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EJ25RUN
02-24-2009, 07:45 PM
http://www.blogcdn.com/www.autoblog.com/media/2009/02/usf1_chop_580op.jpg

Interview with Peter Windsor and Ken Anderson (http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid626910340/bctid14022977001)

I was awaiting more concrete info to come before i posted this. Today, the team became official.

Older article from Autoblog...

When reports began to surface about the formation of a U.S.-backed Formula One team, we weren't surprised. Every three-to-five years, speculation about a new U.S. campaign crops up, and inevitably – almost routinely – they're shot down within a month. However, our lack of surprise didn't stem from the rumor's cyclical nature; we've known about USF1 for over a month and have been waiting to drop the details about how the franchise, the players and the financial backers that plan to bring America back to F1 in 2010.

Get the scoop after the jump.


The Players

As reported earlier, the two principals behind USF1 are Ken Anderson and Peter Windsor.

Anderson has a storied career in both four-wheeled and two-wheeled motorsports dating back to 1979. In the interim, he's served as the technical director for the Ligier and Onyx F1 teams, helped design several open wheel racecars, was instrumental in five Indianapolis 500 victories and recently completed work on the Windshear Wind Tunnel – already booked by several top F1 teams for testing – near USF1's home-base in Charlotte, NC.

Anyone who's watched F1 in the past decade is familiar with Peter Windsor. He's served as the English-language interviewer for SpeedTV and Fox, along with writing for F1 Racing and Autosport Japan. More importantly, Windsor served as a Drivers' and Constructors' Championship-winning team manager for Williams F1, once oversaw Ferrari's F1 chassis and suspension departments and is currently the director of Fifty-Four Nine, the clandestine driver coaching company that helps develop F1, GP2 and F3 talent.

The Pitch

The USF1's mission is to stand apart from the other 11 teams by hyping U.S. technology under the tagline of "Made in America." The vehicle will be designed and built in the States and piloted by a duo of American drivers.

The main operational center would be based in Charlotte, NC, where several associated companies and research universities could help develop the racecar. In Europe, USF1 will work out of the newly erected Epsilon motorsports facility located outside of Bilbao, Spain.

As opposed to Major League Baseball, Football and NBA franchises, the crew behind USF1 maintains there are better branding opportunities in F1, not to mention a global audience of three billion viewers, putting F1 among the World Cup and Olympic Games as one of the most recognizable sports in the world.

The average viewer age (25 to 44) and a more affluent consumer base, many of which are located in emerging markets, are both touted in the USF1's business plan. In 2007, Formula One was estimated to take in about $4 billion in revenue, with the front-running teams grossing over $200 million each through sponsorships, television rights, technical support and merchandising.

Supposedly, F1's heads are excited at the prospect, approving USF1's application for matching funds and according to our sources, the start-up has already completed a round of successful fundraising. Naturally, the exotic locales, sexy sponsors and luxurious lifestyle that surrounds F1 are key to getting backers on board.

The Media

The new media landscape will be an instrumental part of delivering content to viewers, and USF1 plans to tap several foreign and domestic distribution companies to keep viewers up-to-date on the American F1 team's exploits. The crew is partnering with television producers and documentary filmmakers from Perpetual Motion Films to create long and short films, high-definition video, photos and stories detailing USF1's progress. All of this will be delivered both online and through selected TV outlets, providing fans with extraordinary access.

The Timing

Depending on your perspective, the launch of the USF1 team couldn't be better, or more poorly, timed.

On one hand, the newly imposed limits on spending, research and development make it one of the easiest times for a new team to compete at the upper echelon of motorsport. The new rules put a cap on budgets, staffing and development, while limiting the vehicles' technical requirements in an effort to make the sport more appealing to the audience.

USF1 would be the first team born under these new regulations, allowing them to be highly adaptable, focused and streamlined, and the team's principals make it abundantly clear that the USF1 crew is the future of the sport.

Of course, on the flip-side, we've got the global economic meltdown. Getting full-fledged funding for an unproven team in these market conditions is a Herculean task of epic proportions. And its success is dependent on continued interest in the sport from both the fans and the money men.

