Monday 19 March 2018

The future of F1 - What I'd like to see

Daniel Ricciardo, Red Bull Racing RB14
Image courtesy of www.motorsport.com
Hello you, my name is Luca but you can call me Luca. I have been watching F1 since Lewis Hamilton won his first championship, I've had a bit of a love hate relationship with the sport due to the politics and the nature of particular individuals involved within as well, but like everything in life, it can be improved so as appose to blindly hating it for one reason or another (Like the engines or the halo, though I despise the halo too) or being so in love with it that nobody dare criticise it, I am going to bring up some ideas for F1 to probably ignore but I know some of which will be quite popular.

I am making this because of the takeover of the commercial side of F1 by Liberty Media that has brought some really great things to the table - such as the F1 Live shows like the event in London that took place a week before the British Grand Prix - and overall has really modernised F1, even if the new logo isn't that nice to look at. I know what Liberty Media are trying to do so by the off chance they or the FIA for some reason are looking at some random guy's blog, here's some ideas.

Okay first of all there's car design, now this sort of thing is more the FIA's expertise but I fear that F1 is going to fall back in this particular race to really grab people's attention. Recently, Formula E revealed the car that teams would use for the upcoming 2018-19 season and well, it looks absolutely incredible!




Related image
Image courtesy of www.autosport.com
When the Generation Two Formula E car was revealed, it definitely captured that wow factor that I feel we need in F1 and have been lacking for some time. When it comes to styling, you can either make it look smooth and beautiful, or aggressive and exciting and I feel we need to see F1 cars as being out of this world incredible, that we look at in utter awe. The Formula E car looks like a Batmobile, I want those sort of comparisons to be made with Formula One.
 
Of course I haven't steered away from my feelings, the halo which looks absolutely hideous. I'm completely alright if it's a placeholder for an aeroscreen to be developed, I think the FIA's attitude towards the halo has been as hideous as it is, implementing it in all of its single seater categories as almost like a panic. The halo isn't the future, an aeroscreen is and I hope the FIA aren't patting themselves on the back just yet and are proceeding by developing an aeroscreen that all single seaters can use for the foreseeable future.
 
Next up regarding the cars is the technology, now for some reason people think the current engines are abysmal, I like the current 1.6-litre turbo V6 engines though I do think a few things can be done to make the engines sound a bit nicer, like a blown diffuser that were on the 2011 F1 cars, which I think equipped with the turbos can make for some nice deceleration noises. Raising the RPM limit I believe is also necessary, I know these smaller engines can be some real screamers and it would make for a nicer sound, I know they are planning to raise by about 3,000rpm and that can only be a good thing, I can only hope it'll work in a way that they actually do approach the limit as appose to what they do now which is start bouncing off the redline a bit earlier than the maximum RPM.
 
I'd love to see the hybrid systems utilised like how the LMP1 hybrid cars use theirs, allowing for such incredibly sharp and instant acceleration, maybe with the power coming through the front wheels possibly like I believe they did with the four wheel drive LMP1 hybrid vehicles. Also taking into account the aerodynamics that F1 have used over the years, the racing these days is really restricted due to getting dirty air from the car in front meaning cars can't get close and it sucks. I don't claim to be completely educated on aerodynamics but I have heard about Ground Effect and how it doesn't seem to be effected by dirty air, though European based racing don't seem to want to use it for safety reasons. I trust there can be a fine balance found because I'm sick of cars not being able to race because they're in "dirty air" and have to back away to save tyres and the engine.
 
I believe this next one may or may not be a nightmare to organise but with Liberty Media trying to improve the show for the fans, I had a brainwave a while back after racing a particular kind of car on Project CARS, and that was a BMW M1 Procar. Allow me to give you some backstory.

Back in 1979, a championship was put together by BMW in which F1, SportsCar and Touring Car drivers could all compete in the same cars, and they would race just before the Grand Prix took place. So F1 drivers were taking part in this series right before the Grand Prix itself, and they did this for eight of the nine European rounds that year.

This gave me an idea that would mean a little bit of fun for the attendants of the Grand Prix as well as people at home, and that is reviving the Procar name and having all the drivers race either at every GP event or a select few. There would be no practice or qualifying for the event itself, the first time a driver would be driving a Procar would be out the pits on the way to the grid. The way a grid would be decided would be a reversed order of the previous year's F1 championship results, with every new driver coming into F1 then being decided on when their official FIA entry was confirmed.

