RE: Motorsport Monday: mind games
RE: Motorsport Monday: mind games
Monday 6th January 2014

Motorsport On Monday: mind games

In the first of his new weekly motorsport columns Dan Prosser examines how to think your way to the top



The phenomenon of the dominant motorsport competitor has always fascinated. My curiosity doesn't lie in one driver inexplicably operating on a level that his rivals - themselves world-class competitors - can't reach, but rather the crushing psychological impact it must have on those who are being defeated week in, week out.

True grit: McGuinness showed champion mettle
True grit: McGuinness showed champion mettle
Most sporting professionals count self-belief as their single greatest asset, for all the God-given talent in the world means nothing without the confidence to trust it. How harmful it must be for a champion of any sport to watch a younger rival emerge and, on the face of it, just be that much better. This champion, who for two decades, perhaps, has been lauded as the next best thing, or comparable to the greatest of all time, witnessing a less experienced competitor achieving heights he can't comprehend. Maintaining self-belief in the presence of a suddenly dominant rival is perhaps as much a mark of a great champion as dominance itself - witness John McGuinness's comeback Senior win at the TT after a week of domination by an apparently unstoppable Michael Dunlop.

The pity of such dominance from a spectator's point of view, of course, is that it just doesn't make for compelling viewing. We know it's churlish to dismiss one-sidedness as boring, but when we tune in to be entertained and the sport fails to deliver the exciting competition that we crave, we absolutely do feel let down.

Champions all but who wins mental battle?
Champions all but who wins mental battle?
So it was in 2013 for many motorsport series. Sebastian Vettel dominated Formula 1 again, perfectly in the second half of the season, while Sebastien Ogier existed on a different plane entirely to win nine of 13 World Rally Championship rounds. Marc Marquez' six wins in 18 MotoGP races isn't dominance of the same order, but he was reliably the quickest rider out there in what was his rookie season.

The sheer mental strength that such as Alonso, Raikkonen, Hamilton, Hirvonen, Latvala, Lorenzo and Pedrosa will need in order to return in 2014 with the belief that they can win is beyond my comprehension. For some of those guys, it may even be beyond their own comprehension. For the victorious competitor, dominance breeds confidence, which compels dominance. It's a virtuous cycle, as one S. Loeb well knows.

For F1 and WRC competitors and fans alike there is, blissfully, much to feel optimistic about ahead of the new season because the status quo in each is being upset. The most comprehensive regulations overhaul for many years will very probably mean that the 2014 F1 season bears little resemblance to the one that went before it, and given the complete change in machinery Vettel's pursuers mightn't have to rely solely on something from within themselves in order to get back on level terms with the German.

Audi's dominance may finally be challenged
Audi's dominance may finally be challenged
In the WRC, meanwhile, Mikko Hirvonen returns to the team with whom he won 14 rallies, M-Sport, and Northern Irish flier Kris Meeke finally has the works drive with Citroen that his immense outright pace has long deserved. In both series just enough is changing to convince us that it might not all be the same again.

The situation in MotoGP is unique because Marquez is so inexperienced at the top flight compared to his rivals, so there's intrigue aplenty in his ability or otherwise to become the totally dominant competitor in the mould of Rossi, Loeb or Schumacher (for whom, of course, we continue to wish the best).

Beyond those three series, the World Endurance Championship welcomes the factory Porsche team alongside the existing Audi and Toyota squads to tee up the most enticing sports car season for a generation.

For all those reasons, 2014 is shaping up to be a vintage year for motorsport. My fingers remain tightly crossed for no one competitor to have it all his own way.

Kubica is making his mark as a rally winner
Kubica is making his mark as a rally winner
As we wait patiently for the higher-profile racing series to get going, the 2014 motorsport season is already underway following the start of the Dakar Rally and the European Rally Championship. Robert Kubica scored his first ERC victory as he snatched the lead of the Jannerrallye, a tarmac event, in Austria on the final stage. The F1 race winner is due to compete in the WRC this season with M-Sport in a Ford Fiesta WRC, and his performance in a similar Fiesta Regional Rally Car over the weekend bodes well for Rallye Monte Carlo, which kicks off on January 14.

It must be said that the level of competition in the ERC falls some way short of WRC standard so we should keep our expectations of the Pole in check, but he certainly does seem to be adapting to stage rallying very well indeed. The outright pace is there; now he's learning how to win rallies, too.

Additional photography: LAT Photo

 

 

Author
Discussion

chrisironside

Original Poster:

910 posts

186 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
I think there's a lot of external factors that must come into consideration.
For example, Pedrosa will be thinking that Marquez now has a lot of pressure on him whereas there were no expectations of him this time around.
Hamilton, Alsono & Co will be hoping their manufacturers can deliver in the first season with the new cars.

Marquez, Alonso and McGuiness haven't won very much on account of mind-games (I doubt McGuiness is even familiar with the concept!).
Talent and machinery wins races, mind-games just renders weak competition less of a threat.

georgetuk

205 posts

242 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
No disservice to the author but it seems to be a different article than the headline suggests.

