I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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Tommy Cookers
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Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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Hoffman900 wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 17:42
120lb female runners can push 450lbs through a force plate in extremely rapid succession (that’s how running works).
Female Alpine ski racers are seeing up to 6gs of peak load in turns / bumps through their legs. For a 140lb female that’s 840lbs… they have force sensors in their boots thay record this stuff.
afaik peak load (dynamic load conditions eg running etc) isn't all attributable to instantaneous muscle energy transfer....
as the peak loads measured include inertial loads with limb and body velocity changes ie transfer of stored energy
(that's how running works)

I designed and made stuff for force measurements of things crashing into other things


btw Alan Staniforth wrote that Graham Hill pushed 400 lb on the brake pedal and that ....
Brian Redman said that braking was the biggest thing (in stepping up to F1)

Hoffman900
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Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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Tommy Cookers wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 19:48
Hoffman900 wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 17:42
120lb female runners can push 450lbs through a force plate in extremely rapid succession (that’s how running works).
Female Alpine ski racers are seeing up to 6gs of peak load in turns / bumps through their legs. For a 140lb female that’s 840lbs… they have force sensors in their boots thay record this stuff.
afaik peak load (dynamic load conditions eg running etc) isn't all attributable to instantaneous muscle energy transfer....
as the peak loads measured include inertial loads with limb and body velocity changes ie transfer of stored energy
(that's how running works)

btw Alan Staniforth wrote that Graham Hill pushed 400 lb on the brake pedal and that ....
Brian Redman said that braking was the biggest thing (in stepping up to F1)
You do force plate testing from a knees bent static squat. Just like a F1 driver’s leg position.

They’re not doing 400lb single leg presses :lol:

Have you seen F1 driver’s legs? Robert Forstermann does 400lb single leg squats, Bottas, Sainz, Ocon, and people like Devries wouldn’t come close at all wouldn’t come close to that with two legs.

That 300-400lb figure is peak force. F1 drivers are basically kicking the pedal.

Here is Nick Devries deadlifting 235lbs and certaintly looking like he’s trying hard
Image

For someone who is suppose to be 67kg, that is not a lot of weight. As a high schooler at the same weight, I could dl 315lbs and I was a very mediocre small town high school athlete.

A local to me female at the same body weight (weight class) is doing 275lbs and doesn’t even win local lifting competitions… she’s also really fast on a bicycle too. It’s also just a hobby for her too, not her job.
Last edited by Hoffman900 on 05 Jan 2025, 20:10, edited 6 times in total.

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mwillems
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Joined: 04 Sep 2016, 22:11

Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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Tommy Cookers wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 19:48
Hoffman900 wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 17:42
120lb female runners can push 450lbs through a force plate in extremely rapid succession (that’s how running works).
Female Alpine ski racers are seeing up to 6gs of peak load in turns / bumps through their legs. For a 140lb female that’s 840lbs… they have force sensors in their boots thay record this stuff.
afaik peak load (dynamic load conditions eg running etc) isn't all attributable to instantaneous muscle energy transfer....
as the peak loads measured include inertial loads with limb and body velocity changes ie transfer of stored energy
(that's how running works)

I designed and made stuff for force measurements of things crashing into other things


btw Alan Staniforth wrote that Graham Hill pushed 400 lb on the brake pedal and that ....
Brian Redman said that braking was the biggest thing (in stepping up to F1)
This is why I spoke earlier about the calf raise.

Average calf raise for women that keep fit is 180 pounds. Naturally this is only one of the muscles that will help press the pedal. Going further up the leg you have the progressively stronger muscles of the lats and the glutes to aid.

https://strengthlevel.com/strength-stan ... f-raise/lb

https://strengthlevel.com/strength-stan ... f-raise/lb
I'm not taking advice from a cartoon dog

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mwillems
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Joined: 04 Sep 2016, 22:11

Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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Hoffman900 wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 19:59
Tommy Cookers wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 19:48
Hoffman900 wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 17:42
120lb female runners can push 450lbs through a force plate in extremely rapid succession (that’s how running works).
Female Alpine ski racers are seeing up to 6gs of peak load in turns / bumps through their legs. For a 140lb female that’s 840lbs… they have force sensors in their boots thay record this stuff.
afaik peak load (dynamic load conditions eg running etc) isn't all attributable to instantaneous muscle energy transfer....
as the peak loads measured include inertial loads with limb and body velocity changes ie transfer of stored energy
(that's how running works)

btw Alan Staniforth wrote that Graham Hill pushed 400 lb on the brake pedal and that ....
Brian Redman said that braking was the biggest thing (in stepping up to F1)
You do force plate testing from a knees bent static squat. Just like a F1 driver’s leg position.

