Why Formula 1 Racing Crashed and Burned on Its Way to Jersey | newjerseynewsroom.com

newjerseynewsroom.com

Sunday
Sep 01st
  • Login
  • Create an account
    Registration
    *
    *
    *
    *
    *
    REGISTER_REQUIRED
  • Search
  • Local Business Deals

Why Formula 1 Racing Crashed and Burned on Its Way to Jersey

BY JOE FAVORITO
NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM

A little more than a year ago it looked like Formula 1on the banks of the Hudson was dead in the water. However the race was given a second life by the circuit and its organizers and some new dollars and enthusiasm but the race back on track for 2014. With the soon to be released movie “Rush” coming in late September, the casual sports fan in the New York area might, just might, get an added boost to see the amazing value and excitement in what in many circles is the world’s most watched sport this side of soccer. However this past week came more disappointment, growing rumors that the latest effort was still for naught, and F1 in the States was to remain a Texas-only stop at least for 2014.

Why? Let’s revisit some of the points talked about when the initial submission of plans came about last September.

There is perhaps no more costly undertaking that the traveling sports "circuit," which needs to recreate infrastructure wherever it goes. Those huge out of pocket costs are what do in event the biggest of events…from the defunct AVP to tennis tournaments to even large scale events like the Ironman or the X Games and the Dew Tour or the U.S. Surfing Championships, in some places. Big costs for building structures, big permit fees and in the case of first-time events, but learning curves with little margin for error.

Take the event to an urban area, and the potential for problems escalates even further. The Super Bowl in New Jersey? Sure there is some rick but you have the most important element -- the venue -- established and well used before and after the event.

Yes it would be a mega attraction, with perhaps no greater backdrop than the New York skyline. Yes, it would bring in ancillary dollars to towns like West New York, that need the dollars and the work. But the cost, especially for a sport that is well established globally but has little to no footprint in the United States? Devastating.

While promoters talk about millions to flow into the economy, they sometimes gloss over the millions it takes to re-route traffic, build stands, and important all those needed to stage the race to an area where there is no given that people would spend a very high ticket to turn out. A reasonable cost, sure. But thousands for the best seats? Hard to say. The organizers of Formula One are amongst the most savvy, and the most wealthy promoters in the world. They fully understand the value of bringing the sport back to Madison Avenue. It is an idea that every racing sport has chased for years since the Meadowlands Grand Prix departed in the early 1980s.

There are fans of racing in the New York area, but they go to places like Pocono to see NASCAR and now Indy Car and Watkins Glen to see open road racing. The track in the New York area just doesn’t exist. So can the spectacle work in the area? Maybe, but you need to have someone assume very great risk to get it done.

Racing is all about passion and the involvement of brands to activate and support the event. In NASCAR and Indy car to a large extent, the circuit drives sponsors. Yes there are local event sponsors but many of the big dollars come from activation constantly across the country with drivers and their teams. That the beauty of NASCAR’s marketing engagement. Formula One? Big brands for sure. Big TV and technology for sure. But with just one race in the States (Austin) and a few others on this side of the Atlantic, the ability for brands to constantly engage is lost. As great as it is around the world, here Formula One today is what soccer was 10 years ago. Lost in a sea of sports choices for the casual fan.

Maybe it is still too soon for F1 to return to the States outside of the track built for it in Texas. Maybe it needs other places with a little more established infrastructure first before it takes a shot at Gotham. Maybe, like Ironman, Surfing and even the AVP, the X Games and even the Red Bull Air Race the costs of being in New York far outweigh the benefits. Organizers will point to events like the New York City Marathon that have success, but they don’t take the same type of dollar commitment to stage, and they are repeat community events far different from the big business of racing.

F1 is a spectacular experiential event that will win fans when it is done right. Whether it can be done right on the streets in the shadows of Manhattan is another issue. It’s not cheap, and it certainly has a huge long term cost for those who try to buy in to the staging and have little precedence for return, but big precedence for failure. Maybe the organizers will rally and find the dollars and the structure to stage what would be a spectacular event, but in today’s challenged economy, it may be a long and risky ride to the finish line.

