CoopsII wrote:I was watching BBC News this morning, trying to get on top of the hangover that was putting me through the wringer when to make it worse guess who pops up reading the Sport?
Legard.
Aarcgh!! MY EYES!! MY EYES!!
Flipped over to SKY News (I panicked) just in time to see M****n B*****e telling me how good SKY would be doing the F1.
I wish those two Force Indias had run him over.
Judas.
CoopsII wrote:Dont get me wrong, I understand that the BBC are the spoilt, arrogant, self-serving cause of all of this.
dinizintheoven wrote:I've got one: "Reject Moments That Actually Never Happened, As Opposed To Those That Did And Which End With 'Oh, Wait!'" by the users of the F1 Rejects forum.
CarlosFerreira wrote:Are we being slightly silly? It's as exciting as VLADIMIR PUTIN wearing a LIVE BEAR!
BaconLettuceNinja wrote:If there's anything I've learned in this week's competition, it's that I never wish to live in the Shetland Islands. Ever.
kostas22 wrote: when eagleash of all people says you've gone too far about something you just know that's when to apply the brakes and do a U-turn.
eagleash wrote:Didn't Berger sell his share back to Mateschitz several years ago?
Captain Hammer wrote:Over the past month, I have notced that Autosport have run a dozen stories - nearly one every other day - about Raikkonen's return and how he is just as committed as he was before he went rallying, and how he can easily succeed. This culminated a few days ago with Damon Hill offering his opinion on the matter, sounding suspiciously like a yes-man. I could understand it when journalists were asking Eric Boullier and Gerard Lopez because they run the team. I could understand it when they asked Romain Grosjean and Sebastian Vettel, because they are Raikkonen's new team-mate and the reigning World Champion respectively. But as time wore on, they started asking people who were further and further away from Raikkonen. First David Coulthard, then Damon Hill. Who next, Kim Jong-un? He's suddenly become prominent in Korea, and there's a Grand Prix in Korea, so I'm sure that by this time next month, Autosport will have sent someone to Pyongyang to get his thoughts. And it will no doubt be headline news. Long story short, one month after it was announced, Raikkonen's return is old news, but publications keep turning out stories that hype him up.
I find this particularly telling because Autosport have totally ignored Gerhard Berger's comments that he would not re-sign Raikkonen. Considering that Berger is co-owner of a team that just made one of the most ruthless moves in the sport's recent history by ditching Alguersuari and Buemi, I'd be very interested in what he has to say - and why - on the subject of Raikkonen's return. And yet, there hasn't been any mention of it on Autosport.
AndreaModa wrote:eagleash wrote:Didn't Berger sell his share back to Mateschitz several years ago?
I believe he did.
AdrianSutil wrote:AndreaModa wrote:eagleash wrote:Didn't Berger sell his share back to Mateschitz several years ago?
I believe he did.
Yes he did. Sold his 50% share back in November 2008.
kostas22 wrote: when eagleash of all people says you've gone too far about something you just know that's when to apply the brakes and do a U-turn.
Captain Hammer wrote:Who next, Kim Jong-un? He's suddenly become prominent in Korea, and there's a Grand Prix in Korea
Captain Hammer wrote:Who next, Kim Jong-un? He's suddenly become prominent in Korea, and there's a Grand Prix in Korea
mario wrote:It's going to be a problem for Kimi though - we've seen that the reaction to Schumacher's return has been mixed, and arguably he was in better shape than Kimi was for a return despite his age, so too much pre-season hype could backfire badly on the team and Kimi if his performance is underwhelming in the opening races. If the media and public turn their focus on him as aggressively as on Schumacher I can see Kimi getting sick of the sport fairly quickly given his famed dislike of the politics and media in F1 at the moment.
Clint Bowyer at Richmond wrote:Thank you Juan Pablo (Montoya) for wrecking me, and then winning me the race!
DanielPT wrote:Captain Hammer wrote:Who next, Kim Jong-un? He's suddenly become prominent in Korea, and there's a Grand Prix in Korea
Did you just mixed North Korea and South Korea on the same sentence?