They’re not doing 400lb single leg presses :lol:

Have you seen F1 driver’s legs? Robert Forstermann does 400lb single leg squats, Bottas, Sainz, Ocon, and people like Devries wouldn’t come close at all wouldn’t come close to that with two legs.

That 300-400lb figure is peak force. F1 drivers are basically kicking the pedal.

Here is Nick Devries deadlifting 235lbs and certaintly looking like he’s trying hard
https://f1i-com.cdn.ampproject.org/i/s ... V.v1-1.jpg

For someone who is suppose to be 67kg, that is not a lot of weight. A local to me female at the same body weight is doing 275lbs and doesn’t even win local competitions.
This isn't like squats though. It's closer to the free weights where you sit and bench press with your legs.

Squats are way harder and use the core a huge amount. The leg press on machine is waaaaay easier. You are still supposed to bring your feet to your butt, which is the hardest part, but even this isn't required for the "exercise" of pressing a pedal, hence it is easier still.

Image
I'm not taking advice from a cartoon dog

-Bandit

Hoffman900
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Joined: 13 Oct 2019, 03:02

Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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mwillems wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 20:10
Hoffman900 wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 19:59
Tommy Cookers wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 19:48

afaik peak load (dynamic load conditions eg running etc) isn't all attributable to instantaneous muscle energy transfer....
as the peak loads measured include inertial loads with limb and body velocity changes ie transfer of stored energy
(that's how running works)

btw Alan Staniforth wrote that Graham Hill pushed 400 lb on the brake pedal and that ....
Brian Redman said that braking was the biggest thing (in stepping up to F1)
You do force plate testing from a knees bent static squat. Just like a F1 driver’s leg position.

They’re not doing 400lb single leg presses :lol:

Have you seen F1 driver’s legs? Robert Forstermann does 400lb single leg squats, Bottas, Sainz, Ocon, and people like Devries wouldn’t come close at all wouldn’t come close to that with two legs.

That 300-400lb figure is peak force. F1 drivers are basically kicking the pedal.

Here is Nick Devries deadlifting 235lbs and certaintly looking like he’s trying hard
https://f1i-com.cdn.ampproject.org/i/s ... V.v1-1.jpg

For someone who is suppose to be 67kg, that is not a lot of weight. A local to me female at the same body weight is doing 275lbs and doesn’t even win local competitions.
This isn't like squats though. It's closer to the free weights where you sit and bench press with your legs.

Squats are way harder and use the core a huge amount. The leg press on machine is waaaaay easier. You are still supposed to bring your feet to your butt, which is the hardest part, but even this isn't required for the "exercise" of pressing a pedal, hence it is easier still.

https://strongway.co.uk/cdn/shop/files/ ... 1724677220
I know that. I’m trying to illustrate how strong females are and they can be way beyond what’s needed for F1.

I think this is going over most here’s heads though as I doubt most here have any context. A full rom leg press can almost be over 2x that of a back squat, and F1 drivers aren’t even doing that. Only moving the pedal like 2”

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mwillems
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Joined: 04 Sep 2016, 22:11

Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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Hoffman900 wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 20:14
mwillems wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 20:10
Hoffman900 wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 19:59


You do force plate testing from a knees bent static squat. Just like a F1 driver’s leg position.

They’re not doing 400lb single leg presses :lol:

Have you seen F1 driver’s legs? Robert Forstermann does 400lb single leg squats, Bottas, Sainz, Ocon, and people like Devries wouldn’t come close at all wouldn’t come close to that with two legs.

That 300-400lb figure is peak force. F1 drivers are basically kicking the pedal.

Here is Nick Devries deadlifting 235lbs and certaintly looking like he’s trying hard
https://f1i-com.cdn.ampproject.org/i/s ... V.v1-1.jpg

For someone who is suppose to be 67kg, that is not a lot of weight. A local to me female at the same body weight is doing 275lbs and doesn’t even win local competitions.
This isn't like squats though. It's closer to the free weights where you sit and bench press with your legs.

Squats are way harder and use the core a huge amount. The leg press on machine is waaaaay easier. You are still supposed to bring your feet to your butt, which is the hardest part, but even this isn't required for the "exercise" of pressing a pedal, hence it is easier still.

https://strongway.co.uk/cdn/shop/files/ ... 1724677220
I know that. I’m trying to illustrate how strong females are and they can be way beyond what’s needed for F1.

I think this is going over most here’s heads though as I doubt most here have any context. A full rom leg press can almost be over 2x that of a back squat, and F1 drivers aren’t even doing that. Only moving the pedal like 2”
I know, I'm illustrating that it's even easier than youre saying to back your point lol

Yes, it's been a difficult thread with a lot of uninformed and stubborn default positions which in other circumstances would be called out. It's why I tried to simply persevere with a lot a patience. It felt like something that needed to be seen through to the end as one of the reasons women might not gravitate to F1 has been amply demonstrated in this thread.
I'm not taking advice from a cartoon dog

-Bandit

Hoffman900
Hoffman900
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Joined: 13 Oct 2019, 03:02

Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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mwillems wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 20:22
Hoffman900 wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 20:14
mwillems wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 20:10


This isn't like squats though. It's closer to the free weights where you sit and bench press with your legs.

Squats are way harder and use the core a huge amount. The leg press on machine is waaaaay easier. You are still supposed to bring your feet to your butt, which is the hardest part, but even this isn't required for the "exercise" of pressing a pedal, hence it is easier still.

https://strongway.co.uk/cdn/shop/files/ ... 1724677220
I know that. I’m trying to illustrate how strong females are and they can be way beyond what’s needed for F1.

I think this is going over most here’s heads though as I doubt most here have any context. A full rom leg press can almost be over 2x that of a back squat, and F1 drivers aren’t even doing that. Only moving the pedal like 2”
I know, I'm illustrating that it's even easier than youre saying to back your point lol

Yes, it's been a difficult thread with a lot of uninformed and stubborn default positions which in other circumstances would be called out. It's why I tried to simply persevere with a lot a patience. It felt like something that needed to be seen through to the end as one of the reasons women might not gravitate to F1 has been amply demonstrated in this thread.
Got it and we’re on the same page 8)

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mwillems
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Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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V12-POWER wrote:
05 Jan 2025, 16:59

fair enough. some things still taken as granted, ie, saying you only need to be "this" fit and stop. I doubt racing drivers take it easy outside the track, they would push for performance as much as they do on track. When I train I still push for more even if my endurance is already enough, so fitness levels never stop being a differentiator no matter the importance, saying it doesnt matter past a certain point is nonsense, its like saying "im this fast and thats enough, no more improvement needed" which is the mentality that makes athletes lose in all disciplines.

how fast is football evolving?

https://www.facebook.com/FootballFunnys ... 047149985/

so hold your horses. examples like these are many.

"A study that has a pool of one, two or three would be laughed out of any journal"

true, but when every new F1 driver is at least within 2 seconds of the top, one that is 4 seconds (irrelevant of sex) is just not deemed capable. thats how things are as of today. the day a girl can hop in and make similar times, we will talk.

if it hasnt happened in todays age, it is unlikely to happen in the future too
the day a girl can hop in and make similar times, we will talk.

The fact that women aren't in F1 now or close to competitive times has nothing to do with capability (today) unless you can demonstrate it has. But if you don't want to adapt your opinion to all the information presented because you're not ready, that is your prerogative. It's worth saying, I'm not going to argue that women can be successful in F1. I'm just objectively arguing with some of the reasons posited here. There's still a lot more to consider around the subject if discussed properly. What I am saying, is if there is a reason, I highly doubt it is physicality and because of the sheer difficulty that presents itself to women before they even sit in a kart, it is pretty hard to say it is down to talent.



