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Official Formula 1 Thread (Part 8) |
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#3026 |
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Join Date: May 2013
Posts: 3,434
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Maria - RIP. You will always be an inspiration and I hope many girls go on to follow your lead and knock the likes of Vettel off his perch.
Well done Webber too. Wish you weren't leaving F1 but I don't blame you for a second. Christ, have just seen the Senna documentary for the first time and I'm in floods. Forgotten how horrific Ratzenberger's fatal crash was, and how graphic it was too. Gone, but never forgotten. |
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#3027 |
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Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Scotland
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Out of all the accidents that dreadfull weekend at Imola, Barrichello's accident always has me grimacing and wondering how did he survive that.
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#3028 |
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Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Scotland
Posts: 2,764
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Watched a documentary tonight called "1", its about the drivers who risked their lives during the deadliest time of the sport and those who changed it forever.
It was fantastic. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2518788/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1 |
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#3029 |
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Join Date: Aug 2009
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Quote:
It allows new drivers, engineers, technicians and managers a grounding in the sport. It is where people like Rob Smedley (Jordan), Mark Webber (Minardi), Michael Schumacher (Jordan) and Adrian Vettel (Toro Rosso), Rubens Barrichello (Jordan) and Kimi Räikkönen (Sauber) started.
Not ignoring, of course, today's crop of up and coming talent, Nico Hulkenberg's performance is getting noticed as well as Romain Grosjean (I know, who'd have imagined it?). Alonso also started at Minardi. Schumacher also paid for his drive with Jordan.It looks like I was wrong about Nico. It seems he went whilst the light was red. Although the light changed from red to green, whilst half his car was still in the box. Still it looks like it was his fault, even though if he had waited for the light to change to green, he would have still got a penalty. |
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#3030 |
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 84
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Back of the field teams are also where drivers go on the way down.
See: Hill, Kovi, Glock, Trulli. |
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#3031 |
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Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Devon
Posts: 48,013
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The drivers may love the Suzuka track but yesterday's race was one of the most boring of the year.
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#3032 |
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Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Dumfries
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Quote:
The drivers may love the Suzuka track but yesterday's race was one of the most boring of the year.
Instead it's all about driving as carefully as possible and then going quickly for a couple of laps after the guy in front has pitted in the hope that you'll make up enough time that you'll come out ahead after your own pitstop. |
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#3033 |
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Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 3,932
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The sport is even more boring and predictable than it was during the Schumacher years. Let's hope next years changes shakes things up a bit.
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#3034 |
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Southern England
Posts: 2,591
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Quote:
Let's hope next years changes shakes things up a bit.
Oh right, you had word Vettel's retiring? |
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#3035 |
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Join Date: Aug 2009
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Oh right, you had word Vettel's retiring?
I think next season teams like Ferrari and Mercedes will a good start. Then by mid-way RBR would have got their act together, and Vettel will start coming good. We will have to see if the Ferraris and Merces have built up a big enough lead. I some how doubt it, as the four drivers will probably end up taking points of each other. They are all capable of winning races. The new in-season tests next year will also play into RBR hands. As they will be able to test new parts out. They should thank Mercedes for that. |
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#3036 |
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Certainly before the accident, but sadly, with only one eye, it is unlikely she would have been allowed to race.
Overall, a very boring race. |
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#3037 |
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Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: BUDDIETOWN
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it certainty was NOT BORING ..... with people going on on the first corner, battles throughout, another stunning drive from the champion elect .....
also how sad that maria de villota story is and i saw most of SENNA, and as for that barrichello crash, how high his car went, it almost missed completely the tyre barrier! |
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#3038 |
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Join Date: Oct 2007
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I saw the Senna Movie as well and when I saw the Ratenberger Crash I read Steve Rider Autobiography and asked Bernie what would happen if a driver die at a track and Bernie Said no drivers die on the track, But looking at the senna movie it looks like Ratenberger's crash it looked like he died on impact to me
![]() Did Senna and Prost really hate each other because at the end of Film it said Prost is a Trustee of his Foundation
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#3039 |
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Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 12,792
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Do you guys think Grosjean has done enough now to keep his drive?
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I'm done watching F1 for now. I suspect many others are doing likewise, I'm sure viewing figures are down.
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#3040 |
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Quote:
I saw the Senna Movie as well and when I saw the Ratenberger Crash I read Steve Rider Autobiography and asked Bernie what would happen if a driver die at a track and Bernie Said no drivers die on the track, But looking at the senna movie it looks like Ratenberger's crash it looked like he died on impact to me
![]() Quote:
Did Senna and Prost really hate each other because at the end of Film it said Prost is a Trustee of his Foundation They had reconciled by the time of Senna's death. Prost himself has publically criticised the film because it didn't mention that fact.
