F1 Update!: 2013 Grand Prix of Australia
Hello, greetings and welcome to the new format of F1 Update!, the venerable (not vulnerable) flagship of The Pond. In the past, F1U! has evolved from a simple e-mail to a light-hearted romp to a much more formal, almost regimented, review of each race. Today, we here at F1U! are going to take it away from that style to a more conversational tone. There are undoubtedly going to be people who won't care for this change, but we're doing it because, to be blunt, it takes too much time to do it the more formal way. When the race is two hours and the F1U! takes four, there's something wrong, and this new style aims to fix it! So let's get to updatin'!
*TIRE WAR: One of the things you can't be sure of during the offseason is how the tires will last. Yes, everybody knows the super-softs won't last as long as the mediums, but they'll be faster, yadda yadda. What's important is exactly how long they'll go, and with the top 10 qualifiers on the super-softs to start the race, it was hardly a theoretical question. Answers came quickly: Vettel pitted on Lap 7, and everybody in the top 10 had stopped by Lap 12... the two Mercedes, coming in last, were coughing up a full second a lap to the fresher medium-shod cars. Once everybody stopped, we had a surprising leader: Force India's Adrian F'n Sutil. He had qualified 12th and thereby got to start on the tires of his choice, the longer-lived mediums.
*WAIT, WHAT?: It quickly became quite obvious that Sutil wasn't a fluke. He made his mediums last some 20 laps, long enough that HWMNBN actually made a (strategic) second stop before Sutil made his first. The race clearly was going to be one of tire maintenance: he who made the fewest stops and could keep pace in worn tires was going to win. Sutil's Force India clearly was gentle on its tires, but the Lotus of Raikkonen was, too... and was a faster car, to boot. It was quickly clear that Force India's strategy was to hope for rain, not a bad plan this weekend, all things being equal. If it came before they had to stop for the mandatory super-soft tires, the team would win their first ever race... and the forecast was changing every minute and from team to team.
*AW DRAT: Unfortunately, all of Force India's prayers to Indra went unanswered, and Sutil wound up having to stop for super-soft tires. These proved to be even worse than they had been earlier, giving him two good laps before they went to heck. He wound up falling all the way to 7th, and only a questionable team call kept his teammate, Paul di Resta, from passing him.
*UP FRONT: While every eye was turned to the excitement of Sutil's story, Kimi Raikkonen's tire care had put him firmly in front, leading HWMNBN and Vettel. In fact, once the Finn drove past Sutil for the lead, it was clear that the win was going to be his, and that's the way it worked out. In fact, it wasn't even close: Kimi finished 12 seconds ahead of HWMNBN, who was 10 seconds clear of Vettel, who was 11 seconds up on Felipe Massa.
*WHAT DID WE LEARN?: Having good pace in practice and qualifying means nothing when it comes to the long distances of the race. Being easy on your tires is better than one-lap pace. And that McLaren is in serious, serious trouble: they finished 9th and 11th, and never once looked good. There's even rumors of them switching back to last year's chassis.
*DRIVER OF THE RACE: Adrian F'n Sutil. His first race back after being out of the sport in 2012 turned out to be pretty decent. If a rain shower had come by around lap 35, the race would have been his... and the sky looked like it could have happened at any minute.
*TEAM OF THE RACE: Ferrari. HWMNBN's second place is hardly a surprise. Felipe Massa's fourth-place finish at a track he hates probably has to be counted as a surprise. They've got a nice jump on the constructor's championship already.
*MOVE OF THE RACE: On Lap 32, Ferrari's HWMNBN was going to pass the Mercedes of Shiv Hamilton. It wasn't a question of "if", but when and that's all there was to it. Didn't mean that Shiv was going to make it easy for the Spaniard, however. When the Ferrari made its move, Hamilton held off on braking for as long as possible... and maybe a little longer. When he did finally step on the clampers, he immediately locked up his front-left tire and had zero ability to steer.
HWMNBN, who was past the Merc driver and just about to begin the turn, saw what was going on next to him (though with a smoke trail that long, it'd be hard to miss) and decided that he didn't need to turn right then... it could wait. While this let Hamilton keep the place for a few more seconds, it did keep the Merc out of the Ferrari sidepods. For that quick reaction, HWMNBN gets the Move of the Race.
*MOOOOOOO-OOOVE OF THE RACE: A remarkably clean race today, with really only one bit of poor driving. On Lap 25, Papabile Maldonado was heading down to Turn 1 and did what hundreds of drivers had done before him: he moved as far outside as possible to get the best angle into the turn. And then the Williams driver went a few inches too far, his left side tires leaving the pavement and hitting the grass. The result was preordained.
He was out of the race on the spot, the only car to be eliminated via a method other than technical fault. Here ya go, Maldonado: have a Moooooo-ooove!
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AND they had a legit chance to win or podium... if it had just rained.
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 17, 2013 09:00 PM (SFv5m)
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Martin Whitmarsh confirmed that they are considering switching to 2012 car, but for now they'll try and work with what they've got. That probably means another race after Malaysia at the minimum.
Posted by: Pete at March 17, 2013 09:19 PM (RqRa5)
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Never mind, he came out a day later and said they definitely won't switch back to 2012, after apparently an overnight analysis of the race data.
Posted by: Pete at March 18, 2013 05:29 PM (RqRa5)
F1 Quals: Australia 2013... Q2 and Q3
After yesterday's soggy session, it looks like we've finally got a grid for Sunday's Grand Prix of Australia! Let's take a look, shall we?
From reports, Q2 started out wet but drying, and Q3 finished on the supersoft tires. I don't think anybody is going to be surprised by the men on the front row; if we're lucky, the Red Bulls won't dominate the whole year. I think the surprise has to be McLaren just being... slow. We'll see if it carries over through the race and the season.
The race is in a few hours, we'll have the F1U! tomorrow! See ya then! more...
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Usually the times get lower in later sessions, but I don't recall a case where anyone shaved 17 seconds off their Q1 time. The track really must have changed!
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It's the difference between two tire extremes: Q1 they used full-wet tires on a track with standing water, but in Q3 they had on the super-softs on a dry track.
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 16, 2013 10:41 PM (SFv5m)
F1 Quals: Australia 2013... RAINED OUT!
