tzerof1 wrote:Plus there's also the fact that the S941 and S951 are of the same lineage as the Andrea Moda S921.
Sunshine_Baby_[IT] wrote:tzerof1 wrote:Plus there's also the fact that the S941 and S951 are of the same lineage as the Andrea Moda S921.
In my opinion they were both the best looking reject cars ever.
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![]()
Eurobrun?eurobrun wrote:Sunshine_Baby_[IT] wrote:tzerof1 wrote:Plus there's also the fact that the S941 and S951 are of the same lineage as the Andrea Moda S921.
In my opinion they were both the best looking reject cars ever.
This
I think everyone can guess my favourite reject team
wmetcalf68 wrote:Eurobrun?eurobrun wrote:Sunshine_Baby_[IT] wrote:In my opinion they were both the best looking reject cars ever.
This
I think everyone can guess my favourite reject team
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![]()
Sunshine_Baby_[IT] wrote:In my opinion they were both the best looking reject cars ever.
tzerof1 wrote:Sunshine_Baby_[IT] wrote:In my opinion they were both the best looking reject cars ever.
Definitely agree with that. The S921 could've possibly qualified in the lower midfield if it were being run by a different team!
AdrianSutil wrote:tzerof1 wrote:Sunshine_Baby_[IT] wrote:In my opinion they were both the best looking reject cars ever.
Definitely agree with that. The S921 could've possibly qualified in the lower midfield if it were being run by a different team!
The S921 had so much potential in it's day. Anyone with half an F1 brain wouldve got that team fighting midtable easily. I've seen pictures of Sassetti, and you can just TELL he doesn't care about the racing side of F1.
AdrianSutil wrote:Before sucking the blood out of it with endless driver, engine and sponsor swapping until your left with nothing but mounting debts...
MansellsEyebrows wrote:Favourite Future Reject: Narain Karthikeyan; First Indian in F1, Loveable guy, reject speed. What's not to like?
redbulljack14 wrote:MansellsEyebrows wrote:Favourite Future Reject: Narain Karthikeyan; First Indian in F1, Loveable guy, reject speed. What's not to like?
Karthikeyan's not a reject, and never will be.
Nuppiz wrote:redbulljack14 wrote:MansellsEyebrows wrote:Favourite Future Reject: Narain Karthikeyan; First Indian in F1, Loveable guy, reject speed. What's not to like?
Karthikeyan's not a reject, and never will be.
Thanks to Michelin tyres. But, it still counts as Enoch has previously stated.
redbulljack14 wrote:Indeed it does. I feel it's kind of a crime that he's not a reject, whilst great drivers such as Zanardi are.
AdrianSutil wrote:redbulljack14 wrote:Indeed it does. I feel it's kind of a crime that he's not a reject, whilst great drivers such as Zanardi are.
Fixed. And rightly so I feel...
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.
Taki Inoue fanboy wrote:Driver: Yuji Ide. Watching him drive was quite simply comedy gold, better than any episode of Friends (although no one is better than Taki Inoue. I have a knife).
Sunshine_Baby_[IT] wrote:Inoue and Ide in the same team would have been a great thing!
tzerof1 wrote:Sunshine_Baby_[IT] wrote:Inoue and Ide in the same team would have been a great thing!
A great thing for Rejectdom! But perhaps not for the team's budget in the way of massive fines and exponential repair bills
dr-baker wrote:But Inoue could always win the team compensation by continuously being run over by course cars...
tzerof1 wrote:dr-baker wrote:But Inoue could always win the team compensation by continuously being run over by course cars...
True, until the insurance company catches on and Inoue gets arrested for insurance fraud. And gets hauled out of the paddock Andrea Sasseti style. Then Inoue would probably become the second man to have his Super License revoked, as punishment for bringing the sport into disrepute.
dr-baker wrote:tzerof1 wrote:Are you telling me that this was his fault? Plus the safety car crashing into his Footwork in Monaco?
tzerof1 wrote:dr-baker wrote:But Inoue could always win the team compensation by continuously being run over by course cars...
True, until the insurance company catches on and Inoue gets arrested for insurance fraud. And gets hauled out of the paddock Andrea Sasseti style. Then Inoue would probably become the second man to have his Super License revoked, as punishment for bringing the sport into disrepute.
redbulljack14 wrote:MansellsEyebrows wrote:Favourite Future Reject: Narain Karthikeyan; First Indian in F1, Loveable guy, reject speed. What's not to like?
Karthikeyan's not a reject, and never will be.
MansellsEyebrows wrote:redbulljack14 wrote:MansellsEyebrows wrote:Favourite Future Reject: Narain Karthikeyan; First Indian in F1, Loveable guy, reject speed. What's not to like?
