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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 3:04 a.m., Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Auto racing: Ecclestone expects gold medals in place for 2009

By STUART CONDIE
AP Sports Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Bernie Ecclestone is proposing a new method for determining the F-1 driver's championship, and he expects FIA, motorsport's governing body, to agree to it at its general meeting next month.

ALASTAIR GRANT | Associated Press

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LONDON — Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone is confident his proposal for the world drivers' championship to be decided by gold medals awarded to race winners will be implemented next season.

Ecclestone said Wednesday he was moved to act after Lewis Hamilton clinched this year's title by finishing fifth at the season-ending Brazilian Grand Prix.

"It's just not on that someone can win the world championship without trying to win the race," he said.

Under the proposed system, which Ecclestone said should be approved by motorsport world governing body FIA next month, the driver with the most gold medals over a season would win the title.

Under that format, Felipe Massa would have won the title this year because he beat Hamilton 6-5 in race wins.

"It's going to happen," Ecclestone said. "All the teams are happy. The reason this happens is that I get fed up with people talking about no overtaking."

Under the current system, the winner of each grand prix race earns 10 points in the championship standings, with second place worth eight points and third place worth six. Each of the top eight drivers in every race earn points.

Ecclestone was asked if it didn't seem unfair that under his system, someone could finish second in every race over the season and lose the title to a rival who got lucky and won a single GP.

"You'll have to try harder next year," he said.

Although the new system is designed to add to the drama of F1, Hamilton's title win featured one of the most exciting ever finishes to a season.

Hamilton, of McLaren, lost the fifth place he needed for the title when he was passed by Sebastien Vettel with two laps to go in Brazil, but managed to overtake Timo Glock on the last corner of the last lap to become F1's youngest ever world champion.

The 23-year-old Briton beat race-winner Massa of Ferrari by a single point in the overall standings.

If the new scoring system was applied retroactively, there would be as many as 12 different winners in the 58-year history of the championship. Keke Rosberg, for instance, would not have won his 1982 title because he only finished first in a single race.

The medal system, which will be discussed by FIA at the World Motor Sport Council meeting in Monaco on Dec. 12, was not the only change to F1 discussed Wednesday.

Former Jordan team boss Eddie Jordan said he did not believe the teams were in favor of the change, which would further push smaller outfits out of the spotlight and favor the likes of Ferrari and McLaren.

"The points are necessary," Jordan told BBC Radio Five Live. "One point to a team down there is as important as a win is to the likes of McLaren and Ferrari, and we must never forget that. Having been in that position, two points against no points is a huge difference.

"Drivers like Massa, who started at the very bottom and worked his way up, know how important those points are at the back of the field."

Ecclestone also announced an agreement with LG Electronics Inc., which will make the South Korean consumer electronics company an official sponsor of F1, with its exclusive branding on broadcast of the sport.

Ecclestone and LG refused to discuss the financial details of the five-year contract, which comes into effect from next season, but suggested that the sport could benefit from tailor-made technology designed by the company as it tries to boost its profile.

"I don't like the word 'sponsor,'" Ecclestone said. "'Sponsor' makes it sound as though we need help, which is not the case. What I'm much happier about is that we're able to use a lot of the technology from LG."

Ecclestone said he was confident that F1 could withstand the global financial crisis, but that it was too soon to make definitive statements about the sport's future.

"The world is and will be affected for sure," Ecclestone said. "It's pretty obvious that maybe promoters are affected by crowds being smaller. We need to wait and see. The world needs to wait and see. We can't say what will happen in six months."