Rhino & KPY,
I was there just a couple of years ago, trust me I've seen it, looking uphill, downhill and every way in between. The viewing is sh**t, maybe your just used to it and accept it, I expect better for my hard earned income.
Fax
Fax - First, yes I've been to races where spectators have been killed by flying debris or even a car which leapt the protective banking.
Second, the uninformed rubbish is the badly-written article you posted a link to. I've read nothing in it that tells me the viewing is sh**t. The article IS sh**t though.
I spent quite a lot of time this last weekend with a bunch of guys whose job it is to be on the other side of the fencing you so detest. The chief marshal is ten years younger than I am, but has had the sad task of failing to get a driver out of a car alive at his post at Le Mans on
three separate occasions. One of the other guys I spent a lot of time with is called Steve Tarrant. He's still marshalling, but is confined to a wheelchair after being hit by a car at Goodwood seven years ago, which cost him a leg (and nearly both of them) and cost the guy standing beside him his life. Do you really want to put the viewing public to be exposed to the same risks, just so that you can get a better view? For myself I had my stopwatch on Paul Hawkins (hit unguarded tree), Jo Siffert (crap fuel cells) and Gilles Villeneuve (crap qualifying regulations and bad luck). I saw Ronnie Peterson and his F2 March end up against a flimsy fence at Mallory Park, within a whisker of harming a whole crowd of spectators
You say you were there a couple of years ago, uphill downhill etc - I've been going since 1981 (I came to Le Mans 20 years after I started going to Grands Prix), and I know my way around - I've never had a problem with the view even though I need my mountain bike to cover the extremities of the circuit and each year requires a little tweaking to find the best spots. I admit that I'm lucky to get access to the infield on the Mulsanne (you still have to be nice to the gendarmes and stewards, or you don't see anything), but even without that there are good viewing spots
and they have been considerably improved this year. As for "milk for the drivers" and other drivel you come up with, I happened to be where the Lamborghini stopped on the circuit on Sunday afternoon. I got to put my head virtually into the cockpit. It was like an oven - no exageration. How those guys race in those temperatures and remain conscious, I have no idea.
Your ideas about Europe seem to have been borrowed from George Bush. An occasional visit does not make you an expert. Keep your candy up your own ass, engage your hillybilly brain and start talking out of your mouth for a change.