Karthikeyan's not a reject, and never will be.
Blast, you are right, and all thanks to me completely forgetting about the Indianapolis 2005 fiasco (I try to blank it from memory). However, even if I'm wrong, I feel happy for Karthikeyan now. Well done for unrejectifying yourself Narain, even if I'm 7 years late.
Wizzie wrote:AdrianSutil wrote:redbulljack14 wrote:Indeed it does. I feel it's kind of a crime that he's not a reject, whilst great drivers such as Zanardi are.
Fixed. And rightly so I feel...
BINGO! Somebody give this man a beer. Seriously, the fact that he never became a World Champion is a crime of the highest magnitude. (I mean, to be faster than Michael freaking Schumacher in a race simulation in the same car has to be worth something)
redbulljack14 wrote:Wizzie wrote:redbulljack14 wrote:Indeed it does. I feel it's kind of a crime that he's not a reject, whilst great drivers such as Zanardi are.
BINGO! Somebody give this man a beer. Seriously, the fact that he never became a World Champion is a crime of the highest magnitude. (I mean, to be faster than Michael freaking Schumacher in a race simulation in the same car has to be worth something)
How could I forget him, I feel like a complete twat now.
Although that's partially down to the fact that I can't fathom him being a reject. It just doesn't fit.
rffp wrote:CarlosFerreira wrote:For drivers, I'm picking up Pedro Lamy. Extremely gifted, as he went on to show everywhere he raced (Le Mans, LMS, GT Series, Sebring, 'Ring - he won them all!), but Lotus and Minardi just didn't provide.
By the way, talking about reject drivers and races, which was the race in F3000 that Lamy was in the lead and started celebrating the victory one lap before the end, hence giving the victory on Olivier Panis' lap?
nigellamansell wrote:Team has to Life....."Revolutionary" engine and a budget that makes HRT look like bloated plutocrats....and years off the pace
Does Burti count as a reject? I'm picking him purely because Coulthard was so rejectful trying to get past him in Monaco that year. Masterful display of defensive driving.
If I can't have Burti then I'll pick Olivier Grouillard. I remember the bile and venom Murray used when he was forced to mention him.
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.
Faustus wrote:rffp wrote:CarlosFerreira wrote:For drivers, I'm picking up Pedro Lamy. Extremely gifted, as he went on to show everywhere he raced (Le Mans, LMS, GT Series, Sebring, 'Ring - he won them all!), but Lotus and Minardi just didn't provide.
By the way, talking about reject drivers and races, which was the race in F3000 that Lamy was in the lead and started celebrating the victory one lap before the end, hence giving the victory on Olivier Panis' lap?
Reviving an old post here, but I think it was Magny-Cours.
And by the way, Lamy is an arsehole.
AdrianSutil wrote:Faustus wrote:rffp wrote:
By the way, talking about reject drivers and races, which was the race in F3000 that Lamy was in the lead and started celebrating the victory one lap before the end, hence giving the victory on Olivier Panis' lap?
Reviving an old post here, but I think it was Magny-Cours.
And by the way, Lamy is an arsehole.
I assume you speak from experience?
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:Well, Faustus has worked with pretty much every other driver on Earth so I guess so
Faustus wrote:Wizzie wrote:Well, Faustus has worked with pretty much every other driver on Earth so I guess so
I wouldn't go that far, but I had the misfortune of meeting the guy and trying to talk to him for 10 minutes and he was just an arsehole. Seems to be the industry's general opinion of him, except in Portugal.
Blue Brazil wrote: An engine which was about as useful as a fart against a hurricane.
mlincoln wrote:Though a very common task to see in F1, it would be quite embarrassing to feel it almost and realize that you are not going to be able to proceed anything serious and ambitious about it. A very sad route but one that people should realize and experience just to get things going on either side. I would not be surprised to see a lot of the newer bloods just go right through them.
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.
mlincoln wrote:Though a very common task to see in F1, it would be quite embarrassing to feel it almost and realize that you are not going to be able to proceed anything serious and ambitious about it. A very sad route but one that people should realize and experience just to get things going on either side. I would not be surprised to see a lot of the newer bloods just go right through them.
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![]()
mlincoln wrote:Though a very common task to see in F1, it would be quite embarrassing to feel it almost and realize that you are not going to be able to proceed anything serious and ambitious about it. A very sad route but one that people should realize and experience just to get things going on either side. I would not be surprised to see a lot of the newer bloods just go right through them.
Jocke1 wrote:I'm Brian and so is my wife.
leo76 wrote:Come on Baker, we don't need you scaring people off. We're not like that on here.
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