So for example if Procar was brought back for this year, the two rookies in F1 this year are Charles Leclerc and Sergey Sirotkin, if Sirotkin had officially entered F1 after Leclerc officially entered, Sirotkin would lead Leclerc on the Procar grid for the first race, with Sebastian Vettel and Lewis Hamilton lining up on the back row.

For every race afterwards, it would be a reverse grid of the previous race's results, and all races are only five lap sprints at every circuit. So there will be carnage and undoubtedly an incredible show being put on for the fans, and it would be a nice little bit of fun for the drivers in order to warm up before the race begins. In regards to if they would race at some circuits and not all, I'd pick all the European races along with Singapore, USA and Mexico.

The cars used in this series would be all powered by the same spec engine, being built to the same spec to comply to F1 engine regulations, so right now it would be 1.6-litre turbocharged V6 (though for cost reasons, I don't think they'd use the hybrid systems) developed by an engine manufacturer with no current F1 ties for example Cosworth, so no Mercedes, Ferrari, Renault or Honda power units.

The design of the cars like the BMW M1, very much a touring car or GT style but I would hope that it could drive a lot like a DTM or LMGTE car, so the drivers could throw it into corners and feel like they can push every single one of the five laps. So this would effectively be like Rallycross, short races where the drivers push albeit in equal cars which would make the racing even better.

As far as the cars used in Procar, Alfa Romeo attempted to make a Procar back in the day which used their 1988 3.5-litre V10 intended to be used by the Ligier F1 team that year, which is where I got my idea for using the current spec of F1 engines. Mercedes have made a car using their current F1 engine, the Project One, so it isn't out of the question at all, though as I've said before, I fear that having the Mercedes F1 team in F1 as well as making Procar engines would possibly mean they could exploit it.

So again, an independent engine manufacturer and chassis developer working with a racing team to run all the Procar entries and maybe for some extra fun, all the F1 drivers can customise the look of their cars out of their own or their sponsor's pockets so they can all be told apart. What do you all think of this?

Speaking of what I'd like to see at F1 race weekends, the European F1 weekend for the most part consists of two subcategories as well as Porsche SuperCup. Outside of Europe, the support schedule is little to almost non existent. By 2019, the GP3 support series will become FIA Formula 3 and will be on the F1 support schedule at the European events alongside FIA F2, and this gave me an idea to increase the support bill for many nation's Grand Prix.

In recent years, the FIA started backing a lot of national entry level single seater championships, such examples include the British Formula Ford championship, the ADAC Formel Masters and the Formula Abarth championship, which all are on the support programmes of the British Touring Cars, the ADAC GT Masters and the Italian GT championship. After the FIA started backing these championships, they became British, German and Italian Formula 4. (Note: The rebrand for the British championship began in 2015 however since the name 'British F4' had already been taken by a BRDC backed championship, this series was known as MSA Formula until early 2016 when the BRDC British F4 became BRDC British F3).

I bring this up because I think it would be a really good idea to have these national F4 championships join their parent championships at their country's Grand Prix, so for example: British F4 has all of its rounds supporting the BTCC still but then will also have an event at Silverstone supporting F3, F2 and F1 at the British Grand Prix. Same with the Italian F4 championship heading to Monza to race on the Italian Grand Prix support schedule, just like how the American F4 championship supports the United States Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas.

Just doing some research now, apparently the support schedule at this year's Canadian Grand Prix will be the Ferrari Challenge, the Micra Cup and Formule 1600 which is honestly a bit tragic. I'd love to see perhaps the new F3 Americas championship go there, and some more national championships even if they're on the level like that of Australian Supercars, since they have a non-championship round at Albert Park during the Australian Grand Prix weekend. Just add something to this list.

Actually after I initially finished this article, I saw a video on Twitter of what I would learn to be, the Australian Supertrucks which in the video itself were supporting the Aussie Supercars at Adelaide. What makes the series such an incredible spectacle, they have ramps put out on the track's straights and they gain some incredible air! I'd love to see a World Supertrucks championship like that supporting the F1 constantly, and now I think about it, I'd love to see some stunting at all the races like how they do between heats at the Race Of Champions. Maybe this would require structuring the weekend differently, having F2, F3, F4 etc. the days before the Grand Prix, as to give the diehard motorsport fans a reason to buy a full weekend ticket.

I honestly count my lucky stars that Europe gets the feeder series on the support schedule and I just hope that overseas Grand Prix can get some more support races from various other championships. Don't get me wrong, I am not going to say that the Micra Cup doesn't offer up some exciting racing, I've seen the Renault Clio Cup series when I have visited Croft for the BTCC and those small cars pack some punch, but we also had the Porsche Carrera Cup, British F4, Ginetta SuperCup and the Ginetta Juniors.

