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20 June: United States Grand Prix

Further to events at the 2005 United States Grand Prix, representatives of the seven Michelin teams have been summoned to a hearing of the FIA World Motor Sport Council to be held in Paris on Wednesday, June 29, 2005.


Formula One is a sporting contest. It must operate to clear rules. These cannot be negotiated each time a competitor brings the wrong equipment to a race.

At Indianapolis we were told by Michelin that their tyres would be unsafe unless their cars were slowed in the main corner. We understood and among other suggestions offered to help them by monitoring speeds and penalising any excess. However, the Michelin teams refused to agree unless the Bridgestone runners were slowed by the same amount. They suggested a chicane.

The Michelin teams seemed unable to understand that this would have been grossly unfair as well as contrary to the rules. The Bridgestone teams had suitable tyres. They did not need to slow down. The Michelin teams’ lack of speed through turn 13 would have been a direct result of inferior equipment, as often happens in Formula One. It must also be remembered that the FIA wrote to all of the teams and both tyre manufacturers on June 1, 2005, to emphasise that “tyres should be built to be reliable under all circumstances” (see correspondence attached).

A chicane would have forced all cars, including those with tyres optimised for high-speed, to run on a circuit whose characteristics had changed fundamentally – from ultra-high speed (because of turn 13) to very slow and twisting. It would also have involved changing the circuit without following any of the modern safety procedures, possibly with implications for the cars and their brakes. It is not difficult to imagine the reaction of an American court had there been an accident (whatever its cause) with the FIA having to admit it had failed to follow its own rules and safety procedures.

The reason for this debacle is clear. Each team is allowed to bring two types of tyre: one an on-the-limit potential race winner, the other a back-up which, although slower, is absolutely reliable. Apparently, none of the Michelin teams brought a back-up to Indianapolis. They subsequently announced they were flying in new tyres from France but then claimed that these too were unsafe.

What about the American fans? What about Formula One fans world-wide? Rather than boycott the race the Michelin teams should have agreed to run at reduced speed in turn 13. The rules would have been kept, they would have earned Championship points and the fans would have had a race. As it is, by refusing to run unless the FIA broke the rules and handicapped the Bridgestone runners, they have damaged themselves and the sport.

It should also be made clear that Formula One Management and Indianapolis Motor Speedway, as commercial entities, can have no role in the enforcement of the rules.

To read the correspondence between the FIA and all of the teams and both tyre manufacturers on June 1 & 2, 2005, please click here (in pdf).

related:

Michelin F1 Ticket Refund Update: Stubbed Ticket Claim Form Available
Guilty Verdict Cancelled by the FIA WMSC
Michelin, IMS Roll Out Ticket Refund Process For F1 Fans
FIA Senate recommends cancelling the guilty verdict
Appeal to be heard on September 28th
FIA Press conference with Max Mosley
Joint Statement by 19 F1 drivers
Submissions on behalf of 6 Formula One Teams
Joint Statement from 6 Michelin teams
The 7 Michelin teams found guilty on 2 counts
FIA responds to Michelin's statement
Michelin offers a goodwill gesture to the US GP spectators
Michelin concludes its investigation concerning US GP tyres
Max Mosley Statement on the US GP (Q & A format)
FIA list charges against the 7 Michelin teams

Paul Stoddart's account of events at US GP

FIA summons the seven Michelin teams

Michelin teams Post Race Statement

Michelin Post Race Statement
Statement To Fans By Indianapolis Motor Speedway CEO Tony George

US GP Post Race Quotes - IMS

Michelin Pre-Race Statement
Further Correspondence between Michelin and the FIA prior to the race

Correspondence between Michelin and the FIA prior to the race

2005 United States Grand Prix - Main Page

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