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16 Jan 2009, 18:21 (Ref:2372874) | #1 | ||
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Best Drivers...?
By 2 wins out of 2 for Muller in the TDi I mean that he scored 2 wins in 2007, all of them on a TDi. Also, if I still can count decently, I see 3 podiums in 10 attempts (2 wins in Monza race 1 and Oschersleben race 1 and a 3rd in Brands Hatch) against 2 podiums in 14 attempts with the Tfsi. Also, you get 2 wins and a 3rd with the TDi and no wins, a 2nd and a 3rd. 42 points out of 81 (which is more than 50%) made with the TDi in 10 races against 41 scored in 14 races with the Tfsi. So you can hardly question that the TDi was better than the Tfsi.
The fact that Andy has had more practice on the wet is completely arbitrary, you mentioned that Augusto is brazilian so he's obviously less experienced in the wet, but look at Senna, he learned on go karts in Brazil to race on a wet track and look at how much of a legend he is! I honestly think it's more about talent... Priaulx-Farfus: Again, you can't look at qualifying performance and best laps: when you constantly have at least 20kgs less of ballast because you do the fastest lap and then you crash, so you don't have enough results to have the ballast on your car, you can easily do the best lap and the pole position and be better on a single lap. A champion is not only seen on the laptime but during a whole race. You can't say it's about maturity, come on, Augusto is entering his 6th season, I think (if you consider Etcc, too). I think the problem is, he's a super quick driver but he doesn't have the personality of a champion: he's nice, whenever I talk to him I crack up laughing, I really like him, but the difference with Priaulx is in the head and in the talent you need to use your brain while racing, which is not easy. |
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16 Jan 2009, 22:16 (Ref:2373032) | #2 | ||
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People said Massa would never mature though, he took his time but did. I think Farfus needs to learn fast though because, he may be quick, but he just isn't getting enough results.
The TDi was much better than the TFSi. thats a fact. And Muller did a great job with it, adapting to a new, very different car which drives tottally different to anything seen in TC before. he got the job done in a good car, so is a very worthy champion. |
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16 Jan 2009, 22:49 (Ref:2373058) | #3 | ||
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Yes, I agree he is a worthy 2008 champion, not his fault if the rules gave him the best car in the field. On the other hand, Priaulx was a worthy 2007 champion!
As for Farfus, I think Massa, just like him, had so much time to get mature. And anyway Massa has to face Hamilton, a guy who is super fast and a worthy 2008 champion but often makes mistakes. As far as I remember, people like Hill, Alonso and Priaulx are a totally different kind of driver compared to Massa (and Farfus). Also, Formula 1 is a much different thing compared to Wtcc, it's more of a contact sport and the chance of making mistakes while fighting for position is higher. Let Massa come to Wtcc and then we'll see! (and it would be the same if a Wtcc driver had to go to Formula 1, though Priaulx did drive a BMW Williams after the 2005 season, it had to be a one day test but the Williams guys were so impressed that they called him back quite a bit of times, constantly, throughout the 2006 season) |
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17 Jan 2009, 01:40 (Ref:2373145) | #4 | ||||
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17 Jan 2009, 23:22 (Ref:2373573) | #5 | ||
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The Brands Hatch thing doesn't matter, Colin Turkington was there as a wild card, and what matters is the points: had Muller won the championship for the points he acquired by not counting Turkington, would you have said it was unfair because he wasn't actually standing on the podium? The results are what the classifications say, I count Turkington as if disqualified: he was in a sequential gearbox-equipped BMW, which is not what a Wtcc BMW is like. Do you think that if someone comes second at a race and the winner gets disqualified you should consider that he has come second when lloking at his performances? I think definitely not. There is a reason why Turkington was not counted: his BMW was 30 or 40 kgs lighter than the works BMW, I don't remember exactly. Brands Hatch is one of the tracks in which you feel the most the weight difference.
