FORUMula1.com - F1 Forum

Discuss the sport you love with other motorsport fans

Discuss GP2, A1, Rallying, Indycar, Nascar and all other racing series!
User avatar
By headless
#155791

How could you possibly come up with a result like that?


because i am thinking logically.... firstly wait for him to join MotoGP before even saying he can compete on the same level as Rossi!

The level of Rossi can be broke down into
Stoner, Hayden, Lorenzo & Rossi obviously. The people that have beat him, also Biaggi is on his level and in which Spies has beat him.


Stoner Hayden Lorenzo are not on his level! are you serious? Spies hasnt even ridden a MotoGP bike yet youre already making outlandish claims... its like Saying Piquet Jnr was awesome in GP2 so would take it to Schumacher!!!

:yes::D
User avatar
By McLaren
#156047
Right now, i have a question that would turn a few heads.

Spies & Rossi same bike.

Who would win?


Well you say it might turn a few heads ,can't argue with that.

I don't pretend to be an expert on moto gp, but can you honestly believe that a young rookie could walk straight into the sport and beat arguably the greatest rider ever to get on a bike?.Seems a bit far fetched to me.

Not doubting Spies has a future but would be surprised if that happened.
User avatar
By Jamie
#156051
Right now, i have a question that would turn a few heads.

Spies & Rossi same bike.

Who would win?


Well you say it might turn a few heads ,can't argue with that.

I don't pretend to be an expert on moto gp, but can you honestly believe that a young rookie could walk straight into the sport and beat arguably the greatest rider ever to get on a bike?.Seems a bit far fetched to me.

Not doubting Spies has a future but would be surprised if that happened.


To be fair. I respect your point dude, and what you say makes sense. But then again? 1 word.

Lorenzo.

He is young? And has dominated Rossi and played mind games? So to be fair. You make an awesome point which i respect. But Spies came into the game and beat Nitro first ride around. (well 2nd actually)

He's a monster talent dude.
User avatar
By McLaren
#156055
Right now, i have a question that would turn a few heads.

Spies & Rossi same bike.

Who would win?


Well you say it might turn a few heads ,can't argue with that.

I don't pretend to be an expert on moto gp, but can you honestly believe that a young rookie could walk straight into the sport and beat arguably the greatest rider ever to get on a bike?.Seems a bit far fetched to me.

Not doubting Spies has a future but would be surprised if that happened.


To be fair. I respect your point dude, and what you say makes sense. But then again? 1 word.

Lorenzo.

He is young? And has dominated Rossi and played mind games? So to be fair. You make an awesome point which i respect. But Spies came into the game and beat Nitro first ride around. (well 2nd actually)

He's a monster talent dude.


Would be great to see him in moto gp :D I spose looking at it from the other side,theres always someone that eventualy comes along from the new generation and sets a new benchmark.
User avatar
By Jamie
#156058
Right now, i have a question that would turn a few heads.

Spies & Rossi same bike.

Who would win?


Well you say it might turn a few heads ,can't argue with that.

I don't pretend to be an expert on moto gp, but can you honestly believe that a young rookie could walk straight into the sport and beat arguably the greatest rider ever to get on a bike?.Seems a bit far fetched to me.

Not doubting Spies has a future but would be surprised if that happened.


To be fair. I respect your point dude, and what you say makes sense. But then again? 1 word.

Lorenzo.

He is young? And has dominated Rossi and played mind games? So to be fair. You make an awesome point which i respect. But Spies came into the game and beat Nitro first ride around. (well 2nd actually)

He's a monster talent dude.


Would be great to see him in moto gp :D I spose looking at it from the other side,theres always someone that eventualy comes along from the new generation and sets a new benchmark.


Exactly, as much i love Ben. I still think Lorenzo is the next King. His talent it far too big to measure, along with Spies. Spies has ben in MotoGp & did do something above average. But his talent is growing and he is shining in SBK.
User avatar
By Jamie
#156247
Season so far: Casey Stoner
Monday, 21 September 2009

Ducati Marlboro’s Australian former World Champion is preparing to return to action after a break in racing due to his physical problems.

Casey Stoner’s superb start to the 2009 MotoGP World Championship at the spectacular floodlit Losail International Circuit gave no indication of the disrupted season which awaited him in the months to follow.

The young Australian hit the ground running, with pole position secured in the first qualifying session of the season and a hat-trick of consecutive Qatar wins completed in the first ever Monday night MotoGP race, after torrential rain prevented the scheduled Sunday night contest.

At round two in Japan, meanwhile, Stoner was unable to repeat his Qatari success story and after making a poor start to the race from second on the grid he could only fight back sufficiently enough to achieve fourth place, thus conceding his early championship lead to Jorge Lorenzo.

At the Gran Premio bwin.com de España the factory Ducati man crossed the finishing line in third place for his first ever Jerez podium, but at the following round in France he battled hard in the rain at Le Mans only to end up fifth in a complicated contest. Those results left Stoner tied on points with Valentino Rossi in second place in the standings, behind Lorenzo.

Up next was a trip to Mugello, the home of Ducati and previously a circuit where no-one had been able to beat Italian hero Rossi since 2001. In another wet-dry battle the riders again had to change machines mid-race and this time it was Stoner who got it right, to hand Ducati their first ever premier class victory at the beautiful Tuscan venue.

Round six at Catalunya was a key weekend in the story of Stoner’s season and unfortunately for the wrong reason. An incredibly hard-fought race saw Rossi beat Lorenzo on the very last corner, with an exhausted Stoner coming home in third place and just holding Andrea Dovizioso off for the final podium slot.

