Saturday

The Pressure Of Contracts: Bradley Smith Explains How A New Tech 3 Deal Helped Him Ride Better

One belief common among motorcycle racing fans is that racers will ride harder while they are negotiating a new contract, only to slack off once the contract is in the bag. Ask a rider about this, and they deny it fervently, saying they have to ride just as hard after a new contract is signed as they did before. That their contract situation affects their performance is beyond question, though it is not as simple as it appears.

Bradley Smith is a case in point. Since the start of the season, the Englishman has known he has been riding for his place next year, with Yamaha and Tech 3 taking a seriously look at riders in both Moto2 and Moto3 to replace him. The pressure was starting to get to Smith, the Tech 3 man crashing rather too frequently, with the low point being the race at the Sachsenring. Smith crashed four times that weekend, twice on Friday, once on Saturday, and again in the race. It was a very tough weekend indeed.

So when Smith signed a new deal with the Monster Tech 3 Yamaha team ahead of the race at Brno, there was a palpable sense of relief. With this future secure for another year, he could get concentrate on racing again with a clear mind, and without the pressure of his results being judged every race. Over the course of the weekend at Brno, we asked Smith how he felt after his contract extension, and what effect he felt it had had on his results. His answers were revealing, and provide an insight into the pressure which all MotoGP riders must function under.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/MotoGPMatters/~3/jRc5pX54K4c/the_pressure_of_contracts_bradley_smith_.html

David Coulthard Piers Courage Chris Craft Jim Crawford

The Home Racers Assessed

The German Grand�Prix provided an opportunity to add the garnish to an already euphoric population, who are still celebrating their World Cup win. With four countrymen on the grid, and one driving a silver arrow, there was a high chance of German success once the lights went out. The Hockenheimring gave Nico Rosberg, Sebastian Vettel, [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/b0XFeG5hVG0/the-home-racers-assessed

Pablo Birger Art Bisch Harry Blanchard Michael Bleekemolen

Wednesday

Indianapolis was a tale of differing pit strategies on Sunday

INDIANAPOLIS�? Let's get this out of the way immediately. Races dictated by pit strategy aren't inherently bad.

Hell, racing would be much more boring and predictable if there was no variability when it came to pit stops. The element of surprise�? something that's severely lacking in today's NASCAR ? would be all but gone if everyone was tethered to the same outlook on race management.

But the differing pit strategies employed by teams from the beginning of Sunday's Brickyard 400 were a glaring indictment on the lack of quality racing the track currently provides.

Because of rain overnight, NASCAR mandated a competition caution on lap 20. As a lot of teams headed to the pits, Joey Logano kicked off the strategy games by staying out, opting for the uber-important clean air of Indianapolis Motor Speedway instead of fresh tires.

Mind you, Indianapolis is conducive for games like this. With laps of approximately 50 seconds, a team within reasonable distance of the lead can elect to pit under green flag conditions and change four tires without losing a lap. That means the team under green is in an advantageous position if a caution is to come out after the pit stop and the rest of the field pits under caution, as the green-flag pitted team can move up ahead of all the cars that pitted during the yellow.

That was on the mind of Logano's crew chief Todd Gordon, who brought him in to the pits on lap 32.

"Being the first one to pit and then when it cycles out hope that your tires are good enough and your car is fast enough you can hold (the cars who pitted under yellow) off," Logano, who finished fifth, said. "We didn't have anything compared to (race-winner Jeff Gordon), so our strategy was to stay out there and just cycle forward every time you can."

But Gordon wasn't the impetus for the strategy games. The impossibility of passing was. Because of the way the cars are currently designed and configured, racing in traffic at such high-speeds around Indianapolis is a tall task. Outside of restarts, there are few, if any, opportunities to make up significant ground on the race track. Hence the differing strategies that especially dominated the first half of Sunday's race, resulting in a constant stream of cars to pit road under green.

The strategy game got Denny Hamlin and crew chief Darian Grubb a third-place finish after starting 27th. And heck, if Hamlin hadn't left the pits with the fuel tank not completely full during one pit stop, he might have been fighting with Gordon and Kasey Kahne for the lead of the race at the end.

?I knew early in the race we had a car that was really fast," Hamlin said. Then Darian pulled that strategy and then we were going to have a 15 second lead with enough fuel to make it. Dang it. Just didn?t get it full that one stop. We had to get it full. We just didn?t get it full. Had to make that extra stop."

"Obviously, the passing is extremely difficult here. Whoever gets out front can really, really go. We passed all the cars that we needed to pass today.?

(After the race, NASCAR officials found issues with the rear firewall block-off plates on Hamlin's car. Any potential penalties will be announced later in the week.)

While Gordon, driver of the best car, won the race, the passing Hamlin refers to in his final sentence above is in reference to pit road. Outside of Gordon's pass of Kevin Harvick on lap two, there were no passes for the lead during the race that didn't immediately come by via a green flag pit stop cycle or immediately following a restart.

