I know... I would give him major credit if he could even make British superbike level.Pierce89 wrote:As if Lewis could just hop right on the motogp grid If he started today, he wouldn't win a British Superbike race for 5 yrs.JimClarkFan wrote:I know what I'm going to say next might upset some people, don't care, but I don't think I know of a person with their head so far up their own ass.Lewis Hamilton wrote:
It's also interesting to watch Marc Marquez.
He's got the best bike, but it's still remarkable what he's achieved. He won the title in his first season last year, aged just 20, and looks set to retain it after winning the first seven races of 2014.
I see some reflections of myself in Marc. When I watch him, I'm always thinking: 'I would have done it like this.' Then he takes the exact lines I would have - and they work. It's really cool to see that.
It's a great sport and it's good that the fans can get so close to the action.
I really want to try it one day. John Surtees won a world title on a bike and in a car, so it would be cool to do that, too.
It's easy to be popped off a bike, though, so you couldn't take the risk during an F1 season. But I'll definitely try it one day.
I consider what he said to be downright disrespectful to those guys bike racing because it implies there is an inherent lack of skill in motogp.
He should know the John Surtees got his motorbike world championship before his F1 championship, I would be very surprised if you could go from F1 to bikes, I believe that bikes to F1 is a much easier transition - I don't know if anyone else agrees.
And when he is talking about about MM, he can't just pass comment on how good MM is, instead he needs to tell everyone how he see's himself in MM and how MM does the things the way he would - just shut up.
Comments like this illustrate where his head is at, it tells me he doesn't have his feet anywhere near the ground or people who are in his corner and straight talking enough to say - reign it in. He needs them.
Just kind of annoyed me reading that, as a follower of both sports.