart looks like the bargain of the racing universe (Qatar this weekend... I can't wait!). Also, there are several other racing series not shown that obviously are non-zero in spending. There should be a slice for "Other" but there is none.I wonder how that 'NASCAR' figure breaks down. Is that just Cup, all three national touring series, or all NASCAR-sanctioned races?
Are you saying that F1 sponsorship dollars spent are not correctly represented in the pie chart? Or suggesting that manufacturer spending is included in that figure?Not really, this is tracking total sponsorship spend in each, and NASCAR is far, far more commercialized than F1 is. F1 has a massive global fanbase second only to soccer, and for all the sh!t Bernie Ecclestone did he also negotiated massive TV deals in all the major markets that collectively are bigger than NASCAR (The UK F1 deal alone is 280m usd a year). F1 also has heavy manufacturer spending to rely on. F1 doesn't need to rely on sponsorship spending like NASCAR does. The cars are painted in national colors with strict limits on advertising space. Plus there are just far fewer cars to carry sponsorship in general.
Meanwhile across the pond the boys at NASCAR will sell just about anything they can to make a buck (yeah! Capitalism!). So we get cars with a different livery every week and drivers decked out in new firesuits using every available breath to tell the cameras about how awesome whatever company wrote a check this week is. We get the names of the races themselves sold to the highest bidder (who's ready for the iconic Rosanne 300 this weekend??). The pole award, the white flag, sold for sponsorship.The very names of the series itself is sold for sponsorship every 2 years.
No, the only thing I'm surprised by is the fact that despite selling it's soul, NASCAR still is behind F1.
Lowe's at $20 million per year, which I've seen reported by Adam Smith (Motorsport Analytics), would represent 1.7% of the total Nascar sponsorship picture.Puts the Lowe’s deal in perspective.
Can’t wait for Eddie Gossage to make some remarks.
All of the F1 teams are incorporated as separate companies from the other interests of their parent companies, with separate books. Red Bull Racing gets "sponsorship" revenue from the energy drinks parent company. I'd bet that number was picked up in this chart, just an educated guess. Scuderia Ferrari gets the same from Ferrari SpA. Mercedes F1 gets the same from parent Daimler AG. But sometimes the parent company subsidies are booked as capital contributions, or as loans. Those amounts may well be left out..Are you saying that F1 sponsorship dollars spent are not correctly represented in the pie chart? Or suggesting that manufacturer spending is included in that figure?
Not really, this is tracking total sponsorship spend in each, and NASCAR is far, far more commercialized than F1 is. F1 has a massive global fanbase second only to soccer, and for all the sh!t Bernie Ecclestone did he also negotiated massive TV deals in all the major markets that collectively are bigger than NASCAR (The UK F1 deal alone is 280m usd a year). F1 also has heavy manufacturer spending to rely on. F1 doesn't need to rely on sponsorship spending like NASCAR does. The cars are painted in national colors with strict limits on advertising space. Plus there are just far fewer cars to carry sponsorship in general.
Meanwhile across the pond the boys at NASCAR will sell just about anything they can to make a buck (yeah! Capitalism!). So we get cars with a different livery every week and drivers decked out in new firesuits using every available breath to tell the cameras about how awesome whatever company wrote a check this week is. We get the names of the races themselves sold to the highest bidder (who's ready for the iconic Rosanne 300 this weekend??). The pole award, the white flag, sold for sponsorship.The very names of the series itself is sold for sponsorship every 2 years.
No, the only thing I'm surprised by is the fact that despite selling it's soul, NASCAR still is behind F1.
Yet somehow NASCAR racing is far more entertaining.Not really, this is tracking total sponsorship spend in each, and NASCAR is far, far more commercialized than F1 is. F1 has a massive global fanbase second only to soccer, and for all the sh!t Bernie Ecclestone did he also negotiated massive TV deals in all the major markets that collectively are bigger than NASCAR (The UK F1 deal alone is 280m usd a year). F1 also has heavy manufacturer spending to rely on. F1 doesn't need to rely on sponsorship spending like NASCAR does. The cars are painted in national colors with strict limits on advertising space. Plus there are just far fewer cars to carry sponsorship in general.
Meanwhile across the pond the boys at NASCAR will sell just about anything they can to make a buck (yeah! Capitalism!). So we get cars with a different livery every week and drivers decked out in new firesuits using every available breath to tell the cameras about how awesome whatever company wrote a check this week is. We get the names of the races themselves sold to the highest bidder (who's ready for the iconic Rosanne 300 this weekend??). The pole award, the white flag, sold for sponsorship.The very names of the series itself is sold for sponsorship every 2 years.
