BlindCaveSalamander wrote:Gauthier will hire any driver who offers to match what Robert Anderson is currently bringing to the team. So long as they can prove they are faster. We are also interested in running customer Mercedes engines, should the option be available to us.
Jean-Denis Deletraz could bring cash but I don't want anymore real drivers in the series. Plinio Vida is backed by Brazilian oil companies.
CoopsII wrote:On occasion I have ventured into the PMM forum but beat a hasty retreat soon after as it resembles some sort of bad acid trip in there
tristan1117 wrote:Jean-Denis Deletraz could bring cash but I don't want anymore real drivers in the series. Plinio Vida is backed by Brazilian oil companies.
I think I "own" him so I'll say to remove him from the series. We'll say he retired to the BTCC.
BlindCaveSalamander wrote:
Pablo da Silva wrote:If anyone's interested in leaving McLaren i'll gladly take that seat
James Davies wrote:NO YOU BLOODY WELL WON'T. 1994 was bad enough, I am not putting up with you again.
Gauthier will hire any driver who offers to match what Robert Anderson is currently bringing to the team. So long as they can prove they are faster. We are also interested in running customer Mercedes engines, should the option be available to us.
Da Silva kindly declines the offer, but thanks them for having an interest in them.
Mistakes in potatoes will ALWAYS happen Trulli bad puns... IN JAIL NO ONE CAN HEAR YOU SCREAM
Don Rennis wrote:Right. That's it! I've had it up to here with the bathplugging piece of shite transmission! *Leaves the circuit for the first flight back to Woking to personally help fix the problem.*
Biscione wrote:"Some Turkemenistani gulag repurposed for residential use" is the best way yet I've heard to describe North / East Glasgow.
Zimmer will most certainly be racing for Benetton next season. That bet with Davies is looking quite safe at the moment Benetton would like Spokes to remain on at the team, but if he feels his services would be better used elesewhere, he's free to go (and I wouldn't blame him, to be honest).
Shizuka wrote:DAMS offers a contract for both drivers for another year, as both Niko and James are rising through the ranks, with very little reliability problems.
DAMS seems to be constantly improving, so Nurminen accepts this offer. As if there were any other options for him
Eurosport broadcast for the 1990 Mexican GP prequalifying: "The Life, it looked very lifeless yet again... in fact Bruno did one, slow lap"
BlindCaveSalamander wrote:Gauthier will hire any driver who offers to match what Robert Anderson is currently bringing to the team. So long as they can prove they are faster. We are also interested in running customer Mercedes engines, should the option be available to us.
Jean-Denis Deletraz could bring cash but I don't want anymore real drivers in the series. Plinio Vida is backed by Brazilian oil companies.
Brazilian oil, you say? That will do nicely. We'll run Vida at the Duel in the Desert in preparation for next year.
Sebastian Vettel wrote:If I was good at losing, I wouldn't be in Formula 1
Shizuka wrote:DAMS offers a contract for both drivers for another year, as both Niko and James are rising through the ranks, with very little reliability problems.
DAMS seems to be constantly improving, so Nurminen accepts this offer. As if there were any other options for him
pasta_maldonado wrote:Is it possible to have different engine manufacturers than in real life?
Only under special circumstances. For example, if your team isn't supposed to exist at the time, they can switch engines. Therefore, Lola, Volga and DAMS can pick their engines (it should a feasible choice).
CoopsII wrote:On occasion I have ventured into the PMM forum but beat a hasty retreat soon after as it resembles some sort of bad acid trip in there
MCALLISTER RENEWS MCLAREN CONTRACT, '98 "A CRUCIAL YEAR"
Spanish driver Rory McAllister has confirmed today he had renewed his McLaren contract ahead of the 1998 F1 season. The arrangement extends his contract with the English squad for one more season, but it's unclear what McAllister will do after next season.
"McLaren, despite all our hiccups this year, looks a very strong team. We have a dedicated team manager, a working relationship with Mercedes-Benz and now we also have Adrian Newey on our side too. It should be a ver successful season ahead for us.
However, it's difficult for me to confirm what I'll do after 1998. I need to see what will come out of next season, what my form will be, to dissipate any doubts about my future. For that, it will be a crucial year for me, perhaps the most important of my career. My nephew Phoenix also requires some of my attention, since he's coming up fast in the feeder categories and harbours hopes of one day competing in F1 and be as succesful, if not more succesful, as me".
West McLaren Mercedes can now thus confirm their lineup for next season after James Davies and test and reserve driver Sammy Jones confirmed staying with the Woking squad for '98.
Damon Cannon will happily stay with Jordan for 1998.
Fetzie on Ferrari wrote:How does a driver hurtling around a race track while they're sous-viding in their overalls have a better understanding of the race than a team of strategy engineers in an air-conditioned room?l
pasta_maldonado wrote:Williams ask Andrew Spokes if he wants to join our team Is it possible to have different engine manufacturers than in real life?
Andrew Spokes wrote:To drive for Williams would be a dream. Unfortunately it seems that Benetton cannot provide me with a car that can finish races at the moment.
pasta_maldonado wrote:Williams ask Andrew Spokes if he wants to join our team Is it possible to have different engine manufacturers than in real life?
Andrew Spokes wrote:To drive for Williams would be a dream. Unfortunately it seems that Benetton cannot provide me with a car that can finish races at the moment.
Autosport wrote:SPOKES SIGNS SPECIAL CONTRACT Andrew Spokes Signs For Williams For 1998 After much speculation in the media as to the second Williams driver for 1998, joint seatholder Herrmann Mann has announced the signing of Andrew Spokes for 1998.
