watching some old races got my thinking how brutal James Hunt and Murray Walker were as commentators lol
Murray was awesome even though he was prone to mistakes near the end.
AND IT'S GO GO GO
watching some old races got my thinking how brutal James Hunt and Murray Walker were as commentators lol
I think it would be a good idea, personally.Couldn't find the motorsports thread so thought I'd give here a go.
I've been tempted for a while to make a dedicated karting / kart racing thread.. would this be more appropriate in Community or OT (or kinda pointless?).
The final list of drivers for the Stars Challenge is up:
The yellow on the Brawn cars was always ugly. It's like they colored them with a text marker.
That's Felipe Massa's charity thing right?
It's a wonder they got any sponsors at all. The team might have looked like the hottest thing on paper in 2009, but behind that it was a sinking ship.
A completely sponsor-free car was cool though.
KobayashiThe 2010 Sauber basically was for most of the season
The yellow on the Brawn cars was always ugly. It's like they colored them with a text marker.
I can't really put it down to something but I came to really hate Whitmarsh's face over the last year!
I can't really put it down to something but I came to really hate Whitmarsh's face over the last year!
I can see why. Something about him.
Where did you hear that?
Its still under the HD package on thier website
http://www.sky.com/products/ways-to-watch/sky-plus-hd/
I was under the impression that the new regs meant that there was no advantage in a step any more?
Austria is out due the lack of hotels. =(
Yep looks like 19 races on the calender this year
Wait. What about Turkey?
Wait. What about Turkey?
I was under the impression that the new regs meant that there was no advantage in a step any more?
Bravo indeed!Because Turks are smarter then many other corrupted and stupid governments.
The Turkish government has rejected the idea of providing funding to revive the country's grand prix.
Our government paid $13.5m a year to the organisers for five years for the rights. All the income went to the organisers, so the state did not get any benefit
Turkish race organisers, who have been in negotiations with F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone, said the event would depend on government funds being available. But sports minister Suat Kilic said on Thursday that would not be the case.
"If it wants to, the private sector can bring Formula 1," Kilic was quoted as saying by the Dogan news agency.
"But there is no question of us paying the cost of the rights which have been proposed to a private company to bring Formula 1."
Kilic said the government had previously assisted in bringing Formula 1 to Turkey, making a "sacrifice" in order to boost the sport.
"Our government paid $13.5m [£8.4m] a year to the organisers for five years for the rights. In exchange for that, all the income went to the organisers, so the state did not get any benefit from it," he said.
The chairman of the Turkish Automobile Sports Federation said in a statement on Thursday that the organisation was making "every effort" to re-establish the grand prix in 2013 and "in future years". Chairman Demire Berberoglu said in a statement that an agreement had been reached between circuit operator Vural Ak and Ecclestone, but the government also had to play a part.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/formula1/20630049
Bravo Turkey. But I was a great GP, I agree on that one.
Bravo indeed!
To be honest, he isn't *that* wrong, but it's not the sort of thing you should be saying about any of your drivers at all, especially when there's such an obvious team focus on one particular driver anyway. Just looks like he wants to increase the distance between the two drivers, not put them on a more equal playing field.Red Bull motorsport advisor Helmut Marko says he doubts Webber has what it takes to cope with the pressures of an F1 title fight.
In a revealing interview with Red Bull's in-house magazine the Red Bulletin, Marko suggested Webber was good enough to win races but struggled for consistency.
"It seems to me that Webber has on average two races per year where he is unbeatable, but he can't maintain this form throughout the year," Marko said.
"And as soon as his prospects start to look good in the world championship, he has a little trouble with the pressure that this creates.
"If some technical mishap occurs, like with the alternator for example, he falls relatively easily into a downward spiral."
It's the latest criticism of the Australian by the Austrian former racer, after comments last week where Marko claimed Webber would continue to play second-fiddle to team-mate Sebastien Vettel.
To the uninitiated: Helmut Marko is an advisor to Red Bull about young driver talent for F1 - and aside from Vettel (and hopefully Ricciardo) not a particularly successful one. Webber was hired under the old-guard and has been a target for Marko ever since, as the Austrian tries to make himself (and Vettel) look better. 2012 saw the development of the car away from Webber's side of the garage when they attempted to replicate the EBD effect that saw Vettel stroll to the 2011 title, something that has not worked well for Mark. Red Bull lack support for Webber on things like starts, strategy (often a guinea pig for the other car) or even a fully-functioning KERS system - but Vettel is permitted to run different configurations in one weekend like China 2012 (funnily enough, the most successful Newey designed cars have worked better for one driver over the other). 2010 actually saw Mark deliver some sterling pressure drives that limited damage - and save for the team not imposing team orders at the critical moments and that lapse in Korea he might have been champion. Marko is out of line talking like this about a current team member - no other team boss would dream of it.
Mark is Felipe vol. II
Yup :/Marko is a tosser, no question.
He's right about Webber and pressure though. As soon as Webber has a sniff of success he goes to pieces.