TT i would go with the F1's! I would choose them everytime. And well.... if you dont like them then atleast you have had the experience of having them. I think I will give mine some real pain and report back how they cope 
I'm awaiting reports from your Saturday morning blast!

Incidentally, following on from all this "high praise" of Goodyears, and the apparent lack of consistent enthusiasm for Michelins - I pose another question to ponder over.
If these Goodyear GSD3s and Goodyear Asymmetrics are
so good - why do they not have
any OEM approvals? If you look at Porsche, the only OEM tyres they use are either Michelin or Continental, with Michelin being factory fitted to about 70% of all Porks. And for Audi, on their heavyweight S4/S6/S8 (only Conti or Michelin), and their RS range, again, OEM Conti or Michelin, along with OEM Pirelli (though the Pirelli, whilst being shyte and junked by all RS owners come tyre change time - are probably OEM fitted due to Audi owning Lamborghini). RenaultSport only use Dunlop
Shyte SportMaxx or Mich PS2 on their cup cars. Vauxhalls VXR range only use Mich, Conti or Dunlop. Ford (an american company, which should show allegience to the american Goodyear company) don't use Goodyear on their ST or RS range.
See what I'm saying -
if these Goodyears
are as good as peeps claim, why havn't the manufacturers of the sports-orientated cars fitted them as OEM

?
And a further concern, whilst a different "class" of tyre to the F1s, every other Goodyear tyre I have used have been shocking in the cornering department. Goodyear GrandPrixS - fine in a straight line, under traction or braking, wet or dry, but have a lousy turn in, and what can be described as lethal cornering ability - wet or dry. These were used on a wide variety of cars in the 1980s, on front and rear wheel drive cars - and were really quite poor compared to the likes of Michelin MX and Dunlop SP of their time. Even Kleber were a better tyre!
When the GrandPrixS was replaced by the Goodyear GT and the Goodyear Vector (both current tyres), these are still crap compared to say Michelin Energy or Conti EcoContact.