Formula One fans want change but without gimmicks or knee-jerk reactions to a sport many now describe as expensive and boring, according to a survey carried out with the backing of leading drivers.
The Grand Prix Drivers’ Association (GPDA) said in a statement on Wednesday that 217,756 fans from 194 countries had responded to the online survey between 22 May and 8 June.
“The fans are clear: they don’t want a radical overhaul of grand prix racing that takes it away from its historic roots,” said the GPDA chairman, Alex Wurz. “It may sound simple, but the best drivers and teams fighting on track in the most exciting cars is their priority. And we, the drivers, passionately share that view.
“They want competitive sport, not just a show, and they think that F1’s business has become too important, jeopardising our sport.”
In a separate statement to fans, published on the GPDA website, Wurz said they did not believe a revolution was required, as Ferrari’s principal, Maurizio Arrivabene, has suggested. Nor did they want “an artificial show with gimmicks introduced to simply make it more entertaining”.
The results came on the day of a strategy meeting in London, ahead of Sunday’s British Grand Prix, grouping the six top teams as well as the commercial rights holder and governing body. They are considering changes from 2017 to make the cars faster, louder, harder to drive and more aggressive-looking.
Wurz said the GPDA would examine the data and work with key stakeholders “to put fan feedback at the centre of our sport’s future”.
The summary revealed fans wanted louder and more powerful engines, more emphasis on driver skill, a return to re-fuelling and competition between tyre makers. They were in favour of relaxing technical regulations and introducing budget caps.
Worryingly, the top three words used to describe the sport were “expensive”, “technological” and “boring”, in that order. Respondents had an average age of 37, and three quarters had followed Formula One for more than 10 years. Kimi Raikkonen was the favourite driver and Ferrari the top team.
77% felt business interests had become too important and 89% said F1 needed to be more competitive. In contrast, only 32% said F1 needed to promote increasing fuel efficiency and just 14% said it would be better served by fewer teams running more cars.