• Loading stock data...
Monday, February 24, 2025

The Miami Grand Prix Is Formula 1’s Time to Shine

  • The Crypto.com Miami Grand Prix is more than a sporting event, it’s a cultural moment.
  • Formula 1 is taking advantage of its surging popularity in the U.S.
A scene from the Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix
Formula 1

I didn’t make it to the beach in time to get an NFT of my face printed onto a shirt, but I did get to enjoy some classic arcade games and see some luxury watches.

This is after checking out the yachts parked on fake water and attending a conference where I heard Alex Rodriguez talk about his real estate investments and buying the Minnesota Timberwolves (“you want to buy the worst house in the best neighborhood”).

The NFT T-shirts, yachts, and A-Rod are all here in Miami for the same event, as are countless DJs, pop-up restaurants, art installations, and media folk like myself. The Miami Grand Prix is tomorrow at, or more precisely, around Hard Rock Stadium, but it has already taken over the week and the city.

“For us, as an economic proposition, Miami is a great showcase,” said Greg Maffei, CEO of Formula 1’s parent company Liberty Media, who followed Rodriguez at a Bloomberg conference on Friday. “There is an enormous opportunity in the U.S.”

With a record 400,000 people coming to Austin last October for the United States Grand Prix, and another 300,000 coming to Miami’s first run, F1 seems well on its way to realizing that opportunity.

Winning Formula

Liberty Media posted its first-quarter earnings on Friday, showing that F1’s revenue exactly doubled year-over-year to $360 million. 

Maffei credited financial reforms with stabilizing and raising the values of every F1 team, while also nodding to Netflix’s F1 docuseries “Drive to Survive,” which was renewed for a fifth and sixth season on Thursday.

“Now, because they’re all locked into franchises, the bottom team is worth $400 million minimum, maybe more,” said Maffei. “And I think we’re seeing numbers discussed of $1 billion per team, maybe $2 billion per team.”

  • American viewership on ESPN rose 56% year-over-year in 2021.
  • “We’ve brought down the average age of our audience in three years by four years,” Maffei said, adding that F1 is the fastest growing sport on social media.

The series is projecting nothing but confidence that it will continue to grow with Miami hosting its debut race on Sunday and Las Vegas joining the calendar next year.

Think Different

Attention is the basic currency of any entertainment product, sports included, and F1 is doing just fine in that department.

However, it has more than just a critical mass of eyeballs following its races. F1 has a cool factor that has mellowed or never existed among nearly every other U.S. sports property.

The high-performance cars in beautiful European cities, sometimes roaring through street tracks, feel clipped from a James Bond movie, and in fact 007’s preferred brand, Aston Martin, races in F1. It’s an obvious match for luxury watchmakers like:

  • Rolex, an F1 sponsor
  • Tag Heuer, an Oracle Red Bull sponsor
  • IWC, a Mercedes-AMG Petronas sponsor

But does that clash with a U.S. market that associates motorsports with NASCAR and its decidedly non-exclusive sponsors like Coca-Cola and Busch Lite?

Like so many strange bedfellows, the conflict softens when each side gives a little. F1 doesn’t mind going a little off-brand if it means tapping into the American market, and the States have no shortage of brands clamoring to get in the shot (I counted 15 that line the walls of the racetrack).

One type in particular seems to be the American answer to the watchmaker: crypto exchanges. 

Both F1 and cryptocurrencies are trendy, high-tech, and have an audience that skews young. They match up as well as football and cars or baseball and beer. That’s why this is not just the Miami Grand Prix, it’s the Crypto.com Miami Grand Prix. 

Not conceding the spotlight, rival crypto exchange FTX took over a section of South Beach for the weekend, hosting a Mercedes-AMG Petronas F1 display, NFT art gallery, video game lounge, fashion show, the aforementioned NFT T-shirt thing, and a nighttime concert series.

Crypto.com will have its own NFT gallery within the race grounds, which will include 57 NFTs generated from speed and sound data from the race’s 57 laps. You can literally own a piece of the action.

The Proof Is in the Deal

ESPN extended its broadcast deal with Formula 1 in 2019 at a reported $5 million per year. The contract expires at the end of this year, and F1 is looking at a massive increase.