Senna: yeah, it was an acquired skill, something anyone can do, not only Priaulx because it always rains in England. Larini is a great wet track racer, and he's Italian, so... Sorry, I made a mistake in counting the races, but it makes it still stunning: it means 3 podiums in 10 attempts against 2 in 12 attempts. 39 points before the TDi (12 races), 42 points with the TDi (10 races). Still the points he made in the TDi are more than 50%, obtained in the less than half of the races held during the year. Do you still claim that having the TDi was a disadvantage? Farfus: True, Priaulx won his first crown in 2004, but he started his career in 1996 in theory, practically it was in 1999 that he entered his first full season in Renault Spider Cup, in which he won 13 races out of 13. Augusto started his racing career in 1991, by which time Priaulx had only been racing motorbikes, and he started racing outside of Brazil in 1998. A year later, 1999, he started racing in Europe, and he entered the single seaters world in 2000. With touring cars Andy only has a couple of years experience more than Farfus, as Andy became a works driver in Btcc with Honda in 2002, compensating with years and years of racing in go karts, which Priaulx never did. So, in touring cars, Priaulx started in 2002 and Farfus in 2004: I can't see much difference. I would rather rate Sergio Hernandez as the guy who could impress everyone, but it's too early to say. To be honest, at the moment I can't see anyone who can top Andy at all Last edited by helterskelter; 17 Jan 2009 at 23:27. |
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18 Jan 2009, 02:22 (Ref:2373624) | #6 | |||||||
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20 Jan 2009, 01:54 (Ref:2374964) | #7 | ||
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Turkington had a car that did not fit the regulations of Wtcc and was therefore invisible, a equential gearbox is much different than H pattern gearboxes, so it makes sense. If you don't understand, let Turkington explain you, as he drove both of them. Anyway, Muller came third in Brands Hatch. A podium is not about raising a trophy but about coming first, second or third and gaining 10, 8 or 6 points, which Muller did. As simple as that.
I didn't change my mind about wet track, it's just that it's completely arbitrary to say that Priaulx has raced more in the wet, as Farfus could have acquired that skill in Brazil just like Senna did. Anyway, if you were more aware of what you say, you'd have known that Priaulx himself thinks about wet track racing as more of an instinct, that you develop and fine tune through the years, but it is a lot about talent and ALSO about acquiring skills. Nobody is born knowing how to race on a wet track. Anyway, Priaulx showed he's better than Farfus in the wet, no matter why he does. You definitely have to have talent, which is the difference between world class drivers like Priaulx, Senna, Schumacher and Vettel, and drivers like Farfus, but that doesn't make Augusto a terrible driver in the wet! The track was drying in Anderstorp and Rydell had slick tyres while Larini had rains, a lesson Larini already knew: everybody knows that on a drying track the guy with slick tyres is faster than the guy in the rains, as the rain tyres will get burned. Larini has been on a Formula One podium, he drove for Ferrari and won championships, he deserves far more than being treated the way you treat him. You think it was a disadvantage? Then I hope Seat hires you. You'd be great in letting BMW win a few more championships. Either they're idiots or they knew what they were doing, knew what they could do with the TFSI, with which they basically stood no chance, and they switched to the TDi, with which they had a chance. Giving a risky car to the only guy who could let you win the championship would be absolutely clever of them: I wonder why they still have their jobs, as they did such a mistake, because they lost the crown in the end! By the way, look at the performances of Tarquini and Monteiro, and Genè in the second TDi: Tarquini scored 27 points and Monteiro 21 in the reliable and superfast TFSI, while poor Genè only scored 41 in the unsafe TDi (Talking about the weekends in which the TDi was introduced). What an absolute dominance by the TFSI! Is that still statisically irrelevant and showing that the TFSI was more competitive? The difference between you and me is that I respect Muller. I may not like him as a person, but I owe him respect because I love this sport and know that nodoby should discuss what comes from the track and he is a worthy 2008 World Champion, but you don't respect Andy as a 2004 European Champion and 2005, 2006 and 2007 World Champion. I am sorry to tell you, but this is completely wrong, and from the way you are talking to me, you do not respect me neither, which is sad but ok. Like Muller, anyone who doesn't think the way you do is wrong and has to feel like crap. Maturity: characteristic of full development, either mental or physical. Farfus is yet to fully develop himself mentally, and in racing you only do that through experience: there must be a reason why I made a mistake and went into the gravel in my first race ever and came third in the second race, 3 months later. Racing is about learning, which is why Larini, Tarquini, Giovanardi, all of them over 40, are still around and competitive. You seem to use the word mature referring to a guy who is older, but this is not often the case. I looked up the word maturity, now you look up the word respect and try to use it towards Priaulx, at least, if not towards me. |
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F-E-A-R: False Evidence Appearing Real (A.Priaulx) Stubborn As A Mule No Fear - No Limits - No Equal |
20 Jan 2009, 04:21 (Ref:2374999) | #8 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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20 Jan 2009, 10:23 (Ref:2375135) | #9 | ||
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Well stedevil and helterskelter, it is good to see you have so much respect for eachother, given that you take so much time to comment eachother ;-)
Anyway, I am no expert, but I do no something about statistics. And it's easy to predict that in a sport with so many variables as touringcarracing (luck, crashes, driver talent, driver form of the day, penaltyweight, weather, reversed grids, tyrechoice, mechanical failures, etc.), the pretty arbitrary measuring of results (another pointsystem would have given a different result) and so few observations (only 24 races) would give any statistical usefull results. So any numbers that are given in any discussion are illustrative at best. However this forum isn't for statisticians, but for motorsportsfans. I wouldn't be here if it was the other way. And from an educated viewers-perspective, it is not to hard to see that the TDi-engine is an advantage compared to the TSFi-engine; the higher power and torque easily make up for the added weight in most situations. Would Muller had any chance at Monza with a petrol-powered Leon? I doubt it. The discussion about Brands Hatch, and the effects of Turkington on the results is offcourse meaningless. Everybody knows the facts, the choise to count him in the results or not is really arbitrary. About wet-wheatherdriving; I think it's really a question of talent. Surely driving in the wet requires other racinglines, different optimal slip-angles, other (easier) appliance of throttle and brakes. But that's exactly the same as when a driver has to change cars, tyres or goes to a track he has never bin to. Everybody with some talent can learn to drive a car close to the limit in such situations. But the talented drivers learn it quikly. |
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20 Jan 2009, 11:51 (Ref:2375215) | #10 | ||||
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20 Jan 2009, 18:34 (Ref:2375489) | #11 | |||
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The troubles that rallydrivers are, are the really the same that drivers have who come for instance from single-seaters to touringcars, or indeed drivers who for the first time drive in the wet. You not only have to learn a different style, you also have to 'unlearn' your old style. Permanently if you have changed your career to another form of motorsports, for a few weeks if you are a rallydriver preparing for a rally on a type of surface that you are not used to, and for an few minutes if you start a race on a wet but drying track. So yes, learning to drive in the wet is harder than it is to learn to drive a new car, but the talent you need to accomplisch it is the same. And offcourse you need experience as well, but the more talent you have, the more quikly you learn. What I also feel is important that a professional driver has to thÃ*nk about his drivingstyle in the wet. Together with his engineer he must be able to understand how he can drive his car faster. Conscious that is. I feel that a lot of drivers who are 'naturally fast' have larger problems adjusting to new sorts of cars, other surfaces or wet weather compared to drivers who think about their driving. Senna was I think one of the few drivers who have it both, and Loeb has it too probably. All theory though since I have only driven 1 type of vehicles (go-karts) on one type of surface (indoor slippery concrete). Why one driver is faster or slower in different conditions is a fascinating subject anyway. |
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20 Jan 2009, 20:09 (Ref:2375545) | #12 | ||
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1- Rydell was in a Chevrolet, which was clearly the best car in the field that weekend, as the other results show. Once again, you don't know what you're talking about.
2- You said Muller was in the fight for it DESPITE the TDi, and what you wrote just proves you're wrong. You just showed that the TDi was not worse than the TFSI, yet it gave him slightly better results. Don't compare Muller with the 2008 drivers, compare him with the other Seat drivers in a TFSI and you'll have your answer. The table you made is pretty funny, but I'm not as stupid as you try to make me look like, another proof that you have no respect for people who think differently from you, as you try to pick on me while i try to give you facts. 3- I'm tired about the Brands Hatch thing: ok, so Muller came 4th, but got 6 points, so we're both right. Let's stop it, it's getting too funny. 4- Larini was good until 2007, you can have a blackout, it's allowed. If he's slow, I assure you Nicola Larini is not an idiot, and he will retire before they tell him to go away. 5- You're not in the position to question my ability as a journalist or my knowledge, since you're not a journalist, not a racing driver and you haven't been on racing tracks since you were born like me. It's just a different way of seeing, reality, and you take it personally, which may make you feel cool. If it does, I'm ok with it, keep having fun. You deserve this kind of fun, since you can't go in a car and prove your talent or show your much celebrated and absolute knowledge on a website who gets thousands of contacts a day. 6- +40 drivers are more competitive? I thought Priaulx, the most successful touring car driver in the history, was barely in his 30s when he won the Etcc... 7- Wet racing: I said it's a mix of both talent and acquiring skills: Senna and Priaulx had both of them, Farfus clearly lacks one of the two. If not, let's chat again in 10 years time, if Farfus will still be racing in the same car as Priaulx, and we'll talk then and see if he got better or not Last edited by helterskelter; 20 Jan 2009 at 20:12. |
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F-E-A-R: False Evidence Appearing Real (A.Priaulx) Stubborn As A Mule No Fear - No Limits - No Equal |
20 Jan 2009, 22:17 (Ref:2375648) | #13 | ||
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@ helterskelter: your point 5 hits completely misses the target. It doesn't matter where you come from or how cool you are here, everybody can voice his opinion whether you like it or not. Please keep that in mind. Also, an attitude like that ain't exactly working in your favor if you think it does.
For the rest I think you guys should take this a bit less serious Last edited by Bramzel; 20 Jan 2009 at 22:21. |
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20 Jan 2009, 22:59 (Ref:2375678) | #14 | |||||
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20 Jan 2009, 23:13 (Ref:2375689) | #15 | ||
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21 Jan 2009, 16:37 (Ref:2376226) | #16 | ||
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Ok, compare Muller's performances with Tarquini's during the period in which Muller had the TDi and Tarquini had the TFSI and you'll have your answer. No doubt Muller is a great driver, I'm not questioning that. If not an advantage, you have to admit the TDi allowed him to win races, which the TFSI didn't up to then in that year.
