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Nascar drivers----athletes???

NorthernRedneck

Well-known member
GOLD Site Supporter
Anyone who thinks racecar drivers aren't athletes, just watch the video of a crash that happened at last weekends race in Watkins Glen.

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zmLRa9zIPIo&feature=related"]YouTube - Big NASCAR Crash Watkins Glen 2008[/ame]

Thankfully, everyone walked away.
 

Bobcat

Je Suis Charlie Hebdo
GOLD Site Supporter
But the title and the video don't go together. How about a video of some New York cabbies wrecking and saying something like...

Anyone who thinks cab drivers aren't athletes, just watch the video of a crash that happened at last weekends traffic jam at Broadway and 108th. :pat:


Or how about...

Anyone who thinks Lametrac drivers aren't athletes, just watch the video of a de-tracking that happened at last weekends trail grooming in NWO. :poke:
 

dzalphakilo

Banned
NASCAR drivers are just as athletic as golfers and bowlers.

Looks like Tony Stewart has been working out real hard lately.
 

Galvatron

Spock and Galvatron < one and the same
All race drivers (at a serious competitive level)are fitness mad...maybe even to fittest of all athletes .....here's an article on F1 driver fitness levels to explain a little more....

http://www.f1technical.net/articles/1125

Fitness of an F1 driver

Imagine driving the fastest cars on earth, imagine the strain this puts on your body. Fitter than football players and leaner than athletes: racing car drivers possess the most finely tuned bodies on earth.
Medical studies consent. During a race a driver must remain calm, focused and in constant communication with the technical team whilst perfectly manoeuvring a highly complex vehicle around and unfamiliar track alongside competitors, travelling at speeds up to 300 kilometres/hour.

All this in an environment where one wrong move can cost lives calls for a sportsman at the very peak of physical and mental strenght. Fifteen years ago drivers achieved this by visiting the gym twice a week. These days they know better.

The heart
A human being has a resting heart rate of around 60 beats/minute, rising to around 150 during a run on the treadmill. David Coulthard (Red Bull Racing Team) has a resting heart rate of 40 beats/minute, rising to 198 beats/minute during a two hour race, a figure - approximately the same as that of a marathon runner crossing the finishing line - which initially stunned medical researchers.

Dr Riccardo Ceccarelli, from Italian sports medicine clinic 'Formula Medicine' and of the Panasonic Toyota Racing Team, explains why a high speed drive can be as challenging as a 26 mile run.

Dr. Riccardo Ceccarelli "The difference is one of mental stress. There is no sport that demands such intense concentration. A huge amount of adrenalin is being pumped, and this - as well as the physical strain - causes the high heart rate."

The body's ability to cope with such extremes is a result of intensive workout and so drivers undergo cardiovascular exercise for up to four hours a day: jogging, cycling, rollerblading.... This also helps to keep weight in check - a driver such as David Coulthard maintain a body fat ratio of 7%, similar to that of a runner at the start of a race.

The neck
Ceccarelli "I know of no other sport that places such big demands on the neck muscles. A head and F1 helmet together weigh about 6kg. Add about 4G-Force as experienced when cornering in a Grand Prix, and the neck has to support 24kg."

The neck is a driver's most important muscle. During training, large elastic bands are used to simulate the demands of high G-Force. Drivers also incorporate resistance work into their exercise regime - rowing and weight lifting. But they have to be careful not to go overboard: Formula One cockpits are very small and don't accommodate someone with the physique of a weight lifter.

Diet
Formula One drivers eat much like track and field athletes - carefully regulating their carbohydrate and protein intake. In the lead up to a big race they'll gorge on carbs - pasta and bread - for energy.
Immediately before the race and sometimes throughout, drivers absorb huge amounts of water. Failure to do so could bring on dehydration through sweating - the extreme heat found in a Formula One cockpit means drivers can sweat off up to 3 kg of their body weight during the course of a race.

Mental health
Formula One drivers don't just take care of their bodies, they look after their mental health too. Many of the F1 Teams work with sports psychologists to ensure that a driver can exert unwavering mind control during a race. Methods include reviewing track maps, visualising a route and a perfect lap, in order for the driver to feel he has driven the course many times before he even arrives there.
Drivers also learn breathing techniques to stay calm at crucial moments, and techniques for shutting out the outside world - a driver getting into a car surrounded by a medical team, technical staff and thousands of fans and members of the press may use the click of the seat belt as a trigger to block these distractions and get to work.

Formula Medicine
Formula Medicine is a team leader in medical and athletic assistance for motor-racing drivers. Since 1994, Formula Medicine, has co-operated with more than 250 racing drivers, including 36 Formula One drