@weallfollowmanutd That seemed to be the strange paradox of the man, he always seemed to have respect for the other drivers, and he was compassionate and concerned for their well-being when something went wrong. And yet he would put them in danger without hesitation if need be. As a rival of his said, he would get you into a position of a possible accident, then leave it up to you to have that accident or not.
But to be fair, he never seemed to come off as arrogant.
@FlyingBoxHead Believe me i think senna is one of the greatest talents to ever touch a steering wheel but that doesnt put him above reproach. The guy had his flaws and all i see on the channel you say is trolling is quite fair coverage of most things that happen through his career.
So if seing the flaws of your hero is to much to bare dont hate the guy that posts the video.
@FlyingBoxHead Why ? Senna was not god, he was great but just another driver. People always overreact because Senna died. If he was alive nowadays (sadly he is not) people like you would have never even turned attention at dudes like swallowAyrtonSenna :) The dude just dont like Senna so it's his opinion and you must respect it.
The FIA actually thought about punishing Ayrton for taking an official car to the scene of Roland's accident and for not attending the post qualifying press conference. I know good sense did prevail, but the sad fact is that they thought about it, even for a moment. They probably even thought about fining him for not attending the post race press conferences. I know how vile and insensitive that sounds, but clearly they were so wrapped up in red tape even in the face of death, who knows?
@azapro911 I think they were right about reprimanding him. What if every driver would have reacted that way? You would have 25 drivers heading for official cars to rush to 'help'. If - let's say - JJ Lehto would have taken the safety car to watch the scenery of Roland's accident, would you also say - hey, what a hero? probably not. You'd say - why the hell does this guy not let the professionals do their job? - To me this says that Ayrton believed that rules were something others need to obey.
@TheColinChapman Bit politically insensitive to choose Lehto as the example here, as he's now in jail for accidentally killing a friend. But point taken. My only problem was that at a time like this, all they gave a damn about was protocol. Commandeering a medical car, I can see how that was a big issue. But missing the press conference? In those circumstances?! Utterly rediculous and thankfully a rare moment of common sense shone through.
@NASCARWWEclubpenguin You sure mean like "would not crashed there"? Senna would not have survived this crash and he was very unlucky in his accident that the front tire and part of suspension hit his visor . The Ratzenberger crash was 100% fatal maybe survivable in today's cars but I even doubt that...
people should take off Senna and Ratzenberger deaths, everytime I watch them a tear comes out of my eye
V12Style 52 minutes ago
@weallfollowmanutd That seemed to be the strange paradox of the man, he always seemed to have respect for the other drivers, and he was compassionate and concerned for their well-being when something went wrong. And yet he would put them in danger without hesitation if need be. As a rival of his said, he would get you into a position of a possible accident, then leave it up to you to have that accident or not.
But to be fair, he never seemed to come off as arrogant.
gullivera 1 month ago
Somebody needs to get this retarded troll 'swallowAyrtonSenna' off of YouTube.He's REALLY on my and many other's nerves.
FlyingBoxHead 2 months ago 19
@FlyingBoxHead let me guess your a senna fan boy
stellpoons 1 month ago
@stellpoons Just respect those that have since passed.
FlyingBoxHead 1 month ago
@FlyingBoxHead Believe me i think senna is one of the greatest talents to ever touch a steering wheel but that doesnt put him above reproach. The guy had his flaws and all i see on the channel you say is trolling is quite fair coverage of most things that happen through his career.
So if seing the flaws of your hero is to much to bare dont hate the guy that posts the video.
stellpoons 1 month ago
@stellpoons I just mean the way he posts it,it's just so undignified.
FlyingBoxHead 1 month ago
@stellpoons And he's not my hero either,that's Mika Häkkinen.
FlyingBoxHead 1 month ago
@FlyingBoxHead Why ? Senna was not god, he was great but just another driver. People always overreact because Senna died. If he was alive nowadays (sadly he is not) people like you would have never even turned attention at dudes like swallowAyrtonSenna :) The dude just dont like Senna so it's his opinion and you must respect it.
Slu4ainika 1 month ago
@Slu4ainika There's having an opinion and being a total ass.
FlyingBoxHead 1 month ago
@FlyingBoxHead Agreed
ninchin2 2 weeks ago
Rest in peace Roland, such a promising driver.
711leon 3 months ago
The FIA actually thought about punishing Ayrton for taking an official car to the scene of Roland's accident and for not attending the post qualifying press conference. I know good sense did prevail, but the sad fact is that they thought about it, even for a moment. They probably even thought about fining him for not attending the post race press conferences. I know how vile and insensitive that sounds, but clearly they were so wrapped up in red tape even in the face of death, who knows?
azapro911 4 months ago
@azapro911 I think they were right about reprimanding him. What if every driver would have reacted that way? You would have 25 drivers heading for official cars to rush to 'help'. If - let's say - JJ Lehto would have taken the safety car to watch the scenery of Roland's accident, would you also say - hey, what a hero? probably not. You'd say - why the hell does this guy not let the professionals do their job? - To me this says that Ayrton believed that rules were something others need to obey.
TheColinChapman 1 month ago
@TheColinChapman Bit politically insensitive to choose Lehto as the example here, as he's now in jail for accidentally killing a friend. But point taken. My only problem was that at a time like this, all they gave a damn about was protocol. Commandeering a medical car, I can see how that was a big issue. But missing the press conference? In those circumstances?! Utterly rediculous and thankfully a rare moment of common sense shone through.
azapro911 1 month ago
0:45 that`s the corner where Senna died. My goodness I didn't know Roland's was the next corner up. Incredible. -daz in oz
dazincalculation 4 months ago
@dazincalculation I think every F1 fan who loved Senna will always recognize that sign at Tamburello.
shinhawk 4 months ago
@shinhawk unfortunately yes..i always get creeps when i see it..
Mynstroop 4 months ago
@shinhawk
Bennyboy1985 3 months ago
@shinhawk
I think of it every time I see a bottle of Kronenbourg...
Bennyboy1985 3 months ago
Is that John Watson?
S7r0ng3r 5 months ago
@S7r0ng3r yes. he commentated from 1990-1996 on eurosport.
gmiky 5 months ago
@gmiky That I never knew. Thanks gmiky :)
S7r0ng3r 5 months ago
2 incredable drivers die in 2 days R.I.P Senna and Ratzenberger:(
33unholy 5 months ago 5
If only he crashed there. Probably he would still be with us. RIP Senna!
NASCARWWEclubpenguin 5 months ago
@NASCARWWEclubpenguin You sure mean like "would not crashed there"? Senna would not have survived this crash and he was very unlucky in his accident that the front tire and part of suspension hit his visor . The Ratzenberger crash was 100% fatal maybe survivable in today's cars but I even doubt that...
TheBigHase 5 months ago
@TheBigHase And yes I am certain he would be in F1 as a Team leader maybe Bruno would be driving for him and maybe Ayrton's son...
TheBigHase 5 months ago
Never seen this before. Thanks!
afoHusker 6 months ago 2