Think about that.

Tim Comeau wrote:Hey all good points guys, and more importantly, each is an original point of view based on one's own experiences and one's own goals as to what they want to get out of performance driving.
BUT, what I was getting at is that our sport is different from most in that "talent guarantees you nothing", whereas in others, it's THE most important thing. If you have a racket, a pair of good shoes and some white shorts, and some real talent, you can be a pro tennis player. Set of good clubs and some real talent, you can beat Tiger Woods.
In racing, talent is no where near enough. You HAVE to have buckets of money before you can even get to the pro racing level. It's just like that.
It's really evident when I see boneheaded moves from people driving at the pro level, who I know are in that race because they just bought a seat, not because they had some real talent. That's just the way it is.......
And we all know that there's some guy driving a milk truck up in Ramona who's way faster than all of us, but never got to put his talent to use because of the money thing. Sad. Can't help but feel that our sport is missing some stellar performances.
Not so much complaining as just making a painful observation.
It makes me really want to support and foster young drivers with real talent. Seeing their strong racing talent is a dramatically powerful thing to me and it just seems like the right thing to do to push them to a higher level. They deserve to be racing because they have driving talent, not because they could afford a seat in a race.
That's what I meant.
BUT, what I was getting at is that our sport is different from most in that "talent guarantees you nothing", whereas in others, it's THE most important thing. If you have a racket, a pair of good shoes and some white shorts, and some real talent, you can be a pro tennis player. Set of good clubs and some real talent, you can beat Tiger Woods.
kary wrote:To those that believe that TT is safer than club racing I say this:
Mike wrote:kary wrote:To those that believe that TT is safer than club racing I say this:
Yeah boneheads are everywhere (I've been a bonehead before too), but TT risks for car to car contact are not the same as w2w .
Point by passing, designated passing areas (no w2w in corners and brake zones) and no competitve reason to pass help to reduce TT incidents.
kary wrote:To those that believe that TT is safer than club racing I say this:
It is like anything in life, if you focus on the negative aspects of something, you will end up there, it is a self fulfilling prophecy. If one is thinking that way, negatively, they do not belong there. One who is focused on the objective of racing or TT will not focus on the wrong objective. They will infact be alert and prepared for what is happening, thus their odds of negative outcomes will be far less than those that focus on negative outcomes. If you are not in the zone, you should not be there, where ever that is or what ever that is. I skipped the last event because I was not in the zone and I knew that...I would have been focusing on the wrong things, be those negative or other things. More importantly, I do not want to be on a track with those that are focused on the wrong things, you should not be there if you are focused on the wrong things or do not believe in what the activity you are participating.
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