T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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22.1 | Operation Head Start | MUSKIE::SHAUGHNESSY | Carolina Blue | Tue Aug 21 1990 16:47 | 7 |
| What will Ken Tyrell do with his Honda engines, will they be
"B-team" mills or the real thing a la McLaren, and will the
ever-so-talented young Jean Alesi be his driver?
Also, whither Pirelli, or wither Pirelli?
MrT
|
22.2 | Tyrell to be the V10 Honda | CUJO::JORDAN | | Tue Aug 21 1990 19:58 | 7 |
| From what I have heard, Tyrell will get the Honda V10 that McLaren is
using this year. McLaren will get the new V12.
McLaren will probably have the advantange, the Honda V10 is superior to
most engines currently available.
Bob J.
|
22.3 | | NCEIS1::CHEVAUX | Patrick Chevaux, Nice, 828-6995 | Wed Aug 22 1990 07:08 | 12 |
| The question is: will the Honda V12 be better than the V10
- in peak power (probably)
- in peak torque (probably not)
- in flexibility (?)
- on fast (Spa, Silverstone, Hockenheim, ...)
- on slow circuits (Monaco, Phoenix, Budapest, Jerez, ...)
- ???
In other words will Tyrrell beat McLaren ?
|
22.4 | Nigel Mansel, retire or race? | VIVIAN::D_STUTT | | Thu Sep 06 1990 19:54 | 2 |
| Will Nigel Mansel drive for Williams next year or will he do what he said
he would do at Silverstone and retire. Lets hope not!!!!
|
22.5 | Mansell - Will he stay or will he go? | CRATE::SAXBY | Time to say something contentious! | Fri Sep 07 1990 05:10 | 19 |
|
Let's hope he doesn't race or he doesn't retire?
Anyway, he's still saying he'll retire, but rumours have it that
Williams are under GREAT pressure from Renault to sign a star (Mansell)
or a top Frenchman (Alesi). Mansell was at his best with Williams IMHO
and he seemed to be able to live with Patrese as a team-mate (but
maybe Ricardo has improved since then?), so I think on balance it'd be
good to see him in a Williams.
Mansell seems to have become a winer and a
chuck-it-in-at-the-first-sign-of-trouble merchant over the last season
, but the same happened to Piquet and his transfer to Benetton (are
they really going to be called CAMEL next year? If so I'll have one
unhappy wife!) seems to have revived his form.
Mark
|
22.6 | | CARP::SHAUGHNESSY | Big10: Conference of All-Time | Wed Sep 12 1990 11:49 | 30 |
| Maybe Mansell's "retirement" was a politic way of removing himself
from an unfavorable comparison with Prost? If this season has proven
anything, it's this:
1. Berger isn't nearly in the same class as Prost.
2. Neither is Mansell.
3. Especially in light of the fact that he's had worse racing luck
than Senna this year (yes, he had more than him last year ;^),
to be with 16 points of Senna and his McHonda at this stage of the
season reopens the question as to whether Prost is better than even
Senna.
Berger's performance at Monza was typical: He pushes like crazy to
win the early race, beats the hell outta his tires and suspension, and
then does a quiet late-race fade. It's no wonder that Ayrton and
Gerhard get on so well.
re: Honda V-10 vs. V-12
I wonder about the packaging, i.e., will the V-12 carry a penalty as
far as size (aerodynamics) and weight (tires) vis a vis the V-10.
It's been interesting this year to see the V-8s reap benefits in terms
of tire strategy, Ricard was a real eye opener this year. I look
forward to some real mixed-up races on the slow courses coming up, and
that's all we have coming up, slow courses. Based on that, Prost has
a real shot at catching Senna. If Senna would just break a car or spin
off and get zero points while Prost wins and gets 9, then we're back to
a 7 point delta with three races left!
MrT
|
22.7 | Do you believe it ? | YIPPEE::FILHOL | Where are we ? | Wed Sep 19 1990 05:31 | 1 |
| PROST, FERRARI, ALESI or how to win the constructor championship !
|
22.8 | 1 year | OASS::BURDEN_D | He's no fun, he fell right over | Wed Sep 19 1990 12:14 | 4 |
| It's interesting that Ferrari only signed Alesi for 1 year. Maybe they're
setting up '92 so Senna gets to choose his teammate?
Dave
|
22.9 | Alesi signs on with Ferrari - and more news.. | ASPEN2::BOIKO | Heaven..No,it's Iowa/Field Of Dreams | Wed Sep 19 1990 12:49 | 10 |
| * Jean Alesi will drive for Ferrari next season. The contract is for 1991
only. Williams and Tryrell, who both had signed contracts from Alesi, have
decided not to pursue the matter.
* Ligier will use Lamborghini engines for 1991 before switching to Renault
for 1992.
* Brabham have announced that they will ue a Yamaha V12 engine (OX99) next
season. The new car - BT60 - was designed by Segio Rinland.
|
22.10 | If you can't beat him . . . | IAMOK::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @VRO | Mon Nov 12 1990 08:35 | 4 |
| The Worcester (Mass.) Telegram had a story in Sunday's edition claiming
that Brazilian police had broken up a organized crime plot to kidnap
Ayrton Senna. Details were pretty sketchy. Anyone else see this, or
have any further info? Thanks.
|
22.11 | Too wild!!! | RAVEN1::M_PHILLIPS | Flirting With Disaster | Tue Nov 13 1990 01:57 | 4 |
| I heard this on Motor week tonight. I couldn't believe it. Is this for
real??
M.J.
|
22.12 | reposted from USENET | IAMOK::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @VRO | Tue Nov 13 1990 15:47 | 43 |
| From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: clari.sports.motor
Subject: Senna put under permanent security to avoid kidnapping
Date: 12 Nov 90 23:58:51 GMT
Lines: 37
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (UPI) -- Brazilian driver Ayrton Senna,
reportedly the subject of a foiled kidnapping plot, is receiving
permanent security precautions, police sources said Monday.
A police vehicle was parked over the weekend in front of Senna's
house in Sao Paulo. Police were conducting joint investigations in Sao
Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.
``If the plan really exists, the criminals can now postpone its
execution, but it's necessary to be cautious,'' police official Fernando
Costa said.
A police source told authorities he had infiltrated a group of
criminals who were planning to kidnap the world champion driver, 30,
with the help of 15-20 men, said commissioner Jorge Gomes, chief of the
organized crime prevention unit.
Police said the kidnapping was to occur last Thursday, when Senna
arrived from Australia in Sao Paulo in his private jet.
Gomes said he had information the kidnapping would take place when
Senna came to Rio de Janeiro, where he normally spends vacations at
Angra dos Reis, a nearby beach.
Costa has said that Senna's national fame would make him ``an ideal
target for kidnappers.''
A wave of kidnappings has rocked Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo this
year, with at least 32 victims between January and September.
In September, authorities discovered a plan to kidnap Senna's ex-
girlfriend, the famous Brazilian television star Maria da Graca
Meneghel, known by millions as ``Xuxa.''
For the past few months, whenever possible, Senna has traveled around
Sao Paulo aboard a private helicopter in order to thwart would-be
kidnappers.
--
This, and all articles in this news hierarchy are Copyright 1990 by the wire
service or information provider and licenced to Clarinet Communications
Corp. for distribution. Except for free samples, only paid subscribers
may access these articles. Any unauthorized access, reproduction or
transmission is strictly prohibited. We will reward the first provider of
information that helps us stop violators of this copyright. Send reports
to [email protected].
|
22.13 | Can we help? | LEDS::LEWICKE | IfItsWorthDoingItsWorthDoingToExcess | Wed Nov 14 1990 13:26 | 3 |
| Did anyone get an address to send contributions?
John
|
22.14 | It pays to be nice to Michael Kranefuss | IAMOK::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @VRO | Mon Nov 26 1990 12:58 | 4 |
| Heard on ESPN: Robby Gordon, off-road phenom and Ford contract driver,
will be given a test ride in a Benetton. It's an interesting
oppportunity, but his lack of open wheel experience will hurt his
chances for a ride, no matter how well he does.
|
22.15 | injury report | KOALA::BEMIS | no bucks, no Buck Rogers | Tue Nov 27 1990 11:25 | 11 |
|
MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED reported last night that the Doctors are
delighted with Alessandro Naninni's progress and are now predicting he
will race again someday! They won't however predict when. If that
should come about it would really seem to be miraculous.
Any new word on Martin Donnelly?
Nate
|
22.16 | it pays to be GOOD ! | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Tue Nov 27 1990 15:19 | 19 |
| .14> Heard on ESPN: Robby Gordon, off-road phenom and Ford contract driver,
I'd make that "all-around phenom". Remember when he first broke into
the Rousch team, beginning of this season, they claimed he'd never even
driven a stick-shift? Turned out to be an exaggeration, but only
slightly. I think he's about 20 or 21, first year in closed-wheel cars
he won some IMSA GTO races and probably could've been champ if Dorsey
didn't win it.
Last weekend he started his first oval-track stockcar race in the ARCA
race at Atlanta - from the pole!
Don't sell his F1 chances short, if he's got Ford backing (as well he
should!) he's likely to be there.
Of course, they might just want to take a look at him there, to see how
he might fare - so far he seems to have off-road, IMSA, NASCAR all
sussed pretty well. Giving him the F1 test seems the next logical step
in trying to find his limits (if any)...
|
22.17 | to be young, gifted, and FAST | IAMOK::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @VRO | Tue Nov 27 1990 16:20 | 16 |
| Oh, I agree -- he's damn good; won his first time out on pavement in
the GTO class, in a 24 hour race no less. I guess my point was, no
matter how good he is, is it wise to put a guy with minimal open-wheel
experience (and only a couple of years total pro experience) into one
of the top levels of the sport? It's sort of like starting a Heisman
Trophy quarterback in the first game of his first pro season -- yeah
he's good, but can he acclimate himself to the environment before he
makes/has performed upon him a career-ending move? Maybe FoMoCo should
buy him a year of ARS, F3000, or GTP for seasoning before he's thrown
into the F1 fire.
On the other hand, Benetton is not a second-rate team desperate for an
infusion of talent, and they have a lot of European young hot shoes to
choose from, so perhaps the simple act of seeking him out and asking
him to test is in indication that he's ready. Goodness knows he'll
deserve the ride someday soon, anyway.
|
22.18 | | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Wed Nov 28 1990 09:17 | 26 |
| .17> ...is it wise to put a guy with minimal open-wheel
.17> experience (and only a couple of years total pro experience) into one
.17> of the top levels of the sport? [...] -- yeah
.17> he's good, but can he acclimate himself to the environment before he
.17> makes/has performed upon him a career-ending move? Maybe FoMoCo should
.17> buy him a year of ARS, F3000, or GTP for seasoning before he's thrown
.17> into the F1 fire.
I guess there are a couple of things that come into my mind about this.
For one, watching the way the McLaren Demo Duo drove this year, I can't
really see all that much argument for experience, it certainly doesn't
equate with maturity. For another, testing is not at all the same as
getting a race ride. It could well be that FoMoCo is testing to see if
the investment in buying a year of open-wheel seasoning is worthwhile.
There is a potential problem there. GTP is not open-wheel and doesn't
have a Ford seat for Robby to occupy. F3000 is overseas and I figure
Robby is a lead driver for 1991 for Jack Rousch in the road racing
series, since Dorsey is going roundy-round. And ARS is also not a Ford
powerplant. Maybe Robby could do some of the Canadian Export A series,
or the AIS (read, obsolete Indy Cars), but there's not a lot of FoMoCo
open-wheel seat opportunities short of the top levels of the sport...
Personally, I think the best preparation would be a couple of SCCA FF
club races, after that he'd be all set to take anything Senna and
Berger (aka Crash and Bash) could throw at him.
|
22.19 | | WFOV11::DOBOSZ_M | lunatic fringe... | Fri Dec 14 1990 20:29 | 10 |
| Here's a prediction for F1...pure speculation.
Ayrton Senna will be stripped of his 1990 championship.
Additionally, he will be banned for 1991.
I've already decided to vote with my dollars. If he drives at
Montreal, I won't be going for the first time since '85.
Driver of the Year? What a pantload!
Mike
|
22.20 | Moreno with Benetton | LUCCIO::UNNIA | Nelson PIQUET forever ..... | Tue Dec 18 1990 03:11 | 11 |
|
Now It's official:
Roberto Moreno will drive the second Benetton next year.
He signed a contract for only one year....
May Alessandro Nannini come back in 1992 ?
Cheers
Alex
|
22.21 | Prost w/Ferrari for 2 more | JUPITR::JROGERS | | Fri Dec 28 1990 11:51 | 4 |
| Prost has signed a two year contract with Ferrari. Looks like le Prof
is planning on staying around for a while.
Jeff
|
22.22 | | SCAACT::BEAZLEY | | Mon Dec 31 1990 22:39 | 4 |
| Just read in PUNCH that they were planning to make a movie about Nigel
Mansel's racing career but it would be too dull and never finish!
Bob
|
22.23 | F1 update | SKID::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @VRO | Mon Jan 21 1991 15:06 | 14 |
| From various sources:
California-based Nissan Performance Technology Inc. may enter F1 under
the old "Shadow" nameplate with a US-built chassis designed by Trevor
Harris. Power to come from the 1992 NISMO-developed Nissan Group C
V12.
The Ilmor V10, to be run by the Leyton House team this year, will carry
the Suzuki logo. (No comment.) Note that GM owns 25% of Ilmor and 5%
of Suzuki.
Prost sets fast time (1.04+) at Ricard in midwinter testing with the
Ferrari 641. Jean Alesi is slower, but is using the new 642 chassis.
Bernard Gachot (!) was in the top three with the new Jordan-Ford HB.
|
22.24 | rules change.. | TOTH::POWIS | | Thu Jan 31 1991 06:45 | 7 |
| A report in this morning's VNS stated that there will be a change in
this season's scoring. First place will now get 10 pts (previously 9),
second will stay at 6 and third will stay at 4. Also, the best 14
finishes will count towards the championship.
The report also said that in 1992 the cars will be required to run
lead-free fuel.
|
22.25 | Not much change | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Thu Jan 31 1991 09:48 | 5 |
| I still don't get it. If they run 16 races, and FISA makes each team
compete in all of them, why not count all points finshes?
Paul
|
22.26 | | CUJO::JORDAN | | Thu Jan 31 1991 10:35 | 8 |
| .re .25
I aggree. If they are going to run 16 races, lets count them all.
This new scoring system will actually benefit a driver like Senna who
tends to win or DNF because 1st gets a premium on the points.
Bob J.
|
22.27 | | CRATE::RUTTER | Rut the Nut | Thu Jan 31 1991 11:04 | 6 |
| � This new scoring system will actually benefit a driver like Senna who
� tends to win or DNF because 1st gets a premium on the points.
I thought this was the idea - the person who wins more gets the title !
J.R.
|
22.28 | 1991 schedule ... | SPUDDS::MCKENZIE | Never say "Never say "Never !"". | Fri Feb 08 1991 08:20 | 4 |
| If someone has the 1991 F1 schedule including network name and coverage
times could you please post it. Thanks.
Mark
|
22.29 | | SKID::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @VRO | Fri Feb 08 1991 09:21 | 3 |
| According to a USENET posting yesterday, Michael Andretti's first
McLaren test at Estoril ended on Lap 2 when he selected the wrong gear.
Ahem.
|
22.30 | Andretti's F1 test | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Fri Feb 15 1991 09:33 | 10 |
| re: -.1
According to an article in USA TODAY on Tuesday, Michael's testing was
positive. He said that he did make a mistake, that Estoril was not the
place to go too quick too soon. Ditto for the car. Nevertheless,
McLaren management was quoted as saying that they were very pleased
with the results. They feel Michael would be competitive straightaway
in F1. Now, if only they would give him a full ride.
Paul
|
22.31 | More on Mike | JUPITR::JROGERS | | Fri Feb 15 1991 13:18 | 13 |
| Last Sunday's New York Times has a good article on Michael Andretti's
first test session. It seems the track conditions were not optimal, I
believe it was wet. Andretti was in the V10 and ended running laps
about 2 seconds slower than Berger in the V12. Prost was doing some
"race practice" laps about the same time as Berger with same results.
I think the times were about 1'20". Mike did say he needed lots more
time in the car and more familarity with the circuit. I think 2
seconds is not too bad for a beginner on a circuit. Mike also noted
that there were significant differences between the CART ride and F1,
despite the visible similarities. I would image this week's AUTOWEEK
will provide more details.
Jeff
|
22.32 | | BOOKIE::HASTIE | | Tue Feb 19 1991 16:08 | 9 |
| RE: .27
Don't forget either that in Senna's first "championship" year,
Prost would have outscored him if all 16 races were included.
The way he won in 1990 was even worse.
--Lillian, the Prost fan
|
22.33 | F1 updates
| WORDY::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Fri Feb 22 1991 08:15 | 16 |
| Ed Hinton's Friday "FYI" column in The National has some
interesting tidbits on Americans in F1. Seems Marlboro of Europe
is cranking up the hype about Michael Andretti stepping into
one of the open Mclaren seats in '92. (Michael is testing with
the team in Silverstone this week.) Might be an interesting time to
be with McLaren, if Honda drops out and Daimler-Benz moves in as
rumored.
There's a hint that the car Rick Galles' Galmer operation is
designing in the UK isn't an Indy-car after all, but a F1 chassis
for the illustrious Mr. Opie. All they'd need to complete the picture
would be an advanced engine -- like the 135-degree GM V12 with the
transmission in the vee revealed in Autosport recently? I wonder if
good GM dealer and Chevy campaigner Galles might be in the forefront
of GM's conciousness now that Roger Penske's organization is saying
"no comment" to rumors of a Toyota Indy-car engine in the '92 Penskes?
|
22.34 | Updates on F1?????? | JUPITR::JROGERS | | Sun Mar 03 1991 09:27 | 11 |
| With the F1 season about to begin, what are the prospects for some new
faces on the podium this year? Has anyone heard about the testing in
Estoril (or was it somewhere else)? Senna hasn't driven F1 since last
season, while Prost has been out testing all winter. Mansell has set
some fast times for Williams, but in a '91 spec car. Will the smaller
wings actually slow down cornering speeds?
I am anxiously waiting for latest Autoweek to get some answers, since
this note has been so quiet.
Jeff
|
22.35 | Jean! | ORION::HASTIE | | Tue Mar 05 1991 13:51 | 14 |
| > With the F1 season about to begin, what are the prospects for some new
> faces on the podium this year? Has anyone heard about the testing in
> Estoril (or was it somewhere else)?
Best bet: Jean Alesi new for Ferrari. According to one source,
he's been faster than the Professor "...on the same tires..." But
I believen Prost was NOT present at the same testing, so maybre
the comparison is misleading. Anyway, he did very well in a less
competitive car (good chassis, mediocre motor) last year, so he
looks pretty good for this year.
Other good rumors around?
--Lillian
|
22.36 | ...not good | COMET::LUKENS | | Tue Mar 05 1991 15:36 | 8 |
|
I talked to my mother in Phoenix and she says that so far the
newspapers there have had only a very small article buried in
the back of the sports pages about the F1 race this weekend.
|
22.37 | Status?
| LEAF::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Wed Mar 06 1991 09:33 | 5 |
| Has there been any news from Phoenix this week? I assume practice starts
tomorrow. I wonder what the racers think of the modified circuit configuration.
I also wonder if the teams preparing new cars (Ferrari 643, McLaren MP4/6,
Benetton B191) will bring their new hardware or wait until the first European
round. Hopefully ESPN will be carrying the race live.
|
22.38 | | CUJO::JORDAN | | Wed Mar 06 1991 10:00 | 15 |
| There have been a couple of articles this week in the USA TODAY about
the USGP. The first, which appeared yesterday, talked about the new
course layout. It is supposedly much faster than the old one and the
drivers' impressions were favorable. They also are hoping for an
increased crowd from last year. According to the article, the local
promotions are much improved over last year??
The second article, which appeared this morning, talked about the Lotus
team. To me it sounds like the team is in a pretty sad state of
affairs, but they are optimistic about their chances for improvement.
They feel they have good drivers and the car is at least a better
starting place than building from scratch. They really need a major
sponsor! Only time will tell if they are going to move forward.
Bob J.
|
22.39 | | SHIPS::SAXBY_M | You've got a WHAT in there?!?! | Wed Mar 06 1991 10:08 | 5 |
| >> They also are hoping for an increased crowd from last year.
Is he bringing his dog this year?
Mark :^)
|
22.40 | USGP Broadcast 8:30PM EST | IXION::BROWN | | Wed Mar 06 1991 12:30 | 4 |
| According to the cable guide, the USGP will be broadcast 8:30PM EST,
taped.
Gary
|
22.41 | They won't catch Senna | YUPPY::GOSLINP | | Thu Mar 07 1991 13:57 | 11 |
| Greetings from London.
Does anyone think Alesi will repeat this weekend his stunning start to
F1.
Personally I can't see it,but as we know the first corner can make all
the differance at a circuit such as Pheonix.
I really think Mansell with his new hunger will be a force to be
reckoned with..
p.s watch out for the young Scot Alan McNish.The next British
world champion....You heard it hear first!!!
|
22.42 | We've seen this movie before. | LEAF::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Mon Mar 11 1991 08:42 | 33 |
| Well, this season looks depressingly familiar. Mr. Senna (wearing a
Mr. Senna T-shirt in the post-race interview) qualified a second faster than
the rest of the field and motored away, leaving the fight to the Ferraris
(to be fair, Phoenix is not their type of circuit), the Williams (poor Frank
doesn't need this kind of stress), and the Tyrells and Benettons.
Obviously, if the stories of Senna's four month vacation are true, and if the
stories of the MP4/6 being "hardly tested" are true, it's going to be a long,
long season, because when Senna hits his stride and the chassis gets fully
sorted, the McHondas might approach their 1988-89 level of dominance. Of
course, Phoenix is not representative of the majority of F1 tracks, so it's
dangerous to predict based on this one event. The engine sounded wonderful,
and Hobbs related Prost's comments about the excellent roadholding of the
McLaren, which was reinforced by watching them handle the bumps on the track
and put the power down in the corners.
I couldn't decide if the circuit revisions made the race more interesting, or
whether ESPN just picked better camera angles. I also couldn't believe the
officials just left the Williams and Moreno's Benetton where they did. Lucky
Patrese: had he bailed out when he first came to a stop, before Moreno clouted
him, he might have been badly injured.
And they say CART is a closed club: the podium held every World Champion since
1983, save Lauda.
Top five:
1) Senna (pole no. 53, new record; win no. 27, ties the Wee Scot)
2) Prost
3) Piquet
4) Modena
5) Nakajima
|
22.43 | Another year of follow the Senna! | NYTP05::JANKOWITZ | This brain intnt'nlly left blank | Mon Mar 11 1991 09:23 | 5 |
| It may be fairly early to start guessing at this one. It sure looks
like Mr. Berger isn't up to the McHonda domination game. Is this
Michael A's '92 drive? I always liked Mr. Berger and thought he'd be
right up there in front. Will he be banished to the backmarkers like
Stephan Johanson(sp?) who I also thought to be talented.
|
22.44 | Senna, et al. | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Mon Mar 11 1991 09:39 | 21 |
| McLaren has, at least under Ron Dennis, always brought their cars out
"late". The old, "It hasn't turned a wheel till now" story. Since
1984 they have done extensive testing and preparation before ever
seeing the track. And it works. I believe the new McLaren is a fine
car. But not significantly better than, say the Ferrari, Williams or
Benetton. Senna is another story. Like him or not, he is the most
talented driver around. Phoenix was a text book drive - perfect, no
mistakes. Can Senna do that for the season? Don't know, but he
doesn't have to if he wants the championship. He just needs to be
better than anyone else.