When the time came to start Q1 for the Australian Grand Prix... they postponed it for a half-hour due to wind, rain and general miserableness. From what the New Legendary Announce Team said, just after the V8S support race ended, the skies opened up with a fury not often seen in these here parts. Rain came down in buckets, the wind tore branches from trees and umbrellas from hands, and very quickly the track became undrivable. It took frantic action from the track marshals, the broom brigade, some random birds, and a brief cessation of rain for the session to start at all.
Once the 20 minute Q1 did begin, some began to wonder if it should have, as it took only a single lap for cars to begin leaving chunks of themselves scattered around the circuit. Lewis Hamilton, Felipe Massa, both Caterhams, Mark Webber, Sergio Perez, Esteban Gutierrez, Paul di Resta, and Papabile Maldonado all had exciting rides. Webber, Perez, di Resta and Maldonado DIDN'T damage visibly their cars, though only through luck. Eventually the session came to an end, with the following being knocked out: Charles ToothPic, Geido van der Garde, Max Chilton, Jules Bianchi, Esteban Gutierrez, Papabile Maldonado. ToothPic is 22nd, Maldonado 17th.
Unfortunately, in the stretch between Q1 and Q2, the heavens opened up again. Scheduled to begin at 6pm local time, Q2 wound up being delayed by 10 minute intervals to 650pm. At that point, with heavy rain still falling, the radar screen a lurid shade of green for 500 miles, the sun setting at 738pm local and two Qual sessions left to run that would equal 25 minutes on their own, the decision was made to postpone until 11am Sunday morning local (Saturday night, 7pm Pond Central Time). At that point, the action will resume with Q2. Alas, we won't be getting coverage of it here on NBCSN, but I'll report the results when they become available.
On a historical note, this is only the third time Quals has been postponed in 10 years... and the other two occurred in Japan due to various typhoons. No Great Australian Boat Races, though. Pity, that.
3/15/2009: Never Forget
"A bat that apparently had trouble flying instead tried to hitch a ride on the space shuttle Discovery, NASA officials said. The animal was last seen clinging to the foam of the external tank of the space shuttle moments before the Discovery launched, officials said. NASA had hoped that the bat would fly away on its own, but admitted the bat probably died quickly during Discovery's climb to orbit."
May we all be as brave when we are afraid as Space Bat. Now he belongs to the stars.
F1 Practice: Australia 2013
A vaguely gray day greeted the sparse crowd at Melbourne's Albert Park circuit, but nobody cared. Nobody cared because the red light of the offseason had been replaced by a green light, a light that signified that the 2013 Formula 1 season had finally begun.
Then every car in the pitlane came out, ran for the entire length of P1 and P2, and left us as fans exhausted and wanting more. That was the theory. In practice, Practice 1 was roughly half over before we saw our first flying lap. The first 45 minutes saw the teams bring their cars out for an installation lap, making sure that every bolt was tight, every hose connected, every fluid topped off and so forth, then bringing them back in to check everything all over again. Then, and only then, did anybody even think about going back out for head-to-head white knuckled racing action. Or another install lap, take your pick. Seriously. I mean, I expected it; they DID just ship their cars halfway around the world AND this is the first race of the season, of course they're gonna work to make everything exactly right. But still, the people in the stands weren't even getting red-hot pitstop action. What they got was a lot of nothing. AND YOU'LL LIKE IT!
Once the session really began, and all the way through Practice 2, it became perfectly clear that while some things had changed, like McLaren seeming dreadfully slow, some things hadn't: Red Bull and Seb Vettel remained on top of the timesheets. In dominating fashion, it might be pointed out, nearly a half-second ahead of their nearest rival in P2, Nico Rosberg.
Even that little bit of news had a dark lining, as Mercedes' newest driver, Lewis Hamilton, speared into the barriers with five minutes to go in P2, reporting that "something's wrong with the car." Right after that, the Mercedes pit wall told Rosberg that he had a gearbox problem and he needed to pull over and shut it down. That's somewhat ominous, what when both Mercs fail to finish the session like that...
Even more ominous could be the performance of the two McLarens. Jenson Button could only manage 11th on the day, and Sergio Perez a humbling 13th. Handling seemed to be an issue for the glares with wheels, as they tended to porpoise and tremble into corners. Steve Matchett was suggesting that the suspension was too stiff, and he may very well be right... or maybe it's something not so easily fixed?
The boys at Maranello must be ecstatic with Ferrari's 6th and 8th finishes, particularly considering last year's debacle in Australia when they were closer to the back of the grid than the front. If so, Team Lotus are probably calling their doctors after four hours, for they finished P2 4th and 5th.
But of course, this is only practice. You can never judge the true worth of a car from practice, just because every team is operating differently. For all we know, McLaren could have been running under a heavy fuel load all day, and once the weight burns off they'll handle better. Red Bull could have been running minimum fuel (note: they weren't). Maybe Mercedes accidentally used French Onion instead of Ranch in their gearbox. We just don't know.
Except... we kinda do, don't we? We'll find out for sure Saturday at Quals! See ya then!
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Merc people said later that the splitter failed at Shiv's car. I did not imagine that it would affect the car so much but perhaps it got wedged sideways underneath. Even so, it's strange. If this repeats, FIA is going to look into it on safety grounds. You can't have cars this fragile.
Posted by: Pete at March 15, 2013 12:48 PM (RqRa5)
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Talk about a bee in the bonnet, Vodaphone is dropping sponsorship of McLaren end of this year. Just what you need at the start of a new season.
Posted by: vonKrag at March 15, 2013 11:40 PM (KTzaE)
My Favorite Joke...
I note that the Roman Catholic Church elected a new Pope today. Former Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio has now become Pope Francis, the first of his name. I've always been somewhat in awe of the position Cardinal Bergoglio now holds; whether one is a follower of his faith, some other, or none whatsoever, the Pope is the head of an organization that counts some 1.3 billion followers. That little fact deserves some respect, right there. But his elevation to Pontifex Maximus allows me the chance to roll out my all-time favorite joke, which is, alas, limited in times that it can be told and still be funny.
