Share this article on LinkedIn Email

Formula 1 CEO Chase Carey says it could take another year to address all the bugs in the F1 TV 'over the top' streaming service.

He called problems that stuck F1 TV during the recent Azerbaijan Grand Prix weekend "unexpected".

OTT is regarded by Liberty Media as a significant future source of revenue, as it is for other sports, with fans paying the F1 organisation directly for a premium service.

Many subscribers have received refunds after they struggled to access coverage of Baku on F1 TV, which was relaunched this year after hitting teething problems in 2018.

"The issue that arose in Azerbaijan really was unexpected," Carey said in a call with financial analysts.

"That's the nature of these platforms - I think you have to deal with it. And to some degree the unexpected is obviously always troubling.

"The unexpected will occur occasionally, but I think we felt we'd made pretty good headway. We're not far enough to say there won't be another problem.

JONATHAN NOBLE: The streaming outage F1 can't diagnose



"But the problems before that had been probably quite manageable. These things aren't perfect, and it will probably take us another year to get all the small bugs out of it.

"But the significant glitch that we had there was something outside the core of what we've been building in the platform.

"We need to make sure that we're looking at it in the wider context, but I think the core of what we expected to be the platform is we feel functioning pretty well. Not perfect, but pretty well."

Carey also acknowledged that it will take time to get enough extra content onto the service, in areas such as data that cannot be sourced elsewhere and archive footage.

"Some of that takes time to build. Making accessible to consumers some of the expanded data that we think will be interesting and compelling to them is still a work in progress," he said.

"We certainly have forms of content, broadly defined, that we will be adding at the end of this season, that we're working on.

"We still have not tapped in really at all into things like the archives, where I think you want to have the great race of the nineties, the great race of the eighties, great finishes, great passes, those sorts of things, in a digestible form - it really isn't there."

Carey said it will take another year to get the content fully up to speed.

"There's still a lot going on to expand and build the content, and in all honestly we'll probably never stop," he added.

"It's probably between the beginning of next year and the beginning of the following year that we get to the 'phase one' of what we feel is the over the top product that we envisioned going into it.

"We initially probably thought we could get there in two years, obviously last year we were a bit behind. What we thought was two is probably likely in three.

"Dealing with problems always sets you back a little bit, but we actually feel we are making headway and getting to where we planned and hoped to be."