Along the lines of what Ray said, if the situation presents itself, I dearly love the spectacle of a team/car/driver combination that's so good you no longer wonder if they'll find success, you wonder what barriers of apparent possibility they'll break while they achieve it. The 2004 French Grand Prix is an excellent example of this.Fat_T0ny wrote:Why is it exciting watching 1 car lap the whole field?![]()
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I recognize that's it tough when fan loyalty puts someone on the other side of that coin, though. Last year was a nightmare for my fandom.
Beyond that, I like the ultimate suspense of wondering how and when someone is going to stop that success. (On the track, that is. Not with additional regulations.) Because, one way or another, it always happens. At some point, no matter how good the run is, it will come to an end, and when that happens, it usually happens as the result of an exhilarating paradigm shift.
At least, it did. These days, there's no paradigm to shift.