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No 'sentiment' as Ecclestone saves British GP

December 8

Bernie Ecclestone insists he is taking a financial hit by agreeing a new deal for the British Grand Prix...
 
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guardian.co.uk

Hill hails Silverstone grand prix deal

• BRDC president says track is 'place for all motorsport'• Details of 17-year agreement remain unclearThe protracted negotiations to secure the future of the British grand prix ended in success yesterday when the British Racing Drivers' Club secured a 17-year deal to stage the race at the wartime RAF airfield which has been at the core of motorsport for the past 60 years."The title of Silverstone as 'the home of British motorsport' has come true," said Damon Hill, the BRDC president, who won the 1996 Formula One world championship when driving for Williams. "It is a place for all motorsport. Everybody in the BRDC loves motorsport and we are looking forward to the Moto GP as well as the British GP."It is not easy to enter into a contract of this magnitude and you have to take on a lot of responsibility but the BRDC wanted this relationship to continue. Everyone was well aware that the British grand prix was not just a sporting event but the dynamo of the industry in this country. Losing it would have been damaging and perhaps there would have been no coming back."Hill's delight was echoed later in the morning when Gordon Brown appeared at the BRDC's annual awards lunch to present Jenson Button with the Richard Seaman Trophy, in memory of the British Mercedes driver who was killed in the 1939 Belgian grand prix."This puts Britain at the centre of world racing for 17 years to come," said the prime minister.The details of the contract are sketchy. As is the way with race promoters' contracts signed with Bernie Ecclestone, the billionaire Formula One commercial rights holder, the intricacies of the financial details are strictly confidential and have left the motor racing fraternity clutching at straws."We are satisfied with the deal and confident that Silverstone can turn a profit under its terms," said Robert Brooks, the BRDC chairman. However, he would not be drawn into discussing speculation that the starting cost for the 17-year deal was around $21m (£12.775m) for the 2010 race. Nor would he say whether the crucial annual financial escalator had been reduced from its previous level of 10%, though the figure of 5% was reported yesterday."I can't talk about things like that," he said, though Silverstone was reported to have bought the rights at a starting price of £11m.What is clear, however, is that there is a break point which can let Silverstone relinquish its obligations after 10 years. That serves as a reminder that Formula One can be a challenging business when there is no bottomless pit of government money available to buttress any financial shortfall. Nor is it clear whether there is any cash penalty payable in the event of Silverstone exercising its get-out clause.Yet Silverstone remains hopeful that it can pack in a capacity 90,000 crowd year after year, tapping into the soul of fanatical British fans at a time when they have the last two Formula One world champions, in Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button, to entertain them.Silverstone made a profit of only £662,000 last year and that is a surplus which could be wiped off the balance sheet at a stroke, should the FIA, motor sport's governing body, require improvements to the Northamptonshire circuit – such as kerbing or wider run-off areas – in the interests of safety.The saga behind cementing the British grand prix's position on the 2010 international calendar has been a lurid one but entirely in keeping with the tortuous and unpredictable relationship which has existed between Ecclestone and the BRDC for two decades now. After weeks of telling the BRDC to sign up or bow out of Formula One, and despite the distractions caused by the failure of Donington Park to live up to its commitment to take on the grand prix contract, Ecclestone said he was happy a deal had been done with Silverstone."This will ensure that Britain will remain on the Formula One calendar for many years to come, which is something I have personally always wanted to see happen," said Ecclestone. He could not resist a parting shot, however. "It's been a long and tiring nonsense," he was reported as saying. "They could have done this whole thing months and months ago."This time, however, the crucial difference is that the minimum 10-year deal at least gives Silverstone leeway to earn some money, plough investment back into the circuit and build a pit and paddock complex that is more to Ecclestone's taste, and facilities closer to those provided by tracks like Bahrain, China and Abu Dhabi.More importantly it has saved Silverstone as a shrine to Formula One, something for which future generations of fans will come to be grateful.British grand prixSilverstoneFormula OneMotor sportAlan Henryguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
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The Independent

Ecclestone's £11m demand puts future of British GP at risk

Britain, the home of Formula One racing and birthplace of the current and numerous former world champions, faces the serious prospect of losing its Grand Prix after Bernie Ecclestone, the sport's billionaire commercial rights holder, embarked on a typical game of financial brinkmanship with the owners of Silverstone, the only circuit now capable of staging the race.
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B.B.C. NEWS McLaren to fight for British GP

Martin Whitmarsh says McLaren and their Formula 1 rivals will do "all they can" to save the British Grand Prix.
10/28/09
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B.B.C. NEWS British GP facing final deadline

Formula 1 chief Bernie Ecclestone says the fate of the British Grand Prix will be decided at a meeting on 9 December.
11/22/09
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B.B.C. NEWS No Donington GP, says Ecclestone

F1 commercial rights holders Bernie Ecclestone says there will be no British Grand Prix at Donington Park next year.
10/29/09
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B.B.C. NEWS British GP future to be revealed

Silverstone officials will hold a news conference on Monday amidst reports a deal has been struck for the venue to host next year's British Grand Prix.
12/06/09
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B.B.C. NEWS F1 boss urges Silverstone to sign

