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User avatar
By racechick
#17784
JS is always opening his mouth to the camera's looking for another 15 mins of fame.

He stirred the pot with emotional babble and Max was always going to say something. It's natural all the McLaren fans are calling for Max's head, they are disappointed with their own team for dipping their hand into the cookie jar.

You'll all get over it, eventually, LoL...


Max is incompetant and corrupt, Thats why people are calling for his head. Its not only McLaren fans.He makes things up as he goes along and insults people who point this out.
User avatar
By deMuRe
#17790
Yeah I know, he's not the sharpest tool in the shed, but Bernie trusts him so that makes him the most suitable man for the job...
User avatar
By Freddie
#17796
Yeah I know, he's not the sharpest tool in the shed, but Bernie trusts him so that makes him the most suitable man for the job...


Bernie's trust is definitely not a measure for being the most suitable man for the job or not !
User avatar
By deMuRe
#17797
Yes it is, Bernie runs F1, at that level you need to surround yourself with people you can trust...
By Ron Dennis
#17799
JS is always opening his mouth to the camera's looking for another 15 mins of fame.


Maybe he's related to Mark Webber?
By yowl
#17863
Gilled Villeneuve is easily the greatest driver never to win a title.
Just watch what he could do in a car, and i'm sure anyones opinion would at least be a bit different


Villeneuve G, Moss, Peterson.. all extraordinary drivers far more worthy of being WC than just about all the driver's who were.
For me Gilles was the best (Moss/Peterson i sadly never saw live and must base on film only) but they are close... GREAT drivers all.
User avatar
By McLaren Fan
#17867
From autosport.com:

'Mosley dismisses Stewart's resignation call

By Jonathan Noble Monday, October 15th 2007, 10:58 GMT

The war of words between Jackie Stewart and FIA president Max Mosley showed no signs of abating on Monday, as the FIA president hit back at calls from the former world champion for him to resign.

Mosley and Stewart have been at loggerheads over the FIA's handling of the McLaren spy saga, and more recently Stewart has been considering legal action about comments from Mosley calling him a 'certified half-wit.'

Now, Stewart has called on Mosley to resign over his handling of recent events in the sport.

Speaking in an interview with Scottish newspaper The Herald, Stewart said: "There is an escalating awareness that Mosley is being called into question over the proper governance of the FIA and his authority is being undermined, to an increasing degree, largely because we are in the most exciting F1 campaign there has been for years, and yet the papers are full of negative publicity.

"As far as I am concerned, it looks as if we are shooting ourselves in both feet, not with a pistol, but with a semi-automatic rifle, and the governing body is damaging the reputation of the whole sport and bringing it into disrepute.

"They are acting in self-interest and I believe there has to be greater accountability. Perhaps Max Mosley has been in the job too long. I definitely think that he should consider his position and that a new president should be headhunted from outside the sport, so there is no conflict of interest.

"This has nothing to do with me and Max - nor am I acting in any way, shape or form, on behalf of the McLaren team - but I honestly think that decisions are being made which are detrimental to our business and we have to accept that it is time for a change."

Stewart also said that he was flabbergasted at the FIA's decision to use a scrutineer at McLaren in Brazil this weekend to ensure equal treatment between Fernando Alonso and Lewis Hamilton.

"This is absurd and I have no doubts that it is setting a very dangerous precedent for the future," declared Stewart. "Formula One is a domain in which the owners pay the drivers and recruit the mechanics to design the car, and the governing body should have no say in the internal workings of any team.

"But apart from that, it is also hypocritical. Can you imagine the FIA going to Ferrari, while Michael Schumacher was at the helm, and insisting that his No.2 Rubens Barrichello or Eddie Irvine, was accorded the same privileges and that both men had to race on an equal footing?

"It would never have happened and, for that reason, I hope that McLaren do their best for Lewis next weekend in Brazil, because the lad has responded magnificently to everything he has faced in the last few months.

"But you have to be concerned for him in the current climate: he could be taken out at the first corner and it sounds as if the FIA would do nothing about it."

Stewart's comments have not impressed Mosley, who stands by all the decisions the FIA has made this season and cheekily suggests that Stewart's outspoken remarks may be part of a publicity drive for his new autobiography.

"Jackie Stewart's latest comments are as misconceived as those he made prior to the McLaren World Council hearing in September," he told autosport.com.

"During a highly charged and controversial season it is of course understandable that many in the United Kingdom feel great sympathy for the plight of McLaren and Lewis Hamilton. In the same way it is understandable for many on the continent to feel great sympathy for the plight of double world champion Fernando Alonso.

"However, it is not the role of the FIA to court popularity by supporting one party or the other. It is the role of the FIA to ensure that the rules of the sport are respected and that fairness is applied consistently for all competitors.

"If drivers from another team complain about what they consider to be the unsafe driving of a race leader in atrocious weather conditions which then results in an accident, does anyone, even Jackie Stewart, honestly believe the sporting authorities should not examine the new evidence presented to them?

"When the Spanish Motor Sport Authority seeks safeguards to ensure fair play should the international governing body ignore their request?"

Mosley added: "Jackie Stewart seems to have forgotten that McLaren received information on a daily basis for over three months plus a dossier of 780 pages from a spy in its main rival. It was for this they incurred a record sanction and expulsion from the Constructors' Championship. They did not appeal as they undoubtedly would have done had Jackie's ill-considered views had any merit.

"The bandying of partisan and ill informed comments in the media may well result in increased book sales for his new autobiography but they can do little more than confirm my view that Jackie is in no position to provide useful observations upon issues of motor sport governance."'
User avatar
By madbrad
#17868
yeah I have been thinking myself for the past few months too that MM is handling things in a most unprofessional manner. Perhaps he has gone senile. I'd like to see him gone.

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