CarlosFerreira wrote:Are we being slightly silly? It's as exciting as VLADIMIR PUTIN wearing a LIVE BEAR!
BaconLettuceNinja wrote:If there's anything I've learned in this week's competition, it's that I never wish to live in the Shetland Islands. Ever.
Captain Hammer wrote:I deliberately named Jong-un and connected him to the Korean Grand Prix to prove a point: that Autosport have been going to people who are increasingly removed from Formula 1 for opinions about Raikkonen's return, and that they will no doubt ask Jong-un for his opinion because asking him is the natural extension of what they are currently doing.
CoopsII wrote:Captain Hammer wrote:I deliberately named Jong-un and connected him to the Korean Grand Prix to prove a point: that Autosport have been going to people who are increasingly removed from Formula 1 for opinions about Raikkonen's return, and that they will no doubt ask Jong-un for his opinion because asking him is the natural extension of what they are currently doing.
Obviously
Wizzie wrote:He's from a family of used cars salesmen... which might as well be the mafia EurobrunMe wrote:I have no idea why I always think Tony D'Alberto is a mafia member![]()
tristan1117 wrote:I've been trying to halt the F1 Deprivation Blues by listening to every single F1 Rejects Podcast from 2005 onwards. I found out that I'm still pissed that Webber got punted off by Vettel at the 2007 Japanese Grand Prix.
Klon wrote:I really can't help the fact that I am quite annoyed about Webber still being with Red Bull - it's a pathetic joke!
AdrianSutil wrote:Klon wrote:I really can't help the fact that I am quite annoyed about Webber still being with Red Bull - it's a pathetic joke!
Not as annoyed as I am with Massa still being with Ferrari. That seat deserves a proper talent like Kobayashi, Perez, Sutil (I can dream) or Alguersuari (what?! I hear you say). Seriously, he shouldve been driving for his job last year, not this year.
mario wrote:After all, asides from the traditional veterans that Ferrari has tended to pick in the past, there are a few rising stars that might be a good choice - Perez, for a start, looks like he is becoming increasingly competitive and confident. Mind you, Ferrari are probably still trying to line Bianchi up for Massa's seat in the longer term (presumably why they helped him get the Force India test driver role) - make of that what you will...
Martin Brundle, at the 2005 San Marino GP wrote:You can sort of imagine in four or five years time talking about these guys we've got on the front two rows of the grid today, can't you? They're very much the future of Grand Prix Racing.
Wizzie wrote:mario wrote:After all, asides from the traditional veterans that Ferrari has tended to pick in the past, there are a few rising stars that might be a good choice - Perez, for a start, looks like he is becoming increasingly competitive and confident. Mind you, Ferrari are probably still trying to line Bianchi up for Massa's seat in the longer term (presumably why they helped him get the Force India test driver role) - make of that what you will...
Which makes one wonder what Ferrari actually see in him considering it took him a grand total of just over a lap to plant the Force India into a tyre barrier and the first half of his GP2 season last year
mario wrote:It also has to be pointed out that Grosjean, by virtue of being Pirelli's official tyre tester, would have had a fairly substantial advantage over his rivals in the early stages of the 2011 season, so being beaten by him isn't massively surprising.
Martin Brundle, at the 2005 San Marino GP wrote:You can sort of imagine in four or five years time talking about these guys we've got on the front two rows of the grid today, can't you? They're very much the future of Grand Prix Racing.
mario wrote:After all, asides from the traditional veterans that Ferrari has tended to pick in the past, there are a few rising stars that might be a good choice - Perez, for a start, looks like he is becoming increasingly competitive and confident. Mind you, Ferrari are probably still trying to line Bianchi up for Massa's seat in the longer term (presumably why they helped him get the Force India test driver role) - make of that what you will...