I think the competition will be there and that others will win races,
but Senna, rested and healthy, looks to be ready for the test. I'll
tip him to repeat.
I think the comment on Berger is correct. He's good but seems to be in
that humble category of "not a Senna" driver. In any other era, he
would look better. Compared to Senna, well???
Paul
|
22.45 | And it's Monday too :-P | BOOKIE::HASTIE | | Mon Mar 11 1991 11:03 | 20 |
| I'll keep to myself any direct comments about Mr. Senna, except to
say that only his ego and disregard for sportsmanship outweigh his
right foot. The V12 McHonda is clearly the class of the field
mechanically, both in horsepower and handling. I suspect that Senna
is enjoying having a second-rate driver in the other seat --
Berger has not been the same since his Monza crash-and-burn and
never really lived up to the potential he seemed to show when
running with -- what was it -- Bennetton? Suffice it to say, I
found it a depressing spectacle.
What do y'all think of the new rules: 10 points for first, with
the rest of the point structure the same, and all 16 races now
counting in the final standings? I'm disappointed. The
9-6-4-3-2-1 structure worked for decades; the dropping races
concept never worked. I'm glad to see the full schedule counting
again, but not happy with the extra point for first. To my mind
the 9-6 accounting a nearly perfect structure, like the distances
on a baseball diamond.
--Lillian, the totally unopininated :)
|
22.46 | | TOTH::POWIS | | Mon Mar 11 1991 12:46 | 8 |
| I watched about the first hour of the race. It definately seemed that
the McLarens had the right suspension setup for that bumpy "track".
One question tho --- when the commentator (not Hobbs, the other guy)
was talking about the Lotus team, I swore I heard him say "mumble
mumble Lotus team, backed by Colin Chapman". Huh ?? Didn't Chapman
die about 4 or 5 years ago??
Steve
|
22.47 | | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Mon Mar 11 1991 13:25 | 8 |
| re .46 - I watched a bit of the tape and heard something about the
Lotus team "founded by Colin Chapman", which is correct. Chapman died
several years ago, the team was never the same since.
also, regarding the smoothness of the McLarens, the ESPN announcers
were talking about that, and I think it was Hobbs who pointed out that
Senna was smooth as silk but Berger was dirt-tracking it all over.
Wonder if it is really the cars?
|
22.48 | | TOTH::POWIS | | Mon Mar 11 1991 14:50 | 4 |
| re: .47
Ahh, that makes more sense -- I guess I just heard wrong. You're
right, the team hasn't been the same since Chapman died.
|
22.49 | Ferrari: what's going on ? | LUCCIO::UNNIA | Nelson PIQUET forever ..... | Tue Mar 12 1991 08:24 | 21 |
|
Hi !
I don't want to bore you with my comments about Piquet.
I'd like to know what you think about Ferrari: here in Italy
there were great expectation for this race and, after the great
Senna's performance, there is a great disappointment.
I'm not a Ferrari's fan but I can't understand how a team like
that, with a great budget, wasn't be able to win a World
championship in the last 12 years.
And what about Mansell's performance with Patrese ?
Last thing: at this moment Alessandro Nannini is in Austria and is
doing a specific therapy for his arm injured.
Does anybody know something about Martin Donnelly ?
Cheers,
Alex
|
22.50 | | SHIPS::SAXBY_M | Mogul bashing...with my head! | Tue Mar 12 1991 08:29 | 16 |
| >> And what about Mansell's performance with Patrese ?
What do you think, Alex?
>> Does anybody know something about Martin Donnelly ?
Presumably Nannini is at Willi Dungl's place? Donnelly certainly is
and is busy trying to get fit for San Marino (didn't look very likely
from the look of him, but...) and put his weight back up to 70 kg from
40! I saw an interview with him which was shown on satelite TV and he
kept yawning. Obviously he has a long way to go to be 100% fit, but
he said all his injuries were clean breaks and should heal properly
and quickly, unlike Johnny Herbert who had mainly crush injuries to
his legs.
Mark
|
22.51 | My opinion... | LUCCIO::UNNIA | Nelson PIQUET forever ..... | Tue Mar 12 1991 11:35 | 21 |
|
Mark,
I don't understand why Mansell drove in that way. I think that
Patrese was faster than him in that occasion and Mansell forced
him to go off road. We have to remember that they are companions
and I think that it's not a good behaviour between two drivers
of the same team.
If I don't remember bad, Mansell is not new to this kind of
problem ( Estoril '90 with Prost ,the last one ).
It's a pity, because Nigel is one of the greatest driver but
sometimes he is too much istinctive.
What is your opinion about ?
Cheers and ... Come on Magic Nelson !!!
Alex
|
22.52 | Mine too! | SHIPS::SAXBY_M | Mogul bashing...with my head! | Tue Mar 12 1991 11:51 | 5 |
|
FWIW, Alex, I agree 100% with what you say about the incident and
Mansell in general.
Mark
|
22.53 | Re Your Re Nelson P On top At S.M. | BPOV04::SCHRODER | | Tue Mar 12 1991 12:14 | 21 |
| Alex,
Hadn't heard from you in a while, how are things in Italy. I'm
looking forward to San Marino and other races after that when Benneton
brings out the new car for Nelson, I thouhgt he drove a very good race
not being able to win he drove for maximum points. I think N.P. has
very serious thought about his Fourth World Driving Title, hope the
new car and Series 5 Ford are a good combo.
I think Mansell was at times just as quick as Patrese but the gear
box in the William was giving them both problems. I read in CARS_UK
that Patrese's spin was caused by the Semi-Auto packing in an locking
the rear wheels no driver error although Riccardo was driving very hard
from the start. The Tyrrell's looked really good and showed the best
reliablity results as both finished and were in the points with new
Engine and revised Chassis working very well nice to see they may be
back, might even win a race with Modena!!
Mark
|
22.54 | Don't count Ferrari out yet! | CVG::SANTORO | Beantown Centurion | Tue Mar 12 1991 13:26 | 11 |
| Alex,
I think it is a bad mistake to discount Ferrari so easily and
earnestly. The last two season Ferrari has always started too damn
well, and regularly would end up holding dust. The game here is too
adapt, compensate, and adjust. Ferrari has the pilots and resources to
do just that.
Insomma, chi comincia male finisce ...
1991: L'anno dove i traguardi si tingeranno di Rosso Ferrari
|
22.55 | " | KAOFS::B_SOLARI | | Tue Mar 12 1991 15:03 | 21 |
| HELLO RACING FANS !CIAO ALEX FROM ANOTHER ITALIAN
I have been looking forward to the Grand Prix season for quite some
time now.I bought my tickets for the Canadian GP to be held on June 2
at Montreal one month ago and could hardly wait to see and hear the
roar of the incredible machines in Pheonix.
I am proud to say that im a Ferrari fan, but I also like to see
competition, and this year finaly seems to be the year to satisfy my
apetite. With Porsche back into the fray of things and Ferrari and
Honda supplying extra engines to Minardi and Tyrell things seem in
place for some real racing,not complete domination by Mclaren.The race
in Pheonix featured an impressive drive by Senna, but it also showed
how this year will be competitive. Most teams made a strong showing
here, although many of you will disagree with me, but don't forget this
course is probably the toughest course for the cars.I know that things
will be very tight for the next race in Brazil.
I venture to predict that the Brazilian GP will be won by Piquet
with Prost second Alessi third and Senna fourth. This race will prove
that the Mclaren domination is over. BUT..if Senna is to win in Brazil
which I am sure he is favoured to do, Mclaren will dominate 91.
|
22.56 | points | OASS::BURDEN_D | He's no fun, he fell right over | Tue Mar 12 1991 17:13 | 9 |
| I think changing both the point structure and the number of races that count
was a little drastic. I agree that just making all 16 races count towards
the driver's championship would have 'calmed' things down a bit towards the
end of the season.
As for Patrese's car getting stuck in gear, how would you get it in neutral
if the engine's not running?
Dave
|
22.57 | Strange rules ? | LUCCIO::UNNIA | Nelson PIQUET forever ..... | Wed Mar 13 1991 03:41 | 26 |
|
Dave,
I think that the change of point structure is a good thing:
in this way the drivers will have the goad to win more races,
just like in English football where the victory gives 3 points
(while in Italy, for example, it gives 2 points ).
I don't think that the count of all 16 races is a good idea because
in this way the World Championship won't be win, probably, by the
faster driver but by the more regular ( do you remember the '77
W.C. when Lauda won for example ? ).
To conclude, I think it's a nonsense to favour the drivers to win
and, at the same time, to tempt them to conclude as many G.p. as
they can.
Will the 1991 W.C. be a "tactical" competition ?
Hope it won't be....
Cheers..
Alex
|
22.58 | Points?? | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Wed Mar 13 1991 09:52 | 8 |
| re: .56
Dave -
I'm not sure I follow. How was changing the point structure
not good?
Paul
|
22.59 | points | OASS::BURDEN_D | He's no fun, he fell right over | Wed Mar 13 1991 19:12 | 15 |
| I just didn't see a need to change it. The problem was having 3 races left in
the season with the championship all but decided, where one driver had to do
very well in order to win it, while the other didn't have to finish at all.
This lead to the accidents near the end of the last two seasons.
this problem could have been corrected by just making all 16 races count, they
didn't have to raise winning to 10 points.
The Driver's Championship *should* be a tactical win. It would also be nice
if the winner won the most races, but the championship shows who the best
driver was *all season*. A number of fast and flamboyant have not won the
championship, and some pretty boring ones have, but you shouldn't be able
to win it on flash alone.
Dave
|
22.60 | It must be a bad dream | NYTP05::JANKOWITZ | This brain intnt'nlly left blank | Thu Mar 14 1991 08:55 | 11 |
| Re: a few back about Porsche being back in F1.
I've been a Porsche fan for a long time. HOW COULD THEY PUT AN ENGINE
IN AN ARROWS?????? How could they drop the Indy car team to build an
engine for a backmarker?
I am sure they would like someone to pay for a 3.5 liter engine so
they can run in the WSC again. I don't think that's reason enough for
a company like Porsche to put an engine in a backmarker.
Wake me up when it's over!
|
22.61 | no, it's the facts | KOALA::BEMIS | no bucks, no Buck Rogers | Thu Mar 14 1991 09:29 | 18 |
|
re. -.1
The answer to your query - $. Lots of it.
a mild flame -
In my eyes Porsche's reputation has slipped badly. Since the
early eighties when the 962/956 was so dominant, as was the
TAG-Porsche-McLaren, they have had little to show for their
motor racing efforts. The recent successes of the sports car,
at for instance Daytona, can largely be attributed to the
tenacity of their independant customers. More tenacity than
Porsche themselves have shown for sure. I guess they
overestimated their own ability/resources or underestimated those
of their competitors. 'Tis a shame.
Nate
|
22.62 | Semi-Porsches | WORDY::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Thu Mar 14 1991 10:42 | 6 |
| Note also that a lot of the current 962-class vehicles are privately
built chassis with 962-like aerodyamics and Porsche (often Andial-built) engines.
I think Rob Dyson's 962s were built at Dave Klym's shop in Atlanta.
So the successful Porsches often aren't even Porsches. I agree with the
sentiments expressed by others, it's a damn shame to watch a company with
Porsche's heritage decline in such an embarassing manner.
|
22.63 | Good publicity is hard to come by, eh? | WORDY::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Thu Mar 14 1991 10:57 | 7 |
| The locals in Phoenix must REALLY HATE F1. Not only did the Leyton House team
get sabotaged overnight Friday, with wiring harnesses cut and other damage done,
but Alain Prost's hotel room was boosted, relieving him of $12,000 and some
personal items, while Mr. Senna's room was also invaded. Luckily the World
Champion only lost a casette player, some clothes, and his cologne. One can
assume these incidents were not the kind of publicity that Phoenicians hoped for
when they agreed to host the race.
|
22.64 | Memories, just memories.. | SCAACT::BEAZLEY | | Thu Mar 14 1991 11:37 | 16 |
| Re: Porsche's demise
It truly is a shame. The dealers are certainly upset as well. Racing
accomplishments help sell cars and all they have is memories.
Not too surprising tho, all the driver/engineer/director-types that
developed, drove and campaigned the 908s, 910s, 917s, 956s, and 962s
have moved on. Many have retired, the rest have moved to BMW and
Mercedes along with Porsche and Piech family members. The only two
remaining are Butzi and Ferry. US market share(read allocations) went
from 60%+ to 30%+ last year. Theres plans to offer club racing in the
US, subsidized, not sponsered, by the factory. But with all the new hot
iron available what's the point? Do they think they can regain the past
prestige with one marque racing? Boggles the mind.
Bob
|
22.65 | | SHIPS::SAXBY_M | Mogul bashing...with my head! | Thu Mar 14 1991 11:56 | 18 |
|
I wonder if Porsche appreciate how much they are hurting their image
in the US? As a keen follower of Sportscar racing throughout the '80s,
I came to respect (if not like) Porsches because of their reliability
and performance on the track. Their results against serious competition
at Le Mans only heightened that respect, but I find (like you) it
difficult to comprehend how Porsche feel they can improve their image
by backing tail-end sportscar teams with 5 year out-of-date designs and
an overweight V12 engine in a tail-end F1 car.
Jaguar and Mercedes are both feeling the pinch in Europe and the US,
but I suspect that they are doing better than they would have done
without their racing programmes.
I wish Porsche would pull out their fingers and build a '90s Group
C/IMSA car and get back up the front where they belong.
Mark
|
22.66 | | BOOKIE::HASTIE | | Mon Mar 18 1991 11:27 | 33 |
| >The problem was having 3 races left in
>the season with the championship all but decided, where one driver had to do
>very well in order to win it, while the other didn't have to finish at all.
>this problem could have been corrected by just making all 16 races count, they
>didn't have to raise winning to 10 points.
>The Driver's Championship *should* be a tactical win.
Here, here! The system of dropping races led to a driver *losing*
the championship after scoring *more* points than the eventual
winner. Racing involves much pure circumstance -- who happens to
run over debris? Who happens to be the first one into a rainstorm
on the back section? Mechanical failures are bound to happen and
not always from driver abuse. Race wins are one thing, but
season-long performance should be part of a season-long
championship.
As for 10-6 versus 9-6: Over a season, are three seconds worth
two wins? Or, as it is now, should it take five seconds to equal
three wins? That's a difficult question to answer, but I think
experience in NASCAR and CART shows (although they are a bit
extreme) that not giving disporportionate weight to each win
keeps things closer over a season, keeps more people in the hunt,
and minimizes the effect of chance during a given year.
I think, at least, FISA should have changed only one variable at a
time. If no longer dropping races had led to obvious inequities, try
the other change later on, but give a year or two to allow
better evaluation of its effects.
--Lillian
|
22.67 | | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Mon Mar 18 1991 12:17 | 22 |
| .63> The locals in Phoenix must REALLY HATE F1. Not only did the Leyton House
.63> team get sabotaged overnight Friday, with wiring harnesses cut and other
.63> damage done, ...
Actually, my immediate reaction was that the Leyton House sabotage was
an inside job. Not local talent.
Sounded too much like something that would hurt the team considerably,
would not cause a safety problem by going undetected (too obvious), and
required access to areas under considerable security. Took too much
knowledge of the inside details for me to believe it was casual. I
wondered who had a grudge, maybe a former mechanic felt he got a raw
deal or something?
Definitely not nice, though!
As far as Porsche's current fortunes, remember that really top
world-class talent is not easy to come by. The loss of Al Holbert
certainly hurt them a lot, and probably still hurts. The budget
constraints for the past years that stagnated the GTP and WSCC
developments are another painful factor. Sometimes, reality sucks.
|
22.68 | opinions vary | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Mon Mar 18 1991 15:30 | 22 |
| .51> -< My opinion... >-
.51> I don't understand why Mansell drove in that way. I think that
.51> Patrese was faster than him in that occasion and Mansell forced
.51> him to go off road.
I was confused when I first read this, probably because I hadn't
finished viewing the race yet.
Now that I've watched the whole tape, I'm even more confused. Was this
comment referring to the incident when Mansell was being overtaken,
started to turn in, and managed to avoid contact with an insane
late-braking overtaking teammate who slid down the escape road as
reward for his antics?
If that is the incident under discussion, I probably should repeat my
comment to my wife when I replayed it: "Mansell did an incredible job
to balance the car sideways after turning in like that! That's about
the best display of driving skill you could ever hope to see!!!"
(actually, the verbatim transcript was probably more like H**Y S**T!!!
LOOK AT THAT F*****G INCREDIBLE DUMB-S**T PASS! WOW, MANSELL SAVED IT
ANYWAY! GREAT JOB NIGEL!!!, but you get the idea... :-)
|
22.69 | | SHIPS::SAXBY_M | Smoke me a kipper... | Tue Mar 19 1991 03:46 | 23 |
|
Opinions certainly do vary on this, but the incident is probably
better taken in context.
These drivers are teammates and Patrese was obviously faster than
Mansell. Mansell had been deliberately obstructive for a number of laps
(why? Didn't like the idea of his 'no problem No. 2' getting ahead?)
and then he forced Patrese to make a bid for that corner. To me it
looked as if Mansell had finally decided to move over (maybe he had)
but that he then decided to make a point by braking as late as
possible for the corner. This forced Patrese to leave his braking late
and then Mansell appeared (to me) to get his car sideways on the
slippery surface leaving Patrese with no option but to hurtle straight
up the escape road. Mansell DID do well to avoid a collision, but what
was he doing trying to hold up his team-mate at that early stage of the
race?
Mark
PS I watched this with a long-time Williams and Mansell fan and he
couldn't understand what Mansell was playing at either!
|
22.70 | | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Tue Mar 19 1991 10:32 | 18 |
| .69> and then he forced Patrese to make a bid for that corner. To me it
Aw, come on. NOBODY ever forces a driver to make a bid for a pass, the
overtaking driver choses to do so. It's the responsibility of the
overtaking driver to chose a feasible and safe pass, and the
responsibility of the driver being passed to allow the pass to be
completed safely.
I've got to review the tape again, I didn't see anything that I
considered objectionably blatant blocking by Mansell (but then again I
wasn't looking for it). As far as being faster in early stages of a
race, there is a tradeoff between brake and tire wear and speed, which
may be made in car settings or driving style. Again, without reviewing
the tape I can't be sure, but I didn't see anything that convinced me
that Patrese was decisively quicker than Nigel. From where I sit it
seems they may both have been wrong, Patrese's pass was just the more
obvious blunder, and Mansell's adroit save made him look better than
perhaps he should've.
|
22.71 | | SHIPS::SAXBY_M | Smoke me a kipper... | Tue Mar 19 1991 10:43 | 25 |
|
Er, isn't F1 all about winning? To win you have to overtake cars in
front of you (unless you're Senna in which case no-one gets in front!).
Tyre wear? Brakes? Mansell was slower because his automatic 'box was
giving him more trouble than Patrese's was giving him.
From where you sit Patrese made the bigger mistake, from where I sit
Mansell's strange desire to keep his teammate from hassling the
opposition when he couldn't seemed the bigger mistake. If Patrese had
taken second Mansell would now be 2 points closer to Prost, but on the
track he seemed keener to keep his team-mate back than to see his real
rivals beaten.
I don't doubt (does anyone?) that Mansell has fantastic car control and
(to repeat a statement I made in CARS_UK) I hope Mansell is world
champion soon, but if he's going to waste valuable time and effort
fighting his team-mate he'll not be in a position to win anything.
I also thought that he lost control of his car in the braking area,
but only he can really know that.
Maybe you think TOO much of Mansell to see when his determination is
getting the better of his judgement?
Mark
|
22.72 | | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Tue Mar 19 1991 13:27 | 19 |
| .71> Tyre wear? Brakes? Mansell was slower because his automatic 'box was
.71> giving him more trouble than Patrese's was giving him.
Like I said, I hadn't particularly noticed anything so glaring that I
couldn't miss it. Not to say I couldn't be wrong, but it makes me
question just how great the speed differential really was. FWIW, if
there was a truly significant speed differential due to gearbox
problems, I would expect it to be difficult if not impossible to
prevent a pass (consider how gearbox problems will manifest
themselves).
Anyway, there are strategic errors and tactical errors. Strategic
errors cost wins and points and championships. Blocking ones teammate
would seem a strategic error. Tactical errors cost broken cars,
injured drivers, and repair budgets. Misjudging late braking seems a
tactical error. The consequences of tactical errors are more serious
and more immediate, therefore I still consider Patrese's attempted pass
to be the more obvious and serious mistake. His frustration at being
blocked may explain it, but it does not excuse it.
|
22.73 | opinions can change | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Wed Mar 20 1991 14:20 | 77 |
| well, I reviewed that part of the tape of Phoenix last night, and I've
changed my opinion.
I don't think I saw anything I'd call blocking by Mansell prior to the
incident to which I referred.
I'm not sure whether or not we're actually discussing the same
incident, although I don't see any other that might contribute to
confusion. For the sake of harmony I'd like to discover there was
another, but I doubt it.
The incident I am discussing occured about lap 20, on the turn coming
off Washington St. The ESPN TV feed had been on a commercial break for
about 1:30 just previous (that's approximately 1 lap, no more). I have
no idea what the overseas TV feed looked like during that period. Before
going to the commercial break, ESPN had followed a three car battle for
second, third and fourth place for a couple of laps. The three cars
were (in order) Prost, Mansell, and Patrese. At no time did the
seperations between any of them seem greater than a few car lengths.
While following the battle, the ESPN commentators made some very
interesting (and a couple of curious) comments: they first commented
that Mansell was coming under pressure from his teammate then wondered
what James Hunt might be saying, with an explanation that Hunt was
rather nationalistic and last season denigrated Boutsen for not being
dominant over Patrese (as should be expected from a real world-class
driver such as Mansell :-). There was a brief comment about Mansell's
gearbox problems in morning warmup, it was missing or jumping out of
gears, to which Hobbs murmured something about that sounding nasty.
This was followed within seconds by an observation that they were both
reeling in Prost (which convinced me that the posited gearbox woes were
illusory).
While all this was going on the cameras showed all three cars.
Watching closely to try to verify the previous assertions in this
conference I could not see anything that looked like serious blocking
to me (Mansell was weaving occasionally, did not look exaggerated or
defensive, did look like a bumpy track). I did note that about a lap
and a half before the incident, Patrese took a look to the inside of
Mansell and did not pass, under braking, he clearly had no shot. I
also did note that just before the commercial break, one lap before the
incident, at the same corner as the incident, the three car train was
passing backmarkers and as they passed Tarquini Mansell took a look at
passing Prost for second place - hardly an indication that he was
non-competitive!
As we came back from the break, the shot had the three cars coming down
the straight (Washington St.?) before the incident, with Prost having
pulled just a couple of car lengths from Mansell with Patrese close
behind, just as before. Patrese took a look and then tried a late
braking pass similar to the one he had foregone just a couple of laps
earlier. He should have refrained again, IMNSHO.
To review: Mansell showed nothing at all for me to criticize in the
telecast evidence available to me. Patrese was racing Mansell for
several laps (not being blocked by him). Mansell was racing Prost for
second place during the same period (not consistent with being crippled
by a balky 'box). The gearbox problem as described seems likely to
have made a much more obvious and significant effect on Mansell, thus I
do not find it particularly credible.
So, my revised opinion: Mansell made no error, strategic or tactical,
that I could discern from my vantage point (and I find it unlikely that
there would be sufficient evidence supporting such an allegation
available to anyone not having a much better vantage point, eg
trackside). Patrese made a tactical error by overcooking it under
braking, just as I had previously believed.
