What separates the excellent from the elite?

What separates the excellent from the elite?

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Milkyway

9,368 posts

53 months

Monday 29th November 2021
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StevieBee said:
PhilAsia said:
StevieBee said:
Tommy Byrne is widely regarded as the most naturally gifted racing driver of the past 60 years - but lacked the ability to capitalise on his talent.
Is he? By who?
Mark Hughes, the Journalist is probably the most notable for taking this view. Roebuck too and many other journalists and professional observers have said as much in various books and articles over the years.

He won a F1 test in a McLaren. Senna put down a couple of marker laps and Byrne beat them pretty much first time out. Dennis didn't want him anywhere near the team and was only fulfilling an obligation to run him in the test. Worried the times may start a campaign to get him a seat, he asked the mechanics to detune the (either the engine or suspension, can't recall which). He still beat Senna's time.

Have a read of the book Crashed and Byrned. Very interesting read!
Trailer for Crash & Byrne.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ONrC2TVqLPg

LukeBrown66

4,479 posts

46 months

Monday 29th November 2021
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The man was as arrogant and silly as he was good, caused most of his own downfall.

ettore

4,131 posts

252 months

Monday 29th November 2021
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Yes, Byrne was talented but foolish (by his own admission).

....but widely regarded as the ‘most naturally talented driver for 60 years’?! Hyperbolic nonsense that I’m sure the journalists you quote wouldn’t back.

‘The most naturally talented driver over the last 60 years who fked it up by being a tt’ Possibly true..

I have some sympathy for the fact that he came from no money but others managed (notably Nigel at that time).

I also don’t think that all the ‘elite’ were F1 champions in the same way that many F1 Champions were not the elite.


hot metal

1,943 posts

193 months

Tuesday 30th November 2021
quotequote all
ettore said:
Yes, Byrne was talented but foolish (by his own admission).

....but widely regarded as the ‘most naturally talented driver for 60 years’?! Hyperbolic nonsense that I’m sure the journalists you quote wouldn’t back.

‘The most naturally talented driver over the last 60 years who fked it up by being a tt’ Possibly true..

I have some sympathy for the fact that he came from no money but others managed (notably Nigel at that time).

I also don’t think that all the ‘elite’ were F1 champions in the same way that many F1 Champions were not the elite.
I seem to remember, some thought later that Senna hesitated going into F3 to avoid clashing with Byrne choosing FF2000 instead for a season, this was a category most aspiring F1 hopefuls skipped.

Roofless Toothless

5,650 posts

132 months

Tuesday 30th November 2021
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I believe Senna also said that his old karting rival Terry Fullerton was his most fearsome opponent.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terry_Fullerton



andyA700

2,657 posts

37 months

Tuesday 30th November 2021
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Why put some people on a pedestal, based on what you thought they may have achieved, compared to absolute genius drivers such as Senna, Schumacker and now Hamilton, who really did achieve mega success at the highest level.

ettore

4,131 posts

252 months

Tuesday 30th November 2021
quotequote all
hot metal said:
ettore said:
Yes, Byrne was talented but foolish (by his own admission).

....but widely regarded as the ‘most naturally talented driver for 60 years’?! Hyperbolic nonsense that I’m sure the journalists you quote wouldn’t back.

‘The most naturally talented driver over the last 60 years who fked it up by being a tt’ Possibly true..

I have some sympathy for the fact that he came from no money but others managed (notably Nigel at that time).

I also don’t think that all the ‘elite’ were F1 champions in the same way that many F1 Champions were not the elite.
I seem to remember, some thought later that Senna hesitated going into F3 to avoid clashing with Byrne choosing FF2000 instead for a season, this was a category most aspiring F1 hopefuls skipped.
Hmmm...not a cut and dried case!

Teem50

31 posts

224 months

Tuesday 30th November 2021
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StevieBee said:
I recall an articles in F! racing years back in which the author explained Schumacher's uncanny ability sense where the 'friction circle'. This, IIRC, is an area roughly the size of a lens cap on each tyre from which 70% of the grip comes from. It moves around constantly and he knew where it was and where it would go and adjust his style to suit.
Err, no. The Friction Circle is a graphical plot, pioneered by Mark Donohue IIRC, of forward acceleration against lateral acceleration during a particular corner or an entire lap. It allows you to see if you're using all the acceleration supported by the tyre, assuming that that acceleration is available both longitudinally (e.g. during braking) and laterally (eg during cornering). I always plot a friction circle to see just how crap my race laps are... Good race drivers, unlike me, can keep their car right at the edge of the circle during an entire lap and the car does indeed then feel like it's dancing.

Some info here: http://thunval.com/websites/secondsite/trailer/tec...

T

Muzzer79

9,879 posts

187 months

Tuesday 30th November 2021
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The Tommy Byrne story has been hyped up by various people and now he's become this forgotten genius who would have ruled the racetracks if only he'd done (x) spoken to (y) or turned up on time for (z)

In reality, he was naturally gifted but only demonstrated potential, not actual results.

If he was that good, he'd have succeeded outside of F1. His career in the States was by no means spectacular.

To call him the greatest natural talent of the last 60 years is a fallacy.

Siao

844 posts

40 months

Tuesday 30th November 2021
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Muzzer79 said:
The Tommy Byrne story has been hyped up by various people and now he's become this forgotten genius who would have ruled the racetracks if only he'd done (x) spoken to (y) or turned up on time for (z)

In reality, he was naturally gifted but only demonstrated potential, not actual results.

If he was that good, he'd have succeeded outside of F1. His career in the States was by no means spectacular.

To call him the greatest natural talent of the last 60 years is a fallacy.
You'd think the other teams would queue outside his door, not only Macca...

angrymoby

2,611 posts

178 months

Tuesday 30th November 2021
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some people seem to be confusing 'talent' with application or realisation of said talent

no one knows how talented Tommy actually was, as he appeared to have pretty much zero application


Milkyway

9,368 posts

53 months

Tuesday 30th November 2021
quotequote all
angrymoby said:
some people seem to be confusing 'talent' with application or realisation of said talent

no one knows how talented Tommy actually was, as he appeared to have pretty much zero application
Remember watching him in F3...
Talented, but just from the wrong era. Perhaps in the 70’s, he would have been in the Hunt / Sheene mould.
I presume that he would have been a PR nightmare. eek

hot metal

1,943 posts

193 months

Tuesday 30th November 2021
quotequote all
Byrne, might have been great, but in the end, was not

Clark from 72 race starts had 20 DNF`s, if Chapman had not relied so much on string & piano wire as building components his record would have been greater. Half of those retirements included a fastest lap or pole, real shame. Most of the last 2 seasons of his career was spent in cars with underdeveloped or just plain ste engines. From a percentage point of view his record still stands up against the likes of Shuey or Lewis.
He never once finished 5th scratchchin podium or car broke,

Quote:
`I have some sympathy for the fact that he came from no money but others managed (notably Nigel at that time).We are talking elite here,,, yes?`

Mansell was very fortunate to get on Colin Chapman`s good side, his junior formula record was poor, yes, the worst machinery but he simply would not get noticed today. How many have vanished that way ?? Lots, Byrne is just a good story now, one that slipped through the grate.

Edited by hot metal on Tuesday 30th November 22:00

ettore

4,131 posts

252 months

Wednesday 1st December 2021
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Agree, Byrne is a good story and good pub chat. Greatest natural talent in 60 years was the trigger!

Fangio had a 47% win rate in Formula 1!

HARTLEYHARE1

588 posts

129 months

Wednesday 1st December 2021
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There is only one name everyone

Michael Schumacher

Everyone before and especially after have just been lucky

PhilAsia

3,777 posts

75 months

Wednesday 1st December 2021
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HARTLEYHARE1 said:
There is only one name everyone

Michael Schumacher

Everyone before and especially after have just been lucky
Nah. He would cheat at tiddlywinks...

Incredible talent wasted, due to the above being dialled in at 100%.

Milkyway

9,368 posts

53 months

Wednesday 1st December 2021
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Scenario time:
The ultimate ‘Race of Champions’ / Rallysprint style of event....

Multiple races / events, but in identical cars...
Who would be raised to the status of ELITE.

It’s time to sort the wheat from the chaf. scratchchin

Love to see them throwing a works SD1 / TR8 etc through the rally stage.

Edited by Milkyway on Wednesday 1st December 09:44

105.4

4,065 posts

71 months

Wednesday 1st December 2021
quotequote all
I’m no expert and many might disagree with my comment, but…….

For me the Elite seem to almost always make the best of a bad situation, to pull the rabbit out of the hat and get a decent result even when things don’t go their way. This could either be out on the track or on the team politics side of things. They also probably figure quite highly on the autism scale.

I wasn’t a fan of Senna, but if you compare Senna to Mansell, you’ll see what I mean.

Muzzer79

9,879 posts

187 months

Wednesday 1st December 2021
quotequote all
HARTLEYHARE1 said:
There is only one name everyone

Michael Schumacher

Everyone before and especially after have just been lucky
rolleyes

Yes, Jim Clark (as just one example) was just 'lucky'

Utterly clueless.

Muzzer79

9,879 posts

187 months

Wednesday 1st December 2021
quotequote all
105.4 said:
I’m no expert and many might disagree with my comment, but…….

For me the Elite seem to almost always make the best of a bad situation, to pull the rabbit out of the hat and get a decent result even when things don’t go their way. This could either be out on the track or on the team politics side of things. They also probably figure quite highly on the autism scale.

I wasn’t a fan of Senna, but if you compare Senna to Mansell, you’ll see what I mean.
What's autism got to do with the price of bread? confused

Stirling Moss was unquestionably elite. He could charm the pants off anyone and was about as far removed from autistic as you could get.