http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/29072011/5...-deal.html
Formula One fans have reacted with outrage to the news that half the Formula 1 calendar will be taken off free-to-air television in the United Kingdom from 2012 as part of a new share deal between Sky Sports and the BBC.
Teams seek clarification on TV deal
Bet on Formula 1 While all grands prix, qualifying and practice sessions will be broadcast on pay channel Sky Sports, only half the races will be shown live on the free-to-air BBC in the new arrangement, which runs from 2012 to 2018.
The BBC will continue to show highlights of the races it is not covering live, and its Radio 5 Live arm will have live commentary on all rounds.
Eurosport Yahoo! user saunders0000 summed the feeling of many terrestrial TV viewers by saying: "I cannot believe they would do this to F1 fans - this is¬ unbelievable.
"After following it for over 20 years you've taken away my favourite sport. Well thanks very much for that. I will never pay to watch it on Sky Sports - I shouldn't have to. RIP F1 you will be sadly missed by millions."
"This is a terrible idea. The BBC has peaked at 10 million viewers this season, Sky has only 10 million subscriptions in total and I don't know how many of them subscribe to Sky Sports," added Wini_Hatton.
"The current BBC coverage is the best coverage I have seen in years. I'm sure all the sponsors won't be happy when the UK viewing figures fall to around a million when the races are on Sky."
Even BBC commentator and former F1 driver Martin Brundle said on Twitter that he was "not impressed" with the deal.
"BBC/Sky/F1 2012+. Found out last night, no idea how it will work yet I'm out of contract, will calmly work through options. Not impressed," he wrote.
Meanwhile, Formula 1 teams admitted they will seek clarification from Bernie Ecclestone on the new BBC/Sky television deal amid the concerns.
McLaren team principal Martin Whitmarsh told AUTOSPORT: "What we need to understand is whether the large audience we currently enjoy in Formula 1 will be maintained. I think we also need to understand exactly how this is being done."
Williams chairman Adam Parr said the key was understanding the finer details of the arrangement - because what teams lose in widespread television viewing figures could be gained in an increased revenue from Sky.
"In principle I have no issue with optimising the balance between the revenues that we need, and getting a good reach in the audience," he told AUTOSPORT. "The devil is in the detail.
"I think it is a balance and, without knowing the details, you cannot comment on whether it is good or bad. What I do know is that Bernie is a very passionate believer in getting the broadest audience possible and I think he has almost certainly done this in order to do that."