Intoducing a chicane was not an acceptable solution either.
Brundle said they forced the FIA to add chicanes to a few tracks after Sennas death, but it was completely different, as it was done before the races so they ran all the practice and qually etc with the modified circuit.
To add a chicane just before the race when the cars are all set up with downforce, gearing, brakes etc for a fast straight, and to have 20 cars at racing speeds arrive at an unknown part of the track on the 1st lap, could have caused accidents and left the FIA and teams open to law suits.
The FIA statement said that Michelin knew the tryes were not up for the job on Friday and could have shipped in new tyres in time for qually, and then there would have been no penalty for the teams, but they didn't. Probably for 2 reasons, 1: the other tyre wouldn't have been as fast, 2: they couldn't be sure the other tyres would not be just as dangerous.
So at the end of the day it is entirely the fault of Michelin. They have to take responsibility and pay the price. They should have to compensate the spectators at the IMS.
I think there is no way the Michelin teams could have raced on any tyre safely, so what happened was the only thing that could have happened. There was not much the FIA could have done.
I am not saying the FIA is blameless. It is partly their fault that this was allowed to occur. The rules introduced recently are to blame, but they had no way to stop it happening, they were painted into a corner.
The only way to stop it happening again is a single tyre supplier, a return to the old rules, tyre changes, as may engines as you want, proper full speed qualifing, etc, so if it does happen again it is possible to delay the race by an hour, run an extra practice session, change set up etc. These stupid cost saving rules restrict any of that from happening, and are ruining the sport.
Proper cost savings should come from commom components, ECUs, brakes, gearboxes, tyres, steering wheels etc.
Have to get some work done. Rant over - sorry