The rostrum positions tied Rossi, Lorenzo and Stoner up in a three-way draw for top spot in the championship, but the latter was affected by a virus all weekend and pushed his body so hard during the race that he required medical attention before stepping onto the podium.

The alarm bells were ringing at Assen a fortnight later when Stoner finished third again behind Rossi and Lorenzo, once more suffering from severe exhaustion, as he slipped to third in the standings. The 23 year-old went straight from the podium to his motorhome where Dr Claudio Macchiagodena from the Clinica Mobile attempted to rehydrate him and help him recover in time for the Atlantic crossing to California’s demanding Laguna Seca track.

In the first American visit of the year, Stoner was again affected by his illness in the last third of the race and was unable to compete to his usual elite standard. Behind race-winner Dani Pedrosa and Yamaha pair Rossi and Lorenzo, Stoner faded in the final stages and finished in fourth place.

With the rest of the paddock heading back to Europe in the direction of Sachsenring Stoner stayed in California for a series of medical tests, but doctors were unable to find a remedy for what was diagnosed as slight gastritis and mild anemia.

Producing another valiant effort in Germany, as he attempted to force his way back into the title fight, Stoner held the race lead for ten laps but this time it appeared to be tyre deterioration rather than his physical condition which prevented an eventual victory. He was fourth again behind the same trio of riders as at Laguna.

Things could not really have gone much worse than they did the following weekend, however. As MotoGP visited Donington Park for the final time, some typical British summer weather and another wet-dry track meant that tyre choice was crucial but Ducati got it wrong as Stoner and his team-mate Nicky Hayden both went with ‘wets’ whilst the rest of the grid started on dry tyres. The track never got wet enough to warrant the selection and Stoner completed the race in 14th position.

Following the British Grand Prix, Ducati announced that it had been decided to give Stoner a complete rest, after consultation with doctors in Australia, and that he would miss the three races at Brno, Indianapolis and Misano in order to give his body a complete rest.

He has subsequently dropped to fourth in the general standings, seven points behind Pedrosa, but with four rounds remaining he will return to action at the Grande Premio bwin.com de Portugal determined to rediscover full competitiveness – and he is sure to get a warm reception from his fellow riders and the rest of the MotoGP paddock.

Casey Stoner
Ducati Marlboro Team

-

i'M GLAD HE'S BACK, VERY EXCITED THIS SEASON HAS A NEW TURN AROUND. i'M HOPING HE'S UP TO SPEED ASAP!
User avatar
By Jamie
#156272
Can't see a guy like Stoner being kept down for long :D


Exactly :)
I think he has a major opportunity to make somthing amazing happening :thumbup:
User avatar
By EwanM
#156503

How could you possibly come up with a result like that?


because i am thinking logically.... firstly wait for him to join MotoGP before even saying he can compete on the same level as Rossi!

The level of Rossi can be broke down into
Stoner, Hayden, Lorenzo & Rossi obviously. The people that have beat him, also Biaggi is on his level and in which Spies has beat him.


Stoner Hayden Lorenzo are not on his level! are you serious? Spies hasnt even ridden a MotoGP bike yet youre already making outlandish claims... its like Saying Piquet Jnr was awesome in GP2 so would take it to Schumacher!!!

:yes::D


Spies has actually.
User avatar
By bud
#156608

How could you possibly come up with a result like that?


because i am thinking logically.... firstly wait for him to join MotoGP before even saying he can compete on the same level as Rossi!

The level of Rossi can be broke down into
Stoner, Hayden, Lorenzo & Rossi obviously. The people that have beat him, also Biaggi is on his level and in which Spies has beat him.


Stoner Hayden Lorenzo are not on his level! are you serious? Spies hasnt even ridden a MotoGP bike yet youre already making outlandish claims... its like Saying Piquet Jnr was awesome in GP2 so would take it to Schumacher!!!

:yes::D


Spies has actually.

for a whole season
User avatar
By Jamie
#156634

How could you possibly come up with a result like that?


because i am thinking logically.... firstly wait for him to join MotoGP before even saying he can compete on the same level as Rossi!

The level of Rossi can be broke down into
Stoner, Hayden, Lorenzo & Rossi obviously. The people that have beat him, also Biaggi is on his level and in which Spies has beat him.


Stoner Hayden Lorenzo are not on his level! are you serious? Spies hasnt even ridden a MotoGP bike yet youre already making outlandish claims... its like Saying Piquet Jnr was awesome in GP2 so would take it to Schumacher!!!

:yes::D


Spies has actually.

for a whole season


1. I have already said that!!!

2. Experience, is experience.

3. Spies is showing allot of talent, and when you have followed Rossi's career like i have, i know when someone is stronger. & also how Ben & Rossi work. They work sort of the same but Ben is more agressive and nearly or perfectly as consistant as Rossi.
User avatar
By headless
#156660
when you have followed Rossi's career like i have, i know when someone is stronger. & also how Ben & Rossi work. They work sort of the same but Ben is more agressive and nearly or perfectly as consistant as Rossi.

Well I hope you aren't following me then.
User avatar
By Jamie
#156662
when you have followed Rossi's career like i have, i know when someone is stronger. & also how Ben & Rossi work. They work sort of the same but Ben is more agressive and nearly or perfectly as consistant as Rossi.

Well I hope you aren't following me then.


:confused:
User avatar
By bud
#156682
when you have followed Rossi's career like i have, i know when someone is stronger. & also how Ben & Rossi work. They work sort of the same but Ben is more agressive and nearly or perfectly as consistant as Rossi.
[/quote]

How could you follow Rossi's career with anything useful to talk about youre only 18
  • 1
  • 35
  • 36
  • 37
  • 38
  • 39
  • 42

See our F1 related articles too!