.71> Er, isn't F1 all about winning? To win you have to overtake cars in
.71> front of you (unless you're Senna in which case no-one gets in front!).
Um, yes, isn't part of winning not rolling over by letting drivers
behind pass when you can hold them off on equal terms? Especially when
you are also making credible efforts to pass the car immediately in
front of you, who happens to be lying in second place?
|
22.74 | | SHIPS::SAXBY_M | Smoke me a kipper... | Thu Mar 21 1991 03:37 | 19 |
|
We'll have to agree to disagree on this one. I haven't got the tape
to review it, but I know what I (and the others watching it with me)
felt when we saw it. Why was Mansell holding up his faster team-mate?
OK it pays to beat people, but this was VERY early in the race (less
than 1/3 distance) and Mansell was losing time on Prost by trying to
hold Patrese up, as we saw it.
Mansell himself claimed to have a faulty gearbox (I can only go by
what he said) and was obviously not as fast as Patrese as Patrese had
caught Mansell over the previous few laps (passing people on the way)
while Mansell had a few early stabs at Prost and then settled back.
IMO, Mansell was trying to stamp his authority on the Williams team
instead of getting on with racing the opposition. Still, as both cars
retired due to duff gearboxes, it's academic really.
Mark
|
22.75 | On to Brazil.... | JUPITR::JROGERS | | Thu Mar 21 1991 07:38 | 22 |
| There was some good racing between Mansell and Patrese. At the time of
the incident, Patrese was the faster car, but not fast enough for a
clean pass. I give credit to both drivers for avoiding contact. I was
reminded of the comment that Mario Andretti made about Senna's
attempted pass of Prost in the Japanese GP, which was something like,
"there might have been an opening, but it wasn't big enough for a car."
My opinion of Patrese has escalated over the past year. He has shown
consistent speed, and usually thinks about finishing. The increased
competitiveness of the Williams chassis certainly helps. Mansell is
still a bit of a wild man, hard on the car, but a great driver to
watch. It will be interesting to see if Williams or Benetton is the
main challenger to McLaren and Ferrari. On to Brazil, where I hope the
Ferrari team can seriously challenge the McLarens. Here is my first
guess of finish: Senna, Prost (but I hope Alain wins), Mansell, Piquet,
Patrese, and Modena. Hope that Hakkinen can keep his steering wheel on
and show a good finish. Gachot and EJR also might crack into the
points.
Does anyone know what time the race will be broadcast on ESPN? I must
say I enjoyed their 2� hour format, with post-race interviews.
Jeff
|
22.76 | better check your local listing though... | KOALA::BEMIS | no bucks, no Buck Rogers | Thu Mar 21 1991 14:37 | 4 |
|
I beleive the race will be broadcast at 4:00 PM Sunday afternoon.
Nate
|
22.77 | Rain tires? How about pontoons. | LEAF::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Fri Mar 22 1991 08:28 | 59 |
| Article 431
Path: shodha.enet.dec.com!shlump.nac.dec.com!news.crl.dec.com!deccrl!decwrl!look
ing!clarinews
From: [email protected] (MICHAEL MOLINSKI)
Newsgroups: clari.sports.motor,clari.sports.top
Subject: Rough start for Brazil Grand Prix
Keywords: motor sports, men's professional
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 21 Mar 91 20:08:01 GMT
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Approved: [email protected]
Xref: shodha.enet.dec.com clari.sports.motor:431 clari.sports.top:3391
ACategory: sports
Slugword: prix
Priority: major
Format: regular
ANPA: Wc: 401; Id: s1107; Sel: ns--s; Adate: 3-21-305pes; Ver: sked
Codes: ysaprxx.
SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI) -- A bus strike and the heaviest rainfall in
40 years threatened Thursday to disrupt the Grand Prix of Brazil as
Formula One drivers from around the world arrived for Sunday's race.
Although there was little chance of a delay in the race, the
paralyzation of traffic and mass transportation in Sao Paulo was putting
a damper on tourism in a city that loves Formula One racing and idolizes
its heroes.
Time trials were to begin Friday morning at the track at Interlagos,
on the southern tip of Sao Paulo.
Local favorite Ayrton Senna, who turned 31 Thursday, was attempting
to win his first Brazil Grand Prix after a first-place performance two
weeks ago in the U.S. Grand Prix at Phoenix.
``Senna is the man to beat,'' British driver Nigel Mansell said
Thursday as he toured the track.
Senna's archrival Alain Prost, the all-time top-ranked Formula One
driver and the defending champion at Interlagos, has plans to win his
seventh Brazil Grand Prix.
``I get no special pleasure of winning a race in Brazil simply
because ofSenna,'' Prost said of his former teammate. ``I want to win
but with or without Senna on the track.''
Senna stands to claim his first Grand Prix victory in his home
country and also move into second place behind Prost for career Grand
Prix victories. Prost has 44 triumphs, followed by Senna and Britain's
Jackie Stewart, each with 27.
Officials at Interlagos said the track was ready and in good
condition despite Tuesday's severe downpour which killed at least 20
people, destroyed homes and roads and caused the worst traffic tie-up in
Sao Paulo history.
Sao Paulo already has received more rain this month than in any March
in 40 years, and combined with added tourism this weekend for the Grand
Prix, the metropolis of close to 20 million people is expected to be a
madhouse of congestion.
On top of that, a busdrivers' strike that began Thursday morning left
thousands of buses remaining in terminals, stranding millions of
workers. Lucio Gregori, the city's transportation secretary, said he
hoped to negotiate an end to the strike before the weekend.
``There are other ways of getting around -- taxis, private cars and
vans (which have capitalized on the strike by charging fares), and
tourism buses,'' he said. ``We just have to have patience.''
|
22.78 | I hate those guys | LEAF::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Fri Mar 22 1991 14:05 | 2 |
| Scumbag ESPN will only have 90 mins. of tape delayed Brazil GP action
this sunday (4 pm EST). Gotta get the golf game in.
|
22.79 | CALL 'EM!!! | BOOKIE::HASTIE | | Fri Mar 22 1991 16:45 | 10 |
| >Scumbag ESPN will only have 90 mins. of tape delayed Brazil GP action
>this sunday (4 pm EST). Gotta get the golf game in.
Wanna help fix it? Call 'em and complain. All they know is that
if they drop a golf game or leave out one college from the
basketball they get calls. Excvept maybe for NASCAR lovers, race
fans are so passive about it, collectively we harldy ever bother
... and that just let's 'em keep on doing it.
--Lillian
|
22.80 | I Will...Others, too! | JUPITR::JROGERS | | Sun Mar 24 1991 08:41 | 7 |
| Anybody have a number for ESPN? I am disappointed to hear that it will
only be "highlight" coverage. I am also ripped at the Boston Globe at
the moment. They have no coverage of F1 today. I had hoped to see the
grid positions, but not a peep about F1. I will be sending them a
letter.
Jeff
|
22.81 | Sigh. | BOOKIE::HASTIE | | Mon Mar 25 1991 10:50 | 30 |
|
Spoiler ahead:
Another flag-to-flag show for Senna. According to ESPN, that gives
him 16 career flag-to-flag victories. More than my hero Jimmy
Clark. Sigh.
On the whole, it was a *BORING* race, with bad TV coverage. Sigh.
The high point, for me anyway, was Nigel's wonderful angry drive to
recover from those terrible pit stops. (Complete with stupid ending
when he apparently broke the gearbox from rightfooting it in pure
frustration after spinning -- at any rate that was the speculation
-- but at least it was fun while it lasted and the tire smoke was
great. To be fair, it looked from his pit stops like the gearbox
was not healthy anyway. And I admit, I've had the same urge after
spinning myself.) Sigh.
I wish they'd show more action further down the pack, at least
there's some racing going on back there. Sigh.
Senna's a great driver, but so far this year F1 has been a yawn,
and it's *ALL HIS FAULT* !!! ;)
Heavy sigh.
--Lillian
|
22.82 | | SHIPS::SAXBY_M | Smoke me a kipper... | Mon Mar 25 1991 10:58 | 11 |
|
Spoiler in case you haven't see it.
Re .81
I think Mansell's spin was due to his gearbox sticking in 1st rather
than him breaking the gearbox AFTER spinning. Very much like Patrese's
demise in Phoenix, but watch both the Williams in future races, either
could knock Senna off the number 1 spot in the next race or two.
Mark
|
22.83 | "JUST THE FACTS FROM BRUNO" | KAOFS::B_SOLARI | | Mon Mar 25 1991 12:13 | 41 |
| Race order for those who missed it...
1.Senna (who else ?)
2.Patrese some 2 seconds behind
3.Berger (the car is too small for this guy)
4.Prost (he made so many pit-stops,one was 5.9 seconds!
5.Piquet ( Im happy that he finished in the points at home)
6.Alesi (what happened to his aggresiveness?)
7.Moreno (Benneton almost gets into the points,but was lapped by Senna
8.Morbidelli (the old Ferrari engine 3 laps behind)
9.Hakkinen (Lotus -3 laps)
10.Boutsen ( Liger-Lamborghini -3 laps)
11.Pirro (Dalara Judd - 3 laps)
12.Brundel ( Brabham Yamaha - 4 laps)
13.Gachot ( Jordan Ford - 8 laps! )
14.Mansell ( drove one hell of a race only to be let down by that
lousy semi automatic that he despises(sp?)
ETC........
Drivers Standings
SENNA 20 PTS
PROST 9
PATRESE 6
PIQUET 6
BERGER 4
MODENA 4
NAKAJIMA 3
SUZUKI 1
ALESI 1
CONSTRUCTORS
McLAREN 24 PTS
FERRARI 10
WILLIAMS 6
BENNETON 6
TYRELL 5
LARROUSSE 1
11.
|
22.84 | A calm voice in a sea of shouters | SOLVIT::PLATT | | Mon Mar 25 1991 13:22 | 15 |
| RE: 79
Considering the options other than ESPN (CBS, ABC or nothing), you
shouldn't complain. At least we got something. Relative to coverage
racing thru other parts of the pack, I believe we saw more shots of
other "battles" than ever. You have to remember, too, that we were
watching feed from Brazlian television. ESPN had no say in what we saw
or when
RE: 80
While the Globe didn't run an article, they DID have the grid listed.
Back in the last page of the sports section in there with all the small
print, by category. Look under the heading "Auto Racing" -- they
listed F1 and two NASCAR grids.
|
22.85 | tv & Senna | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Tue Mar 26 1991 10:01 | 17 |
| I was impressed by the camera placement at Interlagos - some very nice
positons and pictures. Where F1 coverage falls down is in the
direction - they need a director who knows racing and which images
should appear on the screen. It's about time the FIA established its
own tv team to enhance the international feed. The boys from ESPN do a
pretty good job with what they have.
I think Senna is proving (again; still) that he is the best there is.
I don't believe that the Mclaren is much better than the other front
runners. Senna controlled the race from flag to flag. Yes, he was a
little lucky to survive at the end, but the great racers make their
luck. Senna made his by pulling out the lead and holding, no,
controlling it. An impressive run. I see him winning 8 races this
year and the championship.
Paul
|
22.86 | The nationalist F1 game | NYTP05::JANKOWITZ | This brain intnt'nlly left blank | Tue Mar 26 1991 15:18 | 13 |
|
I thought the TV feed was interesting. I got to play the game...
Name that Brazillian
There was almost always a Brazillian somewhere in the picture. Your
job was to figure out where and who it was. There seems to be a
similar game in many of the countries hosting F1.
We are of course imune here in the U.S. only as long as Michael
Andretti holds off. Then watch out. I'm sure our directors can play
the same game. Of course with only one American in the race the game
will be simple and quite a bit more boring.
|
22.87 | a bit of trivia | OASS::BURDEN_D | He's no fun, he fell right over | Tue Mar 26 1991 17:26 | 14 |
| I stuck this in the UK Cars conf, but for those of you who don't read that:
Senna broke the 400 point barrier, only Lauda, Piquet and Prost have more.
When Senna won his first race, Prost had 17 victories. Now, Senna has 28 and
Prost as 44. Still a 16 race difference....
The first 4 drivers to win the first 2 races of the year went on to become
Champion that year. The second 4 drivers to win the first two races of the
season didn't win the Championship that year. This is the 9th year this has
happened, will Senna start the 4 year cycle over or continue the losing
tradition??
Dave
|
22.88 | Ayrton vs. the Intimidator -- ho ho | WORDY::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Tue Apr 02 1991 10:12 | 12 |
| Ayrton Senna, in an interview on ESPN's Speedweek, says that he'd like to
move to the US and race Ammurican style when his F1 days are over. He said
he might do CART or NASCAR (!) "just for fun" and enjoy himself on the racetrack.
Apparently Emerson Fittipaldi has been bending his ear about the lower pressure
and generally lighter atmosphere in US racing as opposed to FISA-land, and
Ayrton is becoming interested. I think Emmo also said that Senna and Alain
Prost (hopefully not in the same plane) plan on attending this year's Indy 500.
There is a two-week layoff in the F1 schedule which coincides with the second
weekend of time trials and the race.
Ayrton is apparently dating some top US model (this is per Bob "Liz Smith"
Varsha) which may encourage him to spend more time here.
|
22.89 | | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Thu Apr 04 1991 11:55 | 5 |
| yes, this was discussed in the Internet REC.AUTOS.SPORT newsgroup
recently. I believe the report there was that Emmo commented that
Prost was also interested in doing CART. Maybe CART can counter JMB's
FISA sanctions by getting the Prost:Senna duels into the Indy car
series, wouldn't that be something? :-) :-)
|
22.90 | Grass growing, paint drying, Senna winning | LEAF::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Mon Apr 29 1991 09:33 | 14 |
| The nice thing about these live race broadcasts from Europe is that you can get
up, watch most of the contenders take themselves out in the first ten laps,
go down to the deli, pick up some bagels, come home, thumb through the Sunday
Times, turn the race back on, and watch Mr. Senna notch another one. Swell.
All kidding aside, isn't it good to see Patrese making such a mess of the Grand
Williams Plan? Obviously, Mr. $10 Million Nigel can't get the hang of an
automatic transmission at Wlliams any more than he could at Ferrari. Patrese
seems to manage the gearbox quite well, and he doesn't even get his choice of
cars! With some reliability, Patrese could give Senna a run for his money at
some tracks. If Senna doesn't win 16 this year, I'll wager Patrese gets one or
two in.
And how 'bout those Ferraris, eh?
|
22.91 | I haven't laughed so hard in years! | NEWOA::SAXBY | Blessed are the Cheesemakers! | Mon Apr 29 1991 09:55 | 12 |
|
Re .90
What Ferraris? :^)
Prost (The thinking man's driver) spins off on the warm up lap! :^)
Alesi (With the Tifosi's hopes on his shoulders) overcooks it on lap 2!
I reckon Naninni would have been a better bet for Ferrari, even with
only 1 good arm!
Mark
|
22.92 | No, it's just half a peace sign, fellas | LEAF::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Mon Apr 29 1991 10:43 | 4 |
| Re: .91
The expressions and gestures of the crowd as Alesi bumbled to a stop were a
hoot. I'll bet he's on the Tifosi's Class A S**t-list from now on.
|
22.93 | I'm the no1 prat in this team! :^) | NEWOA::SAXBY | Blessed are the Cheesemakers! | Mon Apr 29 1991 10:45 | 8 |
|
Re .92
Not to mention the things they threw at him.
Still at least he threw it away in anger. What WAS Prost doing?
Mark
|
22.94 | | CUJO::JORDAN | | Mon Apr 29 1991 11:12 | 24 |
| I loved listening to David Hobbs and his suggestions about the acrimony
at Ferrari and the Monday morning meeting.
To paraphrase David who was speculating on what the team management
would be saying:
"Well Al, we understand there are some problems with the team, but
don't you think we could do better if you at least took the start!"
Seriously, though, I used to be Alain Prost's biggest fan, but his
constant whining is getting boring.
Another interesting note on the race was Ricardo Patrese in the
Williams. He seems quite competitive with Senna. I was really hoping
he could keep it going so that we could have had some racing. As it
was I got up at 5:55am Mountain Time to watch the race -- can't sleep
even though I know the race is being recorded -- but I went back to bed
about the halfway point. Even though I am a McLaren fan, it is not
much fun watching them beat up on the backmarkers.
In the search for excellence in F1 racing, McLaren has found it,
Williams is getting close, but the rest of the teams seem to be lost.
Bob J.
|
22.95 | A little too clever? | LEAF::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Mon Apr 29 1991 11:41 | 14 |
| Re: .93
Interesting about Prost. The ESPN commentators were speculating that Prost may
have abandoned the car in order to force a delayed start and allow the Modena
gang time to refine the setup on the T-car. By the time he got back to the
pits the second chassis would be set up for the conditions and he (Prost) would
be back in contention. Seems a bit too complex for me, even considering the
dark machinations of Ferrari and le Professeur. Hope le Prof. has le ironclad
contract, because the Italian press is firing up the Scapegoat Machine.
If you want to get really paranoid, you can speculate on the possibility that
Fiorio planned the whole thing to humiliate le Prof. in front of the home crowd
in order to deflect the criticism he (Fiorio) is getting. How Ceasare could
schedule rain is beyond me, however. :-)
|
22.96 | Imola Results Please? | JUPITR::JROGERS | | Mon Apr 29 1991 12:01 | 9 |
| Could someone post the results here? I have scanned this file and
CARS_UK only to find out Senna won, there were some Finns who did well,
and the Loti both finished in the top six. As usual, the local papers
have not more than "Senna wins..." I watched about the first ten laps,
saw lots of drivers retire, and called it quits myself. I walked away
shaking my head about what Mr. Prost must have been thinking about. I
give him the benefit of the doubt using the word thinking.
Jeff
|
22.97 | | COMET::LUKENS | | Mon Apr 29 1991 16:58 | 5 |
|
What was the reason for Patrese's Long pit stop?
|
22.98 | More infos.... | MLNOIS::UNNIA | Nelson Piquet forever ..... | Tue Apr 30 1991 03:35 | 21 |
|
re: .95
Imola results:
1 Senna ( McLaren Honda )
2 Berger ( McLaren Honda )
3 Letho ( dallara BMS )
4 Martini ( Minardi Ferrari )
5 Hakkinen ( Lotus Judd )
6 Bailey ( Lotus Judd )
7 Boutsen ( Ligier )
Re: .97
Patrese had an Elettric problem since the 7th lap. He went to the
Box and the Engine stopped. He started again the race after a few
laps only to verify which was the origin of the problem.
Cheers,
Alex
|
22.99 | A suggestion | IXION::BROWN | | Wed May 01 1991 00:31 | 16 |
| My wife had a good idea. Just automatically give the win to Ayrton and
let everyone else race for second. Would be a lot more exciting
without him a half lap ahead or punting competitor's off the track.
BTW, did any notice the bump between Alesi and Mansell at the start?
Did that cause Mansell's tire to go bad, I wonder?
My wife was surprised at that I had no interest in shelling out the
usual $800 to go to Montreal for the Canadian GP. Hell, I can wait a
month and see the 4th of July parade for free. I think I will tape
"Saturday Night Thurder" the night before so we'll have something
exciting to watch during GPs. In the 30 years I have been following
Formula 1 it has never been so boring.
BTW: Ever notice how, from above, Formula 1 cars look like lawn mowers?
Gary (obviously in a cranky mood)
|
22.100 | F1 has been so exciting...... | VANTEN::MITCHELLD | I dont brake for Westfields! | Wed May 01 1991 05:15 | 19 |
| All the teams are fielding new cars and engines... New drivers are showing
their mettle early .. established teams are having problems with car development..
The top team does not have the fastest car on the track...
Having one driver who excels and a team that excels is not new at all.
Fangio with Mercedes
Clark with Lotus
stewart with Tyrell
Lauda with Mclaren
Brabham with Cooper
Luckily F1 has not resorted to artificial manipulation during the race to
"make good TV"
Well my heart pounds each time the lights go red!
|
22.101 | | NEWOA::SAXBY | Proust? Does he note in CARS_UK? | Wed May 01 1991 05:23 | 4 |
|
When did Lauda dominate with McLaren the way Senna is?
Mark
|
22.102 | | VANTEN::MITCHELLD | I dont brake for Westfields! | Wed May 01 1991 05:53 | 3 |
| I can remember Muddy Talker droning about it...But I cant remember the date...
Even if I've got my wires crossed on Lauda the point I'm making still holds.....
|
22.103 | | NEWOA::SAXBY | Proust? Does he note in CARS_UK? | Wed May 01 1991 06:13 | 8 |
|
Re .102
True, I was just nit-picking.
What about Bob Light in a Noble? :^)
Mark
|
22.104 | Now that what I call race domination. | VANTEN::MITCHELLD | I dont brake for Westfields! | Wed May 01 1991 08:51 | 1 |
| 7 years continuous 1 manufacturer... 3 years for one driver...
|
22.105 | But What About "Charisma?" | IXION::BROWN | | Wed May 01 1991 21:03 | 13 |
| IMO,
Except for Fangio, I wouldn't put any of the others in Senna's class.
In a few more years I might remove even remove Fangio.
But, Fangio (before my time) had "charisma". Moss, Andretti, et al,
had/have charisma. Ferarri, Mercedes and arguably Lotus have/had
chrisma. Senna/McLaren/Honda just don't. Senna is not generally
liked. Honda has bought its success. McLaren just provides the rest;
good but so are some others. Now, if Mario/Lotus/Cosworth was doing
what S/McL/H were doing I would be just tickled. Capricious, heh?
Gary
|
22.106 | psych? | VANTEN::MITCHELLD | I dont brake for Westfields! | Thu May 02 1991 04:46 | 19 |
| Powerful drugs affect can people in different ways.
the two drugs are power ( not Hp or Kw ) and Adrenalin.
Some drivers just cant stop talking after a fix and are cheery and
afable then, even if it isnt their nature. Others become taciturn
or morose.
Some Managers hooked on Power become secretive and poker faced other
become outgoing and smile a lot.
Mclaren main problems are P.R. Senna folds inward after a race and
Ron Dennis is poker faced all the time. Most of Senna's photo's are
just before ( Every driver looks serious then!) and just after. I
saw just one photo of him smiling. He looked really human!
Fangio "Had Charisma" ? still does !
|
22.107 | image, and substance | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Thu May 02 1991 16:42 | 43 |
| .100> Fangio with Mercedes
.100> Clark with Lotus
.100> stewart with Tyrell
.100> Lauda with Mclaren
.100> Brabham with Cooper
.105> Except for Fangio, I wouldn't put any of the others in Senna's class.
.105> In a few more years I might remove even remove Fangio.
I don't know, how do you measure "Senna's class"? (I had to use the
adjectivial modifier, the word "class" without that modifier would have
a whole different meaning - although the interplay of those two
meanings may be very relevant to this thread!)
.105> But, Fangio (before my time) had "charisma".
or, put another way, he had "class". :-)
He also drove well before my time, so I cannot speak from experience.
But in general I would agree that the list of dominant drivers
(possible exception of Brabham, my knowledge of his driving is too
limited to allow me to decide) consists of those who were clearly
without peer at the time they competed. Either Prost or Senna would
clearly deserve inclusion as the best of their time if it were not for
the other, they both have performed at a level unapproached by their
other contemporaries over the past several years. This year Senna is
making a strong argument for his superiority, but I am still
unconvinced that it is the driver and not the car.
And that's the bottom line as far as I'm concerned. I cannot see
divorcing the driver and car, and on that basis only a few drivers have
been truly superlative in more than one single marque:
Stewart (March and Tyrell)
Lauda (Ferrari and McLaren)
Prost (McLaren and Ferrari) (?)
