We will be on the Strip in four hours
Megan and I need to attend the Froog Camp event this afternoon at Resorts World. I will report in again as to how crazy things are on the Strip.
This whole F1 event is starting to seem a bit embarrassing for our city. As locals, we take a dim view of anything or anyone who disparages our fair city.
Mark
Looking forward to the race tonight!
The Froog Camp event was a little odd -- but getting there was no issue. Locals are not using the streets. When we left the Resorts World property at about 6 pm roads were a tad jammed - since the Strip was closed. But no real issues.
Qualifying looked pretty slick -- really pretty race course.
Looking forward to the race tonight!
Mark
I would credit the Netflix series
Craig,
I would credit the Netflix series "Drive to Survive" as the #1 driver to rekindle my interest in F1. I used to attend the Long Beach Grand Prix--another road circuit and enjoyed it. What the Netflix series did for me was to humanize the drivers and thus make the entire event much more interesting to this fan.
I am looking forward to the race tonight. I have another event I need to attend, early in the evening, but I am planning to find a TV around the start of the race.
AZBuck passed along this article from the UK Daily Mail--my take? People love to hate Las Vegas and jump on whenever they get a chance.
And, despite the issues, I think the organizers made a beautiful race course.
Mark
Another "teething" problem
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Southwest Dave
And good on those making the roadway safe in such a short amount of time in the middle of the night! Can you send them to the UK to sort out our ever growing Potholes!)
Yeah, impressive road repair!
I drove past the Henderson Jetport and I think there are less jets parked this morning than there were yesterday. They had prepared for a massive influx of jets --with the staff to match and (almost) no one came.
Another "teething" problem--no doubt.
I think the Strip properties will probably have a net operating loss from this F1 event -- it feels like the normal influx of tourists didn't happen. And we know of a restaurant that put on extra staff -- right on the strip adjacent to the racetrack and almost no diners stopped by. They closed early last night.
Mark
Race enthusiasts not high rollers.
Quote:
I think the Strip properties will probably have a net operating loss from this F1 event -- it feels like the normal influx of tourists didn't happen.
If I wanted to visit Las Vegas and was not an F1 fan then this weekend is the one I would avoid at all costs due to the inflated prices and inconvenience of the event. So despite all the money F1 claim to have brought to the city, it would be interesting to see how much over 'the normal' this would amount to. Away from the glamour a lot of F1 fans are pure enthusiasts that will pay a lot to get to an event, (more than they can afford) but it doesn't mean they have a lot to spend in the casinos and diners etc which is another negative for local business. Any other town and F1 would make a huge difference, but Vegas isn't any old town is it!
Put that all aside and we have a great event to look forward to and it's almost time to let the racing do the talking.
Dave
We have a good friend who was in the grandstands for all events
It was a fun race to watch.
I had a hard time staying awake around lap 40 or so though. I did wake up in time to see the last three laps.
It would have been fun to see Sergio come in first -- but great action at the front for final finish.
Nothing like an actual race to see the skill sets!
Ugly crash that put Lando Norris into the wall. Glad to see that he is OK.
The number that F1 is reporting is 315,000 visitors to Las Vegas. I find that nearly impossible to believe. I know what this town feels like when there are 300K extra people here. I would believe a number closer to 100K.
We have a good friend who was in the grandstands for all events -- he had a blast.
Mark