But first, some background. It is a winter's morning in 1992. The sky is blue and clear, with a sort of vividness that only occurs when it is bone-achingly cold... which it is. There's maybe a foot of fresh white snow on the ground, everywhere but streets, parking lots and sidewalks. None of the many people visible seem to notice the cold, however. That's because this is Minnesota, and the residents are used to it being below zero. Well, that, and everybody has on big hulking parkas that'd keep the wearer warm on the surface of Pluto.
Amongst these huddled masses, enter Wonderduck and his fellow grad student in lighting design, Mike. Mike and Wonderduck get along pretty well; they're both from Illinois, outsiders to these here Northerners. Further, they're currently the only theatre tech grad students and have the same grad advisor. To say they spend a lot of time together would be something of an understatement: they have the same classes, work on each others productions (example: Mike is a show's lighting designer, Wonderduck would be his master electrician, and vice-versa), help teach the same classes, and so on. The main difference between them is that Mike is pushing 40, while Wonderduck is in his low 20s. Both have an interest in history, however, that often left the other grad students bored and confused.
On this frigid morning, Wonderduck and Mike are walking from their reserved parking spots towards the theatre building, about a three-block stroll. Normally not a problem, on mornings like this it could be considered something of a trial for us Illinoisans and our thin "southern" blood. As we make our way towards the warmth of the tallest building in the city, we turn a corner that reveals the northern edge of the campus. The theatre building is there, and just to the west, across a wide expanse of courtyard (that I was known to fly kites from, even in January, but I digress), the Freshman Dorm building.
As anybody who's experienced bitterly cold days like this one will attest, things like vehicles and buildings appear to smoke a lot when it's frigid, and this day was no exception. Small cars would go by, leaving clouds of exhaust to rival any jumbo jet contrail. Buildings seemed to have their own external microclimate, wreathed as they are in clouds of steam condensate. For whatever reason, however, on this day the Freshman Dorm was pumping out enough of this stuff to make any nuclear power plant cooling tower feel inadequate, and it was all a pure, pristine white.
At this point, Mike turned to Wonderduck and said "wow, look at that." Wonderduck, suitably impressed, nodded and said to Mike "Yeah. You know what that means, right?"
A beat passed before Mike replied with excellent comic timing: "The freshmen have elected a Pope?"
Exunt two grad students, laughing uproariously.
And now you know why my favorite joke is only funny at very limited and specific times.
F1 On NBCSN!: Australia 2013
F1 is back.
Everything is right with the world.
As is tradition, the new season is opening in the Land Down Under. Beautiful Albert Park, Melbourne, will host the Australian Grand Prix for the 18th consecutive year, and to say that this should be a revealing race would be something of an understatement. But first, let's take a look at the track map:
It's the same old circuit that it's been for as long as I've been watching F1, and that's a really good thing. What we have here is probably the most balanced of tracks on the calendar, in that there's no "technical" section. See, I just cringe when I see "technical" or "stadium" used as a descriptor for a part of a race circuit. It's just a nice way of saying "slow and pointless". For example, please look at the track map for Interlagos in Brazil. Can YOU guess what the "technical" section is? If you said "from Turn 7 to Turn 11," you're right! It's just there to slow the track down as the cars go up and down and up and down. Awful.
And Australia doesn't have any of that. Oh, to be sure, you slow down, but it's never for more than a corner, maybe two tops, before you're back to racing. It's organic. It flows. It's a challenging layout, but not so challenging to be a bad way to start a season... imagine if Monaco was the first race of the year! HRT would have won every season simply because they couldn't go fast enough to hurt themselves if they bumped into the walls... but I digress. On the whole, drivers uniformly love the track. The single most unique part of the track is that it's very much a street circuit at heart. Almost the entire map can be driven by the public year-round; Albert Park is a working public park, after all. There's even one bit that cuts through a parking lot! As the tarmac is really road, that means there's all sorts of oil, transmission fluid, radiator drippings and crud that falls out of working engines over daily use embedded in the asphalt. Throw in the lines painted to signal lanes and the like and you've got what can be a very slippery surface, particularly if it rains... and guess what's in the forecast for Quals and Race Day? Well, at least a chance of the wet stuff. Personally, I don't want it to rain... I want to see these cars out on a dry track so we can get an idea of what's what! Don't get me wrong, rain is fun! Let's have it in Malaysia, next weekend.
But before we talk about the second race of the year, we need to see the first. This year, for the first time in my adult life as a F1 fan, the races will not be covered by SPEED. In fact, in a few months, SPEED itself will go away, turned into FOXSports1. Y'know the saying "Meth: Not Even Once"? Fox's version of the aphorism appears to be "SPEED: Not Anymore." I've gone astray again. NBCSN, new channel, new coverage... mostly the same old Legendary Announce Team! Steve Matchett and David Hobbs, the mechanic and the driver, make the move over. Leigh Diffey takes over for The Varsha, a role he's used to as he did the same at SPEED whenever Bob was doing car auction coverage. And, if you trust the tweets, The Varsha may be rejoining the Legendary Announce Team later in the season. Will Buxton's Exuberance remains the pit lane guy. But when do we get to experience this new group? Let's take a look:
THURSDAY:
11pm - 1230am Practice 1 (delay) on NBCSN FRIDAY:
1230am - 2am Practice 2 (live) on NBCSN SATURDAY:
1am - 230am Quals (live) on NBCSN SUNDAY:
1230am - 3am Grand Prix of Australia (live) on NBCSN
3am - 330am F1 Extra, whatever that is, on NBCSN.
That's right, we get Practice 1 on television now! P3 is probably streaming, but I can't confirm that.
Before we go, I think it'll behoove us to take a look at the driver lineup for 2013... the last time we talked about it, not every seat had been filled, after all. Here we go:
Red Bull: Seb Vettel, Mark Webber. Really, why mess with a good thing? Ferrari: HWMNBN, Felipe Massa. If he beats Vettel for the championship, even I'll put in a good word for The Evil One. If Massa beats Vettel for the championship, I can only assume the world is about to come to an end. McLaren: Jenson Button, Sergio Perez. So weird to see this team without Shiv Hamilton. Lotus: Kimi Raikkonen, Lettuce Grosjean. Kimi knows what he's doing. The same may not be able to be claimed for Lettuce. Mercedes: Nico Rosberg, Shiv Hamilton. We've seen the last of Hamilton on the top step for a while. Sauber: Nico Hulkenberg, Esteban Gutierrez. With Gutierrez and Perez, we have two Mexican drivers in F1. No Americans, though. Force India: Paul di Resta, Adrian F'n Sutil. Sutil's back! Williams: Papabile Maldonado, Vallteri Bottas. Bottas has no lips. Toro Rosso: Jules Vergne, Daniel Ricciardo. One is French, the other bland. Caterham: Charles ToothPic, Geido van der Garde. I'm gonna have to come up with a nickname for Geido in a hurry. Marussia: Jules Bianchi, Max Chilton. Sponsorship!
