Motorsport can be dangerous, part two
Another weekend, another on-track tragedy, this time in the Lamborghini Super Trofeo

The five-car crash early in the Blancpain Super Trofeo round at Paul Ricard yesterday claimed the life of driver Andrea Mame, who later succumbed to injuries sustained in the accident. A Lamborghini statement said fellow drivers Vaclav Petch, Tomas Kral and Dario Cerati were declared fit by doctors while Andrea Solime was airlifted to a nearby hospital where he is conscious and described as in a 'satisfactory' condition.
Racing was immediately suspended and the event then cancelled, and the statement saying, "Automobili Lamborghini will be working with the circuit authorities and SRO to investigate the accident thoroughly in all its aspects."
Concern about safety in the Super Trofeo series were raised back in 2010 after a shocking crash at the Brno round, discussed here on AxisOfOversteer. While the exact circumstances of the Paul Ricard incident remain to be confirmed Lamborghini will no doubt be looking hard at what can be done to ensure the safety of the 'gentlemen drivers' participating.
In the meantime, of course, the firm and racing community at large is simply offering condolences to Mame's family in what has been a shocking and sobering couple of weeks for all involved in the sport at whatever level.
[Sources: AxisOfOversteer, Lamborghini]
Of course no-one wants to see another death, but then do you want to see the end of racing? People must be allowed to carry on the sport they love. However dangerous the lambo race there are thousands who would jump at the chance to be out there. The "gentleman racers" are fortunate to be able to translate that wish to reality.
You have to either accept that this is a (remote) possibility or stop taking part.
Not being argumentative here - I saw a guy get killed at a bike track day and gave it up shortly afterwards. The potential for serious damage was too high, the rewards not quite enough. Obviously you're a lot safer in a car, but accidents can and do happen.
I've lost friends to racing but managed to walk away from a number of incidents that would have been messy on the road in a regular car and each time it happens you thank your blessings and get out of the way.
Places like Cadwell Park and Mallory Park in the UK have (or had) a slightly scary number of deaths per annum (2 or 3 versus *none* at other tracks) but given the sheer number of hours of use they get coupled with the speeds involved it is amazing that there aren't more serious incidents especially at the "club" end of the spectrum where cars can be more vulnerable thanks to age, relatively poor preparation, cheap tyres, etc.
The MSA and FIA go to great lengths to make sure we all do what we can to minimise the risks but what you can't mitigate against can still kill you (like the muppets that think they can outbrake everyone into the inside of a corner that funnels the cars from three abreast down to one). There will always be stupid driver errors that cause incidents in addition to mechanical failures and unfortunately we drivers tend to be rather soft and squidgy compared with the rest of the environment. The end result is messy...
Just remember that the real heroes at the circuits are the marshalls not the drivers
I was just reading a moment ago there was a crash in Poland during which a yellow Koenigsegg ploughed into the crowd. I don't know if anybody was killed but several are very seriously injured...
However end of the day driving on the road is still more dangerous than motorspott and you are more likely to be killed on your journey to work than racing a lambo around Paul Ricard.
as long as we can learn from these accidents such as barrier placement in repsect of Le mans then these guys lives are not totally wasted.
Have to say I Think we have become a bit complacent, such is the design now of good chassis and saftey pods, Hans devices etc.
Last years high speed crash with Allan McNish http://www.google.co.uk/imgres?q=allan+mcnish+le+m...
Was unbelivebale that any one could walk away from such an inpact! Losing a GTE Driver last weekend was bad enough but this too is very sad news. Have to say after watching the F1 from Silverstone yesterday its a wonder no one was killed or injured there too with the tyres delamination and throwing debary into the path of other drivers
However end of the day driving on the road is still more dangerous than motorspott and you are more likely to be killed on your journey to work than racing a lambo around Paul Ricard.
I was only thinking yesterday while participating, that on a certain section of the track we were really going very, very quickly, and I did think how much it was going to hurt should I make a mistake on that section.
The following lap I went round the outside of someone going even quicker than I did the lap before, on the very same stretch.
Based on how I'm feeling today, the risk is worth the reward, and for the gathered few that were watching, we provided some entertainment.
As someone who competes I feel like I'm in a bit of a knowledge vacuum about the causes of racer fatality. I wear a HANS, have bought the best kit I can afford, but sometimes I wonder is there anything else I could do?
Perhaps other racers feel the same?
The Brno incident you mentioned was back in 2010, and the level of teams, drivers and personnel taking part in the Series has improved greatly since.
Yes there is still a large element of 'gentleman drivers' within the series, but the driver in question's co-driver was Adrian Zaugg, who has raced in A1GP and GP2.
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