Formula One 2014 (5 Viewers)

OP
ZoSo

ZoSo

Senior Member
Jul 11, 2011
41,656
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #61
    Yeah second last. I don't think this season is a shoe-in for vettel. I think Alonso-Kimi will work very well and reliability will play a big part this year. Mercedes could be the fastest, who knows. McLaren might be fast too. I know it's only the second day of testing but Renault engines (Red Bull) have barely done anything besides catch on fire while Ferrari and Mercedes engines have both done pretty well (besides 1 mercedes engine catching fire).

    And stupid how the last race has double points now.. Soon you will see Red Bull pushing for double points in last 3 races (Bernie wants it too... :sick:) so that they can catch up from early problems.

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    times and laps for today's testing

    1) BUT - 1:24.165 (43 laps)
    2) RAI - 1:24.812 (46 laps)
    3) BOT - 1:25.344 (35 laps)
    4) ROS - 1:25.588 (97 laps)
    5) PER - 1:28.376 (37 laps)
    6) GUT - 1:33.270 (53 laps)
    7) ERI - 1:37.975 (11 laps)
    8) VET - 1:38.320 (8 laps)
     

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    Völler

    Always spot on
    May 6, 2012
    23,091
    #62
    I dunno. I see why this year should be more difficult for Red Bull than the previous ones, but I don't want to get my hopes up too high.
     

    Lapa

    FLY, EAGLES FLY
    Sep 29, 2008
    20,044
    #63
    Hopefully Ferrari, Mclaren and Williams will do well this season, teams with a lot of history should do well instead of some fucking Red Bull. I hope that Red Bull fail and Vettel will spend the whole season where he belongs, in the back row.
     
    OP
    ZoSo

    ZoSo

    Senior Member
    Jul 11, 2011
    41,656
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #64
    Don't forget red bull hasn't been the most reliable car always, often having problems with kers last season. maybe this could be magnified with new regulations and engines. Everything is too different to say for certain which teams will be the best until bahrain/china

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    Hopefully Ferrari, Mclaren and Williams will do well this season, teams with a lot of history should do well instead of some fucking Red Bull. I hope that Red Bull fail and Vettel will spend the whole season where he belongs, in the back row.
    :agree: well said.
     

    CaesarCod

    Senior Member
    Mar 13, 2008
    1,852
    #70
    Hopefully Ferrari, Mclaren and Williams will do well this season, teams with a lot of history should do well instead of some $#@!ing Red Bull. I hope that Red Bull fail and Vettel will spend the whole season where he belongs, in the back row.
    Lol..

    I love seeing teams with history getting ass fucked by a drinks company.
     
    OP
    ZoSo

    ZoSo

    Senior Member
    Jul 11, 2011
    41,656
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #73
    It was a false telemetry warning.

    Ferrari car alone has done more laps than all Renaults put together
     
    OP
    ZoSo

    ZoSo

    Senior Member
    Jul 11, 2011
    41,656
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #74


    ALO testing now :juventus:


    - - - Updated - - -

    Renault fail once again :rofl:

     
    OP
    ZoSo

    ZoSo

    Senior Member
    Jul 11, 2011
    41,656
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #75
    BfOQulmCcAEBZnc.jpg


    :rofl: Renault fail AGAIN


    :rofl:

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    Sky News Newsdesk ‏@SkyNewsBreak
    Michael Schumacher's manager says seven-time Formula One champion slowly being brought out of induced coma following skiing accident
    great to hear
     

    Dostoevsky

    Tzu
    Administrator
    May 27, 2007
    88,983
    #76
    Michael Schumacher has 'blinked' and is 'responding to instructions' - reports

    Formula One legend Michael Schumacher is “responding to instructions” as medics gradually bring him out of his coma, according to reports.

    It has also been alleged that the seven-time world champion has blinked during brain tests.

    Citing “very reliable sources”, L’Equipe newspaper said Schumacher has undergone a number of neurological tests since Monday and he has responded “positively”.

    Schumacher, 45, was plunged into an artificial coma after suffering traumatic brain injury in his near-fatal skiing accident on December 29 in the French resort of Meribel. Shutting down function can give the brain time to heal.

    The sports daily revealed on Wednesday that medics had started the process to end his coma by gradually reducing the dosage of powerful anaesthetic drugs being administered.

    And on Thursday the newspaper revealed Schumacher had blinked during the “first stage” of brain tests.

    The newspaper’s deputy editor Jérémie Arbona said the publication was “100 per cent sure” that its story was correct.

    The paper wrote: “After gradually reducing the sedation of the patient, the team of Professor Emmanuel Gay [the medic overseeing Schumacher’s treatment] has been doing neurological tests since Monday. During this first stage, the patient blinked.” Sky News quoted sources saying Schumacher was “responding to instructions”.

    It is not known if the information from the two separate reports is linked and therefore whether Schumacher blinked on command.

    But Professor Jean-Luc Truelle, the former head of the neurology department of the Foch hospital in Suresnes, told L’Equipe that once the patient opens their eyes there would be a “re-establishment of some kind of communication, which we verify through simple commands,” such as “open your eyes, shut your eyes, squeeze your hand".

    "Schumacher appears to show this type of reawakening,” wrote L’Equipe.

    The newspaper said it was “undoubtedly the best news” since his accident.

    Earlier in the day, following intense media interest worldwide, Schumacher’s manager Sabine Kehm was forced to confirm that Schumacher was being brought round from his coma. She had initially responded to the reports by telling fans to treat all unofficial statements as speculation.

    She said: “Michael’s sedation has recently been reduced to initiate a process of awakening which may take a long time.

    “To protect the family, initially it was clearly agreed between all parties only to disclose this medical information once this process was consolidated.

    “The family wishes to express sincere appreciation for the sympathy they have received from around the world.
    ” Schumacher has been receiving round-the-clock care in Grenoble University Hospital.

    Surgeons have performed two operations to relieve pressure on his brain and remove blood clots.

    According to Prof Truelle, the two months following this phase are a period of confusion in which the patient is in a state of “lethargy” and that recovery stage can take “several years in the case of serious head injuries".

    It is possible for someone to spend several weeks in an induced coma and make a full recovery. But Professor Gary Hartstein, Formula One’s chief medic between 2005 and 2012, said: “It is extremely unlikely, and I’d honestly say virtually impossible, that the Michael we knew prior to this fall will ever be back.” Wife Corinna, 44, with whom the champion has two children Gina Marie, 16, and Mick, 14, has remained at his bedside.

    Schumacher had his catastrophic accident in the French ski resort of Meribel, where he owns a chalet.
     

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