Here we go, folks. We're just a few days away now...
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Speaking of Americans in F1, Scott Speed is in Sprint Cup this season and he's doing much, much worse than Montoya, who is not fighting for top-10 himself.
Posted by: Pete at March 12, 2013 10:14 PM (RqRa5)
Posted by: Mauser at March 13, 2013 03:11 AM (cZPoz)
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Mauser, DRS is the "Drag Reduction System," aka "the moving rear wing." It's only eligible to be used in the purple bits, and only if you're within a second of the car in front of you at the DRS Detection Zone.
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 13, 2013 06:56 AM (1BL+a)
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DRS is implemented as a movable flap in the rear wing. You change the angle of that flap, and you give up a significant chunk of your rear downforce, but since you're no longer diverting that chunk of airflow, you get a lot less drag as a result. But you wanted that downforce for a reason, it makes the car turn a lot better. And of course any movable aero bits had long been banned, as the result of a joint or pivot sticking or bits falling off mid-corner is kind of nasty. So, the DRS zone is always on a long straight, for safety reasons, as you don't need the downforce there, and if it fails on you there, you're not going to instantly spin off the track. On a course with multiple long straights, they often allows DRS usage in two places. There is also a bit of "lets put an artificial limit on this so the teams must think, and it becomes 'interesting'".
Posted by: David at March 13, 2013 10:39 AM (qw+UI)
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Will the F1 Update! crew be making any predictions for this season? If I had to take a guess, my head says it'll be another toss-up between Alonso and Vettel for the Driver's Championship; but my heart will be cheering for Mark Webber, even though his chances look pretty slim.
Posted by: Peter the Not-so-Great at March 13, 2013 04:35 PM (ElBzz)
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It's pretty hard to do that before we see any of the cars race. In a couple of weeks it'll be slightly more straightforward.
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Peter TNSG, for the most part I'm in agreement with Steven. While I have seen some small amount of off-season testing coverage, none of it was enough to give any idea which teams were going to be any good beyond "Ferrari, McLaren, Red Bull, Lotus, Williams and perhaps Sauber." Please note, that's more than half the grid.
I will make a prediction however: I'm taking the field vs Seb Vettel.
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 13, 2013 10:08 PM (1BL+a)
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Nice overview of the upcoming F1 season by The Telegraph. It's got a bit of snark too. I'm thinking that it'll be another 3way fight between Jensen, Seb (spit!) & HWMNBN (double spit!). I'll be looking hard to see if Williams can step up, if Force India break out of mid-pack & if what the heck Lotus & Caterham get for the money they spend.
Posted by: vonKrag at March 14, 2013 07:39 PM (KTzaE)
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I'm in Hawaii! And of course this is normally a good thing. But I'm in Hawaii for two F1 races at a house with no NBCSN! Nooooooo...
And I'm in Hawaii and lonely because my honey darlin', who makes it all worth it, is on an overnight field trip with her class...
On the other hand, it's an overnighter on the Big Mo, so it has to be okay by default. (I was not invited to join them. "Your snoring would keep them all awake!" Ah well.)
Also Kawaii-kon is this weekend, so that's a plus...
Posted by: Avatar at March 15, 2013 02:01 AM (IopVv)
Getting Better, Not Gotten Better.
Hey everybody, I've got great news!
The Dacia Sandero will not be appearing in this post! Oh, and I'm feeling better already! As you may remember from that long ago post from... yesterday, I think it was, I had been diagnosed with bronchitis, suffered a damaged muscle in my side, and was generally feeling just rather medically unhappy. To solve the bronchitis, the doctor gave me azithromycin, an antibiotic that costs $15.52 per pill, which fact blew my tiny little mind and made me so very glad I have a full-time job with pretty decent health-care benefits. To take care of the muscle-thingy, he... well, he didn't really do anything. Not much he could do, to be honest, except say "find a position that makes it hurt less when you cough." I've done so, and I'm awfully glad my job tends to keep me in the back room. Makes it ever so much easier to
what, did you really think there'd be something naughty here? and then
you didn't learn the last time?. That's just embarrassing to do every time I cough.
But to deal with the unhappiness, he gave me Cheratussin AC. This is a foul tasting syrup that supports a dose of an effective expectorant... and codeine. Truthfully, it's not doing all that much other than making me cough, which hurts, but the codeine is making it not hurt so much. It balances out. The bad part of all of these wonderdrugs is that, well, I came home from work, had something to eat, then immediately crawled into bed and stayed there until just now... meaning I didn't do the first official post of the new F1 season tonight. I'll do it tomorrow, I promise.
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Heating pad is good for the strained chest muscle. Also that Vicks Vaporub. I suggest the Vaporub on your neck, not your chest, because overheated menthol isn't pleasant.
Also, chai tea with lots of spice and milk, and turmeric like the grannies in India would insist upon. This will distract you. (Obviously the optional germfighting shot of whisky doesn't mix with codeine.)
Some herbal teas include chamomile, valerian, linden, etc. to help you sleep, and they do work, but probably also don't mix with codeine. (Especially valerian, which tastes horrible and puts you out like a light.) If you're not allergic to valerian, linden, etc., this is good stuff. If you're allergic to pollens in the rose family, though, you're probably not going to like linden much.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at March 11, 2013 10:43 PM (cvXSV)
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Sure, sure. It's the widest, the lightest and the stickiest. The only question is why anybody thought it'd do any better?
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 13, 2013 04:21 PM (1BL+a)
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That tire-jumping video. On the one hand: Oh, JAPAN. Sigh. On the other hand... I can't believe how much I laughed at a bunch of tires being rolled down a ramp.