Incidentally, the point about "charisma" is a good one. Consider,
there might be one other current driver who could legitimately be
argued to be a peer of Senna and Prost, he has won the World
Championship, made the podium frequently, and consistently been
competitive over quite a few seasons in several different marques.
So why doesn't he have the same stature as Senna and Prost? Purely a
function of image...
|
22.108 | No, she's not opinionated ... | BOOKIE::HASTIE | | Fri May 03 1991 12:20 | 50 |
|
When you talk about the winner's circle, I'd have to agree that
F1 has been plain boring this year. There are some interesting
things going on back in the pack, but worldwide television has
not learned how to make that show up well in race coverage, so we
seem to miss a lot of the fun back there watching the tube, and
that makes the broadcasts more boring than they need to be.
As for great drivers, there have been many: Fangio, Clark,
Stewart, Lauda, Piquet, Prost ... and ... gulp (I hate to say it)
Senna, although I'm also not convinced that the dominance doesn't
result more from car than driver. None of those first six (except
maybe Fangio with Mercedes) ever dominated the way Senna has. I
refuse to believe that Senna is that much better than 40 years
worth of great driving talent.
Warning: emotional outburst to follow, totally indefensible,
probably libelous, and certainly lacking in logic.
Now, I truly dislike Senna -- from afar obviously, let's just say
as a public figure, I dislike him. IMO, he's whiny, morose, blames
others for his troubles, makes too many excuses (especially given
the advantages he's enjoyed), often drives in a selfishly
dangerous manner, and generally projects a truly sickening image
of being generous to no one but himself. The man seems to have NO
class at all. Again, IMO, two Senna championships come with
asterisks, one for having been outscored in points and winning the
title only on a technicality and the other for purposely booting
his competition off the road to avoid having to race him for the
championship.
Emotional outburst complete.
So many of the other greats showed real class and gave us memorable
seasons, full of inspiring competition. For one, remember the
season of Piquet's championship for Brabham/BMW? The dices with
Prost in the Renault lasted nearly the whole season, and were
exciting to the finish. It was always a question who'd come out on
top, and some of the races were actually won by other drivers and
cars. What a concept, a competitive field ... it's been a long time
since we saw that.
Mclaren/Honda = boredom, bought and paid for, no matter who's
driving.
--Lil
|
22.109 | MERCI GILLES ! | KAOFS::B_SOLARI | | Fri May 03 1991 14:23 | 9 |
| EVERYONE IS TALKING ABOUT SENNA AND PROST. SURE THOSE BOYS ARE GREAT
BUT EVERYONE SHOULD AGREE THAT IF GILLES VILLENEUVE WERE STILL ARROUND
F1 WOULD BE ALL THE MORE EXCITING. PERSONALLY I THINK HE WOULD STILL
BE WITH FERRARI, AND SENNA WOULD NOT BE ENJOYONG THE SAME SUCCESS.
( OK,I MAY BE WRONG WITH THAT LAST CRACK, BUT NO ONE DROVE LIKE GILE
NOT EVEN SENNA, AND PERSONALLY I DONT THINK ANYONE EVER WILL!)
MERCI GILLES !
|
22.110 | | BOOKIE::HASTIE | | Fri May 03 1991 14:52 | 7 |
| > BUT EVERYONE SHOULD AGREE THAT IF GILLES VILLENEUVE WERE STILL ARROUND
> F1 WOULD BE ALL THE MORE EXCITING.
Another great one for sure, and truly *exciting* to watch even in
a vacuum cleaner -- would have been extraordinary in a
flat-bottom car ...
|
22.111 | Remember? | VERSA::ROADES | | Fri May 03 1991 16:59 | 5 |
| I'm not a Senna fan either but he seemed to me that when Senna and
Prost were on the same team, Senna was clearly the fastest.
jeff
|
22.112 | | CUJO::JORDAN | | Fri May 03 1991 22:45 | 13 |
| And if the car were all, then why does not Berger always come in
second. After all, he is an above average driver.
Also, a few years ago Senna gave Lotus its last victories in a clearly
inferior car.
I think Senna is a great driver, maybe one of the best of all time. He
may not be the most personable of people, but then maybe we don't
really know him. Forming opinions based on press releases and TV
coverage can be dangerous.
Bob J. -- Who will be cheering for Ayrton to make it 4 in a row at
Monaco.
|
22.113 | Senna | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Mon May 06 1991 14:50 | 13 |
| I'd like to add a bit to the last note, Bob. I agree. Something that
comes to mind is baseball. Yes, I know. It's a "ball" sport, my god!
Look at the great Ty Cobb. More than 4,000 hits, the highest lifetime
BA, etc. But easily one of the most beligerent, anstiest guys that
ever lived. His teamates disliked him. But no one can take away his
greatness. Senna, believe it or not, is not nearly so beligerent. And
he is great.
In the end, few will remember his personality. They WILL remember his
dominance and stats.
Paul
|
22.114 | Senna(rich man),Berger(poor man) | KAOFS::B_SOLARI | | Mon May 06 1991 15:21 | 20 |
| A little nit-pick..sorry :-)
re 790.112.
" and if the car were all, then why does not Berger always come in
second. After all, he is an above average driver."
Team Mcleren are favouring Senna to the extreem, this year, he is
driving the new car, Berger the old one (last years engine). Senna gets
all the top mechanics, not that Berger has any slouches as mechanics,
but I am sure that Senna's men are more experienced.Also Berger is
one of the tallest men in F1 and the cockpit of the McLaren is small
for him hampering his driving. Berger is driving with added pressure
of being Senna's team mate and Michael Andretti waiting to get into F1.
All things considered I think he is doing an excellent job this year
and once he gets the new engine and he will be on par with Senna, he
will win a fiew races. This spells bad news for us Tifosi (spelling).
I will agree however that Senna is an excellent driver, maturing
with age, however I will continue to dislike him until he behind the
wheel of a Ferrari.(1992 ?) but to say he is the all time greatest...
....I think it's still a bit too soon to tell.
|
22.115 | | CUJO::JORDAN | | Tue May 07 1991 10:49 | 18 |
| .re:
> Team Mcleren are favouring Senna to the extreem, this year, he is
>driving the new car, Berger the old one (last years engine). Senna gets
I think both McLaren drivers are using the new V12 Honda. At Brazil (I
think) they said that Senna had a "new" version of the engine that had
more torque. In any case, he (Berger), is a very good driver and I
believe, judging from the reports on the cockpit modifications, that
McLaren is doing everything in its power to make the machine top of the
line for him. I still doubt very much if we will see him outrun his
team mate.
One true measure of greatness is to do something no one else has ever
done. In this case Ayrton could really go down in the history books if
he won every GP this year! Hows that for dreaming!
Bob J.
|
22.116 | | NEWOA::SAXBY | Proust? Does he note in CARS_UK? | Tue May 07 1991 11:03 | 8 |
| � One true measure of greatness is to do something no one else has ever
� done. In this case Ayrton could really go down in the history books if
� he won every GP this year! Hows that for dreaming!
One man's dream is another man's nightmare! :^)
Mark
|
22.117 | He can sure get in one fast lap! | NYTP05::JANKOWITZ | Dazed and confused | Tue May 07 1991 16:29 | 5 |
| >> One true measure of greatness is to do something no one else has ever
>> done.
He is approaching having the pole 50% of his F1 starts. Like him or
not, you have to admit that's pretty impressive!
|
22.118 | IT'S ALL IN THE HORSES ? | KAOFS::B_SOLARI | | Wed May 08 1991 10:44 | 3 |
| HE MAY GET 50% OF THE POLES, BUT FOR THE PAST COUPLE OF YEARS HE HAS
ENJOYED A COUPLE OF EXTRA HORSES UNDER HIS HOOD, COMPARED TO THE REST
OF THE FIELD.
|
22.119 | $$$$ = wins | BOOKIE::HASTIE | | Thu May 09 1991 15:30 | 13 |
| > -< IT'S ALL IN THE HORSES ? >-
I agree. Honda is the premier motor of the era. Cripes, they're
spending $50 million a year or something like that? The other
Japanese car makers don't want to get involved because they know
they'd have to spend equal amounts to be competitive. Among F1
teams, McLaren has the first-line Honda supply.
Put Senna in a car with equal horsepower and you'll really hear
some whining. He might still win poles, but the races themselves
could be another story.
--Lil
|
22.120 | MONACO: IST QUALIFYING SESSION RESULTS... | KAOFS::B_SOLARI | | Fri May 10 1991 10:24 | 34 |
|
IT'S THAT TIME OF THE YEAR AGAIN FOLKS...MONACO....F1 MOST
PRESTIGIOUS RACE !
Here are the 1st results of Thursdays first qualifying session and
guess who was fastest....
1. Senna (McLaren-Honda) 1:20.508
2. Berger (McLaren-Honda) 1:21.222
3. Patrese (Williams-Renault) 1:22.057
4. Prost (Ferrari) 1:22.113
5. Piquet (Benetton-Ford) 1:22.816
6. Alesi (Ferrari) 1:22.966
7. Jarvi (Dallara-Judd) 1:23.023
8. Mansell (Williams-Renault) 1:23.274
9. Pirro (Dallara-Judd) 1:23.311
10. Modena (Tyrell-Honda) 1:23.442
11. Moreno (Benetton-Ford) 1:23.476
12. Martini (Minardi-Ferrari) 1:24.101
13. De Cesaris (Jordan_Ford) 1:24.257
14. Nakajima (Tyrell-Honda) 1:24.435
15. Morbidelli (Minardi-Ferrari) 1:24.481
16. Gachot (Jordan-Ford) 1:24.540
17. Boutsen (Ligier-Lamborghini) 1:24.728
18. Comas (Ligier-Lamborghini) 1:24.747
19. Hakkinen (Lotus-Judd) 1:24.868
20. Gugelmin (Leyton-Ilmor) 1:24.920
21. Capelli (Leyton-Ilmor) 1:25.040
22. Tarquini (Ags-Ford) 1:25.070
|
22.121 | Senna again..... | ESTASI::UNNIA | Nelson Piquet forever ..... | Mon May 13 1991 07:45 | 25 |
|
What a boring race !
Yesterday we saw another race without emotion. Senna is always
the same, the faster and the best driver and none can fight
with him.
Only Nigel Mansell has made a beautifull over-taking to Prost
and gave us a shiver with his great catching up. Modena and
Patrese were doing a good race but they went out at the same
time even if they never fighted.
"My" great Nelson went out during the first lap (!?) after a
crash with Berger ( I didn't see it but this is the Official
version released by Piquet).
As last: What about Alain Prost ? Nobody here could understand
why Alain is driving so slowly and why he decided to change the
tyres when only three laps were left.
I don't know what's in Prost's mind, but I think that if Ferrari
is going so bad Alain is one of the guilty ( Ferrari was deve-
loping his car on his indications ).
An advice: do like me.... watch "moto world racing" !
Alex
|
22.122 | Will the sponsors continue? | DELNI::SKARZENSKI | | Mon May 13 1991 09:12 | 15 |
| During yesterday's pathetic coverage of the Monaco non-race there was
one interesting bit on the cost of F1:
To enter a team: $10 million
To contend for points: $30 million
To contend for wins: $50 million
To contend for the championship: $100 million
Anyone out there in Marketing or Finance who might comment on how Fiat
or Renault or Ford can (or want!) to spend that kind of money to be
publicly humiliated? Imagine the inroads they might make in the "new"
eastern European market with that sort of money.
F1 has become an exhibition rather than a series of races. ("Race" = a
competition for 1st place.)
|
22.123 | | WORDY::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Mon May 13 1991 09:21 | 10 |
| Re: .121
Alex, do like us . . . watch Indianapolis!
Re: .122
Those figures are annual, so to contend for the championship over the commonly
accepted three-year learning curve costs $300 million. Assume you win in your
third year: to repeat costs $400 over four years. Even today, that is a LOT
of money.
|
22.124 | THE RESULT REMAINS THE SAME. | KAOFS::B_SOLARI | | Mon May 13 1991 09:58 | 27 |
| RACE ORDER FOR THOSE WHO MISSED IT....
1.SENNA
2.MANSELL 18 SECONDS BEHIND
3.ALESI 47 SECONDS " "
4.MORENO 1 LAP DOWN
5.PROST 1 LAP
6.PIRRO SHOULD BE BANNED FROM F1. DID ANYONE SEE HIS PATHETIC
DRIVING? HE SINGLE HANDEDLY TOOK AWAY AN EXCITING RACE
SENNA WAS LEADING MODENA BY ABOUT 8 SECONDS UNTIL
MODENA CAME UP TO PASS PIRRO.PIRRO WAS TOO INTENT ON
RACING WITH MARTINI, NEVER CHECKED HIS REARVIEW AND
IGNORED ALL THE BLUE FLAGS WAVED IN HIS FACE. THE END
RESULT WAS ANOTHER EASY WIN FOR SENNA. I BELIEVE IF
MODENA HAD GOTTEN BY PIRRO, THE RACE COULD HAVE BEEN A
LITTLE MORE EXCITING.
7.BOUTSEN 2 LAPS BEHIND
8.GACHOT 2 " "
9.BERNARD 2 " "
10.COMAS 2 "
|
22.125 | | 45286::SAXBY | Proust? Does he note in CARS_UK? | Mon May 13 1991 11:56 | 3 |
| And Martini got the 10 second stop and go penalty.
Mark
|
22.126 | Pirro is blameless | MLNADG::MAGNANI | | Tue May 14 1991 06:59 | 28 |
| Re. 790.124
Hi.
I would like to give my opinion about modena-pirro problem:
> PIRRO WAS TOO INTENT ON
> RACING WITH MARTINI, NEVER CHECKED HIS REARVIEW AND
> IGNORED ALL THE BLUE FLAGS WAVED IN HIS FACE.
I agree with you Pirro is not a top driver but I think other drivers
are more pathetic than Pirro.
(have you seen that taxi driver - I think Prost is the name - ?
he was not able to keep Mansell behind his car although Ferrari was
not much slower than williams. Do you remember Villeneuve in Spain
or Monaco when he kept behind his car a lot of faster cars for the whole
race ?)
I think you did not notice that two laps before modena was behind
pirro, Nakajima (with the other Tyrrell) was racing behind pirro.
Pirro saw the blue flags but he did not realize the tyrrell behind
was owned by Modena (At Monaco you cannot spend so much time looking
at the mirrors). I think they should have advised Pirro from his boxes.
I am dying to see Modena striking back next race.
Mauro.
|
22.127 | what is wrong with ferrari ? | KAOFS::B_SOLARI | | Tue May 14 1991 10:02 | 25 |
|
I think this may be a good time to start asking ourselves what is
wrong with the Scarlet cars. After 25% of this season's races we have
seen nothing but problems. The results achieved in Monaco are due
mainly to Patrese, Piquet and Modena bowing out of their positions,
otherwise I feel Ferrari would have finished out of the points.
What is wrong with Ferrari ? Is it the drivers ? The chassis ?
The engine ? The whole team ?
Personally, I felt they had two of the best drivers in the world
competing for the championship. A perfect balance of a tactical and
experienced driver in Prost and a brash daring (Senna like) driver
in Alessi. Both men are from France thus allowing for excellent
communication ?
I dont know much about the new engine or chassis, but I thought
they were really supposed to give those McLarens a run for the money.
What's wrong?
|
22.128 | Berger's problem in Monaco? | SOLVIT::PLATT | | Tue May 14 1991 11:32 | 8 |
| Anyone have a clue as to what happened to Mr. Berger? Believe it was
an accident of some sort, but further details are not readily
available.
Thanks for the info,
Barb
|
22.129 | Berger infos | ESTASI::UNNIA | Nelson Piquet forever ..... | Tue May 14 1991 13:46 | 13 |
|
re: .128
Gerard, during the first lap, had a "crash" with Nelson Piquet.
He went into the box and, after two laps, he started again the
race but he went out at the "piscine" while he was taking off
his helmet's visor (he lost the control of his car).
That's what italian Tv said.
Ciao
Alessandro
|
22.130 | Go AJ! | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Tue May 14 1991 14:27 | 22 |
| .124> HE SINGLE HANDEDLY TOOK AWAY AN EXCITING RACE
.124> SENNA WAS LEADING MODENA BY ABOUT 8 SECONDS UNTIL
.124> MODENA CAME UP TO PASS PIRRO.PIRRO WAS TOO INTENT ON
.124> RACING WITH MARTINI, NEVER CHECKED HIS REARVIEW AND
.124> IGNORED ALL THE BLUE FLAGS WAVED IN HIS FACE. THE END
.124> RESULT WAS ANOTHER EASY WIN FOR SENNA. I BELIEVE IF
.124> MODENA HAD GOTTEN BY PIRRO, THE RACE COULD HAVE BEEN A
.124> LITTLE MORE EXCITING.
I dunno. Eight seconds is not a close interval, and Modena expired
rather soon after. In fact, given the manner of the Tyrrell's Honda
failure with Patrese close behind, it could be argued that the
excitement would've been less if Pirro had not held up Modena and all
allowed Patrese to close. So Senna's gain was (initially) Modena's
loss of margin over Patrese, and then Patrese's bad luck when Modena
oiled the tunnel in front of him.
Right now I think the only thing that would increase the excitement
would be a blind draw to see who gets to drive the McLaren's each
weekend. Or a claiming rule.
At least Indy's competitive!
|
22.131 | deep pockets | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Tue May 14 1991 14:31 | 17 |
| .122> During yesterday's pathetic coverage of the Monaco non-race there was
.122> one interesting bit on the cost of F1:
.122> To enter a team: $10 million
.122> To contend for points: $30 million
.122> To contend for wins: $50 million
.122> To contend for the championship: $100 million
Incidentally, did anyone else catch the offhand comment somewhere
during the telecast to the effect that Honda might be spending an
additional $200 million or so, in addition to the team budget? It was
in context with an observation that they've spent something on the
order of $1 billion on the entire program since they started.
Since engines are an essential part of the package, I'd guess that the
total should show an additional line:
To dominate the series (ala McLaren/Honda): $300 million
|
22.132 | | ESTASI::UNNIA | Technotronic say... BOEING ! | Wed May 22 1991 06:39 | 11 |
|
After the bad performance of Ferrari in the first four races,
Ferrari's staff decided to dismiss Cesare Fiorio. They hired
Marco Piccinini ( again ), Piero Lardi Ferrari and Lombardi
( I don't remeber the name. He worked in USA on ALFA-INDY
project and now he is working in LANCIA in World Rally
championship).
No comment.
Alex
|
22.133 | Heard somewhere ... | BOOKIE::HASTIE | | Wed May 22 1991 12:50 | 3 |
|
Rumor: Ferrari bringing Niki Lauda in to manage the F1 effort ... ?
|
22.134 | Some background on the Ferrari triumvirate | DELNI::SKARZENSKI | | Wed May 22 1991 13:07 | 19 |
| re: 132
The name you couldn't remember is Claudio Lombardi. In the new troika
he is to manage the technical end -- and what becomes of Piegiorgio
Castelli? Lombardi and Fiorio worked together at Abarth some years
back -- Lombardi was tech director. Lombardi replaced Fiorio at Lancia
when Cesare went to Ferrari. Lombardi has been credited with the
design of the Alfa Indy engine (wrongly, I think) and has been
identified as tech director of the Alfa racing effort. He brings a
strong tech background -- he was thought to be the wrong man to follow
Fiorio at Lancia because Lombardi is said to be non-political, but a
good engineer -- especially good at engines.
Seemingly a good man. At the wrong place at the wrong time. Piccinini
should be OK at "making nice" with the drivers. He always got pretty
good marks for the PR end of race management. And Piero Lardi
Ferrari... Enzo's son out of wedlock. He'll need to be all of his
father and more to effect a fast turnaround.
Don (who thinks the drivers are not the only interesting persons in F1)
|
22.135 | Caffi out ! | ESTASI::UNNIA | Technotronic say... BOEING ! | Mon May 27 1991 11:46 | 11 |
|
Last Sathurday Alex Caffi ( Footwork - Porsche ) had a road crash.
( unfortunately He was not driving ! )
He had a cheekbone fracture. That's why he will not run in
Canada Gp.
Best wishes Caffi !
Alex
|
22.136 | One excellent ticket available for Montreal. | KAOFS::B_SOLARI | | Wed May 29 1991 10:27 | 27 |
| I know this should probably, not be placed here, but I have an extra
ticket for the Montreal GP. It's a three day ticket in the silver
seats. It is in section 11,in my opinion the best seat in the house.
From section 11 you see the start/finish and the first turn as well as
the first straight away.
sec 11
/ ____________________
/____
_ _|
/ sorry about the lousy track
| layout, but you get the
| drift.
|
| start finish
|
I only have the one extra ticket and anyone is more than welcome to
come with me and my 4 cousins, we have reservations at the Hotel des
Gouverneurs for Fri & Sat night. Hotel will cost about $80.00 for the
two nights and I am willing to sell the ticket for $150.00 it cost me
$180.00 and sells today for $220.00 (i bought it in Feb that's why it
was cheaper).
We are not a bunch of wild and crazy nuts,except for when we get to
the track. We range in age from 21 to 30 all are GP fans, for more info
call DTN-640-7144 between 08:00 and 16:30 today or tommorow price is
negotiable.
|
22.137 | Niki Lauda | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Wed May 29 1991 10:43 | 7 |
| I saw on the news last night that it was one of Niki Lauda's planes
that crashed last weekend killing almost 300 people. What a tragedy.
There were rumors (how good?) that Lauda was being touted as the new
Ferrari F1 manager. I wonder if this incident affects that?
Paul
|
22.138 | LaudaAir bombed? | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Wed May 29 1991 14:10 | 5 |
| Newpaper report that I read last night said that they are suspicious
about it being a bomb. The report stated that LaudaAir was the target
of an extortion attempt last year (?) by an employee who threatened to
put a bomb on one of their planes. He reportedly was fired, but was
later hired by the Thai airline! Great security move there...
|
22.139 | more re LaudaAir | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Wed May 29 1991 14:20 | 27 |
| more, from <<< MEIS::NOTES$:[NOTES$LIBRARY]FLYING.NOTE;4 >>>
-< General Aviation >-
================================================================================
Note 3691.0 Lauda Air Boeing 767 crash near Bankog 5 replies
VNASWS::ERIK "Erik A.Rosdol, ACT-IT Vienna, Austria" 21 lines 27-MAY-1991 04:43
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A Lauda Air Boeing 767 crashed tonight near Bankog. Reports say, that
the plane exploded high up in the air. Niki Lauda, the former Austrian
Formula One racing world champion, who owns Lauda Air, commented this morning,
that there were 240 people on board, possibly all of them have been killed.
After taking off from Bankog on a flight to Vienna, the pilot reported
no problems at all on the company frequency, but 25 minutes later the plane
exploded in the skyes. Later this morning, there was a report, that
there was a telephone call from an unnamed person, reportedly from Germany,
who told the operator at the switchboard at Vienna international airport, that the
bomb was aimed at an american flight, preparing to leave Bankog later
this morning, and the luggage containing it, was mistakenly loaded onto
the Lauda Air Boeing 767. This however is unconfirmed, the switchboard
operator is currently interviewed by local investigators.
The debris of the plane came down in an area about 30miles out of any
road, the blackbox has not been found yet. About 120 bodies have been found so far
Erik
|
22.140 | Montreal | 58378::B_SOLARI | | Mon Jun 03 1991 10:32 | 16 |
|
Well it took a couple of months and 5 races, but we finally have
the tiniest sparks of a good season. The Montreal GP was the most
exciting race I have seen this year atleast for the first 30 laps and
then at the end.We saw for the first time that even McLaren can have
problems leaving an oportunity for other teams to show their stuff. I
was very impressed with the Jordan team, even more impressed that
Andrea De Cesaris finished a race without hitting something ;*)
Ferrari has to trash that semi-automatic gear box before it drives
their fans completely bonkers.Prost and Alesi were running very well at
the start, it seemed to me that Senna was actually holding Prost back
at some points....and then the usual happened, prost slows down Senna
pulls away.Luckily Senna went out a lap before so we can say for one
race "ferrari is more reliable" (dream on).
