Gronholm would be a good choice, although it has been over 2 years since his last WRC event, he was up to 2nd in Portugal 2009 in the Subaru WRC before he crashed.
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Gronholm would be a good choice, although it has been over 2 years since his last WRC event, he was up to 2nd in Portugal 2009 in the Subaru WRC before he crashed.
And who is guessing on which stage should JML crash at about every coming event? Well, he beat you off guard on this one, didn't he?Quote:
Originally Posted by Barreis
Can't believe all the crazy suggestions here :crazy:
Even Marcus said after his last event in Sweden that he couldn't drive at the previous pace due to no testing. Your mind slows down if you're not doing it all the time, another reason the works cars are quicker than privateers
Esa-Pekka Lappi... no wait, that was my wet dream... :p
Usually it takes 3-4 weeks to heal, but you are not ready to drive World Rally Car immediately. Full recovery is around 3-4 months, sometimes up to 9 months (for older people and more serious fractures). Usually well trained people heal faster, should be OK by Acropolis.Quote:
Originally Posted by grugsticles
Not suitable to drive long rallies early after such injuries. Like bluuford says, maybe 3 months.
One guy ready and available is actually Henning. Its not cause i'm a norvegian, but i feel Henning never has been given good enough equipement to show his real pace. Maybe he got his change now? He has never been mentioned as a tarmacdriver, but i remember he won several swrc rallies in a s2000 fiesta couple of yrs ago. I think he is fast enough given fast cars, not the cheap and slow version's he's been driving these yrs.
Sordo to replace? - WRC : VICTIME D
He has it's just that his real pace is not enough.Quote:
Originally Posted by skarderud
Would Mini really let him drive for another factory team? I really doubt that.Quote:
Originally Posted by 6789
"Another"? Sordo drives for a private team.Quote:
Originally Posted by BleAivano