I repeat, Seat engineers are not stupid, they have tested the TDi long enough to put it on the racetrack: if you think that giving Muller the TDi was a mistake, again, look at the TFSI performances during the same period and give yourself an answer. I'm not discussing the TDi anymore, it's so clear that you're blinded by Muller's undiscussed talent and you don't see how much the car is important in this sport. Ah, and about the examples, look at Giovanardi winning the 2007 crown in a new car: does your rule only apply to Seat? And don't mention the Volvo because it has a different fuel on, and it doesn't give the huge advantages the diesel allows to have. As for Anderstorp, I would mention Huff winning Race 1, which you didn't and makes YOUR analysis weird, as the Lacetti, at the end of it all, took all the wins in Anderstorp. Also, a swedish driver will know Anderstorp better than a swiss driver would, which would be another thing to take into consideration and that I didn't mention before. Having said that, Rydell is a great driver and deserves great respect, he's always been a nice and correct guy and a very quick driver. As for the age, it's important to have experience in touring cars, you're right: but a guy who has had a decent experience in touring cars and id in his 30s is more likely to succeed than a guy in his 40s. As Tarquini showed, a guy in his 40s can throw out of the track a guy in his 30s so that he doesn't score points, which is a skill I hope not to learn as my racing career goes on. |
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F-E-A-R: False Evidence Appearing Real (A.Priaulx) Stubborn As A Mule No Fear - No Limits - No Equal |
21 Jan 2009, 23:05 (Ref:2376458) | #17 | |||||||
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2008 2nd half of season (average points per race) - Muller (9,50) - Tarquini (5,00) - Diff (4,50) I think those numbers show what I have been saying all along. In 2007 the TD was quick but unreliable and Muller kicks Tarquinis butt at the end of season whatever the engine technology. The same tendecy you can btw see also in 2006. Quote:
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21 Jan 2009, 23:35 (Ref:2376478) | #18 | ||
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We're talking about 2007: was the TDi slower than the TFSI? It wasn't. The TDi being underdeveloped is your opinion, not Seat's: if they brought it on track it's because they thought it was the best way to win the championship. Like you said, and I agree about that, Muller is the best Seat driver, so they would have been fools to give their best driver something they were unsure about. Failures happen in racing cars, they're always pushed to the limit, in Macau 2007 it happened to Muller and he lost the championship. It happens.
You keep on talking about 2008: I told you to compare the results of the TDi with the results of the TFSI. You think that Muller getting more points is about the driver being better: then take Genè-Tarquini and compare them. You'll have a good time, I assure you. I already told you, you think I'm discussing Muller's talent, and I'm definitely not, and I repeat he's a worthy 2008 World Champion. Like this, we're talking about 2 different things; I'm talking about the TDi and the TFSI abd you're talking about Yvan Muller and Gabriele Tarquini, so take the Muller variable off and compare Jordi Genè, who had the TDi, with Tarquini, and see what happens, so you'll be more serene in judging. Anyway, I would never dare to say that Priaulx kicks anyone's butt, I think it's a bit offensive... VXR driver Giovanardi does remember he had problems during the first part of the season, as he told me, and the car wasn't 100% quick. As he told me, he had to risk much more because he knew that in the next race the car could have a failure or it wouldn't be alright in the next track, so he had to take advantage of the races in which his car was better in order to cover for the difficult races. Seat suffered in 2008 because the car was designed to have Yokohama tyres on, but in the Btcc they use Dunlops, which made them go crazy with the setup as they had to start it all over. And yes, they were unreliable, because the car was designed to have 2 races instead of 3 per weekend, for instance, and a lot of details that are different between Btcc and Wtcc. You also have to mention that in GB they don't have a Tarquini trying to take the direct rival for the championship off the track. Wasn't Huff under pressure? I recall him finishing right ahead of Monteiro... About Rydell, I would say the disadvantages compensate the advantage of knowing the track, considering that he might have tested the Lacetti at least once before getting into the car, a question I'll ask him as soon as possible as an informal curiosity. |
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F-E-A-R: False Evidence Appearing Real (A.Priaulx) Stubborn As A Mule No Fear - No Limits - No Equal |
22 Jan 2009, 00:10 (Ref:2376490) | #19 | |||||||
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22 Jan 2009, 02:02 (Ref:2376527) | #20 | ||
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I can't remember Race 1 in Anderstorp too well, but I seem to recall Monteiro was much faster than Huff.