Anyway, it took me 5 years too finaly see a good race in Montreal
and it was worth the wait.Too bad for Nigel he deserved the win.
|
22.141 | Let's go NELSON !!!!! | ESTASI::UNNIA | Technotronic say... BOEING ! | Tue Jun 04 1991 09:40 | 33 |
|
Hi All !
The great ( and lucky !) Nelson Piquet gave me another
satisfaction. He won Canadian G.p. driving very well a good
Benetton: next year, with new Ford 12 cylinders, he will be
able to fight for the World Championship.
Nigel Mansell drove very well his Williams-Renault but I think
he exaggerated in the last lap. I don't understand why
he drove so fast when he was 50 second ahead Piquet. Nigel
is in Formula 1 since 10 years but it looks like that he don't
understand that win a race with few or more second is the same
thing. Senna showed us very well this thing: he took
a lot of advantage and, in the last part of the race, he drove very
slow and loose his advantage but he win the race !
Anyway, Williams-Renault is a very good car and I think that
Nigel and Riccardo will win lots of the next races.
Ferrari showed us that, with or without Cesare Fiorio, the problems
are always the same. Alesi drove very well in the first part of
the race while Prost didn't. Alain seemed faster than Senna but
he never tried to pass him.
At last: McLaren went out because of electric problems, but I think
that Senna will win the 1991 world championship if Williams-Renault
will not solved their tecnical problems.....
Cheers,
Alex
|
22.142 | another F1 note. | WELCLU::BWALKER | | Tue Jun 04 1991 14:20 | 6 |
| All you F1 buff reading this note. There is a good and much active F1
note on MARVIN::CARS_UK.
Best of luck.
Barry.
|
22.143 | ALRIGHT!!!! | BOOKIE::HASTIE | | Tue Jun 04 1991 17:24 | 14 |
|
Yes! Finally, a race!
Nigel derserved to win, and I beleive it was said that he did not
run out of gas, but had a mechanical problem, so slowing down
wouldn't have done much good -- no gears left (not one!) was the
final word, wasn't it?
But anyway, I'll take a victory for Nelson any day. Jordan was
impressive, Benetton was impressive (again), Williams was *very*
impressive. And Senna didn't whine ... could this be the start of
a really enjoyable F1 season?????
--Lil
|
22.144 | | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Wed Jun 05 1991 17:19 | 15 |
| .143> [...]gas, but had a mechanical problem, so slowing down
.143> wouldn't have done much good -- no gears left (not one!) was the
.143> final word, wasn't it?
hmm, slowing down wouldn't've reduced the stress on the gears by any
chance would it? maybe enough so that the last one might've lived?
guess we'll never know, will we, just as we'll never know if that
"final word" was truth or merely ego protection for a highly paid
number one?
For my money Nigel is the most erratic top-rank driver in F1 for many
years. When he's on he's great, but he seems to endure many more
bonehead moments than his peers. Just MHO.
|
22.145 | Alright, Real Racing Returns to F1!! | JUPITR::JROGERS | | Thu Jun 06 1991 11:08 | 30 |
| With Montreal now behind us, Mexico is the next race on the calendar.
This is a high altitude track. Do any of you folks know how that
favors engine configurations? Does a V-12 have an advantage over a
V-10 over a V-8? Or is it the other way around? Will the Williams
have more or less of an edge over the McLaren? Maybe this is the
Benneton's chance to race for the lead. (As opposed to waiting for
others to drop out.)
The mortality of the McLaren's is now evident. Can the others run
the distance. It was a shame that Nigel didn't get the win in Canada.
It would great to have the Williams, Bennetons, McLarens, and Ferraris
compete for more than the first 20 laps. I suspect that Honda
engineers aren't getting much sleep lately with both engines dying on
Isle Notre Dame. Look for them to be stronger in Mexico. I would not
rule out the Tyrells to finish well either.
Needless to say, I have regained my enthusiasm for a competitive F1
season. I was becoming bored by the Senna parade of the first four
races. Too bad the Mexico race is being delayed until Midnight Sunday.
I will have to wait until Monday night to see the race. I will have to
shun sports coverage so the suspense of the race will keep until then.
I hope we can liven up this F1 notes file. There seem to be lots of
very knowledgable F1 fans out there keeping quiet. Can we get some
speculation on outcome of the races? I will read my Autoweek when it
arrives, ponder over the options, and post my predictions next week.
Regards,
Jeff
|
22.146 | view from the stands | NYTP20::JANKOWITZ | Slime is oozing from my terminal | Thu Jun 06 1991 14:38 | 12 |
| Before the discussions all turn toward Mexico...
For whatever it's worth, I was sitting in the stands at the hairpin and
when Mansell exited the turn and didn't accellerate I didn't hear his
characteristic revving of the engine. I did have ear plugs in so I
can't say whether the engine was dead or not. I thought it may have
been possible that he has realized that if the car is in neutral he
should just flip the selector switch until he feels a gear before
pressing his foot to the floor.
Besides, I was getting very aggrevated by a Mansell fan so I was
hoping he wouldn't win!
|
22.147 | News about Benetton... | ESTASI::UNNIA | Est Modus in Rebus... | Mon Jun 10 1991 08:17 | 10 |
|
John Barnard left Benetton team ! I'm very disappointed
because next year, with the new Ford and Barnard's car,
Nelson Piquet could have really fought for the world
Championship....
Does anybody know the name of new Benetton designer ?
Alex
|
22.148 | Barnard news? | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Mon Jun 10 1991 10:48 | 22 |
| I just saw the news about Barnard. Does anyone have any details as to
why he was let go? Is this another example of clashing egos? I
understand that Barnard is a very tough man to work for and with, but
he is one of the best designers around. However, his ego may be too
large. Years ago, when still at McLaren, it was said that he was upset
with the team and media because Prost and Lauda got all the press,
recognition and adulation. When I see other designers toiling in the
heat of the battle, they seldom get the glory. And many have had long
and productive careers. Mayby Barnard is a bit "too eccentric" for his
own good?
At any rate, the rumor mills must be spinning over time. BTW, do the
rumor mills have rev limiters? I can hear them now:
1) Barnard rejoins Ferrari to shore up their efforts.
2) Barnard and Prost star at the new Peugeot F1 team.
3) Barnard rejoins McLaren.
Any others??
Paul
|
22.149 | | TNPUBS::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Mon Jun 10 1991 11:35 | 9 |
| Re: last
Last year, Barnard made an interesting comment in an interview. He said he'd
like to go back to Indy someday and build another winner (he designed the
Chapparal 2K ground effects machine that won in 1980). Considering how F1
people look down their noses at Indycars I thought it a very curious statement.
Maybe one of the rumored (Japanese) entrants into CART has coughed up the BIG
bucks necessary to secure Mr. Barnard's services. Or maybe Mercedes has secured
him for their F1 effort.
|
22.150 | Barnard | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Tue Jun 11 1991 10:25 | 13 |
| Yes, George, the F1 folks do look down their noses. There is a quote
in the latest "Road & Track" by one of the F1 teams members in Phoenix
and he said: "Indy cars used to be one year behind Formula 1 in
technology. Now they're three." Well, ok. I admit there is a gap in
the current technology. Some of it's because of the rules. But
frankly, if one compares the 1991 CART and F1 seasons, CART has had the
much more entertaining and competitive show. I have enjoyed every race
CART's put on thus far and look forward to the remainder of the season.
I would welcome John Barnard to CART. I suspect that the lure of the
really big money will keep him in Europe.
Paul
|
22.151 | | NEWOA::SAXBY | A house! My kingdom for a house! | Tue Jun 11 1991 10:59 | 17 |
| o Barnard leaves Benneton.
o TWR linked with Ford HB Turbo powered CART project.
Anyone else see a posible link? :^)
If Barnard's split from Benneton was Ford inspired then it would seem
unlikely they'd link up with him again in CART, but if not...
Mark
PS British F3 is more entertaining and competitive than F1, but that
doesn't mean the cars are as advanced. F3 is mainly mass produced
racing cars built down to a cost, like CART. This disuades the spending
of vast sums to achieve dominance (although the TOMS and the Bowman are
worrying signs of a swing towards F1 style design trends and
fund-raising problems!).
|
22.152 | RE: .144 | BOOKIE::HASTIE | | Thu Jun 13 1991 11:12 | 41 |
|
>.143> [...]gas, but had a mechanical problem, so slowing down
>.143> wouldn't have done much good -- no gears left (not one!) was the
>.143> final word, wasn't it?
> hmm, slowing down wouldn't've reduced the stress on the gears by any
> chance would it? maybe enough so that the last one might've lived?
Let me explain something to you. Slowing down wouldn't do any good
unless you happened to be in a useful gear and stayed there. The
Williams uses a hydraulically operated semi-automatic gearbox and the
hydraulic system doesn't allow for finesse, i.e., for being gentle
with the gearbox. The driver cannot slow down his shifts or work the
shifter to slide things gently into place, the hydraulics simply ram
the gear changes through under something like 1500 psi.
> guess we'll never know, will we, just as we'll never know if that
> "final word" was truth or merely ego protection for a highly paid
> number one?
I think sometimes we can take these things at face value without
undue cynicism. While F1 drivers are certainly self-serving at times,
at other times they simply don't need to be. Both Patrese and Mansell
have experienced repeated problems with the gearbox throughout the
season. Frank Williams and designer Adrian Newey have many times
acknowledged that they have a problem with this gearbox that lies in
the box itself not in its handling by the drivers.
> For my money Nigel is the most erratic top-rank driver in F1 for many
> years. When he's on he's great, but he seems to endure many more
> bonehead moments than his peers. Just MHO.
You are, of course, entitled your opinion. Mansell is a passionate
driver and he may very well be harder on equipment than many. Frank
Williams is also entitled to his opinion, and with his win record,
I think I'll put *my* money where Frank Williams puts his.
--Lil
|
22.153 | Picks for Mexico | JUPITR::JROGERS | | Fri Jun 14 1991 12:32 | 14 |
| Well, here are my picks for the race Sunday. Given Mexico is a faster
track than Montreal, I was tempted to put Nigel up at the top. But I
think he will suffer some car problems (surprise, surprise).
1 - Patrese
2 - Senna
3 - Modena
4 - Prost
5 - Piquet
6 - Mansell
Any other people guessing on the race?
Jeff
|
22.154 | ESPN? | OASS::BURDEN_D | He's no fun, he fell right over | Mon Jun 17 1991 10:18 | 4 |
| So, what happened to the race last night? I set the VCR for midnight and
woke up this morning to 4 hours of guys hitting balls with big sticks......
Dave
|
22.155 | I always Tape those West Coast Games! | GIAMEM::SCHRODER | | Mon Jun 17 1991 11:11 | 10 |
| That's what I say what happened all I got was Baseball from midnight
to 2:00, and on Sports Center I found out who won Mexico but the race
did not come on at midmight as the TV Guide said!!!???
Anyone know if they really ment tonight at midnight or something.
Mark
No Breakfeast at Mexico this Morning!
|
22.156 | ESPN :== rat bastard scum | TNPUBS::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY2 | Mon Jun 17 1991 11:14 | 14 |
| Re: last
Saw a rumor in rec.autos.sport it's on at 3:30 am Wednesday. Don't know if it's
legit.
Serves us race fans right, as CBS, for probably the first time in its history,
blew off a sweat sport to complete their coverage of the CART Detroit GP. Must
show those race fans who's boss.
And how 'bout those Ferraris! (that's a :-b , folks)
George (who's waiting for shrill calls to ban the inherently dangerous sport
of golf (it's played outside! where there's lightning!) from the usual gang
of anti-racing idiots who come out of the woodwork after any racing fatality)
|
22.157 | | WFOVX8::DOBOSZ_M | Ididn'tdoitnobodysawmeyoucan'tproveanything!!! | Mon Jun 17 1991 13:09 | 17 |
| Re: Note 790.156 by TNPUBS::ALLEGREZZA
> -< ESPN :== rat bastard scum >-
Ummm...I dunno. ESPN got caught between a rock and a hard place twice
yesterday. The Pocono Winston Cup event ran *way* long due to a rain
delay, and I'll bet there are several tennis fans all upset about the Davis
Cup match being chopped. I believe a baseball game went 15 innings or so
last night, causing the Mexico GP coverage to be dropped.
ESPN is the best thing available in the USA for televise motorsports coverage.
>Saw a rumor in rec.autos.sport it's on at 3:30 am Wednesday. Don't know if it's
>legit.
According to the folks on ESPN's sports wrap-up show that I recorded in
lieu of the Mexican GP, 3:30 a.m. Wednesday is correct.
|
22.158 | crashbox | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Mon Jun 17 1991 16:09 | 33 |
| .152> Let me explain something to you. Slowing down wouldn't do any good
.152> unless you happened to be in a useful gear and stayed there.
No need to explain that to me, I found it out the hard way when my
shifter broke in the downhill lefthander entering the boot at the Glen,
in my first race after drivers school about six years ago. The same
experience taught me that when you're having symptoms of tranny/shifter
problems and catch a gear, any gear, you leave it there and cruise if
at all possible.
.152> The Williams uses a hydraulically operated semi-automatic gearbox and
.152> the hydraulic system doesn't allow for finesse, i.e., for being gentle
.152> with the gearbox. The driver cannot slow down his shifts or work the
.152> shifter to slide things gently into place, the hydraulics simply ram
.152> the gear changes through under something like 1500 psi.
I will defer to your superior knowledge of the internals of the
Williams gearbox, specifically the degree and method of syncronization
("simply ram the changes through" is much less sophisticated than I
expected).
However, I will also ask whether the particular design of those
internals will cause higher transient stresses in the entire drivetrain
when the mill is putting out full power and torque at the shiftpoint,
compared with the same shift by the same mechanism at the same RPM but
with slightly reduced throttle? FWIW, my intuitive suspicion, without
specific knowledge of the particulars of the Williams box but based on
general principals of mechanics, is that ramming the box into gear at
full throttle will cause higher transients than doing it at reduced
throttle. If that is true, my point stands as previously stated.
|
22.159 | Mexico Results | JUPITR::JROGERS | | Tue Jun 18 1991 08:13 | 22 |
| Mexico results:
First - Patrese
Second - Mansell
Third - Senna
Fourth - de Cesaris
Fifth - Moreno
Sixth - Bernard
I picked the winner and three of the top six, not too bad. Due to
problems with the baseball game, still haven't seen the race. Will
have to wait until Wed at 3:30. The folks over in cars_uk mention high
attrition and some spectacular last laps by Mansell. Surprising to see
de Cesaris place so highly, good for the EJR team. Senna had a big
crash on Friday. I wonder if he is feeling more mortal these days? He
has had some cuts and bruises these past two weeks.
Next race is France on July 7. Ferrari should have a new chassis by
then. Track is very smooth which could lead to some interesting
qualifying.
Jeff
|
22.160 | How fast can you hit NEXT UNSEEN? | BOOKIE::HASTIE | | Tue Jun 18 1991 11:30 | 10 |
|
When the race has not yet been shown, could we use form feeds
before giving away the outcome, please? I, for one, much prefer
to watch the race without knowing the finish, and have been
staying away from Sports Center, etc., with the Wednesday wee
hours showing in mind.
Thanks!
--Lil
|
22.161 | Patrese | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Thu Jun 20 1991 18:07 | 16 |
| Watched the tape of the race last night. It was great to see Patrese
and Mansell so competitive. The Williams looked hooked to the track
and very strong. Patrese's drive was excellent and Mansell was
spectacular in the last 20 laps. The track, though rough, has always
impressed me. There are a few turns there that are soooo quick, like
the one leading onto the front straight. Ferrari still look
uncompetitive. Not sure what to think of it. But I also think that
it's way to early to think that McLaren and Senna are on their way out.
I'm looking forward to the next three races. Is Magny-Cours a fast or
slow track? I understand that it is very smooth, but I know little of
the configuration. Silverstone should be interesting too since the
layout is new. Some oft he cars that did not handle the roughness of
Mexico may be quite competitive in France, Britain and Germany.
Paul
|
22.162 | Racing politics? | GUCCI::RDUCHAINE | | Fri Jun 28 1991 13:41 | 13 |
| Can you folks help me get a better understanding of the leadership of
this series? I chuckle at some of things you write about Balestre and
Ecclestone and even the auto magazines are now putting in a few zingers.
I even heard Hobbs say something nasty during a broadcast.
How did these guys get to that position? Are they elected, buy-in etc.
and if they are as bad as I'm led to believe, how can they be removed
from office?
Finally, what is the relationship of FIA and FISA?
Thanks,
bob
|
22.163 | a long winded response | KOALA::BEMIS | no bucks, no Buck Rogers | Fri Jun 28 1991 15:40 | 88 |
|
Bob,
My knowledge is a bit limited but I'll give it a try. Others are
welcome to add/modify/correct me.
FIA is the International Automobile Federation based in Paris.
FISA is the sporting arm of the FIA. They, FISA, are responsable for
sanctioning events, granting licenses, establishing rules etc. Within
each participating nation a national body is empowered to be the
intermediary between the national and international concerns. Members
of the national organizations sit on a variety of FIA committees. Here in
the US that organization is ACCUS (sorry, don't know what the acronym
represents). Burdie Martin (?) represents ACCUS in Paris.
Jean Marie Balestre is the president of both FIA and FISA. Hence he
can do as he pleases, and generally does so.
Bernie Ecclestone is vice president of FISA and the president of FOCA
(Formula One Constructors Organization).
I read somewhere that Balestre used to be a motorsports journalist. I
don't know if that is true or not. How he came to presidential power I
do not know either. He is routinely re-elected at the FIA/FISA plenary
meetings. The politics of the FIA/FISA and these meetings is generally
regarded as byzantine and certainly is little understood by the ordinary
motorsports fan.
Balestre is held in low regard because he is widely perceived to be a
loose cannon. He routinely makes and breaks rules at his whim. For
instance, it was Balestre who created all sorts of acrymony amoung the
sports car teams when he unilaterally decided to let Nissan compete at
LeMans in direct contrvention of the rules. The outcry amoung teams
competing for the world championship was so furious he had to back
down. Another example, a few years ago FISA instituted a rule
prohibiting pedestrian traffic on a race track during the event. Stiff
fines were introduced to enforce the policy. Not long thereafter Balestre
was nearly run down at the German GP shortly after the start as he scurried
across the race track. Fine? What fine? It was reported that
Balestre leaned on Enzo Ferrari to move him up the F40 waiting list.
The story goes that as soon as he got the car he sold it at auction for
100% profit (though in fairness, many others sold F40s for similar
profit). More recently Balestre has shot his mouth off a lot about Indy
and the 3.5l engine formula, as well as a World Oval Series. While such
things *may* come about they are in no way a done deal as Balestre so
implies.
Ecclestone is a former car dealer who got into race team ownership. He
used to own the Braham F1 team and saw an oppurtunity at the dawn of
the commercial era in motorsports to capitalize on F1. He became
president of FOCA and FOCA in turn wrested considerable power from the
FISA to gain control of itself. That once adversarial relationship
seems to have turned highly cooperative. F1 has grown in scale, wealth and
popularity by leaps and bounds since. It is considerably safer, and
more professional. The down side is $s rule the day in F1 and the
heritage of sportsmanship exemplified by the likes of past GP greats
has been considerably eroded. Fans now pay big bucks to be shooed away
from their heroes while corporate representatives are coddled. So,
Ecclestone's legacy is a mixed bag. And by the way, F1 has made him
very wealthy! I saw it reported that GP promoters used to put up $3
million dollars for an event. $1 million to FISA, $1 million to FOCA for
transportation and the like, and $1 million to Ecclestone. Per event.
A sixteen event calendar. Ecclestone is reagrded by many to be the
heir to Balestre's crown.
Balestre and Ecclestone and held sway while F1 has become what is
today. For better and worse. They are generally regarded as highly
provincial and *very* jealous of F1. Their attitudes and behaviour
toward other international, and some national (read CART), series is
often perceived to be to the detriment of the lesser series with an
eye toward bolstering F1. The current state of chaos in World Sports
Car racing and the use of 3.5l engines in this series is perceived by
many to be an effort to weaken F1s competion while provding an
increased supply of F1 compatable engines. Rally racing, at it's
pinnacle in the mid-eighties Group B era seems to this untrained
observer a shadow of it's former self. Ecclestone in particular has
made his disdain for both these series very clear.
JMB and "the dwarf" seem to have Indy/CART and oval racing as their
next target. CART however, has not been inclined to roll over easily.
Tony George of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway seems to have a bit of
an alliance with JMB right now, but he is protecting family interests
and seems sufficiently pragmatic and independant to prevent FISA
control of that event.
My my. I'm am rambling. Anyway, I hope this sheds some light on why
JMB and Ecclestone are the target of so many barbs.
- Nate
|
22.164 | More wind! | SALEM::VINCENT | | Fri Jun 28 1991 17:35 | 20 |
| Let's hope Tony George is sufficiently pragmatic and independent.
Someone else entered a very good description elsewhere in this
conference: Yutz!
Then again maybe grandma's got enough spunk left to whack him up side
the head if he gets too crazy. Tony has to remeber that USAC sanctions
just one Indy car race now and thta's Indy. CART sanctions all other
races. Indy almost didn't have a full field this year. If TG aligns IMS
with the two dictators from abroad maybe the CART boys will just take
their business someplace else. Remeber Penske owns Michigan and
Nazareth(?) now and he's pretty powerful. Don't take this as a whole
hearted endorsement of the CART good-ol-boy network either, I'm just
stating my views of what may happen in the above situations.
Then again maybe the Hulman family will bring in A.J. to run the place.
What a dream, a very popular and knowledgeable ex racer running the
show.
TPV
|
22.165 | tangent continues | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Mon Jul 01 1991 12:09 | 28 |
| .163> Here in the US that organization is ACCUS (sorry, don't know what
.163> the acronym represents). Burdie Martin (?) represents ACCUS in Paris.
ACCUS = Automobile Competition Committee of the US
.164> Let's hope Tony George is sufficiently pragmatic and independent.
.164> Someone else entered a very good description elsewhere in this
.164> conference: Yutz!
.164> Then again maybe the Hulman family will bring in A.J. to run the place.
.164> What a dream, a very popular and knowledgeable ex racer running the
.164> show.
One of the two racing mags (On_Track and _Autoweek_) I get recently
profiled Tony George in fairly flattering terms, I forget which one.
Basically they pointed out that he hasn't been in a position of power
at the Speedway very long at all, yet he has already managed some
degree of accomplishments, and his involvement with JMB et al seems
opportunistic in the extreme. In short, they sounded like they thought
he belonged in the same league, but perhaps without the scurvy
mendacity of the FISA/FOCA management. Far as I'm concerned, the jury
is still out. I'll wait and see what goes down for awhile before I
form any strong opinion on the man.
But the idea of putting AJ in charge would be really interesting. He'd
certainly win a lot of fan sympathy. Again, wait and see if, when, and
how. Most interesting to me would be the context...
|
22.166 | Shoot 'em | HOTWTR::MARTINMI | | Tue Jul 02 1991 12:02 | 5 |
| To expand a bit further, the way to get Bozo and the Dwarf out of
office is to put a contract out on them and pray it's successful.