What was true a year ago hasn’t really changed. Maybe the big screen will give it a boost for years to come, but even the buzz of a film may not put the event back on schedule for The Garden State somewhere in the future. The cost..in millions…still may outweigh the benefit.

*** *** ***

Joe Favorito has almost 30 years of strategic communications/marketing, business development and public relations expertise in sports, entertainment, brand building, media training, television, athletic administration and business. He has been head of communications for the New York Knicks, Philadelphia 76ers, the USTA and other entities and now runs a successful strategic communications and marketing consultancy based in New Jersey and Manhattan. He is also an author and instructor at Columbia University. You can find out more at joefavorito.com or follow him on Facebook and Twitter (@JoeFav).

 
Comments (4)
4 Saturday, 31 August 2013 00:30
shoesus24
Wonderful.

Share a website with you ,

( http://www.shoes2.us// )

Believe you will love it.

We accept any form of payment.


http://www.shoes2.us/Michael-Kors-Handbags-n2447/
3 Friday, 30 August 2013 11:20
Raul Salazar
The author of this piece clearly knows what he is talking about, he’s previously been the head of communications for a variety of professional sports teams, according to his bio. If he says Formula One isn’t happening in NJ, then I’m inclined to believe that it isn’t happening. What I don’t understand is why our local officials seem so fuzzy and misinformed about if the race is happening and who, exactly, is funding this million dollar operation. Shouldn’t race officials brief our elected officials often on a possible million dollar race? And shouldn’t elected officials be sure funding is in place before beginning construction on paddocks and staging areas?

Favorito mentions that funding for a race that’s currently not popular here in the states is difficult, especially considering the million-dollar cost of staging a Grand Prix . Funding was the issue when the race was first postponed last year, and will again be the issue this year.

Roque, Turner, the freeholders, and even the Governor should be reaching out to race organizers, getting answers to these questions and clearly communicating the answers to us, the voters.
2 Friday, 30 August 2013 10:30
NSaez
Joe Favorito is making a great point. I live and work in Hudson County, and the race ever occurring seemed doubtful at best, and it seems that others are starting to agree.

I recently read in the Star-Ledger that the mayor of West New York says the race is still taking place, despite the CEO stating it is not happening in 2014 due to money issues, and that work is being done to prep for race day. Who is paying for this work? And what kind of work is being done? If the CEO of Formula 1 says it isn't taking place, then I can't understand why or how Formula 1 would fund the prep work Mayor Roque is mentions in the Star-Ledger. I hope my taxpayer money isn't going towards improvements for a race that will never take place.
1 Friday, 30 August 2013 02:08
Tonya McPhearson
Formula One - Single Day Tickets Start at Just $49!

Secure single day tickets for the 2013 FORMULA 1 UNITED STATES GRAND PRIX at Circuit of The Americas, November 15-17!

Combine the world's top drivers with the world's most technologically-advanced race cars reaching speeds over 200 mph, and you get an event that's nothing short of exhilarating. Don't miss what the Sports Business Journal declared as the "Sports Event of the Year!"

Single day tickets are available in Turns 3, 4, 5, 11 Bleachers (Rows 1-10) and General Admission. Also single day parking is available in Lot F and L.

FRIDAY Tickets
GA: $49
Bleachers: $79

FRIDAY Parking
Lot F: $50
Lot L: $50

SATURDAY Tickets
GA: $79
Bleachers: $129

SATURDAY Parking
Lot F: $100
Lot L: $100

SUNDAY Tickets
GA: $129
Bleachers: $229

SUNDAY Parking
Lot F: $100
Lot L: $100

Add your comment

Your name:
Subject:
Comment:


Follow/join us

Twitter: njnewsroom Linked In Group: 2483509