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What has changed as FOM and FIA appear more aligned on F1's future?

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Formula 1
What has changed as FOM and FIA appear more aligned on F1's future?

Ex-F1 race director Wittich defends Masi's decision-making at 2021 Abu Dhabi GP

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Abu Dhabi GP
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F1 reverts to old qualifying format from Chinese Grand Prix

Formula 1 qualifying is to revert to last year's format from the Chinese Grand Prix, Autosport has learned

The move comes follows a letter from all 11 teams to FIA president Jean Todt, supremo Bernie Ecclestone and commercial rights holders CVC Capital Partners on Thursday morning, demanding the current elimination system be ditched, and that F1 returns to the set-up used from 2006-15.

UPDATE: FIA confirms format change, announces "global assessment"

Souces have confirmed Todt and Ecclestone have accepted it would be in the best interests of the championship to drop the controversial format and plans for an aggregate replacement.

Ecclestone told Autosport he does not now feel "it is possible to find a solution" for the future.

He added: "People seem to forget what we are trying to do, which is muddle the grid up a little bit because what we have seen doesn't make for much excitement.

"Lewis [Hamilton] has helped us a bit this season by not making good starts and having to come through the field, and Ferrari finally seems to have got its act together, so maybe things will change.

"Unless we can get everybody on board with regard to a new format then we are not going to find an answer. It's as simple as that."

Earlier on Thursday it appeared an impasse had been reached between the 11 teams in one corner and Ecclestone and Todt in the other.

Although the teams played their part in voting through the new elimination set-up for this season, it had proven unpopular and ineffective, with the action front-loaded in Q1.

Further talks took place between the teams, Ecclestone, Todt, along with Pirelli motorsport director Paul Hembery in the paddock in Bahrain last Sunday, with the aggregate qualifying system proposed.

That system ran for six races only at the start of 2005 before being ditched, but teams agreed to review it, only for talks over the past few days to discover it would not work.

A vote was scheduled to take place, but with the teams all in agreement they opted to make a stand against Ecclestone and Todt on this occasion.

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