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| Street races concern Ferrari boss Street races concern Ferrari boss Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo has expressed his concern at the number of street circuits in Formula One. Circuits in Valencia and Singapore have joined traditional street track Monaco on this year's F1 calendar. But ahead of the inaugural Singapore race, Di Montezemolo said the lack of overtaking opportunities is not good for the future of the sport. "I have the impression it will be one of those letdowns where you cannot overtake, like Valencia," he said. "Going forward with these circuits heralds a bad future for Formula One." The Grand Prix around the streets of Singapore on 28 September will be the first night race in the sport's history.
__________________ Equal cars don't provide good racing. Equivalent cars do. Generic cars have created generic races. |
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| Re: Street races concern Ferrari boss Felipe Massa - Overtaking to also be rare in Singapore Grand Prix E-mail Source/Credit - GMM Wednesday, 24 September 2008 Felipe Massa has earmarked qualifying for this weekend's inaugural Singapore Formula One Grand Prix as a crucial element to his championship challenge. The Ferrari driver, who trails McLaren's Lewis Hamilton by a single point with four races to go, thinks overtaking will be even more difficult on the twisty floodlit city circuit than it was at Valencia last month. Valencia's European Grand Prix, staged on a faster urban circuit than Singapore, was slammed as a processional race that lacked overtaking moves. "Saturday will be very important, for sure," Massa, 27, told the local Straits Times newspaper on Wednesday, highlighting the importance of a good grid position. "I've never driven on the Singapore track but it'll be even more difficult to overtake compared to Valencia, because the straights are even shorter," the Brazilian added. Formula 1 veteran David Coulthard backs Massa's views about the Singapore layout. "It appears to be less flowing than Valencia and more of a classic street track, with lots of 90 degree block changes, albeit a relatively wide one in most parts," the Red Bull driver said. |
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| Re: Street races concern Ferrari boss Sounds to me Singapore will be more about acceleration and braking than top speed since the track appears wide enough for overtaking. Sometimes, old dogs need to learn new tricks. I'd hate to see F1 get into "cookie cutter" tracks like NASCAR where many are just slight variations of a common theme.
__________________ Press One For English "It may be that your sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others." - Steven Wright “If you have nothing to say, say nothing." - Mark Twain |
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| Re: Street races concern Ferrari boss Only rain, witch usually happens there, can save the Singapore track. As to why something like the superboring Valencia exists and also why Singapore has been added check the following article: Quote:
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| Re: Street races concern Ferrari boss Quote:
Enzo Ferrari went racing believing that a small and focused team is the way to do things, then he resisted big corporate sponsorship in the 70s. Ferrari survived Ferrari. |
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