At the risk of also being off topic :
forty-two wrote:As for cable barriers, I've heard bikers refer to those as cheese-wires, because a motorcyclist hitting one ends up emerging in several neat slices. Fortunately, these seem to be mostly replaced with "ribbon" style ones.
Around 5 years ago, a friend of mine had an accident where he got sideswiped by a bus and ended up going through the "cheese wires" : he is now missing half of his right leg ...
Wire barriers are nasty things indeed.
Unfortunately, the technology for keeping us safe will never be as good as the technology for propelling us faster than nature intended. It is the nature of the beast, but a risk that we are all willing to take in one form or another.
reikorp wrote:gridwalker wrote:
If you can have everything that millions of fans could ever want, yet still need to endanger yourself (and everything you have built up around you) in the name of letting off steam, maybe you should be in a different profession.
Exactly opposite
The reason why he participated in that rally was the very same reason why he's a Formula 1 driver. Instinct to race.
I still can't but help but think that he should have acted in a manner that would protect the investment of those who would pay him to race machinery that the majority of us can only ever dream of : if being paid millions to race in "the pinnacle of motorsport" isn't enough for you, then what will be?
Sure, I appreciate the concept of the "racer's soul" but F1 is now a multi billion dollar industry and there are very few top-jobs where recklessly endangering your capability in extra-curricular activities would be tolerated.
In this thread, someone has made a comparison to Senna racing in lower formulae during the 80s : The budgets, salaries and marketing opportunities of days gone bye were peanuts compared to what is being poured into the sport in modern times.
When you sign a contract for a top flight race team, you may not be selling your soul but you will be selling marketing rights to your identity.
I cannot criticise his passion, his motivation or his decision, but I can question the wisdom of his actions : if your passion for a dangerous pastime overrides your concern for protecting your multi-million dollar job (in essentially the same pursuit) then maybe you should consider a role where dozens of companies, hundreds of people and millions of dollars aren't resting on your performance ...
Still, that is irrelevant : what is important is that Robert makes a full and swift recovery.
I'd still like to see him become the first Polish world champion.