What F1 was

Chris_D

Elite
 Mostly Holland. Sometimes UK.
The heyday for me personally; the 'Turbo era'.

Turbo's, drivers with at least a modicum of charisma/personality, proper manly-men type gear changes, few or no team orders, races won on the track and not from in the pits (even at Monaco). Tell me F1 hasn't been in a slow, gradual decline ever since.
F1 is just sh!t on a stick in comparison these days.

[youtube]VSUivX4wu7M[/youtube]
Some of those camera angles are epic.
 
Those were indeed the days. Don't"t know what it is like now. I have given up watching. :cry:
 
Started watching again when Lewis Hamilton was winning but got bored with it. Haven't watch properly since the days of James Hunt etc. Got fed up with the Germans winning all the time. Shoemuckers.
 
I went to the British GP in around 1988 as a contractor, so got a pass to access everywhere for the whole weekend. Standing in the pit lane when they fired up and revved the cars was an amazing experience. They revved so quickly it sounded like a dog's bark.

The heyday for me was the early '90s with Williams and Mansell. Had a slight affinity with Williams as I worked opposite their factory in Didcot for a while and my mate was always there mending their CNC milling machines.
 
Don`t watch it anymore apart from the 10 minute highlights if I see it on YouTube . Mainly watch the endurance racing or rallying . Get yourself to a historic racing event and take a big sniff of the air in the pits :D
 
For me the heyday was Senna vs. Prost. (and I was 100% Senna of course :wink: )
So that video falls exactly in that era. Senna showed some ultimate moves and control in his car back in those days, especially when it rained.

The 2021 season gave a similar vibe to that era. Including some FIA controversy (as if Jean-Marie himself was back again :lol: )
 
GuidoK said:
I was 100% Senna of course :wink:
Don't get me started on that sleazeball Balestre and that bent-nosed frog!
Balestre admitted later that he fixed Japan 89 in favour of Prost. The derty onion-stinking fekkers! lol
But the controversy made for some exceptional performances by Senna and eventual world championships for him though.

Well, maybe if F1 was more about driver aptitude and more evenly-matched racing on track rather than technical characteristics of the cars giving win/no-win definition it would be more interesting.
As it is, these days you win or lose a race based on if car upgrades are going to be available at the next race.
WTF? Just rubbish.
 
Without a doubt the Senna, Prost, Mansell years and of course Murray Walker, never missed a race. Cars are safer today but thats it.

Never watch it anymore :(

Always love this clip, Senna was always ahead of the game.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1jxSjt3wU3s&t=21s

Tim.
 
Senna was a great driver but towards the end of his career he was dependent on others giving way otherwise he crashed into them. He rear ended Wurtz at Monaco coming out of the tunnel and stopped him having his first podium. He was angry when Eddie Irving unlapped himself by passing him and later blamed Irvine. Eddie did nothing wrong and was racing. I have the greatest respect for Senna, but like many before him he started to make mistakes and wanted a car low on suspension to give more speed but on a bumpy track at Imola....
 
BeeEmm said:
Senna was a great driver but towards the end of his career he was dependent on others giving way otherwise he crashed into them. He rear ended Wurtz at Monaco coming out of the tunnel and stopped him having his first podium. He was angry when Eddie Irving unlapped himself by passing him and later blamed Irvine. Eddie did nothing wrong and was racing. I have the greatest respect for Senna, but like many before him he started to make mistakes and wanted a car low on suspension to give more speed but on a bumpy track at Imola....
Poor old Roland Ratzenberger never gets a mention though, as Senna took all the headlines that weekend.
As I said earlier, I worked opposite the Williams factory at Didcot in the '90s. The gates to their factory became a shrine to Senna. Never seen so many flowers in one place.
 
Pondrew said:
BeeEmm said:
Senna was a great driver but towards the end of his career he was dependent on others giving way otherwise he crashed into them. He rear ended Wurtz at Monaco coming out of the tunnel and stopped him having his first podium. He was angry when Eddie Irving unlapped himself by passing him and later blamed Irvine. Eddie did nothing wrong and was racing. I have the greatest respect for Senna, but like many before him he started to make mistakes and wanted a car low on suspension to give more speed but on a bumpy track at Imola....
Poor old Roland Ratzenberger never gets a mention though, as Senna took all the headlines that weekend.
As I said earlier, I worked opposite the Williams factory at Didcot in the '90s. The gates to their factory became a shrine to Senna. Never seen so many flowers in one place.

It was a bad weekend alround :( I was on holiday at St Helier at the time and didn't have a mobile phone or internet back then. I only found out on the Monday when seeing the newpapers.

Tim.
 
Back
Top Bottom