Isn't Balestre something like President for life? Bernie is probably
Vice-President until the bucks stop. I'll end this negativism and go
align my telescopic sight.
|
22.167 | George & Indy | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Wed Jul 03 1991 10:41 | 20 |
| re: .165
It was Autoweek that profiled George, and it was a positive article. I
agree we'll have to wait to see, but he certainly doesn't seem cowed by
JMB and Bernie. And he surely hasn't shown any signs of idiocy as JMB
has over the years. I think George is in a tough situation. He is
managing the biggest show in all motorsport. He wants it to be
successful, but he doesn't run the series. Entries were down this
year, and the competition is dominated by a single engine. WHat do you
do? In some ways, I believe the 3.5l rule would help. No short term,
mind you, but it would have a positive effect looking out 4 or more
years since it would bring in more auto makers. It may also lead to an
era of greater international involvement in Indy cars. That could be
good. Or not.
The decisions George makes in the next few years will have a major
impact on Indy and Indy car racing. What do the other noters think of
the 3.5l rule and/or otherr things George should do?
Paul
|
22.168 | 3.5 vs turbo | OASS::BURDEN_D | He's no fun, he fell right over | Wed Jul 03 1991 18:34 | 9 |
| How would the 3.5 engines stand up to the current engines running at Indy? Would it be
practical to just allow 3.5 litre n/a engines to compete or they get 'blown' away
by the current turbo engines?
Dropping one set of rules and picking up a new set in one year seems a little
drastic. If they want to eventually go to all 3.5 litres, then a gradual switch
over might make more sense.
Dave
|
22.169 | | YUPPY::BUSH | Who needs it? | Mon Jul 08 1991 08:54 | 20 |
|
Results from Nevers Magny-Cours French grand Prix
1st Mansell
2nd Prost
3rd Senna
4th Alesi
5th Patrese
6th De Cesaris
Prost led from the start until lap 22 when Mansell passed
on the inside of the hairpin. Mansell then led until the rounds
of pit stops. Prost changed in 7 seconds and Mansell 10 seconds.
Mansell came out 2 seconds behind Prost. (Senna managed an
incredible 5.5 seconds!) Mansell passed Prost again on lap 55 and
raced to the chequered flag 5 seconds ahead.
Senna still leads the drivers Championship by 23 points
from Mansell.
|
22.170 | Surely an exciting race :-\ | NYTP05::JANKOWITZ | Slime is oozing from my terminal | Mon Jul 08 1991 15:22 | 11 |
| This certainly has to be one of the most interesting races of the
season.
1 - BOTH Ferrari's finished!
2 - There were 2 passes for the lead (both by Mansell on Prost)
3 - Patrese wasn't faster than Mansell (haven't heard why yet)
4 - Jordan finished in the points again
5 - Three different teams made the podium
6 - 2 of the people on the podium were on speaking terms
How many cars were left running at the end?
|
22.171 | | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Mon Jul 08 1991 16:11 | 16 |
| .170> 1 - BOTH Ferrari's finished!
More than that, both gave us some good racing. Too bad
Alesi didn't have another lap or two to chase Senna down,
there at the end it looked likely we'd see another pass for
position, but not quite.
.170> 2 - There were 2 passes for the lead (both by Mansell on Prost)
Plus some incredible starts, both Mansell and Prost got
a great jump off the line. And some, er, interesting
lapping too (how many times did Mansell shake his fist
at some backmarker or another?)
.170> How many cars were left running at the end?
at most 12. I remember hearing the report of somebody (not sure who?)
dropping out when lying 11th or 12th, leaving the two Ligiers running
11 & 12 at the back.
|
22.172 | y | GIAMEM::SCHRODER | | Tue Jul 09 1991 12:08 | 7 |
| Will the espn broadcast be shown again this week some time does anyone
know?
thanks
Mark
|
22.173 | Wednesday morning? | KOALA::BEMIS | no bucks, no Buck Rogers | Tue Jul 09 1991 14:07 | 6 |
|
I haven't checked the listings but you might look at 3:30 AM on
Wednesday. ESPN frequently rebroadcasts races from the previous weekend
at that hour.
- Nate
|
22.174 | A little late but ... | SPUDDS::MCKENZIE | Observe the masses,do the opposite. | Wed Jul 10 1991 08:17 | 4 |
| It was rebroadcasted yesterday (Tuesday) morning at 3:30am.
I got it on tape if you're interested. I'm at ZK3.
Mark
|
22.175 | Nigel Still Quickest at Brit GP! | GIAMEM::SCHRODER | | Fri Jul 12 1991 14:21 | 12 |
| Mansell, fastest in ist time session at Silverstone in the 122's
and comfortably ahead of all other at this point, Also a rumor that
Tom Walkenshaw (SP) may buy the Benneton F1 team seems Benneton has
lost interest in Formula 1.
Good luck Nigel at Silverstone This may well be his last British GP
as rumors are about the he will race in the states next year and be
connected with Nissan! Seem he has bought his 7 mil plus home in
Florida!
Mark
|
22.176 | TWR + F1 = Benneton | COMICS::COOMBER | Endurance racers do it all night | Mon Jul 15 1991 08:17 | 9 |
| re -1
there is no may about Tom Walkinshaw buying Benneton , Tom has
infact bought a 35% share in Benneton. Asked at the weekend when he
expected things to change at benneton , His answer was monday..
I wounder if next year Brundle will be driving a Benneton????
Garry
|
22.177 | moon at Silverstone | SASE::J_EVANS | | Mon Jul 15 1991 10:32 | 4 |
| Did anyone catch the guy moon the camera after Mansell picked up Senna?
He was waving the Union Jack, then dropped it to "drop trow"...
jim e
|
22.178 | Err, int that that Senna B*****d? | NEWOA::SAXBY | A light bulb lasts longer? | Mon Jul 15 1991 10:41 | 7 |
|
Re .177
My Mum did! Still what do you expect of an event peopled 90% by lager
louts?
Mark
|
22.179 | FISA must be destroyed | TNPUBS::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY | Mon Aug 19 1991 09:52 | 8 |
| The preliminary FISA schedule for the 1992 F1 season was released
recently, and the US does not have a date, even though the Phoenix
contract has two years left to run!?
Austria and South Africa are back on the schedule, Hungary is out,
there will be only one North American date (either Mexico or Canada but
not both), and the Spanish race is moved up to coincide with the 1992
Olympics.
|
22.180 | NO USGP?! | 17010::MALKOSKI | | Mon Aug 19 1991 10:42 | 12 |
| I'm not surprised at Phoenix being dropped, but I am miffed that there
will be no US GP. The last rumor was that Road Alanta was being
considered. Overall, a good choice, except that the racing surface
appears (from tv) to be a bit narrow. But it must be better than any
street course. I've never been to Road Atlanta. How ar ethe access
roads, ammenities, etc.? I was near Laguna Seca a few weeks ago.
Beautiful country, nice track, but poor access. No wonder the locals
wouldn't be in favor of an F1 race. It's go to be pretty bad there
when the CART boys show up.
Paul
|
22.181 | What about Nannini? | NYTP20::JANKOWITZ | Gloom and despair | Tue Sep 10 1991 09:16 | 4 |
|
Ok, with the contract and seat jumping between Moreno and Schumacher...
what happened to Nannini? I haven't heard his name (or Martin Donnely's)
lately.
|
22.182 | STD | OASS::BURDEN_D | He's no fun, he fell right over | Tue Sep 10 1991 19:51 | 10 |
| Nannini is still recouperating and he was supposed to be doing some testing
in a car this fall, last I heard. (Testing himself, not the car, that is)
Same for Martin Donnelly I presume. He was supposed to have a seat back at Lotus
when he's better and since all the switching has been between Benetton and EJR,
I would guess his seat is still available.
The Silly Season is still is full swing, so I wouldn't start using pens quite yet
to fill in next year's teams.....
Dave
|
22.183 | | NEWOA::SAXBY | Aye. When I were a lad.... | Wed Sep 11 1991 05:11 | 6 |
| MN states that Nannini is postponing a return to racing for a year and
has virtually discounted a return to F1. It seems more likely he will
appear in Touring Cars (or failing that he'll go to the old folks home,
CART! :^) )
Mark
|
22.184 | SENNA & BERGER SIGN,PROST THINKS,PIQUET RETIRES. | KAOFS::B_SOLARI | | Thu Sep 26 1991 11:41 | 11 |
| NEWSFLASH!!!!
This may be old news to some, but Senna and Berger have signed
on again with Honda. Senna will get an nice contract of $20 MILLION !
This news has made Prost decide to stay on with Ferrari( I think he
should retire).All of the above causes poor Nelson Piquet to retire as
he lost his drive with Benneton.I think Piquet could have been a good
choice for Ferrari,he still has the desire to win.
FORZA FERRARI !!
BRUNO
|
22.185 | | CURRNT::PAGED | Surely somebody can beat the WIZ ? | Thu Sep 26 1991 12:24 | 1 |
| Piquet retires ??? I don't think so somehow.
|
22.186 | NO COMMENTS RE: PORTUGAL?? | SOLVIT::PLATT | | Thu Sep 26 1991 13:02 | 10 |
| I'm quite surprised that there has been no "wailing and gnashing of
teeth" over the Mansell tire incident, and subsequent stupid, 18 laps
late, FISA call for a black flag.
In fact, there haven't been any comment on that race at all. Is all of
Europe on vacation, or don't you folks care anymore?
I expected to come in Monday, the latest Tuesday, and read all sorts
of interesting behind the scenes press commentary about what went on.
|
22.187 | News on Spain? | JUPITR::JROGERS | | Thu Sep 26 1991 13:35 | 16 |
| What's the crowd concensus on the new track in Spain? David Hobbs on
ESPN was describing it as a big dustbowl. They were working 24 hours a
day to get it ready. Will it be ready? How is it as a driver's
course? Does it have passing spots? Hopefully it is not another
Hungaroring and the passing parade. Given the performance of the
Williams team in this second half, I would have to go with them to win.
But if Senna (and lately Berger) can crank out a good qualifying lap,
they might be able to hold that for the race. That would put the
Ferrari's down to the third row, but the Benettons might split them up.
The Jordan cars should vie with the Minardi and Leyton House to
complete the top half of the grid.
Any other thoughts out there? Any news of the new track would be
appreciated.
Jeff
|
22.188 | see MARVIN::CARS_UK | WARIOR::BURDEN_D | He's no fun, he fell right over | Fri Sep 27 1991 12:32 | 6 |
| There has been a lot of dicsussion on this topic over there. Basically the
tire holder raised his hand to signal the tire was on, but just then the tire
changer (the guy with the air wrench), took the nut off because it had
cross threaded. The car took off and we all know the rest.
Dave
|
22.189 | | SASE::J_EVANS | | Mon Sep 30 1991 10:40 | 4 |
| We didn't reply to the 18 laps before the black flag here cuz we can't
put the words we used in this notes file.... :-)
jim e
|
22.190 | October 9th!!! | GUCCI::RDUCHAINE | | Wed Oct 02 1991 14:24 | 9 |
| See .162
I read in this week's Autoweek that a person has stepped up to
oppose JMB in his House of Lords for the FISA presidency.
Reading on, he is an attorny and founder of March Cars.
Anyone think he has a chance?
bob
|
22.191 | Do I get to vote? | GUCCI::BBELL | | Wed Oct 02 1991 17:33 | 1 |
|
|
22.192 | Some old tune...? | NEWOA::SAXBY | Aye. When I were a lad.... | Thu Oct 03 1991 04:53 | 8 |
|
Max Mosley is the man. He has a lot of recent FISA history.
It's not as remote as it sounds. In Britain the RAC has backed Mosley
(Who is a Brit), but whether he'd really make a difference is anyone's
guess.
Mark
|
22.193 | And I'm not making this up. | CURRNT::PAGED | Surely somebody can beat the WIZ ? | Thu Oct 03 1991 07:24 | 2 |
| He is the son of Sir Oswald Moseley, the erstwhile king of the British
Nazis !!
|
22.194 | let's hope fascism doesn't run in the family | TNPUBS::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY | Thu Oct 03 1991 08:52 | 7 |
| What's funny (or sad) is that, according to a posting on
rec.autos.sport, one of the UK car rags, in a bio of Moseley, said his
father was "one of the earliest proponents of a united Europe." Along
with one A. Shicklegruber, of course.
Following that logic, Jeffrey Daumer could be described as being on an
alternative diet.
|
22.195 | Which one? | NEWOA::SAXBY | Aye. When I were a lad.... | Thu Oct 03 1991 09:35 | 4 |
|
Wonderful British irony!?!?!?
Mark
|
22.196 | | CURRNT::PAGED | Straight from the toilet seat | Thu Oct 03 1991 13:20 | 4 |
| Even if he wins though it will be just a case of one Brown Shirt
replacing another 8-)
Dave
|
22.197 | "The Sorrow and the Pits" (sorry about that) | TNPUBS::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY | Thu Oct 03 1991 14:52 | 2 |
| Wasn't there a story/rumor some months back claiming the putz Balestre
had been a collaborationist in occupied France during the war?
|
22.198 | who do I lobby? | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Fri Oct 04 1991 16:35 | 22 |
| re .-the last few, it's nice to see the sins of the fathers are still
visited upon successive generations! :-)
re .190 (and any other substantive discussion on that topic): the
challenger to JMB is one Max Moseley, one of the founders of the MARCH
marque and a long-time associate (one might say "confederate") of none
other than a Mr. Bernie Ecclestone! Reports I've been seeing in
various publications seem to give Mr. Moseley a reasonably good chance
of success. Personally, I have a tremendous conflict over this
development. On the one hand, I'd consider almost anything preferrable
as an alternative to continuing the rule of M. Balestre. On the other,
I feel that giving any additional influence to Mr. Ecclestone seems no
more preferrable to Balestre. On the balance I think (however
reluctantly) that I'd like to see Max Moseley win, just for the sake of
a change from the present established order. If nothing else it opens
more possibility of change in the future. Also, as much as I find some
of Bernie's more avaricious tendencies distasteful in the extreme, he
is at least arguably competent, which is more than can be said for the
present incumbent. In fact, I'd tend to suspect that this development
may demonstrate Bernie's conclusion that a change in the figurehead is
necessary, and in that (hate to say this) I wholeheartedly agree.
|
22.199 | Unconfirmed | CURRNT::PAGED | England,home of the bad haircut | Mon Oct 07 1991 06:47 | 6 |
| Ballestre lists among his supporters:
Jaguar
Ron Dennis
"A number of top drivers"
Mercedes(?)
|
22.200 | You forgot one! | NEWOA::SAXBY | Aye. When I were a lad.... | Mon Oct 07 1991 07:13 | 4 |
|
GOD!!!!
Mark
|
22.201 | | TNPUBS::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY | Mon Oct 07 1991 09:24 | 11 |
| Re: .198
Mr. Moesley's tendencies are quite relevant when one considers that
international motor racing is not run as a democracy or even a
benevolent dictatorship, but as a sultanate, where the primary
objectives are the aggrandizement, enrichment, and ego satisfaction of
a very few.
His background is also relevant when one considers the reaction of the
sport's major sponsors, some of which are already under enormous
political pressure.
|
22.202 | "six of one, half-dozen of the other" | KOALA::BEMIS | no bucks, no Buck Rogers | Mon Oct 07 1991 11:04 | 9 |
|
George,
Permit me an observation if you will...
CART is a democracy, where often "the primary objectives are the
aggrandizement, enrichment, and ego satisfaction of a very few."
- Nate
|
22.203 | | TNPUBS::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY | Mon Oct 07 1991 11:35 | 3 |
| Re: last
You're absolutely right, but at least the set {very few} is >2 :-)
|
22.204 | MODERATOR WARNING | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Mon Oct 07 1991 12:41 | 26 |
| .201> Re: .198
.201> Mr. Moesley's tendencies are quite relevant when one considers...
.198> re .-the last few, it's nice to see the sins of the fathers are still
.198> visited upon successive generations! :-)
George, your comment in .201 missed my point that entries .193-.195
were concerned entirely with Mr. Moseley's ancestral burden, and .196
(which was the first and only entry concerning him personally) contained
nothing more than a slanderous subjective comment tarring his politics
with the same brush as his father's without any trace of objective
justification to back it up.
If there is any evidence pertaining to Mr. Moseley's philosophy, that
is relevent. In the absence of such, his parentage and the politics of
his forebears is not meaningful. History abounds with as many examples of
children rebelling against parental attitudes as of their following the
same attitudes.
Incidentally, until I was composing this post I was regarding this
thread as nothing more than an interesting marginal flamewar. BUT...
As moderator I must be concerned with the possibility that postings
such as .196 might be slanderous in the legal sense, and thus in
violation of corporate Policy 6.54, if there is no objective
justification for the comments made. So, STOP THE MUDSLINGING!
|
22.205 | Nah, Mosley's Dad never did Nuffink for motor racing! | NEWOA::SAXBY | Aye. When I were a lad.... | Mon Oct 07 1991 13:05 | 7 |
|
IMHO, Adolf Hitler would be better for motor racing than JMB!!!!
After all Hitler built those great roads AND made sure that
Germany had two top flight F1 teams!!!!!
Mark
|
22.206 | Get a life !! | CURRNT::PAGED | England,home of the bad haircut | Mon Oct 07 1991 13:25 | 1 |
| I really can't believe I read .204 !!
|
22.207 | | TNPUBS::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY | Mon Oct 07 1991 13:28 | 13 |
| Re: .204
I will stop the commentary about Mr. Moesley. But please be aware
that, in order for him to discover the occurrence in RACERS of what you
describe as "mudslinging", there would have to be a violation of
another, more important Digital policy regarding the unautorized
release of internal use only information (notes conferences,
specifically), the penalty for which could be termination, not to
mention potential civil litigation by the Corporation.
I respect your opinion, Bruce, and your role and actions as moderator,
but there's no need to shout. A simple directive will suffice. Sorry
to have offended you.
|
22.208 | by way of explanation | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Mon Oct 07 1991 14:39 | 38 |
| re .207 - George, I have had one instance where (as moderator of
CONSUMER) I had to deal with Corporate Legal over threats of litigation
because of comments about an independent business made in that forum.
It turned out that a principal in the business was also a Digital
employee. We've recently seen postings here by an employee related to
Bertrand Gachot, and had any comments been made here derogatory to Mr.
Gachot they would have surely been seen by Eric. The point is, we are
not safe in assuming that our behavior here is hidden from public view
or becoming know to the outside objects of our comments, just because
it is an internal corporate forum.
Also, we cannot assume that we are free from conventional standards of
behavior just because we are participating in an internal notes
conference that has somewhat limited distribution. As I understand it,
we are still subject to the same legal constraints that affect other
media. So it is not clear that the prohibition against unauthorized
release of internal information would be applicable if, for example,
Mr. Moseley's solicitors were to come calling with a writ based on
someone's reporting the fact (not the content) of some objectionable or
even merely questionable posting here. My belief is that Digital would
have no legal grounds for contesting a writ of discovery and probably
would not choose to do so even if it was possible to do so, but instead
the release of information would be authorized (obviating the objection
raised in .207).
Whether any specific scenario is likely is not the question, as
moderator it is my job to ensure that the contents of this conference
conform to official policy, and I felt the previous tangent was getting
onto thin ice. I'm sorry if that bothers anybody, but I'm not prepared
to take responsibility for moderating this conference without also
having some semblance of decorum. I find the condemnation of any
individual based on the political view of their parents violates my
sense of decorum both personally and in light of the corporate policy.
I prefer not to enforce my personal views, but I have no choice about
enforcing corporate policy.
I am sincerely sorry if this offends or upsets anyone, but I don't see
any alternative.
|
22.209 | Where do I vote? "Oh, I kill myself..." | KOALA::BEMIS | no bucks, no Buck Rogers | Mon Oct 07 1991 15:16 | 27 |
|
All the notes in the current series of responses reflect one basic
fact. FIA and FISA (essentially synonomous with JMB) command about
zero respect. This in spite of the phenominal success of F1. If
this perception weren't deserved then surely FIA/FISA would have sought
to deal with it. The lack of a credible effort to deal with this
simply validates the perception.
FIA/FISA needs to do several things. IMO the most notable are;
a.) Restore a degree of respect towards itself by...
b.) electing a president that can communicate the belief that the
office is held by a rational, reasonable and pragmatic
leader who seeks to see the *whole* of world motorsport
flourish. A good start toward that would be to...
c.) Administer a genuine even handed plan to restore sports car
racing to its' former prestige and participation.
d.) Stop feuding with CART and find ways to co-exist for the
betterment of FISA, CART and Indy.
F1 has phenominal momentum and will continue to flourish. FISA's
energy at this point ought to be in credible efforts directed toward
other catagories of motorsport.
If Mosely can chart a course to accomplish the points above then he
ought to be elected. Just MHO.
- Nate
|
22.210 | | TNPUBS::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY | Mon Oct 07 1991 16:34 | 9 |
| Re: .208
I'm not sure the unique case you cite is relevant here. But you've
obviously taken a great deal of ownership in this issue and I'll
respect your need to do so.
I participate in RACERS because it's fun and I learn a lot from other
people. I apologize if I've offended anyone with my remarks, on this
issue or others.
|
22.211 | | CUJO::JORDAN | | Mon Oct 07 1991 17:36 | 4 |
| Some of the remarks in this conference about JMB and Bernie are
certainly more inflammatory than those about Mosely.
Bob J.
|
22.212 | no comment | TNPUBS::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @TAY | Tue Oct 08 1991 09:06 | 3 |
| The Word from a rec.autos.sport correspondent in Phoenix: Ecclestone
has unilaterally canceled the 1992 USGP, giving the date to Mexico.
Apparently, he intends to negotiate a buyout with the city.
|
22.213 | | CUJO::JORDAN | | Tue Oct 08 1991 11:15 | 15 |
| .re .212
Saw that announcement in this morning's USA Today. Evidently Bernie
intends to buy out the contract and also to purchase the F1 specific
equipment that Phoenix has purchased.
Do you suppose Bernie is taking out his frustration with CART on the
US?
Maybe he can make more money in Mexico!
I wonder how many people in the US will notice that there is no F1
race here?
Bob J.
|
22.214 | Phoenix GP | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Tue Oct 08 1991 15:51 | 18 |
| Hi, Bob!
It is clear that Bernie is acting in F1's interest. BTW, interest is
not something anyone in Phoenix has shown these alst few years.
There is a move, it seems, in both F1 and CART away from the temporary
street circuits. The cost is too high. There is even some talk about
building a permanent circuit in the Denver area! I'll believe that
when I see it. Still, Phoenix is a good racing town. The CART race
has always had good attendance. I'd like to see the USGP on a good
road course, but there isn't one that currently meets FISA's standards.
My first choice would be Road America, with Road Alanta and Laguna Seca
right up there. The latter's problem is access, though they manage
well when CART comes to town.
Too bad, but we all saw it coming.
Paul
|
22.215 | CART/Indy War No More? | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Tue Oct 08 1991 15:55 | 11 |
| Forgot to mention in the last note that the CART/Indy war seems to be
cooling. It was mentioned in AUTOWEEK a few weeks ago that Tony George
and William Stookan (sp?) have been talking and that both respect one
another. They certainly seem to have more to gain thru cooperation
that war. Neither is carrying forward the baggage of the bad history.
I'm hoping for reconciliation. A united front is the best way to face
the FIA, JMB and Eclestone. And to make money. Let's hope it works
for them and us.
Paul
|
22.216 | | NEWOA::SAXBY | Aye. When I were a lad.... | Wed Oct 09 1991 05:06 | 14 |
|
Re .214
I can't see F1 ever racing at Laguna Seca. From what I've seen of the
circuit on TV, it'd be much too interesting for the F1 boys (they'll
call it dangerous!).