Maybe that's the sleep deprivation, though.
Posted by: GreyDuck at March 13, 2013 10:13 PM (xbP2x)
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Greyduck, I laughed waaaay too hard at the last one. Trying to get over a cold and it sent me into a coughing fit. It was worth seeing once though.
Posted by: Tom Tjarks at March 13, 2013 10:27 PM (k3SCe)
Why Create THOSE???
So, remember that cold I had? For the most part, the symptoms have gone completely away, except for one: the cough. The cough has stuck around like the last guest at a party, the one who just won't take the hint to get out. Still, it hasn't been a bad thing... it sounded bad, but really didn't hurt or anything like that. But then, last night, just as I was getting ready to go to sleep, I had one big cough...
...and it felt like most of the contents of those trays were jammed a spot just below my ribs on the left side. From the amount of pain involved, I thought I had just broken a rib. After a couple of minutes, I realized I hadn't, because I could breathe without pain. I went to the Immediate Care place nearby this afternoon. X-rays were taken, and the new diagnosis came down: I have bronchitis and perhaps a muscle tear. It only hurts when I cough. Or twist.
Or have this happen.
I've been given Azithromycin, and a prescription for a cough medicine that I want to have checked out by my doctor due to my heart thingy. But hopefully this will make me better soon... I don't want to be sick for the first F1 race of the year.
UPDATE: I realized just now that I never did get around to explaining the title of this post. When I ask "Why create those???", I'm referring to viruses that cause this whatever-it-is that I've got. Both Ph.Duck and his spouse are dealing with it, and from what he was told, the ick that's in this area is actually two viruses, one piggybacking on the other. One brings the cold/flu symptoms, the other carries the crap I'm dealing with. I'd love love love to know why these things came to be.
After the first sentence, I was ready to write a "go get checked for bronchitis" comment. Guess I didn't have to do that.
Two or three years ago, we had a combo of "common cold leading to bronchitis" and "friggin' laser beams whooping cough" running through the office. Thankfully(?) I only got the bronchitis version. So, you've got my sympathy. It sucks. (But it's better than whooping cough.)
Posted by: Mikeski at March 10, 2013 09:20 PM (DU6Ja)
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I was going to say, surely whooping cough isn't that common these days? Then I checked Google News, and turns out the answer is yes.
Since we've had an effective vaccine for years, it's pretty depressing.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at March 11, 2013 11:30 AM (PiXy!)
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You can't entirely blame the loss of herd immunity on Jenny McCarthy, but she certainly worked hard to make the anti-vaccination movement more popular. One more reason to remind people that entertainers are generally not our best and brightest...
-j
Posted by: J Greely at March 11, 2013 06:45 PM (fpXGN)
Some AMVs
It's been a while since I've coughed up an AMV post, mostly because I've sorta dropped out of the AMV scene. However, earlier today I stumbled across a post over at Ben's place that reminded me of how fun they can be... and how good they can be when they're done right. The "Forever" video sent me browsing for others.
First I stumbled across Nostromo's Running Man.
For a long while, I believed that Nostromo was the greatest technical video editor AMVs would ever see. That doesn't mean he makes the best videos, just the most impressive as accomplishments, if that makes sense. I mean, Thrust SSC is a great technical success, but you're not gonna go to the grocery store in it.
From there, I wound up with this on my screen:
Ileia might be the best editor at "internal sync" you'll find. EVERYthing is to the beat, even if it's not obvious. Her work feels more "right" than Nostromo's, more fun. From there, though, I discovered that she had done a zombie version of the greatest AMV of all time, which lead me back to track down that very classic:
That was made in 2002. If someone asked me what the point of AMVs were, I'd show 'em Odorikuruu. It's 100% distilled fun in a four-minute viddy.
But then I found an AMV that literally made me cry weep manly tears.
I've made an AMV. I know it was pretty decent, particularly for a first try. I also know that, no matter how hard I try, I could never come up with something as good as this. It's very subtle, but there's something surprisingly awesome to this one. I can't put my finger on it, but it's there.
Which is why I put this post together tonight... because I wanted to share that awesomeness.
1
I have the first three on my hard drive already, but that last one is a treat. Thanks for sharing!
And hooray for my Nexus phone being able to play "Gratuitous" without so much as a stutter. Heh.
Posted by: GreyDuck at March 10, 2013 10:24 AM (xbP2x)
2
Man, I remember when AMV's were made with two VCR's and the pause button.... ("Mr. Roboto" done with Gundam...).
Posted by: Mauser at March 10, 2013 05:44 PM (cZPoz)
3
Oh, and in the first one, I thought the black and white footage was kind of interesting. But mostly I was noticing the use of Kate Bush in the song...
Posted by: Mauser at March 10, 2013 05:44 PM (cZPoz)
4
Funny to remember when Kevin Caldwell was the acme of technical video editing (not that his work is no longer worth the time).
It's certainly worth highlighting good amvs from time to time.
Thanks.
Posted by: HC at March 10, 2013 08:08 PM (Yyzy6)
5
Caldwell's Engel is still on my short list of best AMVs ever.
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 10, 2013 09:35 PM (1BL+a)
7
What, "...Angel."? Thanks! It's been a long time, but I still like hearing it praised.
Or are you talking about the rest of the post?
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 10, 2013 11:16 PM (1BL+a)
8
1) Your AMV, which is excellent. I remember you mentioning making an AMV, but never saw it.
2) Your post, which had several good AMVs
and
3) You linked my blog, and being a polite Texan, I complimented your consideration and your taste!
I love very well done AMVs. I didn't think I was the only person who knew about Odorikuruu, but it felt like it.. Still one of my favorites. Another was Tenacious D's Wonderboy set to Big O. The paper bag puppets of the Bigs sell the whole video.
And I fail on links tonight... *sigh* Wonderboy Big O will get you the right vid on youtube.
Posted by: Tom Tjarks at March 11, 2013 09:14 PM (k3SCe)
10
Wow, that's high praise. Thank you! And you'd be surprised at how many kids-these-days didn't know about Odorikuruu! I did Zomboleo as part of a contest in which the competitors needed to parody a well-known AMV and I had to supply the judges with the source so that they'd get the reference. Shame on them!