Asked if F1 might seek $100 million annually, Maffei replied, “that’s a nice number.”

Whatever figure it lands on, F1 is enjoying its moment in the Miami sun.

The business is “in the best health it’s ever been in,” Oracle Red Bull Racing CEO Christian Horner told me. “There’s more partners. There’s more new fans and followers coming into Formula One than we’ve ever seen. I think we’re emerging in markets that we’ve previously been very weak in, particularly the U.S.” 

A Netflix camera lurked behind me while a helicopter thundered overhead.

“Everything has gone exponential in the U.S.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Jun 12, 2024; Dallas, Texas, USA; NBA TV analyst Charles Barkley talks on set before game three of the 2024 NBA Finals between the Boston Celtics and the Dallas Mavericks at American Airlines Center.

Charles Barkley Will Deny NBC, Amazon Offers to Stick With Turner

Barkley has repeatedly flip-flopped in his career plans in recent years.

Fox Reports Big Sports Profits, Eyes New Streaming Service

Football and baseball helped power surges in company revenue and net income.
Feb 2, 2025; Orlando, FL, USA; AFC wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. of the Jacksonville Jaguars (7) carries the ball against NFC return specialist KaVontae Turpin of the Dallas Cowboys (9) during the 2025 Pro Bowl Games at Camping World Stadium.

NFL Pro Bowl Ratings Drop Again Despite Flag Football Push

ABC, ESPN, and Disney XD drew 4.7 million viewers for Sunday’s simulcast.

‘Ultimate Throwback’: The Unimpeachable Cool of Hartford Whalers Gear

Nostalgia and street cred have driven a consistent frenzy for merch.

Featured Today

January 20, 2024; Santa Clara, CA, USA; Kristin Juszczyk, wife of San Francisco 49ers fullback Kyle Juszczyk (44), before a 2024 NFC divisional round game against the Green Bay Packers at Levi's Stadium.

The New WAGs: Sports Wives Building Business Empires

Athletes’ wives and girlfriends are bucking stereotypes and cashing in.
Feb 3, 2019; Berkeley, CA, USA; California Golden Bears mascot dances on the court during a stoppage in play in the second half against the Stanford Cardinal at Haas Pavilion.
January 31, 2025

The Toll of Bicoastal Travel on New ACC Members Cal and Stanford

Cal and Stanford face missed flights, chaotic sleep schedules, and academic demands.
January 28, 2025

It’s Starting to Pay to Be Good at Cornhole

American Cornhole League players made $7.7 million in 2024.
PWHL arena
January 25, 2025

PWHL’s Sophomore Year Booms in Canada, Has Room to Grow in U.S.

Attendance is up 30% from last year, the league says.

Gavin Newsom Reveals Status of 2028 Olympics As Los Angeles Wildfires Roar

Gavin Newsom says there’s a “Marshall Plan” to rebuild Los Angeles.
Paralympics Tiktok
August 25, 2024

The Wildly Successful Paralympics TikTok Account Isn’t What You Think

A cheeky TikTok account is opening the world of Paralympic sports.
August 30, 2024

Premier League Transfer Spending Has Already Topped $2 Billion As Deadline Looms

Saudi Pro League teams haven’t yet matched their English counterparts.
Sponsored

How UBS Crafts Impactful Partnerships Across Sports, Arts, and Culture

As UBS continues to expand its impressive array of sports and entertainment partnerships, the company solidifies its position as a leader in wealth management.
August 11, 2024

Passing of the Torch: Los Angeles Set for Olympic Firsts in 2028

The city last hosted the Summer Olympics in 1984.
August 1, 2024

Saudi Arabia Submits Bold World Cup Bid That Includes a Cliffside Arena

The Saudis are proposing a new stadium in a futuristic city called Neom.
John John Florence (USA) surfs in men’s round two competition during the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Summer Games at Tsurigasaki Surfing Beach.
July 29, 2024

Olympic Surfers Won’t Get Their Full Paris Moment

‘We’re kind of separate off on our own little thing over here.’
Teahupo'o Tahiti Surfing
July 26, 2024

Olympic Surfing Crashes on Tahiti Like a Wave

For Teahupo‘o’s locals, the Olympics are a mixed blessing.