Road America seems a likely track. Still with F1's recent US history
I wouldn't be suprised if some fool built a circuit for it at huge
expense!!!!
What I want to know is, what was wrong with Long Beach?
Mark
|
22.217 | facts | VANTEN::MITCHELLD | Network Consultant | Wed Oct 09 1991 06:27 | 11 |
| -----History lesson-----
Since Mr Mosely senior returned from internment after WWII he
shunned the public eye and polictical life. He dedicated himself to a
life as worker for charitable causes possibly in some sense of
atonement (although a reknowned National socialist I believe no
violent acts could be attributed to him)
It is probably in the atmosphere of organising and fund raising for
charity that Mr Mosely Jr has been brought up.
|
22.218 | St Oswald? | NEWOA::SAXBY | Aye. When I were a lad.... | Wed Oct 09 1991 06:38 | 4 |
|
Different history books to the ones we had at school, Derek.
Mark
|
22.219 | One can hope... | KOALA::BEMIS | no bucks, no Buck Rogers | Wed Oct 09 1991 11:02 | 23 |
|
Mark,
re .216
What was wrong with Long Beach?
F1 didn't give up on the LBGP. The LBGP gave up on F1. Organizer
Chris Pook decided CART made more economic sense. At least that was
the line fed the media. Though the CART race struggled for a couple
of years it seems well entrenched, and profitable, now.
I too would love to see F1 at Laguna or Road America. Both have
drawbacks of course. Though the facility at Laguna seems better
prepared to handle F1 the accessability is atrocious. I suspect
Road America would require millions of $ to improve the safety and
facility for F1. Barcelona and to a lesser degree Magny-Cours appear
to have set very high standards for new venues.
Seems a tall order with the current state of our economy and our lack
of regard for proper circuit safety.
- Nate
|
22.220 | A real track? | LEDS::LEWICKE | My other vehicle is a Caterpillar | Wed Oct 09 1991 11:30 | 3 |
| What's wrong with Bridgehampton?
John
|
22.221 | US is technologically backwards | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Wed Oct 09 1991 11:46 | 28 |
| .219> F1 didn't give up on the LBGP. The LBGP gave up on F1. Organizer
.219> Chris Pook decided CART made more economic sense. At least that was
.219> the line fed the media.
Another way of putting it is that F1 didn't give up on the LBGP but
priced themselves out of that market.
Somehow that sounds consistent enough with the typical F1 form for me
to believe that "the line fed the media" was the truth.
Kind of interesting to note that Detroit as well as the LBGP had the F1
show replaced by CART, and in each case the financial health of the
event has seemed to benefit.
There have been a lot of rumors about Road Atlanta as a potential F1
site, but I'll wait to see.
BTW, it's my personal belief (based on firsthand observation of Monza
and television exposure to other venues such as Barcelona and
Magny-Cours) that there is no permanent circuit in the US that is up
to F1 standards, or even comes close. That is less a reflection on the
course itself than the overall facility. How many US circuits can
provide a LAN drop in each of the several dozen permanent garages, with
the LAN carrying the official electronic timing and scoring information
plus other data channels, as well as the many closed circuit TV feeds
supplying the stewards with views of the entire track? That's what it
takes to play in the world-class road racing circuit leagues these
days!
|
22.222 | | CUJO::JORDAN | | Wed Oct 09 1991 11:56 | 18 |
| Two racing items from this morning's USA Today:
o Watkins Glen is going to make changes to turn 5 to improve the
safety. It sounds like they are going to add some kind of S turn or
chicane in an effort to slow the cars.
o The reason the USGP is moving to Mexico is that Bernie has gotten a
better financial package there. It was also mentioned that F1 could
come back to the US in 93. Possible venues were mentioned but the only
one I can remember is Long Beach. It caught my eye because I can not
see Long Beach giving up the successful Indy car race to replace it
with F1 and I doubt that they would add another race. Of course maybe
they could add the F1 race as the support race for the Indy cars :-).
They also mentioned that JMB is facing his first serious challenge for
the presidency of FISA.
Bob J.
|
22.223 | Its official | CURRNT::PAGED | England,home of the bad haircut | Wed Oct 09 1991 13:04 | 1 |
| Ballestre is out....
|
22.224 | Bridgehampton? | GUCCI::RDUCHAINE | | Wed Oct 09 1991 13:11 | 10 |
| RE .220
John,
It has been a long time since I've been to Bridgehampton! Seems as
though I remember a show on TV that said the track was becoming less
and less active and may throw in the towel due to development
pressures. You know something different?
Bob
|
22.225 | At least they could have a real race. | LEDS::LEWICKE | My other vehicle is a Caterpillar | Wed Oct 09 1991 14:02 | 22 |
| I dunno nuttin about politics. It has always been my favorite
track in the area. I consider it to be much more
interesting/challenging than for instance Watkins Glen. It is
unfortunate that like many other gravel pits surrounded by farms, the
people who have moved into the area have decided that race tracks in
abandoned gravel pits, and farms are quaint, but don't belong in the
area where they have decided to set up houskeeping. Before my day
there were some major Can Am races there, and around ten years ago they
managed to have a pro atlantic race there.
The unfortunate thing is that a proper racing facility nowadays
means a go cart track in a parking lot with good electrical connections
for TV. The fact that it is difficult to impossible to have a decent
race to televise when everything is compromised for television seems to
excape most of the people concerned. Can people imagine the kind of
race that F1 could have on the Bridgehampton track? How would that
kind of racing compare with the kind of things that they have at Long
Beach, Detroit, Phoenix, etc? I've been to Long Beach, and the game
was get around 90% of the track and hope that you have an opportunity
to pass when you get to the straight. Meaning that the only thing that
counts is the engine. Is this what road racing is about?
John
|
22.226 | The Bridge | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Wed Oct 09 1991 14:38 | 8 |
| A few years ago the Bridge was pretty much on the ropes, but over the
past couple of years there has been a concerted effort to revitalize
the track that appears to have been fairly successful. I know I've
seen something in print just recently about it, I'll try to dig it up.
Seems that I recall it said the proponents of the track had managed to
get the local residents and officialdom to recognize the value of the
track to the area and how that more than offset any negatives. I know
they've had some minor league pro racing there this season.
|
22.227 | battlecry = "I have not yet begun to fight!" ? | KOALA::BEMIS | no bucks, no Buck Rogers | Wed Oct 09 1991 15:55 | 9 |
|
re .223
Such has been Ballestre's tenacity that on this apparently blessed
occasion I can't believe what I am reading, or that he won't rebound.
Ballestre is like a cat with nine lives, and he has only used a few
of them already. Surely he will counter-attack?
- Nate
|
22.228 | | ASD::DAUGHERTY | | Thu Oct 10 1991 08:42 | 8 |
|
re: Bridgehampton
I spent much of the mid 60's at that track. At some time during
that stretch they lost the Can-Am races because the track was too
narrow. Was it ever repaved?
Chris
|
22.229 | Who could afford to go? | NYTP05::JANKOWITZ | Ready the lifeboats | Thu Oct 10 1991 09:21 | 10 |
| re: Bridgehampton
I haven't been to "The Bridge" but I was under the impression that the
track was braking up and that the safety left quite a bit to be desired.
Wasn't it there that a Digital person rolled a car within the last two
years?
re: F1 as support race for CART
Can you imagine what those ticket prices would be like????
|
22.230 | Safety has little to do with rollovers. | LEDS::LEWICKE | My other vehicle is a Caterpillar | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:35 | 20 |
| Bridgehampton is a rather fast track as northeast tracks go. In
most places (not all) there is a fair amount of runoff room. There was
a partial repaving at the time of the pro atlantic race. From my
perspective it is difficult to know what safety would be like with cars
going close to 200mph.
As far as someone rolling a car there is concerned, it is totally
meaningless. There are rollovers at almost every race event at almost
every track in existence. They are interesting to watch (especially
from inside the car), but do not in any way reflect on the safety or
lack thereof of any course.
A much greater concern is the proximity of massive, vertical
objects near enough to the track to be hit by a car in a believable
accident. The one place a the bridge that is dangerous in this way is
the vehicle bridge to the infield at the end of the straight.
But I wasn't that serious anyway. I just love the bridge and would
like to drive there again if I ever escape from poverty.
John
|
22.231 | View of a time trial driver. | DATABS::SOO | We need the machine that goes *ping*. | Thu Oct 10 1991 13:54 | 19 |
| >I just love the bridge and would like to drive there again if I ever
>escape from poverty.
John, if I can afford to drive there so can you. Come join us (COMSCC)
next July. EMRA does lots of time trials there too.
I have driven at Bridgehampton twice and Watkins Glen only once (two
weeks ago) and for some reason I like Bridgehampton more, too. It
could be due to turns 1, 2, 3, 8, 11 and the back straight (which isn't
at all straight) which I find very challenging and just plain love
them. I think because they are all high speed turns with no banking.
For Watkins Glen, I can only think of turn 1 that is, well, important.
Turn 5 is also somewhat interesting. On the other hand, I don't think
I have got the hang of either of these tracks yet.
Another turn that I like is the Diving Turn at Lime Rock Park. If only
we could build a track with all these turns.
-=Chong=-
|
22.232 | You don't appreciate poverty. | LEDS::LEWICKE | My other vehicle is a Caterpillar | Thu Oct 10 1991 15:32 | 10 |
| Chong,
Poverty involves things like not having four tires with tread, and
not being able to burn up the tread there is, not having money for gas
to get there, having to spend the weekend splitting wood because of the
lack of money for gas to heat the house, and other stuff like that.
Even in the best of times I never ran a high buck effort, and now I
really can't afford a low buck one. I've been offered a free midget
ride, and could't afford the time to take it. But maybe someday.
John
|
22.233 | You think you got it tough...? | WFOV11::KOEHLER | Brains? No thanks, I'm on 2nd shift | Thu Oct 10 1991 17:49 | 9 |
| Come on John, If I can afford to sponser a 4X4 puller, keep a daughter
in McGill U., another teenage daughter at home, four cars, a motorhome
and two morgages, you can afford the gas to drive to the Bridge and flip
your car like Bob Valsak did. (btw, Bob is the one that flipped his 85
Mustang at the Bridge)
lots of :-)'s
The Mad Weldor....Jim
|
22.234 | Wanna buy a dozer? | LEDS::LEWICKE | My other vehicle is a Caterpillar | Thu Oct 10 1991 18:00 | 11 |
| Jim,
Maybe I could sell the dozeer, or figure out some way to make money
with it on weekends?
As far a flipping a Bridghampton is concerned, I've done it twice
at turn 9. It is possible that I've done it elsewhere there, but
things are starting to get foggy.
And anyway, if you got it so easy, you can easily pay for a Formula
Ford for me to play with (and expense money). There might be other
people who would contribute for the entertainment value.
John
|
22.235 | weekend cash? | WARIOR::BURDEN_D | He's no fun, he fell right over | Thu Oct 10 1991 18:05 | 7 |
| >> Maybe I could sell the dozeer, or figure out some way to make money
>> with it on weekends?
How about hanging around tollbooths and wait for people who take
too long looking for change?? :-)
Dave
|
22.236 | I do hear it's a fun place | NYTP05::JANKOWITZ | Ready the lifeboats | Fri Oct 11 1991 11:37 | 3 |
| I had been told that going off at Bridgehampton offered a good possibility
of a rollover because of the terrain. That's one of the reasons I have not
gone there yet.
|
22.237 | Bye bye Nelson | CURRNT::PAGED | What if Icke is right ? | Mon Oct 14 1991 05:47 | 10 |
| Late last week Benetton conformed the signing of Britains Martin
Brundle to replace Nelson Piquet in 1992.
Brundle is an ex WSC Champion and a winner of the Le Mans 24hr.
I think he may also have won the Daytona 24 as well ???
He's little known Stateside but did compete in some sort of
IROC(?) all-star type championship last season and almost won it.
Dave
|
22.238 | "Billy Bob" Brundle | KOALA::BEMIS | no bucks, no Buck Rogers | Mon Oct 14 1991 10:29 | 8 |
| re -.1
Dave, yes Brundle really impressed the NASCAR drivers that he competed
against in IROC. So much so that they punted him off the track in the
final race to insure he wouldn't beat them for the championship.
Martin seemed to be a good sport about it.
- Nate
|
22.239 | Bridgehampton revisited | ASDG::ZETTERLUND | | Mon Oct 14 1991 14:36 | 11 |
| I was at Bridgehampton for a club driver's school Saturday and
yesterday and can offer this about the condition of the track. It has
not degraded in the past three years. In fact, some pavement patches
have been added at the turn-ins, apexes, and track-outs on several of
the corners. However, it's still a rough, bumpy place were cars take a
lot of stone damage from rocks, gravel, and sand thrown up by the cars
in front. The safety measures (i.e., almost none) seem to be in tact
from the Can-Am days. Strictly from the point of view of layout, I
prefer Bridgehampton to Lime Rock, Watkins Glen, and NHIS.
Bjorn.
|
22.240 | Japanese GP on ESPN - Time? | ELWOOD::TREIDE | | Fri Oct 18 1991 13:52 | 2 |
| Anyone know ESPN's broadcast time (EDT) for the Japanese GP? Per On
Track, it's live on the 19th, but no time given.
|
22.241 | The one between Saturday night and Sunday morning. | KOALA::BEMIS | no bucks, no Buck Rogers | Fri Oct 18 1991 15:44 | 4 |
|
The race will broadcast at midnight, Saturday night.
- Nate
|
22.242 | Japan Gp | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Mon Oct 21 1991 10:55 | 24 |
| It's over, and Senna is champion for the third time. And well deserved.
Nigel was having a go at him when the brake pedel on the Williams got
soft and caused the car to get out of shape on the fast right hander,
with the result of Nige in the sand trap, high centered and out of the
race. Berger was ogne by that time, about +10 sec in the lead. Senna
proceeded to catch him up and pass him - a very commanding drive. No
one challenged the McLarens all day. Very tactical driving by both
McLaren men. Senna then let Berger through a few hundred yards from the
finish to give Berger his first McLaren win. Yes, give him. It was
clearly a gift from Senna. Still, Senna earned this championship and
deserves it. Mansel was tough but luck and skill were in Senna's court
this time. Senna overcame bad luck to win this title, and Nige
certainly can look back on some of his own bad luck, but in the end,
Senna must feel good about this one. His career record is phenomenal.
Now it's on to Australia where the track and organization are very good
though the race won't have much meaning. There are certainly some
youngsters worth the look these days - Schumacher, Wendlinger, Zanardi.
Now, if only some of the teams could put together a good package. I'd
say that Jordan has been remarkable this year. The car certainly looks
like a good p[ackage since everyone who's driven it has done well.
Paul
|
22.243 | ??? | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Mon Oct 21 1991 14:05 | 41 |
| .242> It's over, and Senna is champion for the third time. And well deserved.
In light of that "well deserved" comment, it shouldn't be overlooked
that Senna also has admitted he intentionally punted Prost at the start
of last year's GP of Japan.
.242> Nigel was having a go at him when the brake pedel on the Williams got
.242> soft and caused the car to get out of shape on the fast right hander,
.242> with the result of Nige in the sand trap, high centered and out of the
I am less than totally convinced that Nige was the victim of a soft
pedal. It seemed to me when I was reviewing the videotape that the
seperation between Senna and Mansell remained constant for the several
frames preceding the beginning of corrective steering by Mansell,
suggesting that there was no significant speed differential between the
two cars. It did seem that Nigel was closer to the right edge of the
track than Senna, and I believe he may've put himself off by running
his right side tires (especially the wider right rear) onto the
curbing. Whether this was the result of a concentration break caused
by finding an unexpectedly soft pedal seconds earlier cannot be known,
but I think the car could've made the corner except for running into
the curbing.
I also believe Mansell was dissembling when he was interviewed on ESPN
and mumbled something about the pedal going down and then he just
didn't know what happened. When he first got out of the car he stood
surveying the corner, obviously replaying the incident in his mind.
Given that he was still staying with the car as it slid sideways on the
outer verge of the track, trying to regain control, I think that all
the details involved were clear in his mind. Again, maybe there was a
momentary concentration break if the brakes were unexpectedly
undependable, but I'm not at all sure.
Also, note that the immediate suggestion of front-end aerodynamic
washout made by the ESPN commentators is clearly not a factor, the
onboard camera replay clearly shows Nigel giving large quantities of
opposite lock at the beginning of the incident. This is contrary to
front-end losing bite, but consistent with the loss of grip at the rear
that would occur if he nudged the curb (or, possibly, due to excessive
speed if inadequate braking was available).
|
22.244 | Missed the race. | DATABS::SOO | We need the machine that goes *ping*. | Mon Oct 21 1991 14:27 | 9 |
| What time on Wednesday morning is ESPN going to re-telecast the Japan
GP? 3:00 am?
It is not going to be all that exciting but I would still like to watch
it.
Thanks.
-=Chong=-
|
22.245 | replay time check | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Mon Oct 21 1991 15:44 | 3 |
| according to the weekly TV listing posted to the USEnet rec.autos.sport
group, the Suzuka replay will air on ESPN from 1 to 3 PM on 10/22 !!!!
|
22.246 | F1 92? | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Tue Oct 22 1991 11:04 | 30 |
| Well, we won't likely learn if it was a bad brake pedal or a mistake.
Not that it really matters much. The McLarens weere clearly dominant
all weekend. I believe that they pulled themselves back together when
they saw the Williams making such progress and the cars were on the
money in Japan. It is interesting to note that their strategy was quite
good too. Senna controlled the pace he and Mansell ran while Berger ran
off into a pretty good lead. Then, when Mansell went off, Senna chased
down and overtook Berger as if it were no big deal. Senna controlled
the race with a very good car a great racecraft. Regardless of what he
may have said in the post-race interview about past seasons, this
season belonged to him and I believe he should be very pleased with his
performance.
I was disappointed in Mansell's off, but I do not believe that he could
have caught (and passed) Senna and Berger. His season must be a large
disappointment since he clearly tried so hard and the cards just didn't
fall to him in the end. But he did prove that in a truly competitive
car he could run with Senna, even on one of Senna's good days. Both men
had some bad luck, but Nigel had just a bit more.
So what of next year? i would guess that the Williams/McLaren battle
will continue. I do not see Ferrari mounting much of a challenge
without better team management and a better design team. So I think the
championship wil shape up much the same as this year. Benetton might
figure in, but I think they are year or so away from putting it all
together. Jordan is still a dark horse, especially with Yamaha power,
which may also be a year or more away from maturity. Any one else?
Paul
|
22.247 | Senna Faster in Pits | VERSA::ROADES | | Tue Oct 22 1991 13:34 | 3 |
| Didn't Senna pass/catch Burger by having a 3-4 second faster pit stop?
jeff
|
22.248 | The pass was on the track | NYTP05::JANKOWITZ | Ready the lifeboats | Wed Oct 23 1991 09:36 | 4 |
| >> Didn't Senna pass/catch Burger by having a 3-4 second faster pit stop?
I thought the pass was before the pit stops. I do remember Berger pointing
Senna by when he got behind him.
|
22.249 | Senna passed him first | CARLIE::DAWSON | Turn ignition on - Turn brain off! | Thu Oct 24 1991 04:24 | 4 |
| Senna got by Berger on lap 18 - they stopped for tyres a little after
that (Berger on lap 19 and Senna on lap 21).
Colin
|
22.250 | home town favorites | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Thu Oct 24 1991 12:09 | 9 |
| .246> I believe that they pulled themselves back together when
.246> they saw the Williams making such progress and the cars were on the
.246> money in Japan.
Of course, it is much easier to be "on the money" racing on a circuit
owned by one of the partners in the team.
I'm not sure I'd say "pulled themselves together" so much as I'd say
they had a dominant home-field advantage. Just MHO though.
|
22.251 | definition please | GUCCI::RDUCHAINE | | Thu Oct 24 1991 13:49 | 7 |
| re.243
Bruce,
In your last paragraph, what do you mean by "opposite lock"?
Bob
|
22.252 | For Example | CARLIE::DAWSON | Turn ignition on - Turn brain off! | Fri Oct 25 1991 04:14 | 18 |
| Opposite lock is what you give when the back end of your car tries to
overtake the front end while cornering (called oversteer) - ie you steer
in the direction of the skid which is in the opposite direction to the
corner. If you were to take a photograph of a car cornering on opposite
lock it would look as though it was trying to drive itself off the edge
of the circuit!
If you want a cheap demonstration of this, buy an old VW Beetle and
drive it round an empty carpark at full throttle in a circle while the
road is wet. You will probably find that the rear end steps out of line
a little...! If you are clever, you can keep it running in a very tight
circle with the steering on FULL opposite lock....
Colin (who used to race Formula Vee many years ago and knows all about
opposite lock and oversteer :-)
Colin
|
22.253 | definition and context | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Fri Oct 25 1991 15:26 | 22 |
| .251> -< definition please >-
.251> In your last paragraph, what do you mean by "opposite lock"?
Colin did a good job in .252 of explaining opposite lock, perhaps a
concise definition would be something like:
the term opposite lock refers to applying steering lock (turning)
in a direction opposite to the direction of cornering.
So, as Colin explained, it is the technique used to catch an incipient
spin when the rear of the car is trying to pass the front of the car in
a serious oversteer condition.
In my previous post I mentioned it because I found it very significant
that Mansell applied such a correction, it certainly is contrary to the
ESPN suggestion that the front end washed out and lost grip. It is not
clear to me that the car would've gotten so tail-happy from the braking
problem alleged by Nigel afterwards, although such a problem could
certainly have been distracting enough to make him vulnerable to losing
the car's balance.
Hope the additional context helps your understanding, Bob.
--bruce
|
22.254 | Straight from the horses orifice! | VOGON::DAWSON | Turn ignition on - Turn brain off! | Mon Oct 28 1991 03:30 | 32 |
| Having read the MN and Autosport explanations as to what happened,
including quotes from the man on board at the time, it appears that,
for the first 8 or 9 laps, Mansell was content to shadow Senna but
around lap 9 decided that Berger was getting away too quickly
(remember, he would have had to catch and pass Berger as well as Senna
- a win was the only result worth having) and radio'd his pit to say he
was starting to push. Next time into turn 1, he braked very late and
deep in an effort to lock onto Senna's tail and try and slipstream him
down the next bit. This was the first time he really stood on the
brakes and they went soft, putting him slightly deeper into the corner
and slightly faster than he anticipated. The rest is history.
The brake problem is not a whinge, either, for both cars were
afflicted with it again during practice and Patrese had it during the
race, as well as trying to cope with a recalcitrant gearbox again.
Somehow, this appears to me to be what let Mansell down in the end
; an inability of the TEAM to solve problems that have been around a
long time. I know it must be difficult to do mid-season with races
every couple of weeks but this is where the sheer professionalism of
McLaren asserts itself in their ability to hone in on defects and burn
them away.
Even had Mansell not gone off when and where he did, I could not
see him winning at Suzuka. The power of the Honda out of the corners
and the straightline speed of the McLaren were far superior to the
Williams (and then Senna went even faster to catch Berger). I think
Mansell was right when he said that Williams and Renault had been
marking time a bit recently and let McLaren and Honda catch up - and
overtake!
Colin
|
22.255 | horses must be harnessed and driven as a team | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Mon Oct 28 1991 11:08 | 27 |
| .254> Somehow, this appears to me to be what let Mansell down in the end;
.254> an inability of the TEAM to solve problems that have been around a
.254> long time. I know it must be difficult to do mid-season with races
.254> every couple of weeks but this is where the sheer professionalism of
.254> McLaren asserts itself in their ability to hone in on defects and burn
.254> them away.
I'd say it is where the sheer budget of McLaren asserts itself.