I don't know what that physical limit limit is, just that it isn't the elite physical sport that many have used as the barrier to women being successful in F1. I'm saying that it appears fairly easy to say it is within reach of enough of a cohort of women to be able to supply F1 with a pool of talent... if women had all the other requisite skills which haven't really been discussed yet because it takes 8 pages for people to start to realise that maybe the girls an push a pedal and steer a wheel for two hours and still maintain mental accuity.

If this thread tried to objectively look at the skills and attributes required, and tried to apply some objective and fact based answers to come to an educated guess, and it seemed against women to do well in F1, then so be it. But there is little chance that this thread will progress objectively rather than just throw up incredibly lazy and abstract reasons why they can't and challenge someone to disprove it.

Watching international football I can see the advancements of womens football, but for sure it is not an even journey across the leagues and teams and as far as women's professional football goes, it is still early days. Girls leagues are still expanding and it is in it's infancy. Look at how long it takes things like the MLS to grow. But women's football is growing, the best international footballers are getting better with training and funding. And this observation is most easily seen when looking at the correlation between Olympic funding and results. Britain is a great example of that. You can have all the talent in the world, and we always had huge Olympic talent, but if you don't fund and support it to the level of your competitors it doesn't matter one bit.

GB decided to prepare for the London Olympics by increasing funding at Beijing, these are the numbers:

Image

It took 8 years for the results to truly start to show, and to nearly double the number of golds we had to increase funding 8 times it's original level in Sydney. Increasing the budget 50% at Athens made almost no perceptible difference. That's how much hard cash and time it takes. 8 times the money for double the results over nearly a decade.

Women in motorsports are not getting this kind of backing even now, it's still just largely for perception with not enough happening at the grassroots.

In the Olympic example, both men and women are heavily into Olympic sports all around the UK. This is not a standing start like Women in 4 wheel track based Motorsports where there are so very few despite the new women's upper categories giving a different perception. The fact that a women got to within 2 seconds of a man in F1, against all the odds, is fantastic. Especially when you consider that when a women last drove an F1 car, the simulators were not even close to todays capabilities.

Be worth looking at male debutants from 15 years ago to see how they did and what the gap was too. Also worth noting that Wolff had barely any Time in F3 due to injury, but even then, she was finishing 9th and 11th in her first season for the only 2 races, that's actually pretty good. The fact that next year she went to DTM was not likely due to talent but other considerations in her life, such as her age.

Imagine what they'd do if they were fully backed like guys were , through driver programs that only recently started to open up properly to women, with a pool of talent and not just the lucky ones that got the once in twenty years opportunity for a girl to drive an F1 car and not just the ones connected to a major shareholder of the day. Don't get me wrong, she earned it, but if it wasn't for media perception and for Toto it wouldn't have happened.

You don't need to say women can be as good as men in F1 (I certainly won't make that conclusion though I think they can compete), just open your mind to some of the reasons they might not be competitive and don't be so rigid in your conclusion.
I'm not taking advice from a cartoon dog

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Hoffman900
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Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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They can’t even get a good USA male (Logan Sargent doesn’t count and wouldn’t be sniffing top 20s in US domestic series either) in the sport due to the obscene costs (and lack of interest from American sponsors), Euro-centrism and increasingly Middle East-centrism of the sport (Super License anyone? and teams favoring their own), etc. and the US is a huge country teaming with talented racers.

The only other North American racer is the son of a billionare who bought a team, and the Central American had a lot of (maybe questionable) money behind him.

The barrier for women is ten fold.

woocasz
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Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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Thank God, in Formula 1, it's the lap time that counts. We have all sorts of racing series with only women in them, do you think that if a girl with talent came along, none of the top teams would be interested in recruiting her? come on. dont be naive. Besides, Lawrence Stroll also has a daughter!!! so we have the same environment, we have the same amount of money etc etc. Why is Lance in F1 and not Chloe?!? The biggest difference is the difference in interest between people and things and so women are more interested in people and men are more interested in things. That's why we'll never have a woman in f1, let alone one who becomes a champion.