Posted by: Ileia at March 13, 2013 05:39 PM (55BDN)
Oh, and Zomboleo was probably the most wrong video I've ever seen. I love it, but it's so not right. I'm amazed that the judges weren't familiar with the reference... but then, when I saw first saw Odorikuruu, it was only a couple of years old.
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 13, 2013 10:04 PM (1BL+a)
Vividred Operation Ep07
Keeping up the routine. Keeping up the routine. That's what it's all about with my writeups for Vividred Operation. It's not a bad show at all, it just hasn't caught me the way the other three completed writeup series (Ga-Rei Zero, Rio Rainbow Gate!, High School of the Dead) did. No, I'm not going to drop it... I'm too far into it to do that. Besides, it's not like I have anything else to write about right now. So what the heck, let's take a look at what's going on after the debacle that was Ep06.
It seems like the RHF was out late, defeating another Alone. How lame
must this one have been to not even get any screen-time? Are there
nerdy Alones? Was this Alone the equivalent of having a bowl cut,
coke-bottle glasses and a pocket protector? Was it picked on by the
other Alones, shoved into lockers, tripped in the hallway, that sort of
thing? Finally, it had enough and decided that it'd show all those
bullies and took its shot at doing something none of the others could
manage: destroying the Phlebotinum Engine! Then maybe the cute Alone
cheerleaders would pay attention to him! Hope you feel proud, RHF and
the rest of Team Aquos. I hope you're really happy as you drool onto
your breakfast. That Alone was just trying to be loved... is that too
much to ask for? And you guys were just like all the rest, you slapped a
"Kick Me" sign on its back, took its lunch money and then disposed of
it. Buncha bullies, that's what you are! Meanwhile, as "Our Hero"
sleeps through breakfast...
...Hot Dark Girl Rei and her kickarse scarf lament their failure to
destroy the world. Again. Worse, it took another of her powerups,
leaving her with six. More importantly, she's running out of episodes
to accomplish her task. If she ever shows up with a rubber duck, I'm
going to just go out of my mind... in a good way, not a creepy way.
Well, maybe it'd be a little bit creepy. I wouldn't be proud of it, though.
1
The end of this bothered me: the other three girls watched Akane falling, and none of them flew after her to try to save her from splattering on the ground?
2
Two ways to look at it:
1) They're Only Middle Schoolers. They just saw their friend and leader get blown out of the sky. They're shocked and stunned, and as a result, they don't react.
2) Finally, It's My Turn. "I never really liked RHF anyway. Himawari, come dock with me."
It's probably #1, but #2 amuses me to no end.
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 09, 2013 11:18 AM (1BL+a)
3
Problem is, Wakababa really wants to dock with... Momo.
(I'm not sure how they're going to pull this show up out of the steep dive they put it into after making Angsty-Rei such a big part of things. Plus that training episode. Sigh.)
Posted by: GreyDuck at March 09, 2013 05:53 PM (xbP2x)
4
Am I the only viewer that LIKES Hot Dark Girl Rei?
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 09, 2013 09:35 PM (1BL+a)
5
I sure don't like her. I don't even feel very sorry for her. I suppose they're trying to make her a sympathetic character, what with her tendency to pet cats and feed birds, but it just feels like unsubtle manipulation. And I'm just as sure as I can be that the black crow is fooling her, so she's not only angsty, she's gullible and stupid.
About Rei:
They're trying to make her into Fate Testarossa, an opponent who is nonetheless sympathetic. In the case of Fate, we know why she's doing what she is, and it makes perfect sense. She isn't evil, but whether knowingly or not, what she's trying to do is evil and so we hope she fails.
Yet when she does, we feel sorry for her. And when she finds redemption -- not the redemption she sought, but redemption nonetheless -- we feel catharsis.
I'm not getting that vibe from Rei. I don't like her. I understand why she's doing what she is doing, but there's a difference between her and Fate: Fate didn't know that she was working to bring about a catastrophe. Rei does. Rei is willing to destroy Akane's world in order to save the one Rei came from -- and that's a consciously evil act, no matter how many kittens we see her petting or how many times they let us look between her thighs.
Now I'm Grumpy.
90 minutes of work on the Vividred Operation Ep07 writeup, right down the old bitbucket. All because I couldn't remember the name of a yo-yo trick.
Does this man not have a pot of boiling water and a jar of seadfood sauce?
Posted by: Kurisu Shimei at March 08, 2013 05:53 AM (wP19N)
2
A particular yo-yo trick, or just any yo-yo trick in general? Or do you know something about acclaimed cellist Yo-Yo Ma's trips to red-light districts?
Snow Day! Snow Day!
Duck U is closed today due to inclement weather. To whit: lotsa snow!
It's a snow day!
UPDATE: As of 9pm, we're looking at 9.6" of snow on the ground here at Pond Central. Far and away our heaviest snowfall of the winter. In March. When it's supposed to be over and done with. *sigh* I tell ya, Nature.
Posted by: GreyDuck at March 05, 2013 02:25 PM (3m7pZ)
2
Snowday for me too! Lot's of snow moving, nap, snow moving, a drink, nap, and snow moving.
Posted by: Librarian at March 05, 2013 05:41 PM (JQjLr)
3
It was more of a "get woken up at 545am by the Duck U text message, watch the snow come down, goof off, nap, and now it's 6pm" sort of day for me, Librarian... glad you didn't have to do that drive!
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 05, 2013 06:07 PM (1BL+a)
4
We got between 7 & 10 inches here in the Twin Cities. Morning traffic was a bit snarly yesterday but overall not bad. I think our threshold is in 15 inches and above range, then it overwhelms the plowing. This morning I was out at 0600 and only the side streets are bad, otherwise it's a normal winter day.
PS I'm mos def ready for Spring to sprung.
Posted by: vonKrag at March 06, 2013 08:42 AM (KTzaE)
5
We didn't get any this year. I'm a bit disappointed.
Vodka... Definitely Vodka
For anybody interested, NBC Sports Network will be showing their F1 preview show this coming Thursday at 8pm Central. Oh, and one week from today? F1 on SPEED NBCSN for Australia. It's back, my friends.
