Friday, October 05, 2007

Next customer please...

Prodrive, who own Aston Martin and run their Le Mans programme and Subaru’s WRC cars, now have to wait until October 24 to find out if their plan to run this year's McLarens in the 2008 Formula One Championship is a possibility.

The problem has come due to an intervention from Williams, who have questioned Max Mosley over the legality of the cars, despite the preliminary '08 regulations stating that 'customer cars' will be permitted next year.

In a statement today, Prodrive boss David Richards said: "We are in no doubt that the sporting regulations for the 2008 Formula One Championship clearly allow the use of customer cars, which is why our entire F1 proposition has been based on this fact since the outset.”

But as discussions over a new-for-2008 Concorde Agreement are still on-going and look likely to not be finalised before the end of this year, the current regulations governing the sport (which do not allow 'customer cars', ie, those purchased from another team) could be rolled over. This leaves the possibility that Prodrive's plans may yet be deemed illegal for '08

SO,

The understandable issue being raised by Team Willy is that as a customer team, Prodrive may not be able to run McLaren's next year under the current regulations, but if they are permitted to, then they should at least be unable to score Constructors Championship points as they are - by definition - not a constructor.

And, to some extent, they have a point.

The Formula One Constructors Championship has been in place since 1958, and I think that allowing a ‘race team’ not a constructor to score points is neither fair nor sporting.

Of course, the fact that they would be running the current batch of McLaren Mercedes' MP4-22s, a car which has shown itself to be the arguably the fastest and undoubtedly the most reliable in this year's championship, could mean that Prodrive's outfit are potentially point-scorers from the outset.

However, it is a tad hypocritical for Frank Williams to suggest that running some-one else’s cars is unfair, as his Williams team ran Henri Pescarolo in a year-old March 701 purchased from the French car builder in 1971. His team was eligible for Constructor points, though the car wasn’t quick enough to get any.

So maybe Frank needs to have a bit of a think before he starts getting funny about new teams not being constructors, as this was a situation he benefited from hugely in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s.

We shall have to wait three weeks for the International Court of Appeal to decide the legality of Prodrive’s intentions to run another constructor’s cars next season, and whether or not Britain's newest F1 team will be on the grid next year.

But if Prodrive's appeal is granted in their favour, some of the sport's 'Old Boys' may have to face watching their cars trail home a repainted McLaren Merc, whether they like it or not!

And whether or not Frank is being hypocritical, I don’t want to see it either. Now Aston Martin F1…

That would be a different story.

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