"The man has clear talent" said Herrmann "his drives in good and bad cars continue to impress me, and I feel that he will be able to win races at Williams"
This has come after Spokes publicly said it would "be a dream" to drive for Williams. However, this leaves Pieter Kickert in a difficult place. Unless Daniel Moreno leaves Williams at the end of the year, he could ebe out of a seat.
Pending any unforseen mishaps, Moreno will drive for Williams in 1998.
As for da Silva, he would like to race for a different team next season, if he can help it, and he is interested in Spokes' vacant Benetton seat and Cannon's Jordan seat pending his decision on racing for that team in 1998. Otherwise, da Silva will race for Sauber (again) in 1998.
And with Pieter Kickert being replaced in 1998, Stewart GP will attempt to sign him to a contract in 1998.
Mistakes in potatoes will ALWAYS happen Trulli bad puns... IN JAIL NO ONE CAN HEAR YOU SCREAM
BlindCaveSalamander wrote:Gauthier will hire any driver who offers to match what Robert Anderson is currently bringing to the team. So long as they can prove they are faster. We are also interested in running customer Mercedes engines, should the option be available to us.
Jean-Denis Deletraz could bring cash but I don't want anymore real drivers in the series. Plinio Vida is backed by Brazilian oil companies.
Brazilian oil, you say? That will do nicely. We'll run Vida at the Duel in the Desert in preparation for next year.
Is Vida in immediately or will Anderson continue for the time being?
CoopsII wrote:On occasion I have ventured into the PMM forum but beat a hasty retreat soon after as it resembles some sort of bad acid trip in there
tristan1117 wrote:Only under special circumstances. For example, if your team isn't supposed to exist at the time, they can switch engines. Therefore, Lola, Volga and DAMS can pick their engines (it should a feasible choice).
Rumours say Renault Sport is quitting at the end of 1997. Peugeot however doesn't want to leave, so the DAMS-Peugeot deal is on for 1998.
First things first, Kickert would prefer to stay ar Williams and wants to know what he's done to deserve being on the chopping block. As for the second seat at Benetton, anyone interested can state their interest, and I will decide at some point.
So which drivers are interested in the second Prost-Peugeot? (i suppose keeping Megumi is an option, as not many teams would be interested in a driver who doesn't score any points in a race-winning car...)
This wrote:So which drivers are interested in the second Prost-Peugeot? (i suppose keeping Megumi is an option, as not many teams would be interested in a driver who doesn't score any points in a race-winning car...)
James Allen is interested.
Mistakes in potatoes will ALWAYS happen Trulli bad puns... IN JAIL NO ONE CAN HEAR YOU SCREAM
This wrote:So which drivers are interested in the second Prost-Peugeot? (i suppose keeping Megumi is an option, as not many teams would be interested in a driver who doesn't score any points in a race-winning car...)
James Allen is interested.
Clivio Durand is interested. (Allez les blues?)
CoopsII wrote:On occasion I have ventured into the PMM forum but beat a hasty retreat soon after as it resembles some sort of bad acid trip in there
pasta_maldonado wrote:Is it possible to have different engine manufacturers than in real life?
Only under special circumstances. For example, if your team isn't supposed to exist at the time, they can switch engines. Therefore, Lola, Volga and DAMS can pick their engines (it should a feasible choice).
Volga Grand Prix is interested in talks with Yamaha on engine supply for the season 1998
Masta Valsattis: I honestly have my doubts over the team and car for next season. The Mugen engine isnt as reliable as I'd have liked.
Alain Ligier wrote:Le Mugen is from ze past. Ve have now the vitesse and riabilité of the Peugeot! Ve are also more français than ever, so Durand vould be très interessant!
Dennis Mignolet wrote:What he's trying to say is that we now have works engines, so we can put more focus on the car, and a new, more stable management, including tehcnical director Alain Ligier, aerodynamicist Gérard Prost and commecial director Guy Larousse.
14. James Allen (DAMS) - 1:54.980 15. Ben Fleet (Stewart) - 1:55.024 16. Bernhard Pech (Sauber) - 1:55.184 17. Jorg Scrattenheim (Arrows) - 1:55.188 18. Reiko Megumi (Ligier) - 1:55.477 19. Jan van der Maeyede (Stewart) - 1:55.881 20. Stephano Baroncelli (Arrows) - 1:56.368 21. Gio van Dycke (Minardi) - 1:56.371 22. Miko Fakkinen (Minardi) - 1:56.494 23. Martin McFry (Gauthier) - 1:56.531 24. Poppy Whitechapel (Lola) - 1:56.735 25. Robert Anderson (Gauthier) - 1:56.863 26. Anton Kaliniczenko (Volga) - 2:03.276 DNQ Siergiej Rozvadoskij (Volga) - 2:04.042 DNQ Massimiliano Patrese (Lola) - 2:04.372
Tom Douglas takes pole by a considerable margin. Kaliniczenko and Rozvadoskij were way behind because of the wet Q1 session. This let Anderson onto the grid. James Davies was ROTQ, by the way.
CoopsII wrote:On occasion I have ventured into the PMM forum but beat a hasty retreat soon after as it resembles some sort of bad acid trip in there
tristan1117 wrote:James Davies was ROTQ, by the way.
James Davies wrote:Not my fault! There was a shite ton of traffic every time I went on the track, frankly I'm surprised I qualified as high as I did. Then again, I am the absolute best, so maybe I shouldn't be surprised...
Guillaume Gauthier wrote:ANDERSON! Why ze 'ell are you only 3 tenths off of McFry!?
Sebastian Vettel wrote:If I was good at losing, I wouldn't be in Formula 1