Name This Mystery Ship XXIII
Here ya go, the first Mystery Ship of 2013:
Take your best shot! Remember, no cheating... winner gets a post of their very own (no pr0n, religion or politics, though). One guess per customer. Post no bills. Winners warm up with Malt-o-Meal.
It's an educated guess: Steven inadvertently gave me the clue. It was that odd tapered mast; I knew I'd seen it before. And it's obviously pre-Dreadnaught, but just barely so, as it already has turrets.
A glass of wine with lunch helped: Tom McCall Waterfront Park in Portland, Oregon. A million years ago, I lived about five miles from where Steven lives now. Every summer, during the Rose Festival, my folks would take me to that park to see the ships during Fleet Week. On land, there was a monument to the USS Oregon... consisting of that odd mast.
1+1=3. Indiana Class.
Posted by: Tiberius at March 03, 2013 11:55 AM (97M8h)
7
It's not "Name This Mystery CLASS," Tiberius, it's "Name This Mystery SHIP." Got a guess on the name of the ship?
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 03, 2013 12:26 PM (8xjaN)
That is a replica of the Indiana class Battleships that was built for the Chicago Worlds Fair. The ship was designed using the then current plans for the ships which were finished yet, so it still had the conical turrets that were replaced with roomier models in the final design and it had higher freeboard the ships were designed with before extra armor and drafting errors reduced the actual ships freeboard to about 12 feet.
HA!
Wait...
It's NAME that ship.
You want a name.
IT HAD A NAME?
.....
.....
.....
It was the Columbia exposition and 'Columbia' was the 19th century equivalent of "America-Tan" and ...I'm going to go with Columbia.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at March 03, 2013 02:41 PM (EDjsP)
10
The main turrets aren't right for USS Oregon. They have slanted walls, and the Oregon's turrets were cylinders. But you're right that the mast is the same.
12
I'm sorry, Muppet, you're not correct on the name.
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 03, 2013 02:45 PM (8xjaN)
13
(One of the reasons it looks pre-Dreadnaught is that the hull is longer at the waterline than it is at the deck. That was something that changed in the post-Dreadnaught era.)
14
@ Steven: That was due to two things. The hulls had tumblehome which increased their stability in normal conditions and the bows were designed to be used as Rams.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at March 03, 2013 02:58 PM (EDjsP)
This is a stretch for me, but since Brickmuppet suggested it was a replica of the INDIANA-class battleships, that it was named INDIANA?
C.T.
Posted by: cxt217 at March 03, 2013 05:21 PM (3sPDg)
16
Okay guys. After reading half of the Internet, I know what this is. I haven't been able to find the picture itself, but the story is sooooo juicy that I am absolutely certain that it would tickle Wonderduck's fancy.
This ship is not actually floating.
Posted by: Pete at March 03, 2013 07:01 PM (RqRa5)
17
CT, your stretch fell short. This is not the Indiana.
Pete, go on...
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 03, 2013 07:42 PM (8xjaN)
20
Very well. With our host's permission, I'm declaring Illinois: a 1:1 exhibition replica of a battleship.
At first I thought that one of Indiana-class battleships was later refit with conical turrets. However, it proved not the case. And the naval history sites said that there was no space.
Posted by: Pete at March 03, 2013 08:28 PM (RqRa5)
21
I have a certain aversion to Wikipedia, so I didn't look there initially. But if you go to the article about Illinois, the picture is right there. As CXT says, it should take less than a minute.
Posted by: Pete at March 03, 2013 08:31 PM (RqRa5)
22
*ding* We have a winner! Made of bricks, concrete, chicken wire and 2x4s, I actually found out about it via Wikipedia's article on the Indiana (BB-1)... there at the bottom of that page is a link to Battleship Illinois (replica).
So yeah, not exactly a ship... so sue me.
Pete, whatcha want?
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 03, 2013 08:48 PM (8xjaN)
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 03, 2013 10:04 PM (8xjaN)
25
Funnily enough, it would be much easier if I actually read the comments, because Brickmuppet called it precisely - except the name. But I only glanced diagonally to see if the contest was already won and Brick's comment slipped my attention. I do remember weird formatting. ^_^
This is a big prize and I recall Ken going a bit beyond what I anticipated. I don't know squat about U.S. Navy, and Russian/Soviet Navy seems somewhat insignificant by comparison, lacking bright episodes. Sinop? Deep in 19th century. Survival Sch-303? U-boats saw the same. F1 is sort of played out as a topic. So, anime then. But I don't want to hoist something that is not appreciated, like GA. I'm going to punt on it a bit. How about go down your favourites and review a series that wasn't yet featured? Anything goes, like Library War or whatever.
Posted by: Pete at March 03, 2013 11:27 PM (RqRa5)
26
I can do that... a personal favorite that I've not yet reviewed. Got it.
Posted by: Wonderduck at March 04, 2013 04:42 AM (8xjaN)
I'm A Wimp
As you know, I spent last week in Chicago in a manager training meeting. Forty of us, trapped in a room all day for five days... and two of the other managers were sick. It's as much an occupational hazard for us as papercuts, ulcers and murder charges, but it's been a few years since I had a long-term ick. Oh, I had that stomach flu / food poisoning thing a couple of Januarys back, but that only lasted a couple of days (thankfully). Other than that? I've been pretty good.
I came home from the meetings on Saturday. That night, I had a little tickle in the back of my throat, but I figured that was because of the square of chipotle chili dark chocolate I had just eaten. Sunday, the tickle became something more than a tickle, and I'm sure you can see where this is going. By Tuesday night, I felt pretty darn bad, coughing, sneezing, headache, sore throat... but I just felt awful. I went to work on Wednesday morning, but I immediately knew it was a mistake. I gave up at 10am, and headed right to the doctor's office. I was expecting a diagnosis of something like the Black Death, or Ebola, or porphyric hemophilia or something like that... I mean, I felt so miserable, it had to be something terrible.
