shinji wrote:Getting a bit paranoid there Cap'n, methinks.
2nd that...
shinji wrote:Getting a bit paranoid there Cap'n, methinks.
Myrvold wrote:shinji wrote:Getting a bit paranoid there Cap'n, methinks.
2nd that...
DanielPT wrote:My problems against the official site are because this site is far behind other official sites, mainly their American counter-parts. These show that they think and care at least a bit for their fans. Having said that, the live timings are a good thing. But its an absolute MINIMUM...
dr-baker wrote:F1 could definitely do so much much with modern technology than it currently does. Maybe an official podcast with the press conferences on them. The F1 games with feeder series to work up to an F1 career. Grands Prix clips available on YouTube (even if it is only up to the previous season for the sake of copyright ?!?!). Many previous races available through iTunes/Amazon/etc. And you can think of more, I'm sure.
shinji wrote:Getting a bit paranoid there Cap'n, methinks.
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:shinji wrote:Getting a bit paranoid there Cap'n, methinks.
No, the excessive love for Liuzzi has Saward's sticky fingerprints all over it.
Captain Hammer wrote:shinji wrote:Getting a bit paranoid there Cap'n, methinks.
No, the excessive love for Liuzzi has Saward's sticky fingerprints all over it.
BlindCaveSalamander wrote:Captain Hammer wrote:shinji wrote:Getting a bit paranoid there Cap'n, methinks.
No, the excessive love for Liuzzi has Saward's sticky fingerprints all over it.
Knock it off with the Joe Saward-hate, already. We all know you don't like him, you don't have to keep beating us over the head with it.
Captain Hammer wrote:shinji wrote:Getting a bit paranoid there Cap'n, methinks.
No, the excessive love for Liuzzi has Saward's sticky fingerprints all over it.
DanielPT wrote:Resuscitating this thread to post a non story which is becoming increasingly obnoxious:
The VW to join F1 in the year 34072638832658 (or whatever) theme!
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.
Captain Hammer wrote:My source can beat up your source.
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:It's deeply unprofessional to refer to a colleague as a "hack".
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.
DanielPT wrote:I could not contain a smile when in a commentary he mentioned that he wanted to see Vettel in a bad car conveniently forgetting that Vettel drove for Toro Rosso before he drove a Red Bull...
Clint Bowyer at Richmond wrote:Thank you Juan Pablo (Montoya) for wrecking me, and then winning me the race!
eagleash wrote:It is a term once in common use in the UK used to describe journalists as a whole & doesn't/didn't necessarily have the derogatory connotations sometimes ascribed to it. It's a bit passe now certainly....working journalist or journeyman journalist might have been a better description.
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:eagleash wrote:It is a term once in common use in the UK used to describe journalists as a whole & doesn't/didn't necessarily have the derogatory connotations sometimes ascribed to it. It's a bit passe now certainly....working journalist or journeyman journalist might have been a better description.
Reading the article fully, it appears Saward is referring to said journalist on the basis that he is reporting soemthing different to Saward. Both stories are based on each journalist being told something different. Neither discloses their sources, so it really amounts to "this journalist does not agree with me, so he is not very good". So I'm seeing the term 'hack' being used in a very derogatory sense.
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.
Cynon wrote:DanielPT wrote:I could not contain a smile when in a commentary he mentioned that he wanted to see Vettel in a bad car conveniently forgetting that Vettel drove for Toro Rosso before he drove a Red Bull...
Considering that the Toro Rosso cars were hand me down Red Bulls at the time... and that the Red Bull was a shitewagon... yeah. Totally not spin at all! Vettel has totally never had experience with a bad car towards the back of the field!
Ferrim wrote:Neither have Hamilton and Massa, for that matter...
Ferrim wrote:Cynon wrote:DanielPT wrote:I could not contain a smile when in a commentary he mentioned that he wanted to see Vettel in a bad car conveniently forgetting that Vettel drove for Toro Rosso before he drove a Red Bull...
Considering that the Toro Rosso cars were hand me down Red Bulls at the time... and that the Red Bull was a shitewagon... yeah. Totally not spin at all! Vettel has totally never had experience with a bad car towards the back of the field!
Neither have Hamilton and Massa, for that matter...
Clint Bowyer at Richmond wrote:Thank you Juan Pablo (Montoya) for wrecking me, and then winning me the race!
Cynon wrote:Obvious sarcasm was apparently not obvious enough. Massa used to drive the Saubers and he was the Master of Disaster.
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.
Ed24 wrote:Ferrim wrote:Neither have Hamilton and Massa, for that matter...
Massa and Vettel don't even come close compared to Hamilton. Hamilton's worst car finished 3rd in the WCC!
Also, Hamilton's general attitude and performance when his car was quite bad, in early 2009, was terrible, and worse than Massa's, Kimi's etc. at the time.
Cynon wrote: Hamilton had half a season in a bad car and he was being beaten by Kovalainen until McLaren remembered who the #1 driver in the team was...
Ferrim wrote:You could argue that the car finished 3rd because of Hamilton, though. That car was overall no better than the Brawn, the Red Bull, the Toyota and the Williams (and probably the Ferrari as well, although they had the problem with Massa).
Ferrim wrote:Eeeh... sorry but Kovalainen was utterly trashed by Hamilton. At no point was Kovalainen beating him during their two years at McLaren, not even close on race pace. Maybe the scoreboard in 2009 didn't show it until the final part of the season, but that was because the car was a pile of crap.
Ferrim wrote:I seem to remember Hamilton wasn't beating Kovalainen in qualifying so easily in 2008, either. But, for some reason, on race day Hamilton always was streets ahead.
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.
If it turns out that Mallya is now announcing the sale of a minority of the shares or some such arrangement no-one is going to believe anything that he says as he will already have told a whopping great lie, insisting that the team is not for sale.
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:Joe Saward provides us with another example of bad journalism:If it turns out that Mallya is now announcing the sale of a minority of the shares or some such arrangement no-one is going to believe anything that he says as he will already have told a whopping great lie, insisting that the team is not for sale.
Except that Mallya never denied selling a minority stake in the team. He only said that he would not be selling the entire team.
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.
fjackdaw wrote:Captain Hammer wrote:Joe Saward provides us with another example of bad journalism:If it turns out that Mallya is now announcing the sale of a minority of the shares or some such arrangement no-one is going to believe anything that he says as he will already have told a whopping great lie, insisting that the team is not for sale.
Except that Mallya never denied selling a minority stake in the team. He only said that he would not be selling the entire team.
Why not try not reading Joe Saward's columns?
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.
Myrvold wrote:I'm guessing that McLaren strategy always was "Hamilton's strategy, but add some fuel to make his car heavier"
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