If USF1 succeeds, it hopes to be running in the middle of the pack during the 2010 season and working its way up to the podium within two years. Those are high aspirations for a team that hasn't even publicly confirmed its existence. Judging by recent history, USF1 may never get the chance, but if there was ever a time to make an attempt, it's now.

Elbow
02-24-2009, 08:17 PM
Exciting! I heard about this a few days ago but hadn't heard any real information until now.

StraightSix
02-24-2009, 09:43 PM
I heard it rumored a couple of weeks ago, but couldn't really find anything at the time. I'm looking forward to seeing an American team in F1. I really hope they can be competitive, though.

SampaGuy
02-25-2009, 09:55 AM
Im kinda having trouble coming up with a non-pessimistic comment...

blacknightteg
02-25-2009, 10:03 AM
i didnt read the whole thing ( i get rather lazy) but FUCK YES!

Thighs
02-25-2009, 10:31 AM
i wonder who is gonna build the chassis? is there any other chassis builders here aside from elan? not to mention its not far from charlotte.

Elbow
02-25-2009, 11:22 AM
i wonder who is gonna build the chassis? is there any other chassis builders here aside from elan? not to mention its not far from charlotte.

From what I understand THEY the team will build everything?

Oz10
02-25-2009, 12:02 PM
I am very excite!

blacknightteg
02-25-2009, 12:03 PM
do you have any info about who will be the team princpal and drivers and what not?

StraightSix
02-25-2009, 12:16 PM
Peter Windsor and Ken Anderson are putting things together, so I would imagine they are the team principals. Drivers have not been announced.

blacknightteg
02-25-2009, 12:19 PM
this will be awesome. hopefully with that done. the US grand prix will come back. i would love to go to it again. i went to the first one when they brought it back and it was amazing hearing those cars.

EJ25RUN
02-25-2009, 12:26 PM
Im kinda having trouble coming up with a non-pessimistic comment...

Same here.

I don't see this being different from a Force India operation. Its the same aspiration Super Aguri had.

The only real hope is if they get a driver like Danica Patrick to join and bring the BIG sponsors.

blacknightteg
02-25-2009, 12:28 PM
i wouldnt see why they wouldnt. i mean i atleast hope that they would other wise they wouldnt be able to survive with the amount of money that they would have to spend. especially if they get fined.

Jenson
02-25-2009, 03:07 PM
I work for Elan, we arent making the chassis. With their high expectations and short time frame I am surpirsed that they are building their own chassis. It is either nearly done or they have a very good design already and just need to build it. It just seems easier to buy a chassis that is already FIA sanctioned, the crash test's are no joke.

Danica will definately bring the sponsor money but so would Dale Jr for that matter, and heck he'd probably be better. I do like their idea of getting Speed back in F1.

Thighs
02-25-2009, 03:15 PM
^^ thats surprising to me. i cant think of any other builders in the US who would build the chassis, so maybe they are doing it on their own.

buying one thats already built would be a more cost-effective option, but it would defeat the "made in america" thing.

matthewAPM
02-25-2009, 03:38 PM
I know for sure Elan will not build there chassis, already been asked. I'll try to find where the question was asked and answered.

Elbow
02-25-2009, 03:55 PM
If Dale Jr. races F1 I will never follow F1 again. Please don't bring rednecks to real racing.

EJ25RUN
02-25-2009, 04:02 PM
If Dale Jr. races F1 I will never follow F1 again. Please don't bring rednecks to real racing.

Just like IRL doesn't necessarily mean American drivers, USF1 wont.

Jenson
02-25-2009, 06:20 PM
Im under the impression that they purchased the Menard's factory which is a more than capable facility to build the chassis and everything else.

I get the whole american made idea and love it, but to get started as quickly as they want to it just seems like shooting yourself in the foot. If they begin testing the chassis this race season and work out most of the bug's, then put the engine in Jan 2010 that doesnt leave any room for real winter testing. Not to mention all the presumable bug's that could surface with the real engine in the car. The big 3 in F1 log close to 2 season's worth of miles in winter testing if Im not mistaken so why would they want to hinder themselves? The only thing I can think of is investors, they want the car on the track by 2010 and wont have it anyother way.

