johnston21 wrote:What was the Full-Course Yellow for during the time that Lewis retired from the race??? ...perhaps it was showing by mistake?
If it was meant for Alg., I would have expected it to be "localized."
That was for Algeusari... er, Jamie's car stopped on the track, and it was a local yellow. That's what the yellow on the lap counter means. A full-course yellow is marked by a "SC".
johnston21 wrote:What was the Full-Course Yellow for during the time that Lewis retired from the race??? ...perhaps it was showing by mistake?
If it was meant for Alg., I would have expected it to be "localized."
That was for Algeusari... er, Jamie's car stopped on the track, and it was a local yellow. That's what the yellow on the lap counter means. A full-course yellow is marked by a "SC".
Yannick wrote:Kobayashi! What a move! And now he's P3, so after his own stop he will have gained quite a few places.
RBR and Toro Rosso will need to dress their pit crews differently next season to avoid attempts at stealing expensive fuel, like Alguersuari tried today.
This year they were next to each other, next year there is six teams between them.
Talking about similar mistakes, I think Irvine did the same in his Jordan days (I can remember a picture of it) as did Frentzen in Jerez 1997 (this event was missed due to another more significant event on the same lap)
Yannick wrote:Kobayashi! What a move! And now he's P3, so after his own stop he will have gained quite a few places.
RBR and Toro Rosso will need to dress their pit crews differently next season to avoid attempts at stealing expensive fuel, like Alguersuari tried today.
This year they were next to each other, next year there is six teams between them.
Talking about similar mistakes, I think Irvine did the same in his Jordan days (I can remember a picture of it) as did Frentzen in Jerez 1997 (this event was missed due to another more significant event on the same lap)
I remember the Frentzen-in-the-McLaren-garage incident. McLaren had said before the race that they'd rather give Williams a hand in beating Ferrari, if it came it that. We were joking about it, then Frentzen messed up and one of my friends made a comment as to just committed McLaren were to helping Williams, that they very nearly changed HH's tyres. Watching F1 is much more fun with friends around.
CarlosFerreira wrote:Guys, is the whole thing getting slightly out of hand? Maybe we should drop it and go back to discussing the race, huh?
7
I think we may have exhausted discussing the race.
OK, then we can proceed to discuss about cricket Who will won the World Cup next time?
Ireland ftw! I don't follow cricket, but I remember at the last World Cup we beat Pakistan and the country went cricket-crazy for about a fortnight. Then we got back to following a pathetic football team and a not-so-pathetic rugby team. Australia better watch out, we've got Donncha O'Callaghan!
No but Irish rugby is in a brilliant state right now, but for Ronan O'Gara. We need to get Johnny Sexton in there at outhalf sharpish.
mario wrote:I'm wondering what the hell has been going on in this thread [...] it's turned into a bizarre detour into mythical flying horses and the sort of search engine results that CoopsII is going to have a very hard time explaining ...
thehemogoblin wrote:Someone care to try to explain cricket in one sentence?
Standing in the middle of a field all day getting sunstroke.
mario wrote:I'm wondering what the hell has been going on in this thread [...] it's turned into a bizarre detour into mythical flying horses and the sort of search engine results that CoopsII is going to have a very hard time explaining ...
By coincidence, I dreamt last night in the periphery of one of my dreams that there had been a "test match" going on for two hundred years, and that the game was just about to come to an end at last. I couldn't understand how the original players could have been bothered to start it, knowing that they wouldn't be alive to see the outcome.
Both cricket and golf would seem boring if you're just flicking through the TV channels, though I know that golf is engrossing if you understand what's going on and watch it for a decent length of time. Certainly some of my best sporting memories are watching the conclusions of majors and Ryder Cups (applied for tickets in 2006 - didn't get them ). I'm guessing cricket is similar, otherwise noone would watch/attend.
The most boring sport has to be marathon running. More than two hours of exhausted, slow speed, strategic nothingness.
shinji wrote:Both cricket and golf would seem boring if you're just flicking through the TV channels, though I know that golf is engrossing if you understand what's going on and watch it for a decent length of time. Certainly some of my best sporting memories are watching the conclusions of majors and Ryder Cups (applied for tickets in 2006 - didn't get them ). I'm guessing cricket is similar, otherwise noone would watch/attend.
The most boring sport has to be marathon running. More than two hours of exhausted, slow speed, strategic nothingness.
And you can pretty much predict the winner before the starting...