What a comment indeed...... Roger Williamson, Ronnie Peterson (died later, but the crash was terrible to watch), Riccardo Paletti...... I suggest you acquaint yourself with Formula 1 history and read a bit of this thread you're commenting on. We've had many crashes in Formula 1, where drivers have died or not, that just haven't been acceptable to a televised sport.gilgen wrote:What a comment! I cannot remember any instance of watching a driver die on TV.
The Roger Williamson crash was a watershed moment really for Formula 1 because it was the first time something like that had been televised and thereafter there was at least some motivation to try and improve things, although progress was glacial until we got into the 80s when it was televised even more. Prior to that, the period in the 60s and into the 70s where there was this much vaunted safety crusade by Stewart and others saw no improvements of any kind whatsoever. Drivers were still dying and being injured in exactly the same ways.
I don't understand that because it has nothing to do with my comment. The motivation for 'safety' in the late 70s and into the 80s came about precisely because the sport could not afford that kind of thing on the camera lens if it wanted to make the kind of money it turned out doing, and does today.What do you think that viewers should see? Blood covering the camera lens?
I'm afraid repeating this party line will not make it true. In the time in the late 60s and into the 70s when there was this much vaunted 'safety' drive nothing changed. The cars didn't change, the circuits didn't change, the medical facilities were still poor and the marshalling organisation, as witnessed in Roger Williamson's death, was still as pathetic as it had ever been in the 60s and even the 50s. Jackie Stewart and Max Mosley did zilch to change that in the time they say they were calling for change.I don't know how you can call it chest puffing. Stewart saw a lot of his fellow competitors die. And because of him, and the likes of Mosley, racing is far safer and the families of those who compete are not under the constant fear of losing their son/father/husband etc.
On the contrary, and as GB has already pointed out, the thing that I really have a problem with with Jackie Stewart is during the time he was making noises about safety he was happily driving past other cars on fire with drivers trapped in them. He drove past Roger Williamson's car as he did with Clay Regazzoni a year later. He never got out to help a fellow driver as Graham Hill did to save his life in 1966.