No, the only thing I'm surprised by is the fact that despite selling it's soul, NASCAR still is behind F1.
Yeah, well stated Greg. I've been an avid F1 fan since the early 1960's, but I've not drunk the Kool-Aid about F1 being the ultimate racing art form, blah, blah. Things there behind the F1 curtain are often not what they appear to be.Bernie was just as impure as Nascar. He would sell off prestigious dates with a history for incredible fees at the most ridiculous locations.
They ran one race with the ambience of an India skyline burning dung. Pay the fee and he would book a race at a sewer.
Aside from Monoco, just about any date can be bought out.
And the manufacturing support edge they have isn't without a price. The dominant car will almost win the championship, a two car competition settled among teammates.
And when is the last time they put on a race like the last Monster Energy cup race. 4 solid teams had a real chance. They passed each on the track, ran close with no DRS or whatever acronym it is they need to run close to each other.
Yet somehow NASCAR racing is far more entertaining.
JGR president Dave Alpern said at the end of 2016 that sponsorship makes up 85% of their team revenue.
Meanwhile, F1 teams are taking in their 2017 final payments from FOM this month, totaling $940m across the field for the year. Ferrari took in about $220m in sponsorship in 2016 while taking in $192m from FOM.
Big difference in how these organizations are funded.
JGR president Dave Alpern said at the end of 2016 that sponsorship makes up 85% of their team revenue.
Meanwhile, F1 teams are taking in their 2017 final payments from FOM this month, totaling $940m across the field for the year. Ferrari took in about $220m in sponsorship in 2016 while taking in $192m from FOM.
Big difference in how these organizations are funded.
Yes, you are.Those numbers there alone would seem to call the pie chart into question, or am I missing something?
There is a part of me that wants to start a new thread.
I think Nascar is running races better now than ever, at least the last 10 years. I don't have a time line, but it started happening (for me) last year.
We have significant tire wear and long green runs to fatigue and wear out most. While leaving 3 or 4 cars near the front that can pass, and run slightly different pit cycles.
It is really an incredible story that unfolds for each race. I wish the old Stock Car Racing Magizine edited by Dick Berggren was still around. The current racing is worthy of the best ink. The drama is good enough to hold the interest, and to be reviewed in detail during the following weeks.
I have never needed 150k fans to validate things. It is like a girlfriend, if you need someone to tell you she's beautiful you are already an idiot for needing confirmation of something so obvious. But I do believe the fan base will increase, if the current quality is sustained.
One last tacky analogy : Good racing like we are seeing now, will give some kids the fever. It will put racing in their blood, just like ours.
All of the other crap will take care of itself.
Sounds to me like sponsors aren’t getting much of a return.
There is a part of me that wants to start a new thread.
I think Nascar is running races better now than ever, at least the last 10 years. I don't have a time line, but it started happening (for me) last year.
We have significant tire wear and long green runs to fatigue and wear out most. While leaving 3 or 4 cars near the front that can pass, and run slightly different pit cycles.
It is really an incredible story that unfolds for each race. I wish the old Stock Car Racing Magizine edited by Dick Berggren was still around. The current racing is worthy of the best ink. The drama is good enough to hold the interest, and to be reviewed in detail during the following weeks.
@Greg I agree. You should start that thread. It will provoke discussion and argument. If we are gonna argue every day, might as well argue about something interesting!I think you should start that thread, because it is a worthy separate discussion.
The last three races have been excellent like you said, the actual racing has been really good, I think they are finally making progress with this Gen6 body and finding what will provide better racing. And really, gotta give props to race control for letting the races play out without their help.I think you should start that thread, because it is a worthy separate discussion. I am feeling much the same way. I try to pay as little mind to the stupid plate races as possible. The last three events have been excellent, especially the last one. I don't accept the validity of the stages, but they haven't expanded them (yet) . The last half of these races are being allowed to play out naturally, and the current package is vastly superior to what they had 5-10 years ago.
The current races are almost purist in their appeal. I question whether this will be allowed to continue with the signs of decreasing interest. Someone will want to 'spice it up'. I hope I'm wrong.
There is a part of me that wants to start a new thread.
I think Nascar is running races better now than ever, at least the last 10 years. I don't have a time line, but it started happening (for me) last year.
We have significant tire wear and long green runs to fatigue and wear out most. While leaving 3 or 4 cars near the front that can pass, and run slightly different pit cycles.
It is really an incredible story that unfolds for each race. I wish the old Stock Car Racing Magizine edited by Dick Berggren was still around. The current racing is worthy of the best ink. The drama is good enough to hold the interest, and to be reviewed in detail during the following weeks.
