Hobbs is from Warwickshire,(Leamington Spa) which tends to be a well spoken area. Di Resta is from West Lothian, which is Scotland and a heavy accent. It is understandable that one is easier to follow than the other, it is the spoken equivalent of book print and biro scrawl. (Not intending as insult for Scotts, I have a thick accent too)zoroastar wrote: ↑26 Jul 2018, 02:08im from tennessee (south) and i have never had any problem understanding anyone at Sky really. diresta and some of of the heavy irish accents are the toughest sometimes. ive been face to face with irish people, drunk on guinness, and couldnt understand a word they said, even though i was told they were speaking english. i have spent a lot of time in europe playing music though, so that may help my ability to pick up what everyone at Sky says.
compared to NBC broadcasting from past years, Sky may have more stats, and a larger "show", but ill take David Hobbs any day of the week over most of what ESPN has to offer. i seem to pick up way more obvious favoritism from many of the commentators. maybe subliminally, but am i the only one that notices that any time that someone mentions mclaren, martin brundle changes the conversation to mercedes or ferrari? or in his "on track" observations, he goes out of his way to say how slow mclaren are around a corner, even if they are clearly not on a flying lap? its kindof funny actually. i like DiResta, and at least kravitz has no qualms about telling it like he sees it, without being passive aggressive about things, but Hobbs, Matchet, and the Aussie guy were more entertaining to me.
ps. the only guy i have trouble understanding is Cyril Abitiboul. his fast jumbled accent is tough. even if he knows his english well, the way he speaks is pretty hard to catch, even if i rewind. but i dont think he gives a f***.