Heck, if it wasn't for the final caution of the race, Gordon may never have passed Kasey Kahne for the lead had Kahne been able to make it to the finish of the race on fuel. And it's why Gordon's pass for win on the restart was so important. Whoever got out front was going to nearly unbeatable.

It's a common theme in NASCAR but it's one amplified with a megaphone at Indianapolis. The myriad of pit strategies added a much-needed layer of intrigue. But the layer isn't thick. It's actually quite revealing.

However, there's no magic wand to wave over Indianapolis when it comes to stock cars and the quality of racing. Would an increased apron for more passing space into the turns help? Perhaps. Could slower speeds from the proposed smaller engines in the Cup Series in the future make a difference? Possibly. Are there changes to be made to a car that was designed to help make passing more freuqent? Hopefully.

The racing at Indianapolis doesn't have to be thrill-a-minute and the field doesn't have to be bunched up 1-43 like a restrictor plate race either. The cachet of IMS helps make the Brickyard 400 a crown jewel race on the Cup Series schedule, but that reputation alone can't make it a must-see event. And neither do pit strategies.

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Nick Bromberg is the editor of From The Marbles on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nascar-from-the-marbles/indianapolis-was-a-tale-of-differing-pit-strategies-on-sunday-225350736.html

Marcel Balsa Lorenzo Bandini Henry Banks Fabrizio Barbazza

Tuesday

Caterham challenges legal action by former staff

Caterham has reacted to a statement from the legal representatives of a group of employees who have parted company with the team since the new owners took over. The statement outlined their grievances and their intention to pursue legal action. … Continue reading

Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2014/07/29/caterham-challenges-legal-action-by-former-staff/

Fabrizio Barbazza John Barber Skip Barber Paolo Barilla

Monday

There?s Nothing Wrong With Restarts

I’ve got to be honest, I don’t understand why there has been so much discussion this week about restarts. The rules are really pretty clear. The green flag waves, the leader can go between the two lines, you can’t beat the leader to the line, and don’t change lanes before the start/finish line. Seems pretty […]

TheNASCARInsiders.com

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Patrick Depailler Pedro Diniz Duke Dinsmore Frank Dochnal

With one Saturday night, the way we view on-track confrontations changed

If you're a racing fan, there's a bunch of them etched into your memory. Maybe you remember the first time you saw one live. Maybe it's because you've seen one over and over again on highlights throughout the years. Maybe because it involved your favorite driver.

What are "they," exactly? They're this:

And this:

And this:

Or, in printed form, it's when a driver on foot goes near another driver driving his car to express his displeasure.

Those moments of confrontation have elicited excitement, conjured up drama and added intrigue to NASCAR. And now we know how tragic they can be after Tony Stewart struck and killed Kevin Ward Saturday night in a dirt track race after Ward exited his car to confront Stewart.

After a crash at a short track like Bristol, when there's a history of dislike between two drivers or if it's something that looked a bit out of the ordinary, the intrigue between the moment the wrecked driver exits his race car and he goes to take the mandatory trip in the ambulance has always built suspense. Would the wrecked driver gesture at the driver he felt wronged him? Throw a helmet? Could whatever happens even go so far as to spawn a new feud? Or would the suspense be for naught, and would the driver do nothing?

After all, most crashes are attributed to "one of them racin' deals." That's what made the confrontations so extraordinary.

Now we unfortunately know the answer to a question none of us wanted to ask after a driver exits his car to go after another: What's the worst-case scenario in a literal conflict of man vs. machine?

There's a reason feuds and conflicts have become one of the sport's calling cards; in some way, we're all attracted to the sport because of them. However, emotions can be dangerous, and when combined with motor vehicles, the danger is only amplified. Road rage exists on both the highway and the race track.

No matter the circumstances that surround Saturday night's incident, it's a horrible, horrible tragedy. And it now serves as a perpetual reminder of the amplification. Will it serve as a trigger for drivers to bottle up the displeasure and save it for later? With the absence of clear rational thought in situations like these, it's impossible to guess.

For all of us that watch, however, it's going to be hard to see new and old incidents without thinking about Ward and Stewart. A symbol of what can make racing great now has a high-profile and tangible outcome that's impossible to ignore.

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Nick Bromberg is the editor of From The Marbles on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nascar-from-the-marbles/with-one-saturday-night--the-way-we-view-on-track-confrontations-changed-084240651.html

Gianmaria Bruni Jimmy Bryan Clemar Bucci Ronnie Bucknum

Sunday

Up close : Porsche Cayman GT4

During these last few weeks is making a lot of noise GT4 Porsche Cayman . With the official confirmation and implementation of the 4-cylinder Porsche will present almost certainly in less than a year, all eyes are on this version of the Cayman , which could debut worldwide this new engine . The Cayman GT4 […]

Source: http://www.autocarblog.co.uk/708-up-close-porsche-cayman-gt4.html

Gerhard Berger Eric Bernard Enrique Bernoldi Enrico Bertaggia