Formula 1 Discussion - And favourite driver?

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Made a small meme video about the crash. Some could probably do this better then me.


And the reaction from Hamilton and Wolff to the Verstappen punishment. They should think that it can also hit them right? Or so they think the FIA will always side with them? Nexyt thing you know is we get a Senna - Prost rivalry with both of them kicking their rival of the road without remorse
 
Sooo... I just looked at my F1 fantasy leagues and I feel the need to gloat.
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I hope that there is some kind of award for coming top in these 'official' and featured leagues cause I need some press release name dropping Newey Faggous.

Don't have much to say about Monza except it was a nice race and the first chicane needs to be reprofiled.
 
Wow, you are really kicking ass @New Fag. I knew you were in our little league, but on a global scale as well is great to see! When you are 17th out of a million in the main league, that's fucking huge!

More power to you and I hope you keep onward and upwards, Keep us posted for sure on how you continue to do. I got screwed this week by having Gasly as Turbo in one team and having Max in both. Wish I had Ric as turbo driver but at least I had him, Norris and McL spread across my 2 teams.

There are Top 3 prizes in the global league, but it has to be your "Team 1", see link for info:

But yeah, hats off to you big time!
 
Too busy working to check on the race. I deeply regret that now.

In other news, there is a strong chance the Losail circuit in Qatar will receive the race that was supposed to take place in Australia this year, which would make the final stretch of the season take place entirely on the Middle East. Qatar, then Saudi Arabia and finally on Abu Dhabi.
 
With the driver shuffle settled down, I decided to check on the Formula 2 standings.
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Coming of the summer break, Alpine's two academy drivers are in a comfortable one-two. Assuming they stay the course and either the Aussie or the Chinaman wins F2, what are the odds that Renault, if the rumors about Seb leaving F1 are true, cuts a deal with Aston Martin to give one of their drivers a 2022 ride?
A rookie joining AM? I can't see it. Not yet anyway. I suspect Stroll the Elder would be keen for Stroll the Younger to have another season or two's worth more mentoring. If there is a tie-up between AM and Alpine, perhaps Alonso could slide over to AM (assuming Seb retires at the end of this season) and give Stroll the Younger that extra bit of mentorship.

Either Piastri or Zhou could slot in as AM's Number 2 driver once Alonso retires, although I suspect it'd be Zhou because it makes more commercial sense (kinda like how AT took on Tsunoda).

Of course all of this conjecture could be for naught if Zhou wins the 2021 F2 title and signs on with AR as has been suggested, and if it turns out that the Alpine/AM tie-up happens AND Seb retires, then my prediction about Jack leapfrogging Oscar into F1 may age like a bucket of prawns in the sun.
I never watched these commentators in the past, but now that F1 is only on pay-tv in Germany, I've watched the Sky F1 stream a couple of times and I have to say, it boggles my mind. They are off the mark on several occasions, stuff that I as a layman know better and get validated one way or the other. Either it's the description of a situation like a crash or the strategy call of a team... what background do these guys have? They should know better.
A blind man could do a better job of calling F1 than the monkeys Sky have on their commentary team. Hell, even those soy faggots at THE RACE could probably do a better job (though only just).
I'll be laughing my ass off when FIA decides that Hambone caused the collision.
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If this championship is decided like the one between Senna and Prost with Verstappen on top, that would be icing on the cake. As a fan, I can't really say this is a bad thing, it keeps the tension up - certainly better than one guy leading with 150 points by the halfway mark.
I'm rooting for a finish like Suzuka in 1990. Hopefully Max is leading the WDC at the time.
Obvious head-injuries prevented by the roll hoop and possibly HALO aside, if Max' heat exchanger had been ripped, Hamilton could have been doused with boiling hot water. That's just nasty.
True. Hambone wouldn't know good sportsmanship if it bit him on the arse and his simps are unbearable, but I don't want to see him (or any other F1 driver) come to any physical harm.
 
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10 seconds? You mean the same penalty that Tsunoda got for speeding in pit lane or some shit?
Yeah, "it's a yoke", as they say. Though speeding in the pitlane is not as minor an infringement as you make it out to be. After all, there's people running back and forth in the pitlane or standing ready waiting for their driver to come in. A collision could be fatal, even at the allowed 80kph. Didn't Tsunoda get the penalty for crossing the white line on pit entry though?

In case of the Silverstone crash, a 10 second penalty would be rather lackluster without costcap in such a situation but with a costcap, taking a 10 second penalty is outright a freebie, when your opponent gets his power unit destroyed, leading to an inevitable full grid start penalty down the line.

In this race, had Max been able to continue his race, he'd have gotten a 5 or 10 second penalty himself, but it was transformed to a 3 place grid penalty intsead. That is the most mild grid penalty available to FIA... so on that front, the penalties are somewhat fair in their height when you disregard Max' loss of a power unit in Silverstone and the fact that at worst, this was merely a racing incident if not outright Hamilton's fault for slamming the door shut on Max twice despite being in a signifcantly weaker position.
FIA says, Max could have used the emergency exit, but as I see it, that would mean he yields in a fight for a position where he is clearly in a stronger postion. I think FIA isn't as biased towards Mercedes as some others suggest, but this decision is just something that I can't understand and makes me stray closer to the "FIA is MercedesAlliedFIA" mindset.
 
