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25 Aug 2015, 03:08 (Ref:3568487) | #401 | ||
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And racing on big or fast ovals makes it more likely. I don't know what my point is though. I would say that they should cut out all the large ovals, but they'll still always have Indy. Ugh. Could it be that the talent level of drivers (or the ability of the cars) aren't up to the level they need to be at to race like they do? Does anyone think we'd have seen half as many wrecks at Pocono as we did if the level of driving was at Formula 1 or even WEC level? Not that that's a fair argument either, I know, but maybe the level of driving isn't as high as we think. There's obviously 10-12 top level guys, but the other 12-16 are so much lower that maybe it's causing some of these scary situations (like Vautier wrecking Rahal). |
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25 Aug 2015, 03:09 (Ref:3568488) | #402 | ||
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25 Aug 2015, 03:23 (Ref:3568492) | #403 | ||
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25 Aug 2015, 03:24 (Ref:3568494) | #404 | |||
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25 Aug 2015, 03:44 (Ref:3568497) | #405 | |
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Because on ovals, there's more wrecks where cars hit walls, sending pieces flying, increasing the odds of those pieces hitting following cars and their drivers.
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25 Aug 2015, 06:09 (Ref:3568514) | #406 | ||
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Just to keep things in perspective - Hinch hitting debris in 2014 also occurred on a road course.
This is an open wheel issue - not an Indycar or Oval issue. |
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25 Aug 2015, 07:25 (Ref:3568534) | #407 | |
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I think basic statistics say there's a higher chance of it happening on an oval, but it's still an issue on road courses.
Ovals tend to have larger accidents, cars are closer together, and the smaller circuit means more cars per area. However the issue is still very real on road courses too, as a number of accidents have shown. |
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25 Aug 2015, 07:25 (Ref:3568535) | #408 | ||
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Out of curiosity: Did we have instances in CART, where another driver was hit my debris? I mean, there were sometimes very extreme accidents in CART, yet I can't recall debris flying all over the place. But the DW12 was flawed car to begin with and didn't the nose cone even had to be strengthened with metal or something like that, in order to keep the balance of the car? We have a long off-season approaching and I hope that Dallara seriously reworks their car or else IndyCar should cancel their contract and let someone else build a good race car for all tracks.
But I really hope that this isn't the end of oval racing in IndyCar. IndyCar needs oval racing and while I don't want to see an inflation of oval racing like in the early IRL days, the ovals add a little flavor into an otherwise dull schedule. |
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25 Aug 2015, 07:28 (Ref:3568537) | #409 | ||
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25 Aug 2015, 07:46 (Ref:3568540) | #410 | |||
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And yes, I admit that it's a bit unfair to blame Dallara for head injuries in racing. It should up to IndyCar to enact regulations to ensure proper head safety. |
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25 Aug 2015, 09:26 (Ref:3568563) | #411 | ||||||
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As for CART drivers getting hit; while it wasn't debris from another car, Cristiano da Matta struck a deer during testing at Road America in 2006. He hit it with the right front tire and the remains of the animal then hit him in the head. Other than that it's hard to search for historical data - especially now when the data flow is dominated by the news of Wilson. |
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25 Aug 2015, 13:03 (Ref:3568601) | #412 | |||
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The problem is with the carbon fibre debris. A modern race car is designed to dissipate energy on impact, so that less energy is absorbed by the driver, the by product, if you will, is lots of bits of carbon fibre being scattered everywhere. This, I think is what needs to be looked at. |
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25 Aug 2015, 13:35 (Ref:3568606) | #413 | |
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@rustyfan: Yes, there have been the same incidents on road courses. That doesn't mean it isn't more likely to occur on ovals though. Open wheel cars race almost exclusively on road courses. Indycar is really the only series that races on ovals. So of course the majority of incidents will happen on road courses. But for all the reasons mentioned already: walls right on them, tighter pack racing, bigger accidents when they do happen, more wrecks per race and higher speeds, it is more likely to end badly on an oval than a road course.
@bigjohnsmith: I know it can happen on road courses too. But when is the last time you were watching a race on a road course and holding your breath in anticipation of "the big one", like at Fontana? Or at pocono, when you could see that if they're going seven wide, there will eventually be a wreck. But I agree that the carbon pieces flying off is an issue too. But I'm not sure what can be done, since that helps the driver in the wreck. But it goes back to one of my other points. Maybe its the talent of the drivers. They're making moves that require them to have the skills of the best in the world, yet they're surrounded by half the field being well below the level needed to be able to execute these moves without them ending badly. Or they're caught up in accidents because of the lesser guys (rahal with vautier). Or maybe its the car that isn't good enough? This is just happening too much, and I don't mean a driver dying. I mean wrecks every restart at Nola, big wrecks at Fontana, more than.half the field wrecking at Pocono.... and there's more examples I'm not remembering right now. |
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25 Aug 2015, 13:54 (Ref:3568613) | #414 | ||
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Hang on - when are Rahal and Vautier considered lesser drivers?
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25 Aug 2015, 14:55 (Ref:3568628) | #415 | ||
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The danger is more pronounced on ovals because there's more sustained wheel to wheel action, higher sustained speeds and were debris on track has greater implications.
