wull wrote: Mon Jun 06, 2022 9:41 pm
I just heard Davy Morgan passed away after an incident on the last lap of the supersport race earlier on today. Absolutely gutted, been following Davy since the beginning, that pink helmet! I’d see his name all the time mentioned in the Road Racing Ireland magazine and on the tele. It’s a cruel sport, but they all love it.
R.I.P DM71
I was gutted. He's one of the names I always looked for since I started going/watching 20 years ago
weeksy wrote: Tue Jun 07, 2022 8:25 am
It's a concern though isn't it.. as they push on more, the margins become smaller.. Even with the advances in tyres, electronics, bikes... it's still well, sodding dangerous.
It is a concern in some ways. But I don't think this year is much/very different. Every year people say that the machines are getting faster etc etc etc. Equally, these guys wouldn't do it if they didn't love it.
Similar has been said about road bikes. Would you be happy for non bikers to say that because bikes are now so powerful, we shouldn't be allowed to ride them on the public roads because of too many fatal accidents? I know enough people that were pissed off when the 200kph limit was put in place
Having been so often and talked to a lot of racers I know they do it from passion and love of the sport. They are a different breed. Yes, there is an element of addiction in there too - but also there are regularly racers that walk away from the sport. One guy I did know did practice week and quit the night before the first race. He and his wife had had their first child, there'd been a fatal accident in the practice week and he was concentrating on being safe, not on racing; he realised that wasn't actually safe at the TT so he packed up and walked away. Fair play to his team (one of whom I knew pretty well - I was marshalling so I sometimes got texts asking me how he was as he'd passed) in that they 100% supported him
Surely
all racing is about pushing any and all limits. Yes the TT and other road racing is more dangerous than circuit racing. But the people that do it WANT to do it. People that support, marshall and watch are generally as passionate about it as the riders - but without the ability to race it (for so many different reasons)