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#3041 |
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Join Date: Jun 2013
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the only thing I didn't really like about the Senna/Prost rivarly was it was completely seen as one-sided with Prost basically the film's villian. They mentioned Senna taking him out to win the World Championship in 90 but it was sort of glossed over compared to Suzuka 89 where Senna was excluded from the race result for restarting the car and missing the chicane. I think most people would say running somebody off the road to make sure you can win the title (compare it to Schumacher with Hill in 94 or Villeneuve in 97) is worse than what Prost did with the 89 one
I'm sure it's been mentioned plenty of times before in discussion but Ratzenberger's death on the Saturday was definitely at the track as the footage shows him with his head slumped to the side similar to what Senna has on Sunday and of course under Italian law, the race wouldn't have been run on Sunday and Senna's death wouldn't have happened. Whoever decided to let it go on, whether it be Bernie, sponsors, the race organisers probably wonder why they made that decision
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#3042 |
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Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Dumfries
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Quote:
the only thing I didn't really like about the Senna/Prost rivarly was it was completely seen as one-sided with Prost basically the film's villian. They mentioned Senna taking him out to win the World Championship in 90 but it was sort of glossed over compared to Suzuka 89 where Senna was excluded from the race result for restarting the car and missing the chicane. I think most people would say running somebody off the road to make sure you can win the title (compare it to Schumacher with Hill in 94 or Villeneuve in 97) is worse than what Prost did with the 89 one
I think that role was really reserved for Jean Marie Ballestre who, possibly because he wanted a fellow Frenchy to win, seemed to be doing everything in his power to sabotage Senna and McLaren's championship. S'funny really, after watching Senna and Rush you start to realise why Ron Dennis might've thought the FIA was out to get McLaren. In other news... Was watching the Japan race and Ross Brawn made a comment about how next year's calender is taking things to the point where teams ARE going to need two race-teams to piggy-back each other from race to race so they can set up in time for each race. It occurred to me, would there be any benefit in deliberately controlling the number of people in a race team? I mean, would it make things more interesting if, say, each team was only allowed to bring 15 people to each event and, perhaps, only allow 3 people to service a car during a pitstop? Seems like reducing the team numbers might force teams to build cars which were more straightforward so they could be maintained by a smaller team and if the cars were more straightforward that might improve the racing. |
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#3043 |
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Join Date: Feb 2009
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Just read that Porsche Supercup leader Sean Edwards, son of former F1 driver Guy Edwards, has been killed during a private test session in Australia
![]() http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/motorsport/24532901 |
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#3044 |
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Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Solihull
Posts: 7,274
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More bad news following Maria's death and Dario's accident 2 weeks ago. Motor racing is still an increadibly dangerous sport and despite the good work done to make F1 seem very safe it seems there's a lot of work still to do to see those benefits filter down into other formulas.
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#3045 |
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Join Date: Jan 2013
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Quote:
More bad news following Maria's death and Dario's accident 2 weeks ago. Motor racing is still an increadibly dangerous sport and despite the good work done to make F1 seem very safe it seems there's a lot of work still to do to see those benefits filter down into other formulas.
As for Dario'a accident, the same could easily happen at Monaco or other street circuits - youtube Conor Daly's accident at Monaco GP3 race. There's no saying that couldn't happen at a F1 race at the same circuit. |
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#3046 |
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No - if you read the reports, you'd know that Sean wasn't killed in a Supercar race. He was doing some instructing, which drivers at the lower levels do to supplement their income.
As for Dario'a accident, the same could easily happen at Monaco or other street circuits - youtube Conor Daly's accident at Monaco GP3 race. There's no saying that couldn't happen at a F1 race at the same circuit. I totally agree about GP3 and to a lesser extent GP2 racing. I think they are pushing their luck in those series. Not a race goes by without some incidents and sooner or later it's going to end badly. |
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#3047 |
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Join Date: Aug 2012
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I never said he was killed in a 'supercar' race (by which I assume you mean Supercup). I disagree with your suggestion that the same could happen at other street circuits. Yes, of course, a similar accident could happen in F1 and also to be fair the new chassis Dario was in probably saved his life but the Indycar chassis are still years behind F1 chassis. Chances are if he had been in an F1 car he would have escaped some of the injuries he sustained.
I totally agree about GP3 and to a lesser extent GP2 racing. I think they are pushing their luck in those series. Not a race goes by without some incidents and sooner or later it's going to end badly. |
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#3048 |
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Join Date: Jan 2013
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I never said he was killed in a 'supercar' race (by which I assume you mean Supercup). I disagree with your suggestion that the same could happen at other street circuits. Yes, of course, a similar accident could happen in F1 and also to be fair the new chassis Dario was in probably saved his life but the Indycar chassis are still years behind F1 chassis. Chances are if he had been in an F1 car he would have escaped some of the injuries he sustained.
I totally agree about GP3 and to a lesser extent GP2 racing. I think they are pushing their luck in those series. Not a race goes by without some incidents and sooner or later it's going to end badly. As for Dario, Martin Whitmarsh has actually said that what helped Dario was something they don't have in F1 - energy absorbing seat structure and Martin wants F1 to look into it. As for the crashes,the reason Indycar tends to have bigger crashes is because its a spec series - the cars run closer together than they would in F1. Yes the fencing was suspect in this case - unlikely that the fence would have broken at Long Beach. |
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#3049 |
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Join Date: Aug 2012
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Your whole point was that F1 is safer than other formulas - Sean was not racing, he was instructing which is nothing to do with what series are safe or not
As for Dario, Martin Whitmarsh has actually said that what helped Dario was something they don't have in F1 - energy absorbing seat structure and Martin wants F1 to look into it. As for the crashes,the reason Indycar tends to have bigger crashes is because its a spec series - the cars run closer together than they would in F1. Yes the fencing was suspect in this case - unlikely that the fence would have broken at Long Beach. |
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#3050 |
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Buckingham
Posts: 28,549
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That sounds suspiciously like the "wrong kind of snow defence".
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Alonso also started at Minardi. Schumacher also paid for his drive with Jordan.