F1 commercial rights holder Bernie Ecclestone insists he would be "very upset" not to see a British GP in 2010, but that he will not cut a cheap deal for Silverstone.
10/30/09
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B.B.C. NEWS Ecclestone sends Donington threat

Donington is running out of time to ensure it hosts the 2010 British Grand Prix, according to F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone.
09/26/09
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F1 Complete

Ecclestone: "We don't need British GP"

Oct.24 (GMM) Bernie Ecclestone insists he is prepared to scrub Britain's name from the 2010 calendar if Silverstone does not want to pay the going rate for its formula one race.
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F1-Live.com

F1 doesn't need British GP - Ecclestone

Bernie Ecclestone insists he is prepared to scrub Britain's name from the 2010 calendar if Silverstone does not want to pay the going rate for its Formula One race...  
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The Independent Ecclestone sets Silverstone December...

Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone has set Silverstone a December deadline to keep next year's British Grand Prix on the calendar.
11/20/09
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F1-Live.com Ecclestone makes concessions but no...

Despite the stream of Silverstone officials through the Abu Dhabi paddock turnstiles last weekend, a deal for a 2010 British Grand Prix was not concluded...  
11/04/09
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F1 Complete Still no certainty for British GP

Nov.27 (GMM) Bernie Ecclestone has ruled out rumours he is prepared to revive Donington's collapsed formula one bid if Silverstone does not imminently agree a deal to host...
11/27/09
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The Independent Ecclestone seeking Silverstone deal

Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone has declared an end to Donington Park's ambitious plans to host the British Grand Prix and offered Silverstone the chance to keep the...
10/27/09
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F1 Complete Still no deal for 2010 British GP

Nov.20 (GMM) Bernie Ecclestone has warned that, if next month's World Motor Sport Council were to be held today, the British grand prix would be scratched from the 2010...
11/20/09
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guardian.co.uk Silverstone agrees Grand Prix deal

• Ecclestone and Silverstone reach landmark agreement• Formula One's oldest race saved from extinctionThe British grand prix has been saved following a new deal agreed...
12/07/09
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guardian.co.uk

Mandelson calls for British GP rescue

• 'The British grand prix is important and has to continue'• Mandelson rules out using public monies to support eventBernie Ecclestone, the formula one commercial rights holder, has been urged by Lord Mandelson to ensure the future of the British grand prix at Silverstone.But taxpayers' money will not be used to broker a deal despite the motor racing industry being worth £4bn to the economy.The grand prix was thrown into doubt when the Donington circuit's owners missed a deadline to prove it could raise the £100m it requires to stage the race. Mandelson, the secretary of state for business, said: "The British grand prix is a very important event, it's a much loved British institution and it's got to continue."The whole of motor sport is important, not because of the enjoyment it provides but because it's really important for our economy."It contributes getting up to £4bn to the economy and if you look at the jobs it creates there are 25,000 engineers involved in this sport in Britain, quite apart from 40,000-odd other jobs, so I have a responsibility to retain it and to support the motor sport industry just as I would any other."Mandelson insisted the government would apply pressure for a decision to be resolved but revealed it would not be providing the £12m needed for the race to be held at Silverstone next year. "I'm not in a position to use taxpayers' money to bale out what would be a sort of commercial venture in a very cash-rich sport," he added. "I can't do that, especially during a recession, but he [Ecclestone] has my backing in what he's trying to do."But he also has my pressure to make sure that just by accident we don't lose the grand prix from this country. I don't want to see that and it would damage us; it would damage our sport but it would also damage our economy. All I would say is, 'Come on you guys, get your act together, get your negotiations done and make the British grand prix safe.' "When asked whether he believed the grand prix would take place at Silverstone next year, Mandelson replied: "If I was a betting man I would say, 'Yes.' "British grand prixBernie EcclestonePeter MandelsonSilverstoneFormula OneMotor sportguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
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The Independent

Hill sounds British GP alarm

Damon Hill, the former world champion, has warned of the real threat of there being no British Grand Prix next year.
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The Independent Hamilton joy as Silverstone closes on...

Nobody who set foot in the Yas Marina circuit has been anything other than hugely impressed by the audacious scale, opulence and achievement of Formula One's latest showcase...
11/01/09
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guardian.co.uk Silverstone closer to grand prix

• Donington given 14 days to come up with £50m• Silverstone seeks long-term deal before return of F1Bernie Ecclestone has cleared the way for the British grand prix to...
10/12/09
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The Independent Ecclestone issues Silverstone warning

Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone has suggested he will remove the British Grand Prix from next season's calendar if Silverstone does not agree to a deal in the next two...
11/05/09
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Yahoo! Eurosport Silverstone secures British GP future

Silverstone secures the future of the British Grand Prix after agreeing a 17-year deal with F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone.
12/07/09
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F1-Live.com Ecclestone denies reviving Donington bid

Bernie Ecclestone has ruled out rumours he is prepared to revive Donington's collapsed Formula One bid if Silverstone does not imminently agree a deal to host the British Grand...
11/27/09
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B.B.C. NEWS British GP deal very close - Hill

Former world champion Damon Hill says Silverstone is "very close" to agreeing a deal with Bernie Ecclestone to host the 2010 British Grand Prix.
10/31/09
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