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To be fair Leclerc did exatly that when he was battling with Bottas. He cut the chicane positioned behind Bottas and then overtook Bottas thanks to the slip stream. Bottas even complained "How is that fair that the one making a mistake getsx rewarded?"
But that are all maybe'y and if'S.

On a side note I found the crash very similar to what happened between Maldonado and Hamilton in Valencia 2012. Have a look

 
To be fair Leclerc did exatly that when he was battling with Bottas. He cut the chicane positioned behind Bottas and then overtook Bottas thanks to the slip stream. Bottas even complained "How is that fair that the one making a mistake getsx rewarded?"
But that are all maybe'y and if'S.

On a side note I found the crash very similar to what happened between Maldonado and Hamilton in Valencia 2012. Have a look

https://youtube.com/watch?v=iOvQYtGJqls
Not just that one, let's take a stroll down memory lane:

 
I had no idea that Michael was such a big philanthropist. It just makes me love the guy even more now. Putting tens of millions of dollars into charitable causes is a far better use of an F1 WDC's resources and influence than a bunch of shitty woke tweets.
 
Couldn't watch Monza on sunday but managed to do it last night. As a McLaren fan I hadn't felt like that since the Mika Hakkinen days. I guess so many years without victories and especially 1-2s kind of leaves you numb. But this race was glorious. The 2 McLarens successfully defending against both championship contenders for the first part of the race was already very uplifting, and then the rest of the race was just icing on the cake with a 1-2 cherry on top.
 
I had no idea that Michael was such a big philanthropist. It just makes me love the guy even more now. Putting tens of millions of dollars into charitable causes is a far better use of an F1 WDC's resources and influence than a bunch of shitty woke tweets.
Oh come on, tweets don't cost a thing. Clearly, Lewis' money went into his large collection of unfathomably expensive and rare sportscars with the finest virgin leather upholstery and the private jet he uses to fly around the world to lecture common people on all continents about the importance of fighting climate change and how he fights it by being vegan.

Couldn't watch Monza on sunday but managed to do it last night. As a McLaren fan I hadn't felt like that since the Mika Hakkinen days. I guess so many years without victories and especially 1-2s kind of leaves you numb. But this race was glorious. The 2 McLarens successfully defending against both championship contenders for the first part of the race was already very uplifting, and then the rest of the race was just icing on the cake with a 1-2 cherry on top.
Even with a shitshow like the Verstappen/Hamilton crash, you at least get to enjoy some other great drivers on the podium for once. And given that McLaren has had its dry spell, a well-earned double victory is something to marvel at.
 
Reminder that Senna anonymously donated over 400 million of his personal fortune to help combat childhood poverty in Brazil. Also, Instituto Ayrton Senna is still around, helping less fortunate Brazilians find opportunities. Even from beyond the grave, Senna eclipses Lewis as a both a driver and a humanitarian.
 
Reminder that Senna anonymously donated over 400 million of his personal fortune to help combat childhood poverty in Brazil. Also, Instituto Ayrton Senna is still around, helping less fortunate Brazilians find opportunities. Even from beyond the grave, Senna eclipses Lewis as a both a driver and a humanitarian.
TBH I didn't realise his contribution to humanitarian efforts was that big, mainly because he kept it on the down low when he was alive. As far as humantarianism is concerned, Senna is the GOAT. Not just in F1 history, but possibly even sporting history (though I'm happy to be corrected).

There's a reason why Brazil had three days of mourning immediately after his death.
 
TBH I didn't realise his contribution to humanitarian efforts was that big, mainly because he kept it on the down low when he was alive. As far as humantarianism is concerned, Senna is the GOAT. Not just in F1 history, but possibly even sporting history (though I'm happy to be corrected).

There's a reason why Brazil had three days of mourning immediately after his death.
I should rip my Senna funeral video coverage and throw it up on YT or something. I have a binder full of F1 DVDs before large HDs came into being. Pretty sure I have 2 DVDs from the funeral, maybe 3 or so hours of the coverage.

Literally, it was like a King died. There were IIRC 3 million people lining the streets, most of them inconsolable. It was a pretty moving experience watching it. They had his coffin on a fire truck draped with the Brazilian flag. Flowers were just being showered on the procession by the onlookers.

But yeah, he was massively adored, both for his racing ability and his just being a good human and helping others. He was mega-rich, but could have been more so if he was a tightwad or didn't give a shit.
 
he was massively adored, both for his racing ability and his just being a good human and helping others. He was mega-rich, but could have been more so if he was a tightwad or didn't give a shit.
The paradox (though maybe it's not that paradoxical) is that Senna was one of the hardest-nosed racers of all time, to the point of bordering on dirty tactics at his most extreme. Yet he also seemed to be one of the nicest and most caring souls anyone could possibly meet.

Case in point: 1992 Belgian Grand Prix qualifying, where he risked his life to help save Erik Comas.


Top Gear's Senna tribute was great. Even Hambone was tolerable in this; probably because this was made before he disappeared completely up his own arsehole.

 
Senna had an Austrian flag stashed away in his cockpit when he had his fatal crash. He wanted to wave it after the race in honor of Roland Ratzenberger that had died the day before.

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It's just. Man...

Imola 1994.

F1's darkest hour and one of the darkest hours of racing altogether. It took things from us that could never be replaced.
It's like fate itself told the F1 organizers to not go through with the race and they just didn't listen.
One near fatal crash during free practice. One fatal crash in qualifying. One fatal crash in the race. And even then they did not stop the race.
 
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