Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
1. Alexander Albon. From the pits to 5th on the road, that's a decent day's work for the chap.
2. Unreliability. We actually had a decent number of cars retire for once. More of this please.
2. Unreliability. We actually had a decent number of cars retire for once. More of this please.
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
Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
I'm also voting for Alexander Albon. He had an amazing recovery from a disastrous qualifying – while Albon still has his off days, he recovers from them a lot better than Gasly did!
Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
Also posting a vote for Albon. pits to 5th is definitely worthy of that.
Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
I'm going to go for a slightly different direction and say Carlos Sainz deserves a nomination here - best of the rest for the midfield pack, and managed to do well to hold his position despite being on older medium tyres against a midfield pack of drivers on newer soft tyres.
Martin Brundle, on watching a replay of Grosjean spinning:
"The problem with Grosjean is that he want to take a look back at the corner he's just exited"
"The problem with Grosjean is that he want to take a look back at the corner he's just exited"
Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
(1) Albon
(2) Mercedes strategy team - cool, calm, flexible, best result possible
Plus an honourable mention for Grosjean - his first lap retirement was neither his fault, nor Magnussen's.
(2) Mercedes strategy team - cool, calm, flexible, best result possible
Plus an honourable mention for Grosjean - his first lap retirement was neither his fault, nor Magnussen's.
- rachel1990
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Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
1- Albon. From Pit-lane to 5th was impressive
2- Sainz- Good pace and was best of the rest.
2- Sainz- Good pace and was best of the rest.
Benetton of 1992. Never a reject
Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
Albon - Last to 5th, Top 6 in every race with the A-team, and dueling at 180+ with a spongy brake pedal!
Paul Di Resta - The best commentator F1TV has. Bar none. Martin Brundle should never come back. Ever.
Paul Di Resta - The best commentator F1TV has. Bar none. Martin Brundle should never come back. Ever.
Professional Historian/Semi-Retired Drag Racer/Whiskey Enthusiast
"When I was still racing, I never once thought 'Oh, I can't damage the car here'." - Jolyn Palmer
Me either Jolyn, maybe that's why we're both out, eh?
"When I was still racing, I never once thought 'Oh, I can't damage the car here'." - Jolyn Palmer
Me either Jolyn, maybe that's why we're both out, eh?
- CaptainGetz12
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Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
1) Mclaren. Kept things together and kept above Renault.
2) Alexander Albon. Came to his own after the VSC to take 5th.
Honourable Mentions:
Toro Rosso (Provided most of the action today)
Sebastian Vettel (Showed he had the pace to win on race day, a shame team politics and an MGU-K failure ended his run)
2) Alexander Albon. Came to his own after the VSC to take 5th.
Honourable Mentions:
Toro Rosso (Provided most of the action today)
Sebastian Vettel (Showed he had the pace to win on race day, a shame team politics and an MGU-K failure ended his run)
Klon wrote:What did poor André do to you for him to be insulted like that?
- UncreativeUsername37
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Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
George Russell. He was, like, ahead of people.
Rob Dylan wrote:Mercedes paying homage to the other W12 chassis by breaking down 30 minutes in
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Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
Albon: I know it’s easy to say he should have finished at least 5th in a Red Bull but would Pierre Gasly have done the same earlier this year?
Vettel: Nice to see his ruthless streak come back. Also Leclerc can moan about team orders all he likes but Hamilton was closer to him than he was to Vettel. Seb should have won that today
Sainz: Comfortably best of the rest all race. I’d love to see him in one of the top 3 teams
Vettel: Nice to see his ruthless streak come back. Also Leclerc can moan about team orders all he likes but Hamilton was closer to him than he was to Vettel. Seb should have won that today
Sainz: Comfortably best of the rest all race. I’d love to see him in one of the top 3 teams
Last edited by Alextrax52 on 30 Sep 2019, 18:46, edited 1 time in total.
- Pacific Edge
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Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
1st. Albon: Wouldn't have seen that coming, and he did that on sheer merit, only 1 faster car retired and gave him a spot, other than that, he did that himself.
2nd: Sainz This is why I like how he does things, not the most exciting driver, but he just puts his head down and does the job.
2nd: Sainz This is why I like how he does things, not the most exciting driver, but he just puts his head down and does the job.
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Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
Wallio wrote:Paul Di Resta - The best commentator F1TV has. Bar none. Martin Brundle should never come back. Ever.
post of the year
Williams in the last few years http://imgur.com/sNFFMYF
Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
Came here to post one nomination: Paul di Resta.
He was enjoyable to listen to, he clearly knows what he's talking about as he runs through the possible strategies ahead of us during the race. And not just the strategy over the next few laps ("Will there be an undercut hurr-durr") but for everything. You can tell his brain works fast and that he's been in the racing business for a long time. But he was also enjoyable for his frankness. Not afraid to speak his mind, he was adamant that Sebastian Vettel should have won the race and deserved at least Driver of the Day, and lamented the unfairness of gaining an advantage under the VSC period. It was refreshing to hear a commentator not simply hold up the status quo with "I don't have an opinion on anything that actually matters". It reminds me of Brundle in the late 90s! Commentators need to throw out an opinion from time to time, to actually question whether what they're watching is actually really all it is.
Contrast him with David Croft, who outrightly said early in the race "I understood that!" sarcastically when Paul commented on how Mercedes were going to try to beat Ferrari on tyres. Contrast it with Croft, who mumbled and hesitated when asked his driver of the day as Hamilton went on to win, and didn't seem to have an opinion or insight into anything.
He was enjoyable to listen to, he clearly knows what he's talking about as he runs through the possible strategies ahead of us during the race. And not just the strategy over the next few laps ("Will there be an undercut hurr-durr") but for everything. You can tell his brain works fast and that he's been in the racing business for a long time. But he was also enjoyable for his frankness. Not afraid to speak his mind, he was adamant that Sebastian Vettel should have won the race and deserved at least Driver of the Day, and lamented the unfairness of gaining an advantage under the VSC period. It was refreshing to hear a commentator not simply hold up the status quo with "I don't have an opinion on anything that actually matters". It reminds me of Brundle in the late 90s! Commentators need to throw out an opinion from time to time, to actually question whether what they're watching is actually really all it is.
Contrast him with David Croft, who outrightly said early in the race "I understood that!" sarcastically when Paul commented on how Mercedes were going to try to beat Ferrari on tyres. Contrast it with Croft, who mumbled and hesitated when asked his driver of the day as Hamilton went on to win, and didn't seem to have an opinion or insight into anything.
Felipe Nasr - the least forgettable F1 driver!Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
Support was concentrated to a very few candidates on this thread, so there are three options to choose from for this award. You have 48 hours 

Felipe Nasr - the least forgettable F1 driver!Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
Re: Infinite Improbability Drive of the Race - Russia
A man with braking problems starts from the back and still finishes 5th? A decent day's driving for Mr Albon, who's certainly proving that even on his bad days he can deliver the goods. Most importantly, when being directly compared to his predecessor, Alexander Albon is doing everything right to secure his 2020 Red Bull seat, and this race has only solidified his case. Good job, Alex.
Felipe Nasr - the least forgettable F1 driver!Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.