- 02 Oct 10, 19:41#218326
I'd like to understand what standards you use to rationalize the fact that you've just exalted onto an individual the mark of a real champion by putting sportsmanship above wining a championship, yet when a team does not apply those same moral standards to win a world championship as in the 1964 GT World Championship example I've given you it doesn't bother you.
I ask this because it's very clear that you come solely bearing hypocritical arguments simply to insidiously purport your views; Forza (down your throat) Ferrari!
For me a Champion isn't just about winning races. As a champion, I'd place Stirling Moss over all the current crop of drivers. That's not to say that some might not develop into the sort of champion he is. And, yes, as someone mentioned, he never won a WDC - but only because he decided he didn't want it on a bad stewards decision. For those of you who don't know, in the 1958 Hawthorn/Ferrari were penalised at the Portugal (I think?) GP. If SM had just said nothing, he was WDC for 1958. But, he went and spoke in favour of Ferrari, told the stewards that Ferrari hadn't broken the rules and got the stewards to reinstate Hawthorn/Ferrari. Hawthorn/Ferrari went on to beat SM by one point that year.
I'd like to understand what standards you use to rationalize the fact that you've just exalted onto an individual the mark of a real champion by putting sportsmanship above wining a championship, yet when a team does not apply those same moral standards to win a world championship as in the 1964 GT World Championship example I've given you it doesn't bother you.
I ask this because it's very clear that you come solely bearing hypocritical arguments simply to insidiously purport your views; Forza (down your throat) Ferrari!
"I don't want to be part of a forum where everyone has differing opinions." Boom...