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mwillems
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Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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woocasz wrote:
06 Jan 2025, 14:51
Thank God, in Formula 1, it's the lap time that counts. We have all sorts of racing series with only women in them, do you think that if a girl with talent came along, none of the top teams would be interested in recruiting her? come on. dont be naive. Besides, Lawrence Stroll also has a daughter!!! so we have the same environment, we have the same amount of money etc etc. Why is Lance in F1 and not Chloe?!? The biggest difference is the difference in interest between people and things and so women are more interested in people and men are more interested in things. That's why we'll never have a woman in f1, let alone one who becomes a champion.
Yeah true, they don't like things. I never see a woman driving a nice car, riding a horse, interested in buying things for their house, smart watches. They don't like gaming and PCs... They skip to work with their mates chatting about wonderfully positive things, ensuring they only tread on rose petals along the way because they won't spend money on clothing and trainers.

I mean, what your saying is tantamount to racism because the laptimes don't lie, there have been barely any black drivers. Before Lewis, none really in F1. But we know that that is b*llocks. Laptimes don't lie, but the way you look at the data and underlying reasons beneath them need a certain level of openness and intelligence.

Putting that absolutely absurd statement aside, it's been well demonstrated some of the quite major reasons why the laptimes aren't able to show you what women capable of, even if it isn't at F1s level.

Interestingly, I just found this article talking about exactly what I said to Hollus earlier, about the catch 22 of females in motorsport, in that they won't get funding because there is a ceiling, but the ceiling is there because they won't give the funding. it needs a female Lewis Hamilton to smash that ceiling.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/motorsport/66116141

The website for that organisation set up by DC looks rubbish, but I did just find this other article about women in motorsport

https://www.autosport.com/general/news/ ... T%20racing.
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bluechris
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Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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woocasz wrote:
06 Jan 2025, 14:51
Thank God, in Formula 1, it's the lap time that counts. We have all sorts of racing series with only women in them, do you think that if a girl with talent came along, none of the top teams would be interested in recruiting her? come on. dont be naive. Besides, Lawrence Stroll also has a daughter!!! so we have the same environment, we have the same amount of money etc etc. Why is Lance in F1 and not Chloe?!? The biggest difference is the difference in interest between people and things and so women are more interested in people and men are more interested in things. That's why we'll never have a woman in f1, let alone one who becomes a champion.
I agree, there is no interest from woman's. See a boy from its early days wants to do 3 things, kick a ball, riding a bicycle and then a bike or a car. It's not that its in the DNA of the boys like that, it happens because the whole world that the boy sees from very young, is like this and this is what the families offer. You think only Valentino Rossi raised on a track and became what he became? I am pretty certain that many people in F1 or MotoGP had their little girls near them, you see any woman in motogp?
So 1st this must change and then we discuss about muscles and reactions etc. A woman need the triple work to achieve the same "love" for what the guys do. Off course there are exceptions everywhere but they are so little that don't end in a success story. I hope F1 and what Sussy tries to do, will find a young kid or many kids and sponsor their way up in motorsports. But here is the deal, how many families will love to have their girls doing that? Think of it, again its the whole society that doesn't help on this imo.

Hoffman900
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Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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woocasz wrote:
06 Jan 2025, 14:51
Thank God, in Formula 1, it's the lap time that counts. We have all sorts of racing series with only women in them, do you think that if a girl with talent came along, none of the top teams would be interested in recruiting her? come on. dont be naive. Besides, Lawrence Stroll also has a daughter!!! so we have the same environment, we have the same amount of money etc etc. Why is Lance in F1 and not Chloe?!? The biggest difference is the difference in interest between people and things and so women are more interested in people and men are more interested in things. That's why we'll never have a woman in f1, let alone one who becomes a champion.
Except it doesn’t. Nearly half the grid is there not because lap time alone $$$$

woocasz
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Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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mwillems wrote:
06 Jan 2025, 15:17
woocasz wrote:
06 Jan 2025, 14:51
Thank God, in Formula 1, it's the lap time that counts. We have all sorts of racing series with only women in them, do you think that if a girl with talent came along, none of the top teams would be interested in recruiting her? come on. dont be naive. Besides, Lawrence Stroll also has a daughter!!! so we have the same environment, we have the same amount of money etc etc. Why is Lance in F1 and not Chloe?!? The biggest difference is the difference in interest between people and things and so women are more interested in people and men are more interested in things. That's why we'll never have a woman in f1, let alone one who becomes a champion.
Yeah true, they don't like things. I never see a woman driving a nice car, riding a horse, interested in buying things for their house, smart watches. They don't like gaming and PCs... They skip to work with their mates chatting about wonderfully positive things, ensuring they only tread on rose petals along the way because they won't spend money on clothing and trainers.