It's not that hard to do if you have the ability to seperate the race
preparation from the development activities. All that ability requires
is a budget sufficient to field two teams (one of which never goes
racing). I have no doubt that this is the scope of McLaren's effort,
I doubt very much that either Ferrari or Williams undertake anything on
that same scale.
Another factor may be the organizational style of the teams. One
hurdle in approaching development in parallel with racing is that
personnel can be a limiting resource. A team that is organized to use
many more or less interchangable technicians will be better able to do
this than a team which relies upon a smaller "brain trust" or cadre of
highly talented individuals. I could be wrong but my impression is
that McLaren/Honda tend more to the first style, relative to their
competitors. Again, I wouldn't necessarily label it "sheer
professionalism", it's more a matter of resources (and priorities)
being handled with a different style than by their equally professional
competition.
|
22.256 | | NEWOA::SAXBY | Aye. When I were a lad.... | Mon Oct 28 1991 11:18 | 10 |
|
I guess you've got to say whatever you'd call it (resource management
or professionalism) they've done damn well on it.
I'd be suprised if Williams and Ferrari didn't ATTEMPT to test at the
same level as McLaren. These, and Benetton, are big budget teams with
the full support of a major manufacturer. I doubt that those sponsors
and manufacturers would be interested in supporting a second rate team.
Mark
|
22.257 | Budgets? | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Mon Oct 28 1991 16:15 | 20 |
| IN the end, one might well call it resource management, keeping in mind
that you've got to get the resources to manage! And there is little
doubt that McLaren (and Williams and Ferrari) have huge budgets. As for
McLaren and Williams, the budget is a credit to their leaders, who are
both very good at convincing people to spend money. It may not be
"spoting" but it is the nature of the game these days. In spite of all
the outrageous rumors, I'd guess that operating budgets of these three
teams are pretty close.
What's more interesting to me is how a team with a very large budget
(Ligier) and one with a small budget (Jordan) can net such different
results. I mark up the difference to - you guessed it - management.
Eddie Jordan is very much of the Frank Williams mold to me and it shows
in the dedication and results the team acheived. The can was very good
and showed well in a number of drivers' hands. Ligier often didn't make
grid. Go figure. I wonder if Prost, as team manager, would be able to
make progress at Ligier?
Paul
|
22.258 | | TOTH::POWIS | | Wed Oct 30 1991 06:48 | 5 |
| This morning's VOGON news reports that Prost has been fired by
Ferarri. Giani Morbidelli will take his seat for Australia. No
word on next season...
Steve
|
22.259 | Will he have to buy a ticket? | GUCCI::BBELL | | Wed Oct 30 1991 16:48 | 1 |
| Has anyone heard if Prost will get another ride in Australia?
|
22.260 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Wed Oct 30 1991 18:51 | 4 |
| Rumor on the net was that Prost had cancelled his customary hotel reservation
in Adelaide.
--PSW
|
22.261 | PROST IN A LIGIER-ANDRETTI & FERRARI | KAOFS::B_SOLARI | | Thu Oct 31 1991 13:12 | 10 |
|
ANOTHER RUMOUR FLOATING ARROUND HAS PROST DRIVING FOR LIGIER IN
AUSTRALIA. WOULDN'T THAT BE A GAS. IN THE LOCAL PAPERS THEY ARE
SAYING THAT PROST WILL SIGN WITH LIGIER TO BE THE TEAM MANAGER/DIRECTOR
THEY ARE ALSO SAYING THAT IT'S ALMOST A DONE DEAL THAT MICHEAL ANDRETTI
WILL BE IN THE FERRARI NEXT YEAR. THEY GO ON TO STATE THAT ANDRETTI HAS
SIGNED WITH NEWMAN-HAAS RACING FOR NEXT YEAR, BUT THERE IS AN OPTION
THAT ALLOWS SOMEONE ELSE TO BUY OUT THE CONTRACT....HMM I WONDER WHY?
|
22.262 | Prost to sue Ferrari?? | CUJO::JORDAN | | Thu Oct 31 1991 13:48 | 9 |
| In this morning's USA Today there was an article that said Prost is
having his attorneys look into possible legal action against Ferrari.
Too bad there is such acrimony there.
The real way for him to get even is to take Ligier or some other team
past Ferrari in the next few years.
Bob J.
|
22.263 | For my money it's NO and NO! | VOGON::DAWSON | Turn ignition on - Turn brain off! | Fri Nov 01 1991 03:06 | 15 |
| My latest weekly Motoring News paper (no names!) suggests that the
Prost Ligier link may not happen (ie for Prost to drive the Ligier next
year). I can't see him working miracles with a car that is so obviously
uncompetitive - he is still motivated to race but only at the top with
a chance of success. A third-rate Ferrari woulk kill a top-rate Ligier.
Managing the team may be a different challenge and one I would imagine
Prost would go for - if he can't find an alternative competitive drive.
What about Jordan then...?
I can't see the Andretti deal coming off either - there were long
discussions on this a whiloe ago but it did not seem to gel. Not that
that rules it out completely but *I* don't think it will happen.
Colin
|
22.264 | Australian GP on ESPN - Time? | ELWOOD::TREIDE | | Fri Nov 01 1991 08:17 | 2 |
| Does anyone know the air time for ESPN's Australia coverage, which tape
delayed to some time Sunday?
|
22.265 | Race time in Oz. | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Fri Nov 01 1991 12:16 | 14 |
| The race airs at 1PM EST Sunday, on tape.
I don't think Andrestti will do to Ferrari either, but you never know.
In many ways, it would be good - for CART. There would be a good seat
open and the driver line up might see some good movements. There's no
shortage of talent out there to fill the seat. There are a number of
good drivers looking for work and the only thing that tends to keep
them out of CART is personal sponsorship. It's expected these days that
the driver bring considerable $$$'s to the game - I hear somewhere
around $2M+ for anything approaching a competitive ride. This might not
be true on Newman/Haas since their sponsors might well be lined up for
next year. Question might be how much Haas wants for Michael's paper.
Paul
|
22.266 | I'm going to blaspheme... | KOALA::BEMIS | no bucks, no Buck Rogers | Fri Nov 01 1991 14:50 | 12 |
|
- flame on -
If a driver wants to win a world championship he has to race a
McClaren, or perhaps a Williams (well, OK, a Honda powered car).
Ferrari would rather **** their drivers over than see them win races.
Until they become a "team" they will continue to be also-rans. The
success they have had has been in spite of themselves.
- flame off -
- Nate
|
22.267 | Ferrari & Champions | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Fri Nov 01 1991 17:03 | 19 |
| re. .266
You're right. It's called Ferrari politics. McLaren (BTW, note the
spelling) has the organization, as does Williams, that is run by one
man - a dictator. He may be benign, as in the case of Frank Williams,
but he is a dictator. And it causes the team to focus. Ferrari has a 35
year history of flirting with success then messing with the team,
especially the drivers, and losing focus. Look at all the great drivers
who went to Ferrari, had some success (if they were lucky) then left in
dismay and often bitterness - Phil Hill, John Surtees, Niki Lauda,
Giles Villeneuve, Mansell, Prost, etc etc etc. Consider that they
haven't had a world champ since Scheckter in 1979!
Nate, flame or no, I agree. I don't think Ferrari will ever achieve the
kind of success we've seen from McLaren and Williams until the politics
are done away with. Fat chance. It's really a shame.
Paul
|
22.268 | Prost & Ligier still rumored | BEING::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Fri Nov 01 1991 17:59 | 41 |
| .263> My latest weekly Motoring News paper (no names!) suggests that the
.263> Prost Ligier link may not happen (ie for Prost to drive the Ligier next
.263> year). I can't see him working miracles with a car that is so obviously
.263> uncompetitive - he is still motivated to race but only at the top with
.263> a chance of success. A third-rate Ferrari woulk kill a top-rate Ligier.
but then there's this, posted on the USEnet newsgroup rec.autos.sport:
>From: [email protected] (Eric Jacquier (PhD student))
>Newsgroups: rec.autos.sport
>Subject: PROST to LIGIER
>Date: Thu, 31 Oct 91 12:02:44 GMT-0:10
>Sender: [email protected] (NewsMistress)
>Organization: University of Chicago
>Lines: 18
>Hi,
>
>Heard on Radio France International, Wednesday night EST (USA east
>coast).
>
>1) Prost said that he is suing Ferrari for breach of contract. Matter
> in the hands of lawyers. He also said that he is "relieved" that
>this
> uncomfortable period is over. (Or something to that effect ..)
>
>2) Radio France gave a LONG interview of Guy LIGIER. He praises Alain's
> qualities as a "metteur au point", pilot, etc... It's quite open
>and non subtle. Basically Alain Prost can start drivinf and working
>tomorrow if he wishes, there is nothing that Ligier would like more.
>In the interview, there were strong hints that Renault strongly
>supports this as well.
So, sounds more likely that there is some fire as well as smoke blowing
around the Ligier connection.
Keep in mind that Ligier and Prost both have ties into the highest
levels of French politics. Add the generally nationalistic climate
around that part of the world, it's hard to see it as unlikely.
--bruce
|
22.269 | Come on guys, watch the race! | NYTP05::JANKOWITZ | Ready the lifeboats | Mon Nov 04 1991 09:21 | 22 |
| For anyone who missed the race, you didn't miss the race. It was
red-flagged after 16 laps due to VERY heavy rain. I think they awarded
1/2 points.
1- Senna
2- Mansell - crashed just before the red flag. scoring reverted to
previous lap
3- Berger
.
.
6- Morbidelli - Alesi crashed out of 6th several laps earlier.
Well, the race was quite the letdown. It's always nice to see a race
where the championship pressures are off. I've tried to race in some
pretty heavy rain and you don't feel safe. Driving with your foot on
the floor at 100+ mph when you can't see 50 feet (or the next flag
station) is a pretty uncomfortable feeling. The same goes for feeling
the car get loose in the middle of a straight.
How did everyone miss Mansell going straight off behind Senna? You
could see Senna comming onto the straight and Mansell just going
straight through the turn.
|
22.270 | Prost & Ligier | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Mon Nov 04 1991 09:44 | 14 |
| It sounds like Guy Ligier is wooing Prost. Guy and his team have
everything to gain from this. As Mr. Dawson points out, if Prost really
would like to win more races and another championship, he can't do it
at Ligier. Not in 92. Probably not in 93. I think that Prost may start
his next career with Ligier, but it seems that he isn't ready for that
just yet.
As noted in CARS_UK, the Australia race was a mess. Anyone here have
any comments on how to handle weather delays? I'd like to see them be
able to run the event on the following day, or weekend. Or something.
Any ideas?
Paul
|
22.271 | | CRASHR::JILLY | COSROCS -- In Thrust We Trust | Mon Nov 04 1991 11:13 | 8 |
| I watched some of the Aust. race and frankly I was appalled by the race
officials letting it run as long as they did. Cars and emergency vehicles
strewn about the track especially that one straight section. After all the
noise I have heard about F1 safety standards I was shocked to see such a total
disregard for driver and worker safety. That race probably should never have
been started.
Jilly
|
22.272 | It should *NOT* have been started | VOGON::DAWSON | Turn ignition on - Turn brain off! | Mon Nov 11 1991 05:08 | 14 |
| Did you see Mauricio Gugelmin, who was chasing Modena's Tyrrell at
the time, spin off INTO the pit road and hit the inside of the pitlane
barrier, almost vaulting back onto the track?? Two marshalls were
slightly injured but it could have been a *lot* worse.
There is severe criticism of Schenken and Bruynserade for :
a) letting the race start in the first place and
b) not stopping it sooner
The drivers, apparently led by Senna and Berger, are calling for a
stronger voice in safety matters - something like the F1 Drivers
Association of several years ago. I wonder how far they will get...
Colin
|
22.273 | I <heart> MGB! | NEWOA::SAXBY | Aye. When I were a lad.... | Mon Nov 11 1991 05:33 | 15 |
|
I was watching Inside Track yesterday (for anyone without an Astra
satellite receiver, this is a programme which covers each GP in depth
with highlights of practice and driver/team interviews as well as
race highlights) and in one scene Patrese was seen arguing with Money
Grabber Ecclestone. Ecclestone was obviously telling Patrese to stop
complaining about the terrible conditions and go out and earn Bernie
some more money (he being so short on cash) - Well, ok, I don't know
quite what was being said, but it was obviously along those lines.
Ecclestone has been fairly low profile recently, but that short scene
convinced me that he is worthy of any contempt that can be raised
against him. What a piece of scum.
Mark
|
22.274 | | VANTEN::MITCHELLD | Network Consultant | Mon Nov 11 1991 05:56 | 0 |
22.275 | Total Wins? | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Tue Nov 12 1991 17:42 | 9 |
| A question for Colin Dawson:
Do you know the total number of wins the top 10 F1 teams have now? I
seem to remember Ferrari having ~100, and McLaren ~80, followed by
Lotus, Williams, Brabham, Tyrrell. Being a statistician, I was hoping
you might have the numbers handy.
Paul
|
22.276 | Manufacturer's wins 1950-1991 | VOGON::DAWSON | Turn ignition on - Turn brain off! | Wed Nov 13 1991 05:39 | 41 |
| Paul,
I have a list of manufacturer's wins which came from Dave Burden ; the
only problem I have is that I didn't note exactly at which point this
cut off (the mail was dated 30th May 1991 and could have been up until
the end of last season or included the first four races of this
season!).
I will try and clarify this with Dave but here is the full list of
manufacturer's wins up until the end of the 1991 season (from 1950) :
Ferrari 98
McLaren 94 (or 98!)
Lotus 79
Williams 51
Brabham 35
Tyrrell 23
BRM 17
Cooper 16
Renault 15
Alfa Romeo } 10
Maserati }
Mercedes } 9
Vanwall }
Matra }
Ligier 6
Lancia }
Benetton } 5
March }
Wolf } 3
Honda }
Talbot } 2
Porsche }
Eagle }
Hesketh } 1
Penske }
Shadow }
Hope this is what you wanted.
Colin
|
22.277 | All Time List | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Wed Nov 13 1991 11:15 | 20 |
| Colin,
Thanks. This is what I was looking for. I thought I had seen something
about "Ferrari's 100th win" somewhere, but I must have been predicting
it in my mind! What's interesting about this list is how close McLaren
is to being No 1. I knew they were getting close. And, of course,
Williams position is almost entirely from the efforts during the 80's
and 90's. As you go down the list you see how few teams have added to
their totals in the last decade or so. It's especially sad to see
glorious names like Lotus and Brabham with poor showings in the last
few years. But that's sport.
It appears that McLaren will be become the winningest team ever some
time in '92. At this time, I do not see Ferrari adding much (or at all)
to their total - too much politics. I would expect Williams to add to
theirs, and would love to see Jordan join the list.
Thanks for the updated list.
|
22.278 | Modern F1 Statistics | DENVER::MALKOSKI | | Thu Nov 14 1991 14:41 | 188 |
| Below is a comprehensive look at modern (1950-present) F1 history.
What you have are ALL the winners organized in one easy chart.
Thanks to Colin Dawson for the statistics. For all you stat lovers
this is great stuff.
Constructors wins and titles
Paul,
My poor attempt at replying to your query has prompted me to spend
a little time during lunch to munge together a proper constructor's wins
and titles chart - attached fyi.
I tried to reply it into the conference but it wouldn't let me -
perhaps you could do this for me as next reply in topic 790 of RACERS??
As you say, it makes interesting reading, particularly to see how
McLaren have totally dominated the sheets in recent years!!! Also to see
how what (from memory) were "successful" teams (such as Eagle, Shadow, and
March) were relatively unsuccessful, at least as far as sheers wins were
concerned.
Happy browsing!!
Best regards,
Coliln
CONSTRUCTERS.TXT
50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 50s #Ch
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ferrari 3 7 7 2 1 2 2 24
Alfa-Romeo 6 4 10
Maserati 1 2 2 4 9
Mercedes 4 5 9
Vanwall 3 6* 9 1
Cooper 2 5* 7 1
Lancia 5 5
BRM 1 1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTALS 6 7 7 8 8 6 7 7 10 8 74 2
60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 60s #Ch
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lotus 2 3 3 7* 3 6* 1 4 5* 2 36 3
Ferrari 1 5* 1 3* 2 1 13 2
Brabham 2 4* 4* 2 12 2
BRM 4* 2 2 3 1 12 1
Cooper 6* 1 1 1 9 1
Matra 3 6* 9 1
McLaren 3 1 4
Honda 1 1 2
Porsche 1 1
Eagle 1 1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTALS 9 8 9 10 10 10 9 11 12 11 99 10
70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 70s #Ch
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ferrari 4 2 1 3 6* 6* 4* 5 6* 37 4
Lotus 6* 5* 7* 3 1 5 8* 35 4
Tyrrell 7* 4 5 2 1 1 1 21 1
McLaren 1 3 4* 3 6 3 20 1
Brabham 1 3 2 2 8
Williams 5 5
BRM 1 2 1 4
Ligier 1 3 4
March 1 1 1 3
Wolf 3 3
Hesketh 1 1
Penske 1 1
Shadow 1 1
Renault 1 1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTALS 13 11 12 15 15 14 16 17 16 15 144 10
80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 80s #Ch
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
McLaren 1 4 1 12* 6* 4 3 15* 10* 56 4
Williams 6* 4* 1 1 1 4 9* 9* 2 37 4
Ferrari 2 3* 4* 1 2 2 1 3 18 2
Brabham 3 3 2 4 2 1 15
Renault 3 3 4 4 14
Lotus 1 3 2 2 8
Tyrrell 1 1 2
Ligier 2 2
Benetton 1 1 2
Talbot 2 2
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTALS 14 15 16 15 16 16 16 16 16 16 156 10
90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 90s #Ch
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ferrari 6
McLaren 6* 8* 2
Lotus
Williams 2 7
Brabham
Tyrrell
BRM
Ligier
Benetton 2 1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTALS 16 16 32 2
50s 60s 70s 80s 90s TOTAL #CH
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ferrari 24 13 37 18 6 98 8
McLaren 4 20 56 14 94 7
Lotus 36 35 8 79 7
Williams 5 37 9 51 4
Brabham 12 8 15 35 2
Tyrrell 21 2 23 1
BRM 1 12 4 17 1
Cooper 7 9 16 2
Renault 1 14 15 -
Alfa-Romeo 10 10 -
Maserati 9 9 -
Mercedes 9 9 -
Vanwall 9 9 1
Matra 9 9 1
Ligier 4 2 6 -
Lancia 5 5 -
Benetton 2 3 5 -
March 3 3 -
Wolf 3 3 -
Honda 2 2 -
Talbot 2 2 -
Porsche 1 1 -
Eagle 1 1 -
Hesketh 1 1 -
Penske 1 1 -
Shadow 1 1 -
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTALS 74 99 144 156 32 505 34
CONSTRUCTORS' TITLES
--------------------
1958 Vanwall GB
1959 Cooper-Climax GB
1960 Cooper-Climax GB
1961 Ferrari IT
1962 BRM GB
1963 Lotus-Climax GB
1964 Ferrari IT
1965 Lotus-Climax GB
1966 Brabham-Repco AU
1967 Brabham-Repco AU
1968 Lotus-Ford GB
1969 Matra-Ford FR
1970 Lotus-Ford GB
1971 Tyrrell-Ford GB
1972 Lotus-Ford GB
1973 Lotus-Ford GB
1974 McLaren-Ford GB
1975 Ferrari IT
1976 Ferrari IT
1977 Ferrari IT
1978 Lotus-Ford GB
1979 Ferrari IT
1980 Williams-Ford GB
1981 Williams-Ford GB
1982 Ferrari IT
1983 Ferrari IT
1984 McLaren-Ford(?) GB
1985 McLaren-TAG GB
1986 Williams-Honda GB
1987 Williams-Honda GB
1988 McLaren-Honda GB
1989 McLaren-Honda GB
1990 McLaren-Honda GB
1991 McLaren-Honda GB
|
22.279 | CAPELLI TO FERRARI | KAOFS::B_SOLARI | | Tue Dec 17 1991 12:17 | 7 |
|
DOES ANYONE CARE THAT FERRARI SIGNED IVAN CAPELLI FOR NEXT SEASON.
I AM SURPRISED NO ONE ENTERED THIS NEWS A COUPLE OF DAYS AGO. I HOPE
FERRARI CAN PRODUCE A COMPETITIVE CAR FOR THEIR DRIVERS. IT SHOULD
BE EXCITING TO WATCH ALESI & CAPELLI SHOULD THEY HAVE THE MACHINERY
TO MATCH THEIR SKILL.
|
22.280 | Piquet is a gonner! | VOGON::DAWSON | Turn ignition on - Turn brain off! | Tue Jan 14 1992 03:32 | 32 |
| <<< MARVIN::DISK$TOOLS:[NOTES$LIBRARY]CARS_UK.NOTE;1 >>>
-< CARS_UK conference >-
================================================================================
Note 1557.163 Formula 1: 1992 Season 163 of 163
VOGON::DAWSON "Turn ignition on - Turn brain off!" 25 lines 14-JAN-1992 08:26
-< Piquet is a gonner! >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nelson Piquet officially announced his retirement from Formula One
motor racing today, citing "lack of opportunity to win the World
Championship" as the reason. Who's leg does he think he is pulling??
Piquet is a three-times World Champion : 1981 and 1983 in
Brabham-Cosworths and 1987 in a Williams-Honda. However, just to put
this in perspective a little, in '81 he beat Reutemann by a single
point (and Prost also had three wins), in '83 he beat Prost by 2 points
(taking three wins to Prost's four and Arnoux's three) and in '87, of
course, he beat Mansell by 12 points after the Brit did not start the
last two events of the year following his Suzuka practice shunt
(winning three races to Mansell's six).
In my opinion, although a three-times Champ., he is a "worthy" and not
a "great" and has had a certain amount of good fortune in being in the
right place at the right time. For the last four seasons, his
performance, except for one or two occasions, has been decidedly
lack-lustre.
I, for one, be not be sorry to see him go, much preferring the youth
and aggression of a Schumacker, Wendlinger, Hakinnen or Herbert, to
name but a few.
Colin
|
22.281 | 199TWO | VERSA::ROADES | | Tue Jan 14 1992 12:39 | 5 |
| Moderator, how about starting the 199TWO F1 note.
thanks,
jeff
|
22.282 | BMW not Cosworth | JARETH::HASTIE | | Tue Jan 14 1992 16:58 | 9 |
|
Just a nit, but his '83 championship was in a Brabham BMW, the
first of the turbo engines to win a championship.
Whatever you want to say about how he won his championships, I
always liked his style and sense of humor (he could shut John
Bisignano up good, which remains forever to his credit).
=Lil
|
22.283 | | ZEKE::SAIA | | Wed Jan 15 1992 11:43 | 14 |
| Winning a championship by a point or 2 points is irrelevent. It's whose
name goes into the recordbooks and it was NP. Thats the bottom line and
all that really counts. Saying that he had a little bit of luck is not
the case IMO. He finished and scored more points and won, hence
championship.
I always hear about guys that could have or might have. Sometimes I
have people tell me that they were the fastest guy in practice and win
the pole for the last 3 events, but had 2 dnf's and a 7th place.
Whats that tell me ? B.S.walks and perfomance talks.
Mike
|
22.284 | I'm still glad he's walked!! | VOGON::DAWSON | Turn ignition on - Turn brain off! | Tue Jan 28 1992 03:24 | 7 |
| My point being that he is good - no doubt about it - but not great
and I, for one, will not be sorry to see an also-ran walk. His
performances in the Benetton sometimes have made me weep - hurrah for
the Schumackers of this world, and let's hope we wee more of them now
Piquet has gone.
Colin
|