Seems to be more about the way there will be lots of upsets next season not a psychology article which I was expecting!

vrooom

3,763 posts

291 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
God, that picture of vettel and his finger is making my blood to boil.

pengers

25 posts

158 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
It would have been far more interesting to read about the psychology of winning within motorsport teams rather than what we all know already, processional winning is dull unless you're the winner, very little insight into the mind games that go on at every single level of sport, professional or amateur, potential for a good article here sadly not delivered.

oldtimer2

729 posts

157 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
I suspect that some of the opposition are as much concerned about what Adrian Newey conjures up this year as they are about Vettel`s undoubted ability as a driver. That said he has a remarkable ability to focus on the job in hand, as in that pole winning lap he achieved in Abu Dabhi when the camera revealed he did not blink once.

As for the psychology, the top drivers will bounce back. If they were as fragile as you imply they would not have got into F1 or the other series in the first place. To get there and to win demands total, utter singlemindedness. The moment that flags any team boss as ruthless as they should be would boot them out.

anonymous-user

78 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
F1- Terrible
WRC- Dead
Moto GP- Fantastic but starting to change.
TT- Crazy but pure racing.

As a motorsport fan it is the first time in my life that I am not missing F1 during the winter break.

I just can not see how 2014 is going to be any better.

WRC has lost the plot.

Moto GP was very good and spanks the above for entertainment.

TT as normal is very dangerous but you really feel the rider who wins has gone that extra mile to be the Champion.

I really hope I am wrong about F1 and the WRC but I doubt it.

All we can hope is cars break down but that is very unlikely

F1- 2014 World Champion The Finger Sebastian Vettel
WRC- 2014 World Champion Sebastian Ogier

frown


RS404

319 posts

226 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
Good article. Reminds me of when I was lucky enough to have a brief chat with the legend that is John McGuiness at Snetterton about 5 years ago. I told him how gutted we were for him while watching the TT earlier that year when he had to retire with a snapped chain. I still cringe to this day that I talked about negative things with him before a race :facepalm:

RTH

1,059 posts

236 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
I see no indicators of a brilliant year either.

speedjockey

131 posts

160 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
WEC is the series to be watching!

The Wookie

14,187 posts

252 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
RS404 said:
Good article. Reminds me of when I was lucky enough to have a brief chat with the legend that is John McGuiness at Snetterton about 5 years ago. I told him how gutted we were for him while watching the TT earlier that year when he had to retire with a snapped chain. I still cringe to this day that I talked about negative things with him before a race :facepalm:
I wouldn't worry, if a racer gets bothered about the things people talk to them about before they go out then by that point in their career they'll make sure they're not talking to anyone before they go out! hehe

paranha

633 posts

266 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
Agree for WEC.

Craikeybaby

11,824 posts

249 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
Despite Allan McNish retiring, I'm also most excited about WEC this year.

green-blood

147 posts

263 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
great article I look forward to this series, and plenty to debate too

audi have dominated the results at lemans but the races have been epic, some of the Peugeot battles were superb. that said bring on 3 teams and a fully prepared Toyota.


Alex Langheck

835 posts

153 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
Quite rightly, lots of interest in the WEC. What it really needs is better TV coverage. MotorsTV do a great job, but the picture quality isn't acceptable for a FiA World Championship. Eurosport have cherry picked Le Mans and show bits of the other races.

161BMW

1,823 posts

189 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
Looking forwards to all the motorsports this year
I am a f1 fan but the other motorsports look very interesting
Interesting topic but little said on physcology of winning and how affects other drivers etc

Craikeybaby

11,824 posts

249 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
Alex Langheck said:
Quite rightly, lots of interest in the WEC. What it really needs is better TV coverage. MotorsTV do a great job, but the picture quality isn't acceptable for a FiA World Championship. Eurosport have cherry picked Le Mans and show bits of the other races.
I find the online streaming (live.fiawec.com - I think) is pretty good.

Dinoboy

2,599 posts

241 months

Monday 6th January 2014
quotequote all
Also really excited about WEC this year.

FestivAli

1,152 posts

262 months

Tuesday 7th January 2014
quotequote all
ELUSIVEJIM said:
F1- Terrible
WRC- Dead
Moto GP- Fantastic but starting to change.
TT- Crazy but pure racing.
I like to watch from a different angle, in terms of F1. For 2013 for me it was almost a given that Vettel would win, and consequently most of the race coverage focused on the battles behind him, many of which where fantastic - in that way F1 delivered for me in 2013. I'm in Aus and Our Channel 10/One bought the Skysports coverage and commentary package - whatever is happening in the actual race, you can always count on Martin Brundle injecting some dry humour. Yes, I believe the tech changes will make F1 closer (or one team will dominate BrawnGP style if they find a loophole) but so long as there are drivers competing for the same bit of track, be they P1 and P2, or P21 and P22 I'll be watching.

The other I watch religiously is MotoGP. I used to go for the underdog, but the last few seasons showed me that there is much to be excited by by the top guys. Stoner hunting down then demolishing his pray, usually sideways; Lorenzo just being so knife edge precise in pitching his M1 in the turns, time after time. Marquez winning races in Moto2 having (rightly) started from last place, being criticized because he was lighter than everyone, then moving up into motoGP and being absolutly unphazed and just getting on with it. Thrilling stuff. Back a few pegs, I hope Crutchlow and Dovi resume the tight fights they had on the Tech 3s now they are teammates again on the Dukes

Krikkit

27,841 posts

205 months

Wednesday 8th January 2014
quotequote all
Anyone know the source of this picture? Would make an awesome desktop: