http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/76853
Well, this probably won't be happening, but it will be interesting if he could make the switch to F1 sometime and see how far he can go. Though he is on age.
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http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/76853
Well, this probably won't be happening, but it will be interesting if he could make the switch to F1 sometime and see how far he can go. Though he is on age.
If anything, it indicates that he is tiring of WRC. As far as circuit racing goes, he might do a few more F1 tests, and take part in the Le Mans 24 hour again. But not much more.
About time... it's since years he's thinking about that. Actually ... he WANTS it, but it is hard to believe that TR team will give him a change in a real race.
But it's not impossible ^^
Would be cool, but it won't happen
Olivier would rather lose his left nut than lose Loeb.
Ain't gonna happen!
From a marketing perspective, it would be making a lot of sense for Torro Rosso, who have been flying well under the radar throughout this season.
And with only four WRC events left and only one of them (Catalonia) clashing with an F1 race, Loeb could actually do both F1 and rallying. Also of course, Red Bull is a sponsor of the Citroen rallye team, so they might want to pull some strings.
I agree it is a long shot, but it would be interesting to see how Loeb does in Formula One.
While class is scorned these days by many, at least drivers such as Button, Barrichello, Piquet and Bourdais have that.
Loeb is a bloodsucker and he thinks he can step from one of those silly little rally cars to formula 1 car, especially the TR and race better than a proven driver like Bourdais?
I think Loeb has what Eddie Irvine used to term "a legend in his own mind".
Both Loeb and Valentino Rossi have only done limited mileage in F1 cars and were less than a second slower than the regulars who drove them, despite being complete novices.Quote:
Originally Posted by Saint Devote
He won't race in F1 though, at 35 he is too old to start.
These days being more than 200ths slower than a teammate is slow.Quote:
Originally Posted by Malllen
It was barely 10 years ago that being with 700ths was good as a start.
There is a significant difference being able to be "almost as quick" versus competitive. Lots of drivers would be under a second - it is a small band that could be consistently competitive.
He was faster then that:Quote:
Originally Posted by Malllen
http://www.rallybuzz.com/loeb-video-f1-test/
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/72194
but i agree that he is too old for a F1 career.
Wishful thinking on Loebs part i think.Its different driving a 35 minute stage,to driving a 90 minute race.And although 35 years old may not have been old a few years ago for F1 ,the youngsters like Vettel are here now at 22 years old.
Ah from what I understand the original interview was a bit tongue in cheek when he was asked about this but his reply has been taken out of context and made a big deal out of.
Obviously he's a talented driver and was not far off the pace when he raced at Le Mans so with more practice he could find a second career there but I don't think he seriously considers he can be competitive in F1 (or at least I don't).
I believe he was fastest of his teammates in one of the wet practice sessions in preparations for Le Mans.Quote:
Originally Posted by SpooSH
I would root for him if he tried the 24 hour again. It's a brilliant event.
Rally GB is the weekend before the Abu Dhabi GP, so I can see him making a one-off appearance that weekend..
Long term though, no chance. He's too old to start a career now IMO
And Loeb would have to be nuts to do it. Jump from a successful rally career into a sinking F1 team that has been cannibalizing its own? That is a working definition of :crazy: .Quote:
Originally Posted by gm99
ClarkFan
Don't you have to be :crazy: to be a rally driver anyway?? ;)Quote:
Originally Posted by ClarkFan
You point of view is dillusional.Quote:
Originally Posted by Saint Devote
Maybe you should read what he said before accusing him of being a bloodsucker and arrogant.Quote:
Originally Posted by Saint Devote
I've never seen any evidence of this, ever.Quote:
I think Loeb has what Eddie Irvine used to term "a legend in his own mind".
But he is a motorsport legend.
Yes, but not crazy in that particular fashion! :pQuote:
Originally Posted by Sonic
ClarkFan
Agree 100%....Sainet Devote I have no idea where you got this impression of Loeb. He's always come across a great sportsman and gentlemen whether winning (which he does a lot of!) or losing.Quote:
Originally Posted by theugsquirrel
Another pearl of StD 'wisdom'! :rotflmao:Quote:
Originally Posted by Saint Devote
Perhaps we could find a rally driver who would take StD for a ride in his "silly little car". Might set him straight.
He sure wouldn't talk to much after the first corner. :DQuote:
Originally Posted by Sonic
Would require some sort of moisture-proof covering for the navigator's seat, or it would smell funny afterward.Quote:
Originally Posted by ioan
ClarkFan
lol! Yes quite!Quote:
Originally Posted by ClarkFan
I think he is going to suprise a few people and really hope he does. I think most drivers become quick and legends with practice, but Seb is basically a boy race who can drive like no one else and has big, big balls. WRC, F1, Dakar, LM24, anything with a car, he can win.
Put it on pole Seb ;)
How ignorant can one get? This guy is fast in anything. Dear me.... :dozey:Quote:
Originally Posted by Saint Devote
Agree, Loeb will do well. At least top 10 with a clean run. I dont think the F1 guys can see that this guy is a genius, the greatest driving talent the world has ever seen....... i wont hold my breath!Quote:
Originally Posted by AndyRAC
He's brilliant at driving a car fast, but he hasn't got racecraft, and has no idea how to navigate a field of 20 closely matched cars driving at 10/10ths ploughing into the first corner.
Lets be honest, Le Mans is no comparison to driving in a grand prix. So for that reason, he shouldn't be in F1 without going through several feeder series races.
Ah I see the silly little discussion clique is snickering again - yet you have no answer for my statement.
Toro Rosso have to decide whether they are a serious racing team or one making up the numbers using publicity stunts. Gunter Schmidt would be right at home.
And anyone that believes Loeb will actually do better than Bourdais is as dysfunctional as those that believe Obama is presidential material.
Your statements are just a load of hot air, there is no other answer to that than a good healthy :rotflmao: !Quote:
Originally Posted by Saint Devote