shimon.ifraimov
De-activated on request
monza!
Ferrari got completely **** on their home grand prix.
Ferrari got completely **** on their home grand prix.
US GP! The funny guy going "nyoom nyoom nyoom" imitating F1 cars was my highlight.
For me my interest in Formula One is at an all time low nowadays, and frankly I thought the whole year was something of a disappointment really. Not much in the way of on track fighting (the real kind, not DRS assisted or fast cars coming from the back with no challenges), and the cars just don't do anything for me from a spectator point of view.
However, much like a fan of a band who's first two albums rocked and the next 10 years were rubbish, I'll keep tuning in to see if the tide turns.
OP first 2 sentences says it all.
Its understandable some lose interest especially when their team is not winning…Liberty media are making more changes to the F1 show so for some you might be better of watching re-runs of the good ol days .......older guys are still wishing for the 70's ,80's and even some the 90;s to come back. [/MEDIA]
Well, I don't really have a favorite team or driver, I watch F1 mainly because I love racing, period. Liberty media is making a lot of cosmetic changes and it's true that TV coverage is far superior now to what it used to be. The problem is on the track itself, where drivers are constantly managing the engine, tires, fuel, etc. instead of going at full speed. There are just too many rules. F1 needs to be an extreme sport again.
They wiped out track records at every circuit during the last couple of years. Not by a tenth but by full seconds. What's "extreme" then I wonder.
I don't think there was ever an era in F1 when they would go flat out during a whole race or even most of the race. They always had to save engines and gearboxes and manage fuel and tyres. That is one of the reasons why drivers like Jackie Stewart won titles and those like Ronnie Peterson didn't.The cars are quicker... It just means they could go even quicker if there were less restrictions. What I find annoying is all this talk about saving engines and gearboxes, fuel, energy, etc. Just ask Alonso... A lot of drivers don't say anything because they have to obey the team's PR people.
Yeah, spec racing does that. F1 has never been the place for that kind of thing.They need to learn lessons from Indycar
Fantastic wheel to wheel and almost anyone can pull off a win .....7-8 drivers this year was it ?
...and only 17 races
I don't think there was ever an era in F1 when they would go flat out during a whole race or even most of the race. They always had to save engines and gearboxes and manage fuel and tyres. That is one of the reasons why drivers like Jackie Stewart won titles and those like Ronnie Peterson didn't.
I have to agree here, at first I wanted to look through highlights to remember all the races, and to find race that was better than US GP, but then I realized. If I forget on SC included false entertainment (Australia, China, Baku, Sliverstone), then those 2 tracks I can't remember (Singapore, Sochi), then remove Merc/Ferrari being above all (Spain, Canada, France, Belgium, Japan). I end up with Bahrain ("old tyres, noooo. Oh it's Bot not Lewis, I got it guys"), Monaco ("Please Renault, survive"), Austria (did they race there this year?!), Germany (cry-wall-smile, racing=0), Hungary ("death race frankenstein" in second position taking on red/blue cars), Italy (team tactics leading to 0.1% of racing), Abu Dhabi (his engine can survive only 1 lap, but he can win without issues).After seeing the results of the pool, and because I wanted to keep a little faith in F1, I decided to download the US GP ... my God! ... if this was the best race of the year, I can only imagine how boring and poor was the rest of the season ...