Now for the F1 eSports championship which I know the new F1 owners are pushing heavily and has proven to be incredibly successful, I'd love to see this concept expanded so they can do what Formula E does. Formula E have a single day structure mostly for their events and have a lot of time to kill between qualifying and the race since their cars are charging, and what the organisers do is have the drivers as well as fans compete to try and qualify for a short sprint race on a simulator. Formula E use the mobile game Real Racing 3, and I do hope to fuck that they work with the developers of RR3 to create a dedicated Formula E game.

Formula One already have a dedicated game, which is how they managed to create the F1 eSports championship and put on an incredible show. With the plans to expand the eSports championship, I can see the potential perhaps to run the eSports championship full time to host their races on the evening of the Saturday proceeding the following day's Grand Prix, but maybe as a lead up to the eSports event itself, have drivers volunteer to compete alongside attending fans who will try to qualify for the chance to race alongside real life drivers, just like what they do in Formula E. It would give plenty of attending fans reason to stay after the final day's race.

Speaking of which, I would like to genuinely know what else could be done for fans attending the Grand Prix itself. When I went to Silverstone in 2011, Jamie Archer from the X Factor was there performing next to the Wellington Straight, I don't really do much live concert stuff but that's all I can really think of. They did also invite the attendees to come on stage for a 'talent show' with some cringey play on the judges, someone acting like Simon Cowell and calling it 'Silverstone's Got Talent'.

I remember one year the YouTube channel 'P1 Pole Position' was there and I was actually meant to go on one of their shows but I couldn't make it. So with the rise of WTF1 in recent years, I can an opening for them to have an interacting factor in there among the audience. I've always liked the idea of a motorsport show with a live audience, maybe even bringing on online personalities and Grand Prix drivers perhaps in a head to head style format on a gaming rig.

Finally for the people watching at home, F1 have launched a streaming service for both current and classic races, and this would really modernise F1 if they did it right. I'd love to see onboard cameras where the viewers can rotate 360 degrees, and the ability to jump from F1 car to another, among other viewing points from the click of a button, maybe even scrolling through different commentary feeds depending on their selected language. How about looking at real time telemetry? That'd probably be a stretch considering how the teams could take advantage of each other's telemetry, but it would be just throttle, braking, G-Force, and also timing to the exact thousandth of a second in real time, among other options like temperature, tyre wear etc. I'll leave the details to the professionals.

Of course, it'd be very naïve of me to expect this to be taken into any sort of consideration but it is indeed wishful thinking. I haven't even mentioned it at length but the new logo looks horrible, I'll put up a picture along with a design I made on paper which I'll show to you all now.

Image is my own.
Top left is the previous F1 logo used between 1994 and 2017, the top right is the new logo that will unfortunately be used from 2018 and the bottom is what I made. I took inspiration from the FIA junior formulae championship logos, that being from Formula Two, Formula Three and Formula Four, and I retained the black and red colour scheme from the previous F1 logo.

The old logo was iconic and much beloved, the new one I honestly cannot think I or indeed many people will get used to. I get that Liberty wanted to put a new face to F1, to show a new period was coming led by new people, but I feel like they went too far with the logo as it just looks hideous, and I wish they had looked to the junior categories for inspiration as appose to ESPN.

Anyway that's very miniscule, F1's new logo is hideous but not the main concern, it can come across as petulant but it doesn't disguise how horrible the logo is.

So with all of that out of the way, what do you all think? Do you agree with some of my suggestions, do you not agree with some? Anything you're thinking of that I may have missed? Feel free to leave it in a comment below.

Alright! That'll be all from me, so if you enjoyed what I have had to say, I'd hugely appreciate it if you spread this around, and if you're reading my blog for the first time and you like what you see, if you want to see more of what I have to say in the future then leave your email in the 'Follow By Email' option or follow me on Twitter @TheLucaFormat.

Hope to see all of you soon, so until we meet again.
Luca.



Sunday 4 March 2018

An idea - Gran Turismo movie


Dino Zamparelli, Jann Mardenborough and Jimmy Eriksson on the podium (GP3 Series Media)
Image courtesy of www.skysports.com
Hello you, my name is Luca but you can call me Luca. So I am well aware that my last blog post was also on Gran Turismo, but this isn't the exact same sort of idea because in this blog post, I'd like to talk in detail about a proposed Gran Turismo movie by Sony, and how it has the potential and the pressure to be a hell of a lot better than crappy film adaptations of video games that we have become all but used to seeing.
 