The Dale comment is my view on how horrible it'd be if they have Danica drive, but at least he wins. If your hiring a driver strictly for sponsor money you better make sure your number 1 guy can drive like Hamilton, Kimi, and Massa.

dazn
02-25-2009, 08:11 PM
i wonder who is gonna build the chassis? is there any other chassis builders here aside from elan? not to mention its not far from charlotte.


hahaha, silly kids.

Danica has been informally asked to test, she declined thankfully. her in a F1 car would be a fucking joke. I might stop watching F1 if that happened, glad it never will.

Jenson, what do you do at Elan? Ive spent a bit of time there myself. How long have you been there? Know Matt Lodge?

this could be history in the making or just another pipe dream. Its looking really good this time around though. The people involved can make it happen and ball is rolling. I might be in Charlotte in a years time. :D

matthewAPM
02-26-2009, 03:45 PM
I wouldnt be surprised if we see a FBMW driver in F1, as well as someone from ALMS or Champ.

dazn
02-26-2009, 07:21 PM
I wouldnt be surprised if we see a FBMW driver in F1, as well as someone from ALMS or Champ.


FBMW???? hahaha, those guys are lucky to make it to FM or Atlantics.

as much as I hate to say it, my money is on someone from Nascar. not too many american roadracing talents anymore, especially open wheel. this will be all about marketing for the first few years and thats the only thing Nascar is good for, besides finding unique ways to cheat. we will see, I pray that I am wrong.

Elbow
02-27-2009, 06:56 PM
There isn't driver talent in America because it's all gentlemen racers now. Bring back Red Bull Driver Search or another ladder program to find lower funded people with high amounts of skill.

Danica would bring tons of media, and to get Americans interested yes a NASCAR driver. It'd be funny seeing barnyard redneck racing with high class Europeans. I say give Scott Speed a ride, at least he's entertaining.

I do think they should test the cars at Road Atlanta to give me more work.

EJ25RUN
02-27-2009, 07:00 PM
FBMW???? hahaha, those guys are lucky to make it to FM or Atlantics.


Sebastian Vettel went through German Formula BMW.

Elbow
02-27-2009, 07:02 PM
Sebastian Vettel went through German Formula BMW.

I forget who someone is in FBMW somewhere right now with lots of talk with F1 teams.

dazn
02-27-2009, 10:34 PM
Sebastian Vettel went through German Formula BMW.

thats one out of how many people? besides, as everyone can tell, he has a natural talent for racing and he wouldve gotten through to F1 if he raced barstools and lawnmowers.
dont get me wrong, there is nothing wrong with FBMW, i worked in FBMW for two years. But look at the driver lineup in North America FBMW the past few years. most were not americans, especially the ones who won. it just doesnt have the level of competition that you would see in europe. open wheel racing that doesnt include roundy round for most of the season just isnt popular here. the end goal is always money, there is no money for it here. where is the money? nascar, thats why you will more than likely see a large nascar influence. like i said before, hope im wrong. no one dislikes nascar more than me.

i dont have much to say on the red bull rookie search. i find it hard to believe that after testing all those people, the best they could come up with as far as talent goes was scott speed.

Mazda has tried to use the ladder program, but Champ Car died off and now there is no more top rung. Thank you Tony George.

i wish they would test the cars at RA so I could watch too, too bad it would never happen.

BKgen®
03-29-2009, 01:57 AM
There isn't driver talent in America because it's all gentlemen racers now. Bring back Red Bull Driver Search or another ladder program to find lower funded people with high amounts of skill.
I say give Scott Speed a ride, at least he's entertaining.


Well... at least Speed has a little F1 experience from racing with Toro Rosso in 2006.

During friday practice on SPEED this week, Peter Windsor announced that they are going through with a US F1 team with 2 American drivers. No idea who they are though. I'm very curious about them. For this to have a snowball's chance in hell, I would think the best bet would be to go with an experienced Indy driver like Dixon or Franchitti.