Vividred Operation Ep06
Okay, right, here we are, only a week late. Not so bad, really... at
least I'm still keeping up with the show. Sure, it's not the perfect
situation, which would involve the writeup being completed using only
the mental power of my massive, pulsating brain, but it's close. Oh,
and codfish. There would be some nice beer-battered cod with a tasty
tartar sauce involved in a perfect situtation, too. On Friday, after
the business trip was officially over but while I was still in Chicago, I
had dinner at The Cheesecake Factory with three managers who had their
flights cancelled, and I can recommend their fish 'n' chips. Which is
not to be confused with fission chips, which tend to go bang when you
dip them in tartar sauce. They don't mention that in nuclear physics
class. Speaking of not mentioning things in Physics class...
...have these glasses from Gurren Lagann become an anime meme, or what? After seeing the Red Headed Freak out
the door as she heads to summer camp, lil' sister Momo and Gendo
Plushyferret chat for a second about "beginning the operation," and out
come the glasses. What's really annoying is that I hated Gurren Lagann, yet it's hailed as a masterpiece of the mecha genre, if not anime as a whole. I just don't get it. Oh well, so it goes.
But that's a discussion for another day. For now, there is Vividred Operation. Which, I hasten to point out, is not considered
a masterpiece of any genre. Unless the genre is "butt shots of
middleschoolers," in which case it's groundbreaking. And deeply, deeply
troubling. You'll note, of course, that I'm still working on it, so
maybe not so troubling as all that.
1
Himawari seems to be in charge of Gainaxing, and she's really good at it.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at February 26, 2013 11:57 PM (+rSRq)
2
When I got to that first shot you grabbed of Rei, I knew that would be a lead pipe cinch to be in a certain someones top rotation thing...
The sad thing about Himawari is that most of the time, especially in the opening credits, she runs like Hank Venture.
Posted by: Mauser at February 27, 2013 04:27 AM (cZPoz)
3
Yo. *raises hand* I hated Gurren Lagann, too. Except for the awesome character design of Yoko. Which brings me back to VividRed, because Yoko was fourteen.
Posted by: Ben at February 27, 2013 03:00 PM (/Mdmg)
4
This year's trend appears to be "artists drawing ill-fitting swimsuits that would cause injury to their wearers," so "mad scientists designing ill-fitting swimsuits that hurt everyone around them" is a natural anime progression.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at February 27, 2013 07:59 PM (cvXSV)
5
Ben, you're not alone. I got about 7 episodes into it and simply couldn't tolerate the idiocy any longer. I've never had any urge to go back to it.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at February 27, 2013 10:24 PM (+rSRq)
6
Philistines! Gurren Lagann was almost as awesome as Kimi ni Todoke!
Posted by: Pixy Misa at February 28, 2013 01:52 AM (PiXy!)
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at February 28, 2013 09:39 AM (+rSRq)
8KnT is great, even awesome, but it's demo focused and is ridiculously drawn out. It gave up before the end of the 1st season. However, it's one of the few franchizes that my Japanese coworkers generally know about. That means going level with Jojo, One Piece, and Gundam. Gurren-Lagann and even Naruto do not have the same mainstream recognition.
Posted by: Pete at February 28, 2013 12:42 PM (RqRa5)
9
Wow. Now it gets awkward. I adore Kimi ni Todoke. But, yeah, it could be shorter. And it has the second-season, everything-was-roses-but-now-there-is-a-dark-cloud-hanging-over-the-relationship-that-might-mean-their-love-is-doomed plot. But it's just a hangnail. Or something.
Live Action Anime Fight Scene Done Right
While we wait for me to complete the writeup for Vividred Operation Ep06 (PROTIP: business trips are not a good time to work on such things), I want to talk about a single scene from a movie that falls firmly into the "meh" category for me. The movie in question came out in 2011, and was titled Sucker Punch. On the whole, there's very little about the movie to like except for some of the visuals; much like the original Hellsing anime, it's great to look at but not so good to watch. One scene, however, makes it clear that Director Zack Snyder has watched a lot of anime.
If anybody out there is thinking about doing a live-action fighting anime, Snyder has shown you how to do the fight scenes right. Watch it in 720p; it's worth it.
Disaster At Daytona
On the final lap of today's NASCAR Nationwide series race at the Daytona Superspeedway, there was a terrible wreck. Kyle Larson, in the middle of the pack coming out of Turn 4 and heading for the tri-oval/start-finish line, got tipped sideways and as often happens at any superspeedway race, The Big One happened. There were cars going every which way, but Larson went nose-first into the wall, snapped over, and got airborne. HIGH.
The entire front of his car, back to the firewall, was torn off as he pinwheeled over the SAFER barrier and into the catch fence. The catch fence did its job: it kept the #32 out of the stands. Mostly.
You may notice the man with the orange hat. Directly above him in that picture is the engine of the #32; the fire you might notice is from fluids draining from it. Unfortunately, that's not the only thing that got through the fence, and what got through was worse than an engine.
At least one 120lb tire/wheel/brake rotor combinaton made it into the stands, working its way through the spectators until it came to a halt some 15-20 rows up. Around thirty people are known to have been injured. 15 were taken to the track's medical facility for minor cuts and bruises and were released. Conflicting reports say 14 to 16 were taken to two hospitals near the track. At least one was reported to have a serious head injury and was in emergency surgery. Having said that, NASCAR officials just had a press conference, and they said that everybody at the hospitals were in "stable" condition, so take that emergency surgery report with a grain of salt.
Racers know that what they do is dangerous. They understand that every time they climb into their car, be it NASCAR, F1, IndyCar, dragsters, LeMans or motorcycles, they could be injured or killed. But no fan expects to see a tire flying at their face, and it's troubling every time a fan is hurt.
With luck, everybody injured will be okay. Ironically, the drivers involved are all just fine. As of right now, Sunday's Daytona 500 will go on as planned, with Danica Patrick on pole.
1
The winner of the race did the right thing too. They basically skipped any sort of post race celebration/interviews/antics and just focused on getting people care.
Posted by: Tom Tjarks at February 23, 2013 08:03 PM (kEIAU)
2
Maybe it's too early to be this cynical, but somehow I DON'T expect there will be calls to Ban NASCAR racing after this. Unlike how they tried to end the Reno Air Races after their darkest hour.
Posted by: Mauser at February 23, 2013 08:08 PM (cZPoz)
3
Looks like there weren't any deaths, and that's damned lucky. This is no LeMans...
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at February 24, 2013 11:12 AM (+rSRq)