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Post by jbcarfreek on Jul 18, 2015 11:52:58 GMT
When i saw the incident for the first time i thought he died on impact, when they said he was in a coma i kinda knew it would come to this. Rest in peace and may you have died doing what you liked most.
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Mus
Member
The Real Guy
Posts: 817
Registered on: April 2015
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Post by Mus on Jul 18, 2015 12:50:58 GMT
Watching him race in Monaco last year was an absolute blast, it's a real shame we couldn't see more of him. Alas, rest in peace Jules Bianchi.
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Post by SakiBomb on Jul 19, 2015 1:23:03 GMT
RIP Jules
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mich25b
Member
I have fun in games, it's that simple.
Posts: 121
Registered on: June 2015
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Post by mich25b on Jul 19, 2015 1:49:13 GMT
I was looking for a thread like this to commemorate to Jules Bianchi. I am not a die-hard F1 fan, but I still know things about it and how this is tragic for the F1 motorsport, the community, and his family. His crash on Suzuka last year has lead up to what happened yesterday. I give condolences to his family for their loss I am a lot younger than him, but he died at such a young age, especially with him having the career he had and the obstacles and a good life in front of him. Motorsport is dangerous, whether you like that or not, and if you try it, you have to deal with what happens. Whether you think this is his fault or not, he still died due to what he loved, and I really respect that. Rest In Peace, great person Jules Bianchi
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StevenH2012
Member
Posts: 31
Registered on: December 2014
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Post by StevenH2012 on Jul 19, 2015 9:05:34 GMT
RIP #JB17
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Post by vxwk on Jul 19, 2015 10:20:28 GMT
Rest in Peace Jules, great driver. Could have gone on to win titles at the right team.
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Post by Pundip on Jul 19, 2015 11:55:52 GMT
The context of this battle is in the description. Jules is in the Lotus btw and shows some supreme driving skills
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Post by endersai on Jul 19, 2015 22:29:53 GMT
I haven't commented much on this aside from posting Joe Saward's eulogy. Incidentally, if you're an F1 fan, and you don't know Joe Saward...!
Bianchi showed extreme talent and speed and outdrove that Marussia car to its P8 (P9 post-penalty) finish in Monaco in 2014. He was undoubtedly a rising star who, along with Finland's Bottas, Australia's Ricciardo, Spain's Sainz and Netherland's Verstappen represent the winners and champions of tomorrow.
His death was a tragic accident that none could have forseen, and none should be held accountable for. Bianchi was a racer, who came from a line of racers, and accepted that motorsport carries these inherent risks at all times.
What his death showed, though, was that in the 20 years since the tragic death of Ayrton Senna de Silva, F1 had achieved such a level of safety that the death of a driver was a freak accident in highly unique conditions that would be difficult to replicate. They can learn from this, for sure, but there is unlikely to be an accident like this again.
RIP Jules. We will celebrate the races you would have won, the teams you would have joined, and the excitement you would have brought.
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