Kalmadi’s ambitions are lavish but his reach has always been tethered to senior politicos who would rather float in anchorage. It must be frustrating. So when he assures us that virtually everything is settled, we know that absolutely nothing is. For instance, one of the cardinal terms of Ecclestone’s contract is that the IOA be entirely and solely responsible for financing the promotion and conduct of the race. Another condition is that the IOA must identify the land for the circuit in consultation with FOA (Formula One Administration) Ltd, with FOA partner Tilke Associates having a final say in the matter. The letter in Kalmadi’s hand is also a disclaimer. Neither in its text nor in its brandishing does it announce that it constitutes an offer that is capable of acceptance; and it is not legally binding. (The letter also effectively negates the recent proposal by liquor baron and motorsport aficionado Vijay Mallya to host a street race around India Gate.)
Every comma and clause in the contract has to have the FOA’s Olympian approval. The IOA must meet a race promotion contract with the FOA. The IOA must settle the commercial issues, the fee, security inputs, and the costs of national and international TV organisations. Also requiring Kalmadi’s compliance will be a circuit rights agreement with APM Sport (
The upside is that if
The downside is that in the overfull F1 calendar,
Ecclestone likes to keep his options open till the last moment, which is why the diminutive 76-year-old has provisionally signed on more than 10 nations for new F1 circuits.
Furthermore, we’ll get to know for sure only in late 2008 if
This is hardly the stuff of optimism nourishment. There’s more to F1 than watching balloon-tyred needles decked out in the motley of million-dollar advertising patches belting down straights at 300 mph; there’s the migraine of massive organisational vicissitudes, of being part of a scheme of a financial scheme so epic that it is almost mystical – none of which Indian administration has shown itself good at.
What
Formula 1 for
The problem is that Kalmadi is pretty much a stranger to the niceties – and the not-so-niceties – of organisation on the scale of Genghis Khan’s army. Purely in terms of logistics before a race, and given that all other issues have been settled to the refractory satisfaction of Bernie Ecclestone, seven aircraft have to be cleared through customs within an hour. After a race, equipment and cars have to be shoehorned into the same aircraft within two hours. The airport bureaucracy has to be as fast on its feet as the F1 drivers are off theirs. This is probably the reason why the Sepang International F1 Circuit is part of the Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) project. The KLIA project, which is managed by the Malaysian airline, Berhad, owns both the
As Vicky Chandhok, Indian motorsports big-leaguer and father of Karun Chandhok, said on July 28, 2003 (http://www.rediff.com/sports/2003/jul/28chandhok.htm)
Mr Ecclestone was very, very clear when he sent Michael Taub as an intermediary...that it is not just a racing track that we are going to have but also various industries, industrial parks, etc, to make it commercially viable. The economics of having just a race track will not work. Today,
[But] Formula One is not just 20 cars. These cars arrive in seven jumbo jets carrying all the equipment. The production company comes in three large aircraft with a staff of about 300-400 people. The security staff is the same world over. They fly from one venue to the other.
After landing, the seven aircraft have to clear through the customs within an hour. Two hours after the race, all the equipment and cars are packed into the aircraft and they leave. In a country like
When asked whether he thought that Ecclestone was aware of “problems”, Chandok said:
I don't think he is aware of these Indian problems in the form of delays. He cannot afford the delays. But before he says yes, he will actually fly an aircraft with all the equipment and do a mock run. He did that in
This does mean that if Ecclestone jinks an eyebrow,
And, a decade and some after Chandok Sr’s interview, Ecclestone did visit
At the bottom of the F1 pile is money, shitloads of it. India can scarce afford to pump in millions of dollars, megawatts of energy and rivers of sweat, all from a polity that will already be stripping itself of a great deal of developmental logic to feed the leviathan maw of the 2010 Commonwealth Games. Tellingly, after Ecclestone recently patted
Furthermore, each track that wishes to hold an F1 MotoGP will most likely have to sign at least a half-decade contract and pay US$ 8 million (approximately Rs 32 crore, at the going rate) a race. These costs are hardly something that Kalmadi – and his political bosses – would be willing to look full on. Even if he is personally out of the woods, in that he might have long departed the political scene when cumulative losses begin to turn the government of the day purple in the face, it’s a good bet that the Congress today will think a dozen times – which is 11 times more than it normally does – before it sends “Yes, bending over” signals to Ecclestone.