On the face of it, Formula 1 recently presented a healthy 19 race dates for the 2010 calendar but many of those venues remain are under a cloud.
Canada and Germany are subject to the signing of contracts, Britain’s two alternative circuits are not guaranteed races, Spa’s racing license has been revoked, and South Korea’s new venue is only half built.
Meanwhile, the latest uncertainty surrounds the May 30 allocation for the 2010 Turkish Grand Prix. Istanbul is therefore due to host a race within days of the Monaco Grand Prix, and the logistical impracticality of that prospect has been discussed this weekend by the Formula One Teams’ Association.
At a meeting of the World Motor Sport Council today though, it was confirmed that the Monaco Grand Prix has been brought forward by a week in order to aid the logistical demands of the teams ahead of the Turkish round of the championship.
In addition, the FIA has approved in principle a proposal to swap the dates of the Abu Dhabi and Brazilian races, pending agreement with the promoters of both events.
Officially, the Turkish Grand Prix, criticized for attracting so small a crowd earlier this year, is due to move to June 6 if the negotiations with Montreal fall through, which would give teams a more feasible time-frame to travel to the venue. This scenario seems unlikely, as reports have come out that the Canadian Grand Prix will take place in 2010, and the announcement will be made before the final round of the 2009 season.
The Most recent version of the 2010 schedule looks like this:
Formula One is such a glamorous sport, with cutting-edge technologies, in the most beautiful and scenic venues like Monaco, Valencia, Singapore, etc. So I beg the question, why does Formula One Management, the media distribution and promotion arm of F1, lag on providing the most advanced broadcasting technologies?
However, the Federation Internationale de l’Automobile (FiA) and Formula One Management (FOM) seem to be forgetting something for their worldwide TV audience: an HD feed. The current word is that the final Grand Prix of the season at Abu Dhabi will feature a HD world feed, which will hopefully open the door for getting HD feeds for all venues soon. But why is Formula One so behind the times on this? Is it a money issue, broadcasting rights issue, or just a plain oversight?
An HD feed would be great, but I’d like to go further than this… why isn’t Formula One using cutting-edge distribution tools? Due to time zone differences for such a global sport, I would think any type of DVR partnership would be a great win.
How about new online distribution technologies, in this ever TV-to-Web media convergence? Most people in the industry want to bring the TV experience to the web, but I would tend to differ and see it the other way around. The Web experience can be so much more integrated in a rich-media experience, marrying video with any type of other information available online at a user’s request (anything, anytime, anywhere). It can also provide quite a bit of value bringing the history of the sport for newcomers, creating a deeper understanding and stronger connection between the sport and the fans.
For example, I can definitely foresee a DVR-like web broadcast in HD merging video feeds with the following: