T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1044.1 | The story I was told | IOSG::MITCHELL | Elaine | Tue Apr 24 1990 12:36 | 7 |
|
I was told by someone, who knows someone, who knows someone....
that the person who was killed was a marshall, and he died from a
heart attack, caused by shock, rather than his injuries....
Elaine
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1044.2 | Same as i read... | RUTILE::GUEST | | Tue Apr 24 1990 13:54 | 4 |
| Did that last someone read the papers 'cos that's where i read he'd
had a stroke.
Nigel
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1044.3 | Results ? | NCEIS1::CHEVAUX | Patrick Chevaux, Nice, 828-6995 | Tue Apr 24 1990 14:17 | 3 |
| I did not have time to buy the monday newspapers. Could anyone post
the results of the race here ? I know Comas (Lola-Mugen DAMS) won.
I wonder what happened to the EJR boys (Irvine, Naspetti, Frantzen).
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1044.4 | he was there | IOSG::MITCHELL | Elaine | Tue Apr 24 1990 15:27 | 5 |
|
re 1 and 2 - the last someone on my list was (apparently) an official
at the track.
Elaine
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1044.5 | The "official" version of events at Donington | VOGON::DAWSON | Turn ignition on - Turn brain off! | Thu Apr 26 1990 09:02 | 50 |
| Acording to Motoring News, the person who died was a spectator who
was standing in a designated spectating area. Ray Plummer was hit by
the rear suspension of McNish's DAMS Lola as it disintegrated and
suffered a heart attack as a result of his injuries. Despite tremendous
efforts by the paramedics who resuscitated him immediately, he died
later in hospital. Three other spectatorts were injured, two of whom
were marshalls. McNish escaped unharmed although was he was desperately
upset by the tradegy and was treated for shock. The other driver
involved, Emanuele Naspetti, was unharmed.
The accident occured as McNish, who had switched to slick tyres on
the damp tracl during the parade lap, was slicing his way back through
the field and, on lap three, came upon Naspetti. As they passed under
the Dunlop Bridge on Starkey Straight and approached the Esses they
made nose (McNish) to tail (Naspetti) contact. They then both speared
right into the concrete retaining wall, locked together. Naspetti's car
hit the wall, knocking off the right front wheel. The car ran along the
wall into the gravel trap and stopped. McNish's car, which was
sandwiched between the Reynard and the wall, took off, turned through
180 degrees with the rear wing over the wall and the nose on the grass,
barrel-rolled twice along the top of the wall and then took off over
the wall, coming to rest minus engine, gearbox and rear suspension at
the base of the vehicle underpass. During its flight, it had cleared
several cars as well as the 3' high wall and a loudspeaker sustem
(being at least 15' in the air at one point) before ploughing through
a chickenwire fence.
Both cars were impounded pending inspection and Leicester
Constabulary took statements from both drivers as a matter of course
although it is not thought that poor driving had anything to do with
it. As McNish was running slicks and Naspetti wets, they were using
different bits of track but witnesses agree Naspetti defended his line
correctly although McNish was obviously gaining on him rapidly and was
travelling a lot faster.
The other worrying thing about the episode concerns the lack of
proper debris fencing. Some say that this could have prevented the
tradegy while others say the energy involved in the accident could not
have been contained by any sort of fencing. Donington had only recently
complied with a number of FISA requirements (put forth while there was
still hope for an F1 race) to the letter and the track had been
reinspected, and passed, on the Friday before the race. However,
Silverstone were required to install debris fencing around the complete
circuit while Donington only has it around part of the circuit and not
at the Esses.
There will be a full enquiry by FISA and reccommendation by the RAC
MSA regards safety standards at all race tracks.
Colin
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1044.6 | ex | COMICS::COOMBER | It works better if you plug it in | Thu Apr 26 1990 16:16 | 18 |
| Autosport this week has a whole page devoted to the accident at
Donnington. There are 3 picture ,2 of which show the real horror of the
accident. The main picture show McNish's car disapearing over the
retaining wall , there is clearly parked cars not too far from the
wall, the engine ,gearbox etc flying through the air and generally
bits, presumably body, showering the area. The other 2 , one a simular
picture to that on the front of M.N., the other show a steaming
engine & gearbox lump laying on the ground in the spectator area. There
is a deckchair and a bag on the ground nearer to the fencing than the
engine. I think the comment in M.N. about the chicken wire is a little
unfair, the picture in autosport clearly shows a standard motorsport
prohibited area notice on the fence , that to me suggest that it is to
keep the spectator away from the wall and not flying car parts away
from the spectators. There is also a sketch the rough location to what
happened .
garry
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1044.7 | No new Alesi here yet | YUPPY::PATEMAN | Forza Leyton House!! | Tue Jul 10 1990 12:19 | 23 |
| I thought I'd wake this topic up on another tack..... F3000 is boring
this year!
I've seen the last two races (Jerez & Monza) on tv recently, and
they were *so* processional. The clips of Silverstone looked a bit
more entertaining but it seems that once one of the top few get
in front thats it, end of race.
If you add to that the ludicrous display at Pau, and the very sparse
fields in the British championship, I wonder who's going to be the
next F1 graduate.
From what I've seen recently, Comas is in a different class, and
Damon Hill looks very fast but hampered by poor reliability. Apicella
looks to have missed the boat, and McNish, Morbidelli and Motormindi
look to be the favourites for next year. Eddie Irvine also looks
to have potential - a possible recruit for Eddie Jordan's GP team?
I'll be up at the Birmingham Super Prix, and it'll be interesting
to see how things are shaping by then. To date I've fast forwarded
through large chunks of the races.
Paul
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1044.8 | F3000 in Birmingham | YUPPY::PATEMAN | Forza Leyton House!! | Tue Aug 28 1990 10:19 | 49 |
| In case anybody still reads this note - a few thoughts on the
Birmingham Super Prix.
God those cars sound flat! After the glorious noise of F1 V10's & V12's
the massed ranks of V8 F3000 cars sound very dull. Anyway, onto "the
future of F1" Hmmm??
Brits first -
Gilbert-Scott : Shame he's so old (32!) Drove very well yesterday and
looked amongst the best in the field.
Irvine : Fast and smooth, climbed up the field well until something
happened with Barbazza(sp?)
Hill : Caught up in the first corner incident, and clearly upset the
car, didn't really feature in the race.
McNish : Started well down the grid, but was slicing up the field very
well until mechanical problems intervened. Looks set for F1 atthe end
of next year, when he can handle new circuits better.
Andrews : Who? Didn't really see him!
Warwick (Paul) : Impressive in only his second F3000 race. Coming up
well from the back of the grid when he tangled with Andrews and then
ran (lapped) with the leaders. Definately made the right decision to
jump out of the Mika & Mika show in F3.
Now the rest -
van der Poele - very neat drive, handled the lead very well, but can he
repeat it away from street circuits?
Apicella - when is this person going to win?!! Took the lead
decisicively from v d P, and ran away, only to blow the engine. I hope
he gets into F1 despite his non-winning record.
Comas - a big disappointment, held up a lot of the field for a long
time.
Frentzen - rough, tough and very fast, but looks hard on the car.
Chiesa - ran well, but a bit anonymous.
All in all, I saw very little to impress and inspire confidence for F1,
although it was a very entertaining race. No-one really stood out.
Paul
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1044.9 | McNish vs Alesi - No contest. | CHEST::SAXBY | Is this personal or what? | Tue Aug 28 1990 10:37 | 23 |
| Paul,
You asked in the F1 note how I could discount McNish so easily? Well,
I'll admit part of it was to wind you up slightly, but on the strength
of what I saw on TV yesterday, maybe I wasn't far wrong. I know he had
a good first few races, but he seems to be losing his way away from the
circuits he knows well (as you say he seems to have trouble learning
circuits), I certainly don't rate him and suspect virtually any driver
in F3 the year he won could have done as well as he has with same
bottomless pit of Marlboro backing.
Re Alesi (again in the F1 note, but valid here), you say he only just
won the F3000 championship, but surely the fact that he did means he
DID beat all the other drivers you mentioned. In addition you seem
to ignore the fact that he did this while also racing the Tyrrell in
F1. Alesi is getting a lot of hype at the moment, but I don't think
he shows any sign of being affected by it, on the contrary he seems to
be keeping a very level headed approach and doesn't seem to have gone
into prima-donna mode as many lesser talents (and bigger names) would
have if they'd been linked with 3 of the top 4 teams in only their
1st FULL F1 season.
Mark
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1044.10 | This will run & run! | YUPPY::PATEMAN | Forza Leyton House!! | Tue Aug 28 1990 11:01 | 32 |
| Re McNish
From the TV coverage we recorded and watched last night, its not
surprising you didn't see McNish. In fact, the only time I saw him was
in the pits walking past Apicella's car!
On the track, McNish was about 20th on the grid, and after the start
was rapidly moving up the field. In comparison to many of the others he
was smooth *and* fast. I don't know what his problem was 'cos he
stopped out on the circuit, but I reckon he would have been in the top
6 if he had finished.
Re Alesi
I do not dispute he is good, but I reckon he is being over-rated. Last
year he won three races (McNish has won two already this season) in
F3000 and beat Comas to the title on a 3-2 wins count back. He actually
stopped racing in F1 to win those races, and missed a couple of GPs.
As for the prima donna bit - calling a press conference to tell the
hacks to lay off??? signing letters of intent with Ferrari *and*
Williams?
I reckon he should stay at Tyrrell for another year and settle down
before looking to take the mega-money. On the evidence of yesterday he
was one of the three or four best from a very bad bunch in F3000 last
year (Paul Belmondo?!?!) and is the one who got the breaks.
How about an advance wager on McNish for 1992?
Paul
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1044.11 | Indeed it will, but let's call it a draw! | CHEST::SAXBY | Is this personal or what? | Tue Aug 28 1990 11:14 | 33 |
|
You want to bet that McNish could win a Grand Prix (assuming he doesn't
get a Marlboro engineered drive with Mclaren :^)) in 1992? I think
I'd be more than happy to take a bet on those odds!
Personally I find it hard to see where McNish is going (or sadly
any other British F1 contender), because it seems that the UK is seen
less and less as an important market for the sponsors and after all
it IS sponsors who ultimately decide which drivers get which seats.
I could be wrong (It HAS been known!) but I really don't think McNish
is anything special (or is it just because he sounds like that Cleland
bloke and constantly looks as if he has a cold? :^)). We all have our
favourites (I thought Mario Hytten was a damned good driver myself),
and McNish is obviously yours, but I really can't share your enthusiasm
for him as all I see is a driver who doesn't stand out (2 wins is good,
but NOT outstanding) despite having enormous Marlboro backing. In F3
it was the same, maybe it's because he's too much of a Prost driver
for my liking, he simply picks up the placings when things aren't going
exactly his way and then ends up with the championship (It COULD happen
this year), but I really don't think he'll ever be a top-flight F1
driver (although if F1 cars get any smaller he'll be the only driver
qualified to race one!).
Mark
PS Letters of intent don't mean anything. Surely all Alesi did was to
say 'ok I'm interested in driving for this team or that', what do you
think any driver offered the chance of driving for these teams would
have done? Turned round and said, 'No I'm not going to sign this,
you'll come to me if you want me and I'm still available'?
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1044.12 | I Give Up! (Almost) | YUPPY::PATEMAN | Forza Leyton House!! | Tue Aug 28 1990 11:38 | 30 |
| Honourable draw agreed Mark, but ..........:-)
McNish is a stone cold certainty for McLaren in '92. In F3 he often
drove well from the back, 'cos like most of them he couldn't start very
well! This year has seen 5 different winners in F3000, Comas 3, McNish
& Van der Poele 2, and Irvine and Morbidelli 1 a piece. Considering wee
Allan is
a) driving on circuits abroad he's not seen before
b) driving a much more powerful machine
and
c) is only 20
I reckon he's not doing too bad. All the others were regular contenders
last year. OK, so his wins have been at Silverstone and Brands but he's
run well at Jerez and Monza. Plus he's come back from the Donington
tragedy.
Anyway, I'm willing to put him at the head of the queue of Brits in
waiting.
I will say tho' that Alesi will win a GP before McNish does, probably
next season at a street circuit with the (still) underpowered Tyrrell,
or outright in a Williams-Renault.
As for the rest of F3000, they are a pretty ordinary bunch. Look to F3
with Hakkinen, Salo and Fittipaldi, and to the lower ranks with
Barichella (sp?) Palhares and Sosperi for the real talent.
Paul
|
1044.13 | | NCEIS1::CHEVAUX | Patrick Chevaux, Nice, 828-6995 | Wed Aug 29 1990 09:56 | 6 |
| Could someone post the race results ? I assume this race was part of
the British F3000 championship, but I may well be wrong.
On the subject of British drivers, McNish is obviously very good
and promised to a brilliant career. How about Eddie Irvine, Damon
Hil, etc ?
|
1044.14 | Too many entrants for the British series! | YUPPY::PATEMAN | Forza Leyton House!! | Wed Aug 29 1990 10:11 | 30 |
| Patrick,
The Birmingham Super Prix was Rd 9 of the European Championship.
Results -
1 van der Poele
2 Chiesa
3 Artzet
4 Gounon
5 Giovanardi
6 Naspetti
7 Gilbert-Scott
8 Warwick
9 Jones
10 Wendlinger
No other finishers.
As for the other Brits, Hill has come on very well recently, but like
Apicella, has a problem winning races. He definately has the skill to
go with his name (unlike Paul Stewart) and is being touted as a
possible for F1 next season. Irvine looks better, and is much younger.
He also looks to have better sponsorship connections, but there might
be the odd doubt about his "killer instinct".
Paul Warwick has just stepped up from F3 for the end of the season and
looks to be aclimatising quite well, he should be one to watch next
year if he gets a good drive.
Paul
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1044.15 | Superwhat? | HAMPS::LINCOLN_J | John, Hampshire House, Basingstoke | Wed Aug 29 1990 13:32 | 13 |
| The trouble with the Birmingham Superprix is that it
appears to be run on the worlds worst circuit. Watching
on TV you would think that the events were being watched
only by a collection of some of Britain's most uninspiring
buildings.
It's run to bolster a bit of Brummy civic pride, not so
unreasonable considering that Birmingham is the centre of
Britain's motor industry, but quite counter productive in
my view. Surely there must be somewhere better than that
bumpy, concrete monotony.
-John
|
1044.16 | Its Quite Good Really! | YUPPY::PATEMAN | Forza Leyton House!! | Thu Aug 30 1990 09:49 | 22 |
| John,
The circuit looks much better in the flesh than on TV. We've been for
the past two years, last year at Halfords Hairpin, and this year at the
corner before the start. The viewing is superb, and for a street
circuit its very fast - winners av speed 105mph. At Halfords you can
see all the way up the dual carriageway for both the on-coming and
leaving cars, and at the corner where we were this year we were within
10 metres of the cars as they accelerated out of the corner.
I'll concede that Brum is a bit of a charmless city, but they do an
excellent job at the Super Prix, and from what they have said the
drivers like the circuit too. There is also a reasonable amount of
local interest, and loads of side-shows etc.
To sum up, the viewing is better than Silverstone and the facilities
are better than all the "real" circuits.
I just hope they keep the F3000s next year rather than those rubbishy
WSPC things ;->
Paul
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1044.17 | F3000 drivers to carry L plates! | CRATE::SAXBY | Is this personal or what? | Thu Aug 30 1990 09:54 | 15 |
|
You'd never get the WSPC boys there! :^)
Having said that I can think of one advantage with holding Group
C races in Birmingham over F3000...
You'd probably succeed in getting the whole field of cars beyond the
first bend before the race had to be stopped. Really the Superprix
shows up the quality of the F3000 drivers quite dramatically! ITV
have shown great determination in continuing to cover a race which
NEVER gets a clean start (remember the year that the race STARTED
after ITV's extended coverage finished?).
