thehemogoblin wrote:Silverstone: Nothing says "we love tradition" quite like moving the pit lane after it had been in the same spot for nearly 50 years.
thehemogoblin wrote:Valencia: It looks like it is in an industrial wasteland, and the races have been a waste of time.
thehemogoblin wrote:Indianapolis: As the Indy 500: There was practically no crossover between actual Formula One races and these races considered as championship races. As a road course: The 2005 Michelin farce. (Honorable mention: It runs in the opposite direction of the outer circuit.)
CarlosFerreira wrote:Are we being slightly silly? It's as exciting as VLADIMIR PUTIN wearing a LIVE BEAR!
BaconLettuceNinja wrote:If there's anything I've learned in this week's competition, it's that I never wish to live in the Shetland Islands. Ever.
thehemogoblin wrote:Pedralbes: Another track taken off the calendar because of the safety backlash of the Le Mans disaster. Its straightaway was named after Franco.
thehemogoblin wrote:Here we go, 69 circuits analyzed from a reject point of view. For the most part, just expect a mention of the worst aspect of each track. These are 100 percent up for debate, and I'll take criticism and/or suggestions to make this better.
Adelaide: It's really hard to trash a track that consistently gave some of the most memorable moments in Formula One history, especially because so many people here are Aussies. But I'm probably going to say Mika Hakkinen having to receive an emergency tracheotomy on the side of the racetrack in 1995.
Aida: It's not racing if nobody can pass ... and does the race really happen if nobody is there to see it?
Ain-Diab: The track was way too long and the death of Stuart Lewis-Evans marred the only championship race to take place in Morocco.
Aintree: Liverpool is kind of a dump.
Albert Park: It took the race from Adelaide and it has incurred mounds of debt.
Anderstorp: Having the pits halfway through the lap is just plain strange.
AVUS: It lacks a certain je ne sais quoi, like, right turns, for instance.
Bahrain: One of many new tracks built for the money, not for the racing.
Boavista: Nice view, but racing on cobblestones is really unsafe.
Brands Hatch: Lots of good races, but there were a lot of deaths at the track as well.
Bremgarten: It's not your fault, Bremgarten, but the Swiss ban on motor racing takes the cake here. Losing your race because your country bans the sport is pretty strange (even though I understand the Swiss government's ideology).
Bugatti Circuit: It hosts a 24-hour rollerskating race.
Caesars Palace: It was in a parking lot, and proceeded to make for races exactly as boring as one would think races in a parking lot would be.
Catalunya: There's too much testing there. There's not enough passing there. The races are unfailingly boring there.
Charade: Loose gravel punctured 10 tires and one eye during the 1972 race, and Formula One never returned.
Dallas: The pavement was falling apart. Oppressively hot. The pavement was falling apart. Who schedules a grand prix in Texas in July? The pavement was falling apart.
Detroit street circuit: I'd say too much attrition resulted from the narrow track, but this is F1 Rejects and that is sacrilege. Instead, I'm going to complain that it wasn't Belle Isle.
Dijon-Prenois: The track was too damn short.
Donington Park: The biggest failure didn't actually have to do with the race it hosted; instead, it had to do with tearing up the track without the funding to put it back together in a failed attempt to get the British Grand Prix.
Estoril: Forgot to get its repairs done in time and was usurped by Jerez in 1997 for one of the more memorable incidents in Formula One history.
Fuji: Building NASCAR-style ovals in countries not named "The United States of America" is a bad idea from the outset. But specifically for Formula One, building the racetrack in an area prone to torrential downpours just wasn't smart. Regardless of its layout, Hermann Tilke.
Circuit Gilles Villeneuve: Lots of horrible crashes. Riccardo Paletti, Olivier Panis, Robert Kubica.
Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez: The elevation just screwed with so many things.
Hockenheimring: It never should have been touched by Hermann Tilke.
Hungaroring: Universally regarded as the most boring track on the circuit.
Imola: 1994.
Indianapolis: As the Indy 500: There was practically no crossover between actual Formula One races and these races considered as championship races. As a road course: The 2005 Michelin farce. (Honorable mention: It runs in the opposite direction of the outer circuit.)
Istanbul: It's not Constantinople. Also, there has been a startling lack of fans at recent races.
Jacarepagua: It got sacrificed for an Olympic training venue.
Jarama: Short, narrow, twisty, boring.
Jerez: In the middle of nowhere, relatively speaking; that sadly took a perfectly good racetrack off the schedule and gave us Catalunya (see above).
Interlagos: (The inspiration of this list.) That constant threat of being mugged.
Korean International Circuit: Lucky the race was so wet that nobody was able to focus on the sheer ridiculousness of the racetrack's construction.
Kyalami: A good racetrack in a country with bad politics. A bad racetrack in a country with better politics.
Long Beach: Hosted the last Champ Car race.
Magny-Cours: The Germans conquered France here, with 10 of 18 races on the track being won by them.
Marina Bay Circuit: Nelson Piquet Jr's little stunt here pollutes the history of this track.
Monsanto Park: The track crossed tram lines. There's a reason it only hosted one grand prix.
Monte Carlo: Nelson Piquet said it best: "It's like riding a bicycle round your living room."
Montjuic: The track was tragically unsafe during its final race, the 1975 Spanish Grand Prix, where four spectators were killed.
Mont-Tremblant: Kind of unsafe with all those bumps.
Monza: You know there's a problem with deaths at the track when there is a Wikipedia page entitled "List of Autodromo Nazionale Monza fatal accidents."
Mosport: It's not that notable.
Nivelles-Baulers: As a reaction to Spa-Francorchamps, it was wide, flat, safe and sterile. Ironically, it eventually lost its race because it was too unsafe to race upon the pavement.
Nurburgring: Nordschleife: Albeit legendary, it was far too unsafe for modern Formula One. Grand prix track: Too mathematical, too calculated, not natural and free-flowing.
Autodromo Oscar Alfredo Galvez: Flat, twisty and boring, in its modern iteration at least.
Osterreichring: One of Hermann Tilke's success stories turned sour when the stands were demolished for no good reason in 2004.
Circuit Paul Ricard: This track has the ignominy of being neutered into a test track with no stands.
Pedralbes: Another track taken off the calendar because of the safety backlash of the Le Mans disaster. Its straightaway was named after Franco.
Pescara: The longest track ever to host a grand prix, and that's not a compliment. The 1957 race there was the first time two races were held in one country in a season, starting an annoying trend that eventually led to the Valencia Street Circuit.
Phoenix street circuit: Three of Formula One's most terrible races happened here, including one that was out-drawn by an ostrich festival. This track scared Formula One out of the United States for more than a decade.
Prince George Circuit: South Africa's first Formula One circuit was too small for the sport.
Reims-Gueux: It was a giant triangle predicated entirely on drafting. It was Daytona, sans banking, in open-wheel cars.
Riverside: It's a shopping mall now. But the race's promoter bit the hand that fed him and pissed off the local media in Los Angeles, and in turn, nobody knew about the race that happened. Nobody came.
Rouen: It had plenty of opportunities, but couldn't ever secure the French Grand Prix over the long term.
Sebring: A giant expanse of super-flat concrete hosting a single race that nobody showed up to.
Sepang: Starting races in the late afternoon has been one of the dumbest logistical decisions of modern Formula One. Torrential downpours ensued.
Shanghai: A drain cover at the track once won Reject of the Race. Enough said.
Silverstone: Nothing says "we love tradition" quite like moving the pit lane after it had been in the same spot for nearly 50 years.
Spa-Francorchamps: If only the neighbors liked the racing as much as motorsports fans do...
Suzuka: It's not a rejectful track in its own right, but a NASCAR pace car driver died during an exhibition race at the track in 1996.
Valencia: It looks like it is in an industrial wasteland, and the races have been a waste of time.
Watkins Glen: America's most legendary road course lost its race because it forgot to pay the teams after the 1980 race.
Yas Marina: One race with both titles determined in 2009 isn't enough to judge this circuit. Let's see what it looks like with all the chips on the table this season.
Zandvoort: Another track killed by budget issues and hindered by bad neighbors.
Zeltweg Airfield: Like a boomerang, but with none of the fun. One farcical race, and that was the end of that. Jack Brabham was classified despite being 29 laps down.
Zolder: Took the life of Gilles Villeneuve and took the Belgian Grand Prix away from Spa-Francorchamps. Talk about unpopular.
thehemogoblin, on giving a reason for reporting a particular post wrote:He Zsolted!!!
Phoenix wrote:Bremgarten: screw the Swiss government ideology. It was too harsh. Whoever wanted to risk his life racing in a closed track was in his right to do so. Why they didn't ban skiing, which is potentially equally as dangerous, or promulgate a law that bans suicide altogether? And that wasn't the circuit's fault.
Phoenix wrote:Hockenheimring: 200% agree. He butchered the circuit.
CarlosFerreira wrote:Are we being slightly silly? It's as exciting as VLADIMIR PUTIN wearing a LIVE BEAR!
BaconLettuceNinja wrote:If there's anything I've learned in this week's competition, it's that I never wish to live in the Shetland Islands. Ever.
CarlosFerreira wrote:Are we being slightly silly? It's as exciting as VLADIMIR PUTIN wearing a LIVE BEAR!
BaconLettuceNinja wrote:If there's anything I've learned in this week's competition, it's that I never wish to live in the Shetland Islands. Ever.
Captain Hammer wrote:Phoenix wrote:Hockenheimring: 200% agree. He butchered the circuit.
I find Martin Brundle's comments from this year's race interesting: from a driver's point of view, the revised layout is better because the old circuit was just a drag race to see how had the best engine. All the skill in the world wouldn't count for an engine that was down on power.
Stramala describing Chris James wrote:probably the biggest c**t to ever grace the BTCC. He is proof you should need to pass a license test of some kind to have access to the internet.
JJMonty wrote: it cannot be blammed for Surtees's crash as that is more of a design fail for not having wheel tethers.... that could of happened at any circuit.
P_Friesacher wrote:JJMonty wrote: it cannot be blammed for Surtees's crash as that is more of a design fail for not having wheel tethers.... that could of happened at any circuit.
It could have happened on many tracky, I agree - but the runoff there could have been a bit bigger, too. Van der Drift's crash, by the way, could also have happened in Monza or even the new Korean backstraight. But still - the combinations of all these factors and the rather narrow track is what, in my opinion, makes Brands a bit dangerous for some types of racing. Apart from that, as I've said, I really like the track. Great fun in rFactor, too.
thehemogoblin wrote:Magny-Cours: The Germans conquered France here, with 10 of 18 races on the track being won by them.
JJMonty wrote:P_Friesacher wrote:
Agreed.... but some drivers prefer the old school circuits as it gives them the risk and in some ways.... risk = fun! Thats what Hamilton says, he gets more of a kick knowing he is inches away from the wall and knows he has no 2nd chances because of no tarmac run-offs.... it separates the men to the flukers.
I must admit as a karter/racer that I agree with him... sounds a bit dare-devilish I know... but thats the risk you take in racing... of course making it safe is a must and they have done a good job on that! You just cannot get rid of that risk all together as we have whitnessed.
Put it this way, if I had a choice of racing at Brands, or Go to Bahrain circuit to race, I would probably pick Brands because it gives you more of a challenge!
.... Perhaps i'm the only one that has this opinion or do others have a similar point of view?
thehemogoblin, on giving a reason for reporting a particular post wrote:He Zsolted!!!
JJMonty wrote:Put it this way, if I had a choice of racing at Brands, or Go to Bahrain circuit to race, I would probably pick Brands because it gives you more of a challenge!
.... Perhaps i'm the only one that has this opinion or do others have a similar point of view?
Klon wrote:thehemogoblin wrote:Magny-Cours: The Germans conquered France here, with 10 of 18 races on the track being won by them.
You say that like it's a bad thing.
Also: Suzuka - Building in an unneccesary chicane, better known as Casio Triangle
Klon wrote:thehemogoblin wrote:Magny-Cours: The Germans conquered France here, with 10 of 18 races on the track being won by them.
You say that like it's a bad thing.
Also: Suzuka - Building in an unneccesary chicane, better known as Casio Triangle
thehemogoblin wrote:Oh, not at all. Just wanted to remind the French people on here.
(Side note: Just found out last week that I'm a German citizen for life, because my mother was a citizen when I was born. So, yeah.)
P_Friesacher wrote:thehemogoblin wrote:Oh, not at all. Just wanted to remind the French people on here.
(Side note: Just found out last week that I'm a German citizen for life, because my mother was a citizen when I was born. So, yeah.)
So: time to join the Bundeswehr then! And quick too, before they finally abolish conscription. Or, if you really want to, migrate to Austria where probably we're all still going to have the distinct pleasure in the next few years...
P_Friesacher wrote:Not mine either. Spent a year in civilian service (not sure if thats the correct translation, dict.cc says yes...) instead of 8 months in our military...
P_Friesacher wrote:JJMonty wrote: it cannot be blammed for Surtees's crash as that is more of a design fail for not having wheel tethers.... that could of happened at any circuit.
It could have happened on many tracky, I agree - but the runoff there could have been a bit bigger, too. Van der Drift's crash, by the way, could also have happened in Monza or even the new Korean backstraight. But still - the combinations of all these factors and the rather narrow track is what, in my opinion, makes Brands a bit dangerous for some types of racing. Apart from that, as I've said, I really like the track. Great fun in rFactor, too.
ADx_Wales wrote:None of these tracks, these F1 tracks, will EVER trump the rejectful nature of the Beijing International Streetcircuit that A1GP visited where the hairpin was unable to be taken without using reverse gear, and even when they shortened the venue none of the crashed or spun cars could get removed properly.

thehemogoblin, on giving a reason for reporting a particular post wrote:He Zsolted!!!
ADx_Wales wrote:None of these tracks, these F1 tracks, will EVER trump the rejectful nature of the Beijing International Streetcircuit that A1GP visited where the hairpin was unable to be taken without using reverse gear, and even when they shortened the venue none of the crashed or spun cars could get removed properly.
CarlosFerreira wrote:Are we being slightly silly? It's as exciting as VLADIMIR PUTIN wearing a LIVE BEAR!
BaconLettuceNinja wrote:If there's anything I've learned in this week's competition, it's that I never wish to live in the Shetland Islands. Ever.
dr-baker wrote:JJMonty wrote:Put it this way, if I had a choice of racing at Brands, or Go to Bahrain circuit to race, I would probably pick Brands because it gives you more of a challenge!
.... Perhaps i'm the only one that has this opinion or do others have a similar point of view?
I go to Brands to watch motorsport often enough for many people on here to know what I think. But the safety of the GP loop does need to be considered... And the local NIMBY-ism... And the environmentalists if they do decide to improve the loop - it is about as wooded as at Hockenheim...
Klon wrote:I am T5 (not suitable for military or civilian service) and proud of it. But that's beside the point.
Also AVUS - Quite a load of very dangerous accidents
CarlosFerreira wrote:Are we being slightly silly? It's as exciting as VLADIMIR PUTIN wearing a LIVE BEAR!
BaconLettuceNinja wrote:If there's anything I've learned in this week's competition, it's that I never wish to live in the Shetland Islands. Ever.
mario wrote:P_Friesacher wrote:JJMonty wrote: it cannot be blammed for Surtees's crash as that is more of a design fail for not having wheel tethers.... that could of happened at any circuit.
It could have happened on many tracky, I agree - but the runoff there could have been a bit bigger, too. Van der Drift's crash, by the way, could also have happened in Monza or even the new Korean backstraight. But still - the combinations of all these factors and the rather narrow track is what, in my opinion, makes Brands a bit dangerous for some types of racing. Apart from that, as I've said, I really like the track. Great fun in rFactor, too.
There was Lafitte's crash during the first start of the 1986 British Grand Prix, which shattered both his legs and forced him to retire from the sport - so there were serious accidents during the time that it was used as a Grand Prix circuit. It is a fun track with the elevation changes, but it has had its share of problems over the years.
Also, thehaemoglobin, I thought that the infield section of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway had nothing to do with Tilke - the contract for the infield section was drawn up in 1998, and at the time Tilke had been awarded the contract for Sepang. Do you have a source linking Tilke to the road course design?
In addition, surely you should add to Spa-Francorchamps's entry the perennial money problems that they've had? They've been running at a loss for the past few years, and the original owner went bankrupt in 2005 because of that. Then there was the 1985 Belgian Grand Prix, which had to be postponed by several months because the track surface broke up and made it impossible to drive a car there.
Speaking of which, you're not quite right that the road surface didn't break up in Detroit - in 1985, it did start to disintegrate at Turn 2, and caused several drivers to crash at that corner when they were caught out. However, it also lead to an ingenious bit of driving by Michele Alboreto - when Senna tried to pass him, Alboreto stayed away from the apex in Turn 2, where the surface had broken up, and Senna, in his trademark manner, threw his car down the inside of Alboreto. Of course, Senna hit the loose surface there, causing his car to slide wide and hit the wall, breaking his suspension, leaving Alboreto to drive on to the finish without any threat from Senna.
Kimi-ICE wrote:NOOOOOO!!!!! Damm those Pirelli tires, Made of cheese
Clint Bowyer at Richmond wrote:Thank you Juan Pablo (Montoya) for wrecking me, and then winning me the race!
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