Ferrari eye other competitions after F1 threat

MILAN, (Reuters) – Ferrari will race in other series  if they quit Formula One at the end of the year and the fans  will follow them, president Luca di Montezemolo said yesterday.

The Italian team, the sport’s oldest and most successful,  said on Tuesday they would not enter the 2010 championship  unless plans to introduce a budget cap are abandoned.   Toyota, the two Red Bull teams and Renault have made similar  threats given that the plans would allow capped teams to operate  with far greater technical freedom than those continuing with  unlimited budgets.

“If it really was like that, then I have to say that our  cars will race in other competitions, where — and I am  absolutely convinced about that — they will find the enthusiasm  and the passion of millions of fans,” Montezemolo told the  Ferrari website (www.ferrari.com).

“Racing is part of Ferrari’s DNA and this is something that  will never change.”

Media reports have speculated that the Formula One champions  might set up a rival series, compete in the United States, or  enter cars in the Le Mans 24 hour race.

Ferrari drivers Felipe Massa and 2007 world champion Kimi  Raikkonen said it would be a big blow not to have Ferrari in  Formula One but they understood the reasons why.

“Since I was a child, Ferrari has been the synonym for  racing for me,” said Massa.

“That’s why I’m convinced that even if the Scuderia is  forced to leave Formula One, there will be other competitions  where it will be possible to admire the Reds on the track.”

“I understand the motivation, why the company got to this  point. The idea of having a championship with two velocities,  with cars, which for example are allowed to have flexible wings  or an engine without a rev limiter, is absurd.”

Raikkonen, who enjoys rallying in his spare time, echoed his  Brazilian team mate’s comments.

“It’s difficult to think of a Formula One without Ferrari,”  the Finn said. “But I can’t imagine drivers racing each other on  the track with cars built according to different rules.

“If that should happen, it would be too bad and I understand  that a company like Ferrari is thinking about racing somewhere  else.”

The International Automobile Federation (FIA), headed by Max  Mosley, wants to introduce an optional 40 million pound ($61  million) budget cap next year to encourage new teams to enter.

Glamour team Ferrari have been in Formula One since the  first championship race in 1950 and, with the Monaco Grand Prix,  have long been seen as the jewels in the crown. They have been  champions eight times in the last 10 years.

Montezemolo is scheduled to meet Mosley, other teams and  Formula One’s commercial supremo Bernie Ecclestone tomorrow.