Stramala [kostas22] wrote:Giedo van der Garde - We expected crap from him, he has delivered crap so far. Well done on matching our expectations lad.
mario wrote:As to what Ferrari see in Bianchi, to be fair to them Bianchi's record in Formula 3 is pretty strong - he was 3rd in the European F3 series in his rookie year before winning the series by a substantial margin the following year, whilst his 2010 GP2 season was solid enough (he was the highest ranked rookie in the series that year) despite the accident he had in Hungary that lead to a fractured vertebra. It also has to be pointed out that Grosjean, by virtue of being Pirelli's official tyre tester, would have had a fairly substantial advantage over his rivals in the early stages of the 2011 season, so being beaten by him isn't massively surprising.
Nuppiz wrote:Romain Grosjean - kids of all ages watch this you know, we don't want to see you realizing your fantasies of creating STR-Lotus babies.
I wrote:After watching Di Resta getting passed by both Toro Rossos, I want an update to the DRS which makes it that if the car in front got passed by the car second in the queue in the first zone/under braking, the car that is third in the queue will not be able to activate his DRS in the second zone.
Another reason why I don't like DRS.
Klon in the Chatroom wrote:Vettel is just straight-up bitch nigga.
Martin Brundle, at the 2005 San Marino GP wrote:You can sort of imagine in four or five years time talking about these guys we've got on the front two rows of the grid today, can't you? They're very much the future of Grand Prix Racing.
Wizzie wrote:It's just occurred to me that the corner Maldonado went off at is pretty much flat out in a Renault freaking Megane as anyone who watched either of the Red Bull Challenge races this weekend would testify to
WeirdKerr wrote:Wizzie wrote:It's just occurred to me that the corner Maldonado went off at is pretty much flat out in a Renault freaking Megane as anyone who watched either of the Red Bull Challenge races this weekend would testify to
the what???
why cant sky show ALL the support races.......(not just the GP2 and 3)
Martin Brundle, at the 2005 San Marino GP wrote:You can sort of imagine in four or five years time talking about these guys we've got on the front two rows of the grid today, can't you? They're very much the future of Grand Prix Racing.
Wizzie wrote:WeirdKerr wrote:Wizzie wrote:It's just occurred to me that the corner Maldonado went off at is pretty much flat out in a Renault freaking Megane as anyone who watched either of the Red Bull Challenge races this weekend would testify to
the what???
why cant sky show ALL the support races.......(not just the GP2 and 3)
The only good thing about the ONE coverage was it showed most of the support races. From memory, the ones they broadcast were the Red Bull Challenge with DC involved, the V8s and the Porsche Carrera Cup with a Mr Heinz-Harald Frentzen being anonymous and causing an accident with Daniel Gaunt with a few laps to go of the last race![]()
There may have been more but since I was trying to avoid listening to the ONE Commentary team for as long as humanly possible, I missed about half of the support races. And, for the record, the Red Bull Challenge was one of the most rejectfully awesome things ever with a three-wide photo finish in both races.
Mark Beretta wrote:So is it true that you've converted about 200 grand worth of race car parts into about $1500?
Garry Rogers wrote:Well, we actually got $1900 cash, plus GST! This is a legitimate sale!

kostas22 wrote:[So incredibly off-topic that it has zero to do with F1]
CLAUDIO RANIERI GOES OUTTA!!!!!
And here is a video of me driving a BMW X5. I am so ridiculously over the f***ing moon at this news I am plastering my message of joy all over the internetz right now.
I apologise for the disruption, normal service should be returned to you shortly.
DanielPT wrote:Erm... Why are you so happy about? After Mourinho left, Inter have been saddled with an ageing squad while devouring manager after manager at a rate way faster than Chelsea, if that is even possible... It will be hard for them to go back at the forefront in the next couple of years or more if they keep going like this...
WeirdKerr wrote:*yawn* football.....

kostas22 wrote: I am so ridiculously over the f***ing moon at this news I am plastering my message of joy all over the internetz right now.
I apologise for the disruption, normal service should be returned to you shortly.
Stramala describing Chris James wrote:probably the biggest c**t to ever grace the BTCC. He is proof you should need to pass a license test of some kind to have access to the internet.
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