But the danger is still real and substantial on road courses nevertheless so the distinction is fairly academic. The quality of the drivers isn't at play here. The majority are very capable and reflect well in comparison to any other international series today and in the past. And mountainstar you need to stop seeing Tony George in cloud formations. When you find yourself doing that, time to erase the sport from your field of vision. This was a freak accident that could happen to a driver in any open cockpit racing car. |
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25 Aug 2015, 15:10 (Ref:3568635) | #416 | |
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25 Aug 2015, 15:20 (Ref:3568638) | #417 | |||
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Karam's crash at Pocono had nothing to do with pack racing, he was leading the race and the rear end of the car stepped out, something I've seen countless times and not just on ovals. It was debris from the crash, not the nature of the race that is the problem. However, like you I'm not sure what can be done, when the cars are designed to break up, so to reduce the impact on the driver. I don't know what you mean by lesser guys; that's a little crass. Over the decades I've been following motorsport, I've seen the very best go off big time. |
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26 Aug 2015, 05:54 (Ref:3568820) | #418 | ||
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I think the driver quality is at one of its higher standards in the last 20 years.
Vautier is has been successful throughout ladder series and showed well enough in his previous rookie year with Sam Schmidt |
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26 Aug 2015, 11:19 (Ref:3568883) | #419 | ||
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These type of incidents will happen , in tin top racing, once a car rolls anything can happen, but Like a few other posts, I am not anti IRL, but the current type of car , compared to what was run some years ago, seems to have a few problems, with ,lifting, falling apart all over the track , I know they build the tub to protect the driver, but this cuŕent version seems to have a few problems.
Time to do an indepent test , just saying |
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26 Aug 2015, 11:30 (Ref:3568884) | #420 | ||
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2 Sep 2015, 05:06 (Ref:3570672) | #421 | |
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In my opinion, the 2015 season was another PR-disaster for INDYCAR and it will be another season to forget. The list of controversies and tragedies is pretty long one:
1. Fragile body kits that break away and injure spectators. 2. The new NOLA race in the rainy swamp of Louisiana which was stopped due to time limit under yellows. 3. James Hinchcliffe, injured but lucky to be alive after the Indy practice crash 4. The comments about the dangerous race in Fontana, instead of producing a safety discussion resulted in IRL announcing new fines for criticizing them. 5. Justin Wilson, dead. 6. The double-points controversy at Sonoma. It looks like the deep crisis continues. PS: I know that Dixon is a great driver, but a lot of people are also bored with his precise machine-like success in driving. It would have been a great story for IndyCar this year if Montoya or Rahal actually won the title. Granted, I think fans are still pumped up about them Last edited by JacobP; 2 Sep 2015 at 05:13. |
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2 Sep 2015, 10:19 (Ref:3570704) | #422 | ||
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You forgot the flying Chevys at indy
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2 Sep 2015, 11:06 (Ref:3570713) | #423 | |||
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The Wilson tragedy is bleak but it is understood to be a motorsport issue; it comes in the wake of Bianchi and the Tony Stewart incident. People understand motorsport is dangerous - like mountaineering say - and it has reignited a conversation throughout motorsport on what the next stage in cockpit safety is going to be. It is understood not to be in the same category as that disgusting 'Vegas race which was the kind of insane madness that was purely a creature of Indycar. Dixon winning is a double edged sword. He came from nowhere, beat aside the two obvious pretenders and unseated the year long points leader in a surprise victory. An extraordinary story -- but it was marred by Montoya's understandable reaction. But this is easily fixed if they wise up. Either scrap the double points or hold a season ending double header. There's far more messing with these venues then there should be, particularly as some dropped venues have had good crowds! But these are more or less backroom issues and I'm glad they are experimenting with new venues even if they don't come off as long term propositions. Indycar still has a strong slate of venues to stage a successful championship. Indycar picked up new viewers apparently in the wake of the NBC NASCAR deal and NBC, in its turn, respected Indycar by showing even clashing races live. The one advantage of Indycar's season finishing early is that it avoids any further difficult clashes. We had a cracking 500 this year and there was a good number of races that were better than F1 and Cup. Lots of strong positives this season but they need to make running these teams affordable again and understand it's not the end of the world as we know it if the championship is resolved before the last race. |
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2 Sep 2015, 12:18 (Ref:3570732) | #424 | ||
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The racing product was a strong as ever.
The tragic loss of Justin Wilson will always be how the 2015 season will be remembered and quite rightly. I don't buy into the narrative that 2015 was a PR disaster. The backroom struggle between the team owners and walker was a major concern. Other positives was the rise in TV ratings and the rise of Graham Rahal and Newgarden. |
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2 Sep 2015, 18:32 (Ref:3570806) | #425 | |||
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Unfortunate as it was, there was only that woman spectator who got hit at St. Pete's. If the problem of fragile winglets had persisted throughout the season then yes but it didn't. NOLA should never have happened and many thought holding a race there was ill advised but it went ahead, though what happened there didn't mar or detract from the rest of the season, though the fallout post race, especially with the two Andretti organisations, threatens next year's Milwaukee Mille. PR has nothing to do with either Hinchcliffe's or Justin Wilson's accident and not wanting to make light of either but motorsport is dangerous and no amount of PR spin can change that. The double points was clearly not thought out and I think should be applied to 500 mile races only, or as Paradise City suggests why not run a double header. From a purely racing point of view, I thought it was a good season, with excellent racing; much better than F1. The crisis though, is the same old combination of low viewing figures, low crowd attendance but this seems to be getting a little better, availability of race venues plus there is this very long off season. |
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