The Moronic New F1 Qualifying Format Has Finally Been Ditched For The Old System

The new elimination-style Formula 1 qualifying format was met with a pretty bad response when it was initially announced at the end of February. The systemâs unpopularity only increased when it debuted in Australia, failing completely.
F1 bosses said it would be scrapped for the next round in Bahrain but alas, it was not. And when it bombed for a second time, it was clear there was only one thing left to do â bring back the old knock-out system from last year.

This wasnât what FIA president Jean Todt and F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone wanted and other alternatives were discussed at a meeting with bosses on the Sunday of the Bahrain Grand Prix. An aggregate system was put forward, where the classifications from Q1, Q2 and Q3 would be from the driverâs best two laps.
However, team bosses didnât like this one bit and sent a letter to Todt and Ecclestone ahead of Thursdayâs meeting. In a rare showing of unity, all 11 teams said they wanted to revert back to the old format and also made clear any attempts to bring in an aggregate system would be rejected.

Changing a rule at last minute requires unanimous support from Ecclestone, Todt and the 11 teams. All of them decided at the meeting to go back to the three-session, knock-out system from 2015. The regulation switch will go before the F1 Commission and the World Motor Sport Council next week, where it will likely be ratified.
The FIAâs statement read:
âAt the unanimous request of the teams in a letter received today, Jean Todt, President of the FIA, and Bernie Ecclestone, commercial rights holder representative, accepted, in the interests of the Championship, to submit a proposal to the F1 Commission and World Motor Sport Council to revert to the qualifying format in force in 2015.
âThis proposal, if approved by the F1 governing bodies, will take effect as from the Chinese Grand Prix and will apply for the rest of the season. Jean Todt and Bernie Ecclestone welcomed the idea put forward by the teams to have a global assessment of the format of the weekend for 2017.â
Thankfully this whole qualifying mess (which didnât even need to exist in the first place) looks to be over and done with.
Comments
God Bless
THANKS BERNIE THANKS 🙌🙌🙇
Iâm sure Bernie will whine and moan about this once we get to China next week and say the teams are stupid etc, when heâs the main reason that they were stuck in this mess to begin with.
Finally. They need to realize these sporadic decisions to âmake things more excitingâ are what ruins F1
Wait⊠Wasnât F1 already very boring? Looking back on what Iâve watched of F1âŠIts really boring to stare at the TV for hoursâŠ
Now just scrap the âbossesâ and we are all set, looking at you Bernie.
Donât forget Todt. Out with him.
And keep the momentum going by ditching the engines.
They should change all F1 Cars to Dacia Sanderos.
Yeah sould be fun and pretty slow
Sorry i had toâŠ
Good idea. No new ideas have to be banned thereafter
Finally!!!!! The new way is absolutely horrible
I quite liked the new system, kept it interesting and strategic. F1 has all been strategy and engineering for quite some time. And watching qualifying with an open mind it keeps every minute of qualifying interesting. Itâs like the elimination type races on games.
But Iâm just a nerdy engineer
It wasnât so bad o think too.
Except no one being able to have a second try to better their time and the last three minutes of each session having an empty track.
#retardedbernie
F1 has more Commissions and Councils than the Galactic Empire. We really need to thin out the bureaucrats if we want to save F1. Itâs being regulated to a slow and agonizingly painful death.
More power, less politics!
Pagination