Mark
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1044.18 | | OVAL::GUEST_N | Somewhere else... | Thu Aug 30 1990 10:22 | 9 |
|
Come on Mark, Group C drivers aren't exactly perfect. Remember Dijon
this year ? At the end of the warm up lap they couldn't even leave
each other alone whilst slowing down for the start.
God knows whats happened at the rest.
Nigel
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1044.19 | Problems on the streets. | CRATE::SAXBY | Is this personal or what? | Thu Aug 30 1990 10:31 | 23 |
|
Never said they were (a lot aren't even professional drivers!), but
considering that F3000 drivers are only a step away from being the
'best' drivers in the world wouldn't it be reasonable to expect a
degree of competence? After all you don't get the same carnage on
street circuits in F1, do you?
If I was an F1 team manager/sponsor I'd be a bit concerned about
the inability of most of the next crop of drivers to finish on
street circuits (just check out the Pau result!) when there are a
number (seemingly a varying number) on the calendar in F1.
Another factor seems to be the zeal with which they stop races in
Birmingham. Other street circuits seem to be able to deal with one
or two cars stranded by using yellow flags and cranes, but at
Brum that seems to be impossible (remember the stupid situation
where a car virtually blocked a corner for a number of laps while
racing continued? Anywhere else the car would have been craned away
or the race would have been stopped immediately). I don't know who
is responsible for running the Superprix, but they don't seem to
really have cracked the problems of racing on the streets.
Mark
|
1044.20 | ex | VOGON::DAWSON | Turn ignition on - Turn brain off! | Wed Sep 05 1990 08:29 | 24 |
| RE:
================================================================================
Note 1044.19 F3000 19 of 19
CRATE::SAXBY "Is this personal or what?" 23 lines 30-AUG-1990 09:31
-< Problems on the streets. >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Never said they were (a lot aren't even professional drivers!), but
> considering that F3000 drivers are only a step away from being the
> 'best' drivers in the world wouldn't it be reasonable to expect a
> degree of competence? After all you don't get the same carnage on
> street circuits in F1, do you?
Well, Mark, yes actually! Seem to remember one or two at Monaco in
recent years (months even!). And Spa had a couple of problems and
that's not even a street circuit!!
I think the F3000 boys show an extraordinary amount of competence in
the circumstances ; the problem is finding circuits for these
open-wheeled machines that allow them to perform in a reasonable manner
while still providing the spectators with something to watch other than
a great big tv screen.
Colin
|
1044.21 | 1990 champion : Erik COMAS | NCEIS1::CHEVAUX | Patrick Chevaux, Nice, 828-6995 | Fri Sep 28 1990 15:26 | 31 |
| Last week-end at the Bugatti circuit in LeMans Erik Comas has won
both the race and the 1990 championship. After a beautiful half
season the DAMS driver has encountered a number of problems with
his Lola race chassis, problems that have eventually been sorted out.
Bugatti results
1. Comas Lola/Mugen
2. Montermini Reynard/Mugen
3. Irvine Reynard/Mugen
4. Gounon Reynard/Mugen
5. Chiesa Lola/Mugen
6. Belmondo Reynard/Mugen
Comas (pole) and McNish were on the front line. McNish gave up on
lap 26 due to electronics problems.
Championship
1. Comas 45 points
2. Irvine 27
3. McNish 26
4. Van de Poele 21
5. Apicella 18
Chiesa 18
7. Morbidelli 16
......
With only 2 races left, Comas is the 1990 F3000 champion.
Next race : Nogaro, Oct 7
|
1044.22 | Nogaro | NCEIS1::CHEVAUX | Patrick Chevaux, Nice, 828-6995 | Mon Oct 08 1990 16:39 | 5 |
| Eric Van de Poele won the race, Comas 2nd. Comas score is now 51
points. Eddie Irvine could still equal Comas total of 45 points
by winning the last 2 races provided Comas would not score; in that
case Comas would have been named 1990 champion based on number of
wins. Erik Comas is definitely the F3000 top performer to-date.
|