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Premiership gets its Own Racing league - Forumla Football
As this year’s football season gets underway a new racing series is getting set for next year’s kick off.
Superleague Formula plans to race 20 cars backed by different football teams.
Trackside’s Keith Collantine has seen the same idea fail in the past - and questions if it can work this time.
There’s nothing new about motor racing and football getting together. F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone has been linked to a buyout of Arsenal, and Renault team boss Flavio Briatore is set to buy QPR.
But now a new championship aims to bring motor racing and football together on the track.
Superleague Formula has all the makings of an exciting new racing series.
It promises to pit drivers against each other in identical cars, so racing skill should account for more than it does it in Formula 1. Each round will carry a €1m (£680,000) prize.
Powered by 4.5 litre, 750bhp V12 engines, the cars should have plenty of grunt and the chassis looks good as well.
The twist is this: each team will be backed by a European football squad and painted in their colours. The organisers hope to attract football fans from the pitches to the tracks.
It’s not a new idea – the Premier 1 GP championship tried to do exactly the same thing in 2001. But hardly any teams showed an interest and the series never held a single race.
Despite that, Superleague Formula has picked up the ball and run with it. It plans to start races in August next year and intends to hold 17 races in 2009.
‘Formula football’ prepares for kick-offSo far seven teams have shown interest: PSV Eindhoven (above), Borussia Dortmund (left), AC Milan, Anderlecht, Flamengo, FC Porto and Olympiakos.
But will football fans really take to motor racing just because of a few cars decked out in their teams’ strips?
The two sports are totally different, and a football fan used to being able to see the entire pitch might be taken aback by only being able to see a couple of corners at a racing track.
And instead of holding the series during the football off-season, the races will be competing with football matches for spectators.
Not to mention the hostility of some motor racing fans who may resent seeing their sport used as a marketing exercise to get more money out of football supporters.

































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