The DNFs are taken on a small amount of races, so that the failure they had in Macau makes it already 20% of the races... To me it is not enough indicative. Anyway with the Btcc version of the TDi I'm talking about structural differences between the Wtcc version and the other version that needed to be created. Once more, they introduced the TDi because they knew that without it they would have lost against Giovanardi. And to Piedone it's not a normal approach, this year he won it because he didn't take unnecessary chances and he won because he's smarter than other drivers, and definitely quicker. Every new car is not immediately quick and reliable, but it doesn't mean that the TDi wasn't because we don't know when they started its developement. That's why I say that your statement of the TDi being underdeveloped is an opinion. I know that there's a strong fight in the Btcc! What I meant is that Turner never deliberately pushed Giovanardi off the track because he had broken his turbo! Slight misunderstanding. Again, you are talking about Tarquini and I'm talking about the TDi! Compare Genè and Tarquini and come back... We all know Muller is the best Seat driver, nobody is discussing his talent or the fact that he's far more consistent than Tarquini. Muller is definitely a top driver, stop defending him as if I were attacking him! You might be trying to decrease the prestige of a multichampion like Priaulx by saying that Muller would have won, were it not for the TDi but, however you may want to discuss, the track has spoken and said that Priaulx was the best from 2004 until 2007 and this year Muller was, as simple as that. Also, please remeber we're both talking about somehing we deeply love, so please stop taking it personally and be more serene when talking about this, maybe stop trying to laugh at me or discuss my job as a journalist, because I've had far more exclusive interviews and news than many other more experienced guys in the business and yet I'm vey very young, so maybe you're not in the position to say certain things about me. We don't have to necessarily be friends, but respecting each other would be great Last edited by helterskelter; 22 Jan 2009 at 02:07. |
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F-E-A-R: False Evidence Appearing Real (A.Priaulx) Stubborn As A Mule No Fear - No Limits - No Equal |
22 Jan 2009, 04:18 (Ref:2376562) | #21 | |||||||
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22 Jan 2009, 14:03 (Ref:2376831) | #22 | ||
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The TFSI is not a Lada, of course it was a competitive car, not enough to win the championship, though.
I'm saying the TDi was more competitive than the TFSI, which is proved by the fact that Muller was more competitive, won races (which didn't happen that year until the TDi came in) and was in the fight for the championship until the end. Have you noticed that the TFSI won 1 race in 2007 and the TDi won 3? As for Tarquini, your table for 2008 shows Genè was worse than Tarquini in 2008 in the second part of the season, but he wasn't when he had a TDi Leon. Do the comparison, it'll help you understand my point. Tarquini has been worse (not 'sucking', which is offensive) than Muller, but not worse than Genè, so this comparison can really help IMO. Piedone is what Giovanardi is called in Italy, it means something like 'big foot', referring to his skills especially on fast tracks, such as Thruxton or italian Pergusa. I must have missed him taking Turner deliberatey out of the track, please remind me when it happened, as I missed watching some of the summer races, and I'll go and see what Giovanardi did. |
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F-E-A-R: False Evidence Appearing Real (A.Priaulx) Stubborn As A Mule No Fear - No Limits - No Equal |
22 Jan 2009, 15:18 (Ref:2376882) | #23 | ||
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As for a team mate taking out the main rival, TOC did a pretty nasty one a few races before where he sent Plato spinning into the tire barriers. It's not like Plato didnt have it coming after his behaviour in the past, but two wrongs doesnt make a right, and it certainly was relevant for the championship outcome. And the indy Champion, Turkington, I completely lost track of how many times he shoved people of track. At least 1 per weekend for sure, but the worst was the race he sent no less than 5 drivers off. By that point of course the rest of the drivers got so fed up by his behaviour so 3 of the guys he had sent off made a big point of slamming back into him as the passed him (Neal, Gio, Jackson). It's just sad to see how drivers need to resort to on track penalism because the officials always look the other way. The only people made happy by this are the crash monkeys. |
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22 Jan 2009, 23:17 (Ref:2377195) | #24 | ||||
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23 Jan 2009, 22:12 (Ref:2377928) | #25 | ||
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True, but i never questioned Muller's talent. It all started because I said that a champion has to be a certain kind of person, and I think Muller is not the kind of guy I would rate as a champion. Priaulx and Senna are champions to me. But I never questioned Yvan's talent, he's absolutely a top class driver.
I said those things about me cause stedevil questioned my ability as a journalist and my knowledge about touring cars. |
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F-E-A-R: False Evidence Appearing Real (A.Priaulx) Stubborn As A Mule No Fear - No Limits - No Equal |
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