I mean, what your saying is tantamount to racism because the laptimes don't lie, there have been barely any black drivers. Before Lewis, none really in F1. But we know that that is b*llocks. Laptimes don't lie, but the way you look at the data and underlying reasons beneath them need a certain level of openness and intelligence.

Putting that absolutely absurd statement aside, it's been well demonstrated some of the quite major reasons why the laptimes aren't able to show you what women capable of, even if it isn't at F1s level.

Interestingly, I just found this article talking about exactly what I said to Hollus earlier, about the catch 22 of females in motorsport, in that they won't get funding because there is a ceiling, but the ceiling is there because they won't give the funding. it needs a female Lewis Hamilton to smash that ceiling.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/motorsport/66116141

The website for that organisation set up by DC looks rubbish, but I did just find this other article about women in motorsport

https://www.autosport.com/general/news/ ... T%20racing.
You have completely missed the point, do you understand the meaning of the phrase ‘most likely’ ? read again what I wrote. Now answer me and yourself, why is it that over 90% of engineers are men? 10 years ago it was still 97%vs 3% in favour of men. on the other hand, why are those working as nurses still 99% women?
Stop this woke and diversity BS. You want a woman in F1, please go ahaed, she will be lapped 3 times in a race distance...

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mwillems
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Re: I would love to see a woman in F1 but...

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woocasz wrote:
06 Jan 2025, 15:40
mwillems wrote:
06 Jan 2025, 15:17
woocasz wrote:
06 Jan 2025, 14:51
Thank God, in Formula 1, it's the lap time that counts. We have all sorts of racing series with only women in them, do you think that if a girl with talent came along, none of the top teams would be interested in recruiting her? come on. dont be naive. Besides, Lawrence Stroll also has a daughter!!! so we have the same environment, we have the same amount of money etc etc. Why is Lance in F1 and not Chloe?!? The biggest difference is the difference in interest between people and things and so women are more interested in people and men are more interested in things. That's why we'll never have a woman in f1, let alone one who becomes a champion.
Yeah true, they don't like things. I never see a woman driving a nice car, riding a horse, interested in buying things for their house, smart watches. They don't like gaming and PCs... They skip to work with their mates chatting about wonderfully positive things, ensuring they only tread on rose petals along the way because they won't spend money on clothing and trainers.

I mean, what your saying is tantamount to racism because the laptimes don't lie, there have been barely any black drivers. Before Lewis, none really in F1. But we know that that is b*llocks. Laptimes don't lie, but the way you look at the data and underlying reasons beneath them need a certain level of openness and intelligence.

Putting that absolutely absurd statement aside, it's been well demonstrated some of the quite major reasons why the laptimes aren't able to show you what women capable of, even if it isn't at F1s level.

Interestingly, I just found this article talking about exactly what I said to Hollus earlier, about the catch 22 of females in motorsport, in that they won't get funding because there is a ceiling, but the ceiling is there because they won't give the funding. it needs a female Lewis Hamilton to smash that ceiling.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/motorsport/66116141

The website for that organisation set up by DC looks rubbish, but I did just find this other article about women in motorsport

https://www.autosport.com/general/news/ ... T%20racing.
You have completely missed the point, do you understand the meaning of the phrase ‘most likely’ ? read again what I wrote. Now answer me and yourself, why is it that over 90% of engineers are men? 10 years ago it was still 97%vs 3% in favour of men. on the other hand, why are those working as nurses still 99% women?
Stop this woke and diversity BS. You want a woman in F1, please go ahaed, she will be lapped 3 times in a race distance...
I read your whole statement and my reply is quite suitable to both your first and second post. Bluechris then made a statement which makes more sense around societal impact, but you didn't say that, you made quite a broad stereotype and other lazy statements that are nonsense. You also never used the phrase "Most likely".
I'm not taking advice from a cartoon dog

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