Wednesday, 21 September 2016

Car, Bike, Bike, Car, Or How About Both!

Anyone remember Carl Fogarty, Britain's World Superbike hero and national icon? Well there are three Brits in the top three places of the World Superbike Championship right now and I wonder how many people who aren't dyed in the wool bike racing fans can name them.

They are Jonathon Rea, the reigning champion, and currently leading the championship in his title defence, multiple race winner Tom Sykes and Chaz Davies, the champion in 2011, currently lying third. You can and should watch highlights on ITV, or better get along to a race. Magny Cours is next and it's just over the channel in France.

World Superbikes are supported by Supersport races and Superstock races, of course they are race tuned, but they're really pretty close to the bikes you can buy, especially the latter class. You can't buy an F1 car so easily and the racing's not so close these days in F1 either. Don't give up on the cars, but if you haven't watched bike racing, then perhaps you should.

Malcolm Snook former racer of cars and bikes.

Monday, 19 September 2016

Don't Panic Get A Strategy

I watched British Superbike Racing from Oulton Park recently and the F1 from Singapore. Thrills and spills in Superbikes resulting from close racing and dicing. Most of the excitement in F1, (single seater racing cars were my first love by the way) comes these days from whether the gap is getting bigger or smaller.

Rosberg was peerless, winning the two hundredth Grand Prix he has taken part in. It seems he must be the winningist driver not to have won the championship, but he is looking like a champion right now. He's won three races on the trot since the summer break, all, and I think this is significant, at places where he has never won before.

Being British I should support Lewis, but I have to say I like Nico's personality and if he wins it on merit then I wish him the very best.

I've long been a Kimi fan and when he was in front of Lewis on yellow sidewall tyres I expected him to go to the end. Ferrari knew they'd made a mistake when they radioed him in the pits exit telling him he could do it, hoping he would cover for their error. The ultrasofts just weren't that much of an advantage, certainly not against a Mercedes. Kimi had been on red hot form all weekend and a podium was thrown away.

The pieces fell into place for Vettel, last to fifth and doubtless Ferrari managers will point to that to hide their embarrassment, but they need a strategist of the calibre of Ross Brawn and they need him soon. I'd like to offer my services but......

Motor Racing Gifts

Wednesday, 14 September 2016

Boys On Bikes Or Boys In Cars?

Moto GP is in rude good health. I worked for Yamaha in the Rainey, Schwantz, Doohan era, which was also a golden age with Rainey on a Yamaha, Schwantz on a Suzuki and Doohan on a Honda all very closely matched and the advantage varying circuit to circuit, race to race.

In recent years Ducati have blown hot and cold and Suzuki were almost reduced to also rans, but no more, with eight winners from eight races and four manufacturers at the cutting edge, Moto GP is providing far better racing than F1 and a one hundred thousand strong crowd at Misano were not disappointed. Moto GP2 and 3 were great races too.

Compare Formula One's one team monopoly with eight winners from eight races, four manufacturers and no artificial overtaking aids. Real racing, fast, brave and thrilling. Cars were my first love but......

Congratulations to Dani Pedrosa on a stunning race, along with thousands of Italians I was hoping to see Rossi win, I'd love him to take one more championship, but Dani was amazing, I believe he's won one race at least every season he's been in the senior category and this weekend ended his longest drought of podium finishes. Brilliant.

I wonder if the new owners of F1 can bring back mechanical grip, close racing and a fairer share of the money, which just might make it a sport again.

Gifts for Bikers

Tuesday, 6 September 2016

BORING – NOT MY BLOG – THE RACE


Some of the pre-race news wasn't boring in Monza but the race was highly predictable after the first corner and entirely predictable come the last third. It's a great shame. Monza is one of the world's top three race tracks in my opinion with a fabulous history and the Italians are passionate about their racing. We and they deserve better.

In 1971 Peter Gethin won by a nose over the line, from the great Ronnie Peterson but there were effectively five cars in the group he led over the finish. There were four different marques in the top five and five in the top six! We've seen nothing quite like it since and we never will again if things stay as they are.

Eddie Jordan's pre-race revelation that F1 is about to change hands was the most exciting thing that happened all weekend, but what will actually transpire remains to be seen. Then we had the news that McLaren are to dispense with the services of Jenson Button, for next year, but keep him on as reserve driver with an option for 2018.

It may be, as the ever diplomatic Button says, that he will relish the break and that he wants to do other things. However, he has previously said that F1 is his life. I used to race Formula Fords and I can remember thinking once, on a long straight on the Brands GP circuit, 'relish this now because you won't always be able to do it'. When it became financially impossible to carry on racing it hurt me deeply. I fear that we've seen the last of Jenson and that he may come to regret what he's agreed to.

The people at McLaren may want to secure Stoffel Vandoorne, but they don't want a driver of Jenson's calibre going to another top team, because he's the complete article right now. Alonso, who many F1 watchers still consider the best driver in F1 has described Jenson as the most complete team mate he's ever raced with.

Other F1 watchers rave about Lewis Hamilton, but when Lewis and Jenson were team mates Jenson scored more points, if Nico could say that he'd be the world champion. I'd have liked to see Jenson go to Williams and Claire Williams says she'd have loved to sign him. He has to be in a top car though, well, Renault is a works team with a stellar history, they're in some difficulty right now, but we hear all the effort is going into next years car built to the new rules. Those situations often turn things around. Wouldn't do Renault sales in the UK any harm to have two British drivers.

Ron Dennis claims that with Honda, McLaren will once again dominate, but it's hard to see on current form. We've seen that Jenson can be ruthless on track and peerless in the wet, that he understands tyres and set up and race strategy, possibly better than anyone else, but no one is perfect. Jenson is possibly too much of a gentleman off the track, but that is a reason why sponsors adore him and that's yet another reason for Ron to keep him dangling. Sad and probably cynical.

Once Lewis fluffed the start a Rosberg win was simply down to reliability and keeping out of trouble and Rosberg is nothing if not competent. That Lewis would get past the Ferraris was predictable on relative performance, the only real question was whether Ricciardo would pass Bottas given the Williams straight line speed. I thought he would, Red Bull got the tyre strategy dead right, Ricciardo released his electrical energy at just the right moment and didn't hesitate and so he did. He came from too far back some would say, but no lock up, superb control and he got the result he might not have got had he been patient.

There was some racing down the order, Jenson was pushed out more or less at the start by a Sauber and came from last to twelfth in a car which is improved but is still far from truly competitive, if that doesn't underline his on-track calibre I don't know what does. Come backs, even if they happen, often end in tears, Jenson should have stayed by hook or by crook.

The British Motorcycle Grand Prix was far from boring. Congratulations to Maverick Vinales on his first win and to British hero Cal Crutchlow who finished second, just 0.583secs ahead of Italy's Valentino Rossi, the seven-time champion and 2015 Silverstone victor. Crutchlow won his first Moto GP recently in the Czech Republic. Moto GP is a lot healthier than F1!

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