New Straits Times

Keeping Liberty Media on track

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LONDON: Liberty Media enjoyed plenty of goodwill after taking over Formula One and ousting former supremo Bernie Ecclestone but the honeymoon is over as the Americans start a second season in charge.

There has been much talk of putting fans first, with more engagement at the racetrack and through social media, and developing a digital strategy to tap new revenue streams and woo fresh audiences.

The big questions have yet to be answered, however.

The sport has elemental decisions to make on what it wants to be, and what rules to play by once current contracts expire at the end of 2020, and storm clouds are gathering.

“Liberty had a positive first year, they did a lot of good things around the sport,” Red Bull team boss Christian Horner told reporters during pre-season testing in Barcelona.

“But a lot of that is windowdres­sing, it’s not dealing with the fundamenta­ls of the product.

“The next 12 months are going to be crucial for the (governing) FIA and for Liberty, where they’ve got to get on the same page and then present what they want to do and what they see Formula One as from 2021.”

In fairness, Liberty’s hands are bound by existing agreements with teams and FIA that cover the distributi­on of revenues, how the sport is run and what kind of engines are used.

But Formula One must now decide how best to balance technology and entertainm­ent, and how level a playing field it really wants.

Formula One’s chief executive Chase Carey said this month that he believed there was “alignment on the overall broad goals, but we have to find the right compromise­s as we work through the details.”

A new Formula One TV offering was launched this month, and Liberty have invested in research and marketing as well as eSports to attract a new and younger demographi­c.

That has also meant teams getting less money, as more is spent on building up the business and putting on special events.

The fans, as Carey and other managers state frequently, come first — even if some ex periments such as bringing in big fight announcer Michael Buffer to present the drivers at the US Grand Prix in Austin drew mixed reviews.

Ecclestone, still a salaried Formula One employee but now in an unspecifie­d ‘emeritus’ role, had a different take on the business.

“The fans? I don’t know who fans are,” says the 87-year-old, discussing the changing landscape at the central London offices from where he once commanded the sport.

“Liberty, all they want to talk about is fans... I used to call them customers.”

When the season starts in Australia on March 25, television viewers will see new graphics, camera angles and sound. The venue cities should also see more of a buzz.

Four city fan festivals are planned through the year, building on one staged in central London last season before the British Grand Prix.

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