So when I say Gran Turismo movie, what springs to mind? If we are going off just the in-game content, maybe a driver who enters into some crappy sub 100 horsepower race called the 'Clubman Cup' before entering more races and eventually racing at Le Mans? Or doing a tedious driving test where you drive forward and pull up, and if the character fails then you hear a certain song by Yello? Yeah that sounds pants. A lot of non story driven video game adaptations do this, take literal elements from the source material that work as an interactive experience and expect it to work for a passive and engaged audience. This isn't the idea I have for the Gran Turismo movie.
 
This is something I know needs to be celebrated and made for the big screen, and I know a lot of you will be amazed to hear this, there are drivers who because of Gran Turismo have gone from sitting on their sofas with their PlayStation controllers to racing against all of the world's best drivers in a variety of different motor racing categories as a result of GT Academy. One such example is the man in the centre of the picture above, Jann Mardenborough.
 
Mardenborough entered into GT Academy during a hiatus from education and ended up beating up to 90,000 entrants to win in the European based competition in 2011, and has since gone on to be majorly successful in championships such as various GT and Formula Three series, winning a race in GP3 supporting the F1 German Grand Prix in 2014 and also in LMP cars at the 24 hours of Le Mans.
 
Coupled onto the other levels of success that GT Academy graduates have had, these drivers are the real deal and are here to stay, and when you also take into consideration the legitimacy that video game racers have garnered in recent years in mainstream thanks to the F1 eSports championship taking place last year, and one of the competitors being a former real life single seater from Turkey named Cem Bölükbaşı, who was signed to a team that two time F1 champion Fernando Alonso bought into, no matter what is said now about video game racers, they have proven themselves and are not going anywhere.
 
So with the rise of video game racers and competitive racing both translating over to real life and remaining within the games themselves, this is the topic and now is the time to make a movie out of this to show any old Joe sitting on his sofa that even a gamer could probably become a pro-racing driver and win Le Mans or the F1 world championship. So with this synopsis in mind, what to do?
 
According to GTPlanet, the movie might be dead which may or may not have been a good thing as of now which means someone with passion can pick it up. May not help considering Sony is looking to sell off its TV and film division, I still think something will fall into place to tell this story because whilst Sony were looking to make it a franchise competing with Universal's Fast and Furious as well as Dreamworks' Need For Speed franchises. I don't know how a GT franchise could work but let's just focus on a standalone now.
 
Okay first let's think of a main character. I'm going to be taking liberties with my idea, but have the main character take elements and characteristics from the real life GT Academy winners, mostly like Mardenborough though, mainly because of who I have in mind to portray this character. The person I'd like to see lead this film, much to the surprise of a chunk of you who believe I'm about to say Taron Egerton, I'm actually going with John Boyega.
 
Image courtesy of www.thedailybeast.com
Most of you know Boyega as Finn from the new Star Wars films, and I'm picking him because not only as we all know that he is one hell of an actor and a very charismatic guy, but also I saw an interview that he did that he apparently has a big racing rig at his home so he must be passionate about racing to some degree.
 
I'd like to see a character portrayed by Boyega as a working class college graduate a bit like Mardenborough who has maybe taken a few years away from education and casually competes in racing on PlayStation games such as Gran Turismo with his typical PlayStation controller as appose to a big simulator rig. His favourite driver could be Lewis Hamilton, since they're both Black British and this is what inspires the character's love for racing.
 
Another great thing that I'd like to see, Boyega actually told his Nigerian father about being cast in Star Wars and in a very strong Nigerian accent, his father expressed his utter delight and then asked what Star Wars was, so maybe Boyega's character could have parents who are just like that in regards to his racing. We could see some minor conflict in regards to his fixation on racing without any major aspirations in mind for his future, with the both of them hoping to see him take up a higher occupation as a result of going to university.
 
Just for the sake of not having to type out 'Boyega's character', I am going to think of a name for him which could be changed in the final version, so I'm going to call him Joshua Zuma and have him be a British-Nigerian with a mother and father who were originally from Nigeria and both moved over at a young age. So as you know these details now, you'll know I'm referring to the character when I say Josh.
 
Josh will be aged around early to mid 20's and be very much a Jack The Lad, likes his partying and hanging with his mates in the evenings, maybe have this over-confident side play into his character and development over the course of the story as it will work against him. He'll be an only child which plays into the flaw of not being able to see past himself, which he will learn when it comes to working with other people especially in the highly demanding world of motorsport.
 
Of course, Josh will have to compete with other potential candidates, and he sees when he makes it to the finals what he's up against, you could have multiple eSports and League racing champions ran by professional teams, with Josh being the only one who doesn't have any sort of major credibility or peak physical fitness. This would be an interesting point to see how Josh would react when he sees these people, making him realise he's out of his depth and begins to doubt himself since he came from a very casual racing background.
 
As far as inspirations go, the character of Josh for me would pull a lot of characteristics from both Mardenborough but also F1 eSports champion Brendon Leigh, the finger waving, impulsive and flamboyant Brit who performed an incredible last lap maneuverer for the lead in Abu Dhabi to win the inaugural championship. Leigh's very impulsive and unrefined approach to racing as well as his attitude outside the 'car' as well as his background not being in traditional simulators, makes him all the more appealing when it comes to the casual audience and that's why I have him in mind when it comes to a character like Josh.
 
Seeing the world of video games and how serious the motor racing side is through all these other characters who Josh will be competing against would be by far the best way to show off this world. I can already think of people who are already very established in competitive league racing in order to create characters for this story to appose Josh in the GT Academy training.
 
During the GT Academy events, there would be a panel of experts coming from the world of motorsport there to adjudicate the candidates, and I was thinking here we could have a fictitious British racing driver inspired loosely by 3-time F1 Grand Prix winner Johnny Herbert. Having started his career at an age that would be considered way too old and being held back by an injury from a lower category of racing, as a result not being able to be as successful as he could have been and as a result, had a relatively short career. But still very much a happy go lucky character, I was thinking probably Mark Addy for this role.
 
Addy's character that we will call, Anthony 'Tony' Kemp will - as was the case I believe in real life - be in charge of the Brits who made it to finals as the competitors who come from a certain country will be given guidance from the judge who is from their home country. Throughout the competition when the driving, fitness, media training are all piling on Josh, Kemp will be there to help him pull through but will be put under pressure to not have any conflict of interest when choosing the winner after observing the final hurdles for all the entrants.
 
As far as the end game of this movie since Josh would end up winning the scholarship, he would end up on a Nissan racing programme and he could be placed in the All-Japan F3 championship and the Japanese Super GT preparing for an assault on both the F1 championship and an attempt at winning Le Mans, a baptism of fire. I don't know how that could fit into a two hour run-time, something like that would be alluded to at the end possibly a follow-up should this movie do well at the box office then it could become a franchise like Sony were expecting. Whether or not the main elements of the gamer to racer journey doesn't carry over into a second film or not remains to be seen.
 
Former Nissan Motorsport boss Darren Cox stated on the Amazon series 'Le Mans: Racing is Everything' that he knows one day, a gamer will win both the Formula One World Championship and the 24 hours of Le Mans. The unsuccessful attempt at heading up the Nissan LMP1 effort in which Jann Mardenborough as well as another GT Academy winner Lucas Ordóñez along with a bunch of other professional drivers tackled the race in the top class, in a very untraditional front wheel drive Nissan car, the programme itself ended before it had really got going and it was such a shame.
 
The sad fact is, the reality of the situation doesn't align with what I'd hope could be told but rather than base it on one true story that hasn't quite had its moment, instead base it around so many true stories both past and present in an attempt to make a mark on the future. The reality is, we can see now that this pathway elicits pure legitimacy and I agree with Darren Cox, that we will see a gamer in our lifetime win the F1 drivers title and Le Mans, we just aren't there yet in reality. I personally would love to see this dream recognised in the form of this/these movie(s).
 
I'd love to see how the first film does if they do decide to make a franchise out of it, not that I am expecting it to be such a hit that it would warrant a sequel but it would be nice. A definite nice change of pace from the competition, I'm not into the Fast and Furious or Need For Speed films, this sounds like it would be so much more my thing. Question is though, what do you all think? Feel free to leave a comment saying something nice about this whole thing, I do genuinely want to know what you all think.
 
Oh and if you're somehow reading this Michael De Luca, Dana Brunetti, Joseph Kosinski, Jon and Erich Hoeber, all of you being in charge of this movie, I know this can be good so pen a nice script Hoeber brothers and really do try with this vision in mind. Hopefully something materialises.
 
Alright! As for the rest of you, thank you so much for reading what I have to say. If you're new here and want to see more, either follow me on Twitter @TheLucaFormat or put your email in the 'Follow By Email' option if you can see it on the right hand side of your screen.
 
Hope to have you back here soon for my next blog post. So until we meet again.
Luca.