I have never needed 150k fans to validate things. It is like a girlfriend, if you need someone to tell you she's beautiful you are already an idiot for needing confirmation of something so obvious. But I do believe the fan base will increase, if the current quality is sustained.
One last tacky analogy : Good racing like we are seeing now, will give some kids the fever. It will put racing in their blood, just like ours.
All of the other crap will take care of itself.
Dr Dirt, oh yes, I miss him on pit road.I always liked Dr. Dick Berggren. He was always smart and insightful. Nothing remotely phony. He's one of the guys I wish was still around on race day.
If we are gonna argue every day, might as well argue about something interesting!
I'm sure I'm not looking at the same car twice, but darned if I can tell them apart. Just another reason I don't watch F1.
Why is it I have no interest in motorcycle racing? Is it related to my complete lack of interest in motorcycles in general? Maybe I just haven't looked at it close enough to figure out what's going on.Moto -Gp is a great show ...... no frills, no chills and no damned stages ............ just racing
I've never understood the appeal of F1. The racing that I've seen yielded little excitement when compared to NASCAR. I tried watching a year or two ago. I think in four races that I watched, the leader into turn #1 lap #1 was the winner of the race. I just looked up some stats from their most recent 2017 season. Forty-six, the total number of lead changes over the twenty race season in F1. Three races produced zero lead changes. Two times in 2017 did the winner come out of a starting position outside the top three. I guess this appeals to someone but not this race fan.I'm sure I'm not looking at the same car twice, but darned if I can tell them apart. Just another reason I don't watch F1.
I've never understood the appeal of F1. The racing that I've seen yielded little excitement when compared to NASCAR. I tried watching a year or two ago. I think in four races that I watched, the leader into turn #1 lap #1 was the winner of the race. I just looked up some stats from their most recent 2017 season. Forty-six, the total number of lead changes over the twenty race season in F1. Three races produced zero lead changes. Two times in 2017 did the winner come out of a starting position outside the top three. I guess this appeals to someone but not this race fan.
Montoya said he watches the first lap then turns it off.I've never understood the appeal of F1. The racing that I've seen yielded little excitement when compared to NASCAR. I tried watching a year or two ago. I think in four races that I watched, the leader into turn #1 lap #1 was the winner of the race. I just looked up some stats from their most recent 2017 season. Forty-six, the total number of lead changes over the twenty race season in F1. Three races produced zero lead changes. Two times in 2017 did the winner come out of a starting position outside the top three. I guess this appeals to someone but not this race fan.
I can tolerate a dominant leader; after all, that's what we've seen in NASCAR the past three weeks and for much of last season. But I can only tolerate it IF positions are being actively swapped further back in the pack AND the broadcaster shows them to us.I've never understood the appeal of F1. The racing that I've seen yielded little excitement when compared to NASCAR. I tried watching a year or two ago. I think in four races that I watched, the leader into turn #1 lap #1 was the winner of the race. I just looked up some stats from their most recent 2017 season. Forty-six, the total number of lead changes over the twenty race season in F1. Three races produced zero lead changes. Two times in 2017 did the winner come out of a starting position outside the top three. I guess this appeals to someone but not this race fan.
Yeah, I keep hearing that. That doesn't make me want to watch. In fact, it actually discourages me.F1 is an engineering exercise. Therefore all the racing is done in qualifying before the race.
Usually lap 1 is the final part of the race. That's when the idiots get to wreck their cars.
Why is it I have no interest in motorcycle racing? Is it related to my complete lack of interest in motorcycles in general? Maybe I just haven't looked at it close enough to figure out what's going on.
Regardless, http://www.motogp.com/en/ does a lousy job of explaining the basics of the sport to this casual fan looking for more information. What's 'MotoGP', 'Moto2', 'Moto3'? Sure sounds like stages to me. How is qualifying run? Are the races run based on a time limit or a number of laps? I'm not asking here for answers, just pointing out their site doesn't help educate people.
It is, to say the least, interesting how it all works. Ferrari get almost $70m just for being Ferrari. Williams get a $10m heritage payout. Red Bull and Mercedes each get $35m bonuses, the former for signing the most recent bilateral agreement first and the latter for meeting its agreed-upon target of two championships. Ferrari, Mercedes, Red Bull, and McLaren all have separate deals for another bonus exceeding $30m. Is it all fair, probably not. But Sauber getting ~ $50m is still way more than any NASCAR team can ever hope to collect from NASCAR. Vast differences between how the two operate.Ferrari gets a special "historical" payment for being Ferrari.
Meanwhile, other independent teams with 20+ years on the grid DO NOT receive any "historical" payment. Meaning, Williams and Sauber are ****ted on payment wise every year.