ade!
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i'm with you sid
at least these rossi fans have all seen rossi ride. 99% of man utd fans have never been to manchester, never mind old trafford.
ade!
ACU? why not add "nt" to the end, you'll get the idea!
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25-10-2006, 08:21 PM |
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thewitch
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Bit unfair to judge Rossi by his fans..he's an amazing talent, and seems a genuinely nice guy too. I'm a Rossi fan (but I haven't got the t-shirt)...just remembered....I've got a Klaffi t-shirt...Gail and David gave me it for my birthday...which team would that be??? Everton???
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25-10-2006, 09:00 PM |
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Paddy_NL
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Oh dear, the King hast lost his Crown :shock:
A very respectable second place in the championship though...
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29-10-2006, 03:44 PM |
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thewitch
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29-10-2006, 03:54 PM |
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Stella
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Congratulations to Nicky Hayden he did what he had to.
For me today Troy Bayliss was by far... man of the meeting, awesome display
As for the God that is Valentino ??? he will be back...... 8)
Stella
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29-10-2006, 04:08 PM |
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Paddy_NL
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thewitch and stella both Wrote:He'll be back! Yep. He was too close to even think he will give up next year.
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29-10-2006, 05:13 PM |
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cargo
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Correct me if I'm wrong but did I detect am atttempt by Hayden to barge/shove Rossi off just after the start
To me it looked like he tried twice. Once was maybe a clash of fairings and a racing incident.......... but twice ?? not so sure
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29-10-2006, 05:15 PM |
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Paddy_NL
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Didn't think I saw that second time. First one was just after the start, was that second one in the first corner then? After that Hayden seemed fading quickly...
Would be stupid by Hayden if he succeeded, he could have gone off himself and lost on points with that act :shock:
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29-10-2006, 05:31 PM |
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cargo
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I have heard tell of a certain competitor being bought off so that he didn't protest all the Hondas that finished in front of him in a 600 race.
Apparently all the Hondas had modified fuel tanks that were not allowed under 600 rules................story was they could NOT get two laps out of a standard tank...........................
ALLEDGEDLY
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04-11-2006, 05:50 AM |
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Paddy_NL
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fixed races? we don't want to know, now do we? :shock:
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04-11-2006, 11:54 AM |
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PeterCourtney
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I too have, within limits, enjoyed the MotoGP season - particularly as, living in Spain, I get the excitable Spanish commentary on the 125 & 250 before switching to the poor-but-in-English jobby on the Beeb! As for the cars...well I gave up on expecting much from them years ago. Both disciplines have suffered in my opinion from excessive control over the past many years - for the 'bikes; age limits and singles-only limits on the 125s, riders only allowed to race in one class, generally strict controls over specifications, and as for the cars the only way they will ever get some interest back into that lot is by restricting the width of tyres to around one-third of what they are now. No more technical restrictions would be needed, as a 5-litre turbo motor would soon chew up its rubber, yet a smooth 2 litre be slower on top speed - the tortoise or the hare....that would add a bit of technical interest! That would stop the problem of them having outgrown the challenge of the circuits and give the drivers a different challenge in controlling them. Motorcycle development has always had the problem of matching power with useability - remember the early Honda 500 being wrestled round by SMBH?
Both disciplines have also shown up the difference between racing on a circuit of the magnificence of the Isle of Man TT course, where I would doubt that any rider has ever done what he would regard as a perfect lap, and the Scalextric tracks where no more than thousandths of a second separate the lap time of several competitors, because it is so much less of a challenge to the technicians and the rider.
Now if only the organisers of the TT would ban tyres that are not road-legal, and add a penalty of 5 minutes for anyone changing tyres during a race, we might see the TT become the only real test of racing where to come out on top, the rider and the machine have to work on rough and non-grippy, bumpy and smooth, uphill and down, with the best compromise between power, speed, handling and economy - and in any weather!
MGP '68 & '69; TT 1970-74
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04-11-2006, 06:32 PM |
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