F1: Ecclestone's plans to deny Hamilton a second championship
Having failed to prevent Hamilton winning the 2008 Championship, Formula One is determined to prevent him winning again, by changing the rules.
Most Recent - This Section
F1: competition or lottery?F1's new spa - the mudbath in Texas
F1: Will the 2012 Bahrain GP happen?
F1: the Lotus saga continues - without Lotus
F1: Sorting the men from the boys
Most Recent - Whole Site
BizLawCentral: SEC issues procedings in huge South Florida Ponzi schemeThe Risk Professional: Green Capital Consulting Group
Legal Professional: Baker Mac lawyer guilty of money laundering and securities fraud
Sales and Marketing: shooting oneself in the foot
Business Crime: Dear Mrs Kate Dave: Yes, please. Send it now.
Most Recent - BankingInsuranceSecurities.Com
AML/CFT: a fraud of horrifying simplicitySanctions: USA PATRIOT Act designation 20120522
Sanctions: OFAC Update 20120515
Sanctions: OFAC update 20120508
Sanctions: OFAC Update 20120517
If Hamilton and Massa had finished last season on equal points, Massa would have been champion because he won more races. But Hamilton's consistency won through and his accummulation of points from a range of places - including sixth in the last race which Massa won, gave him the title by one point.
Bernie Ecclestone, the rights holder for Formula One, wants to prevent that consistency counting.
His plan? Medals for the top three places and the one with the most gold medals will be champion. Points will count for nothing.
It's simplistic and gauche, and - like changing the rules to block (obvious) team orders - undermines the entire basis of the sport.
And it's clear who the target is.
Again, F1 wants to favour Ferrari - which has a win or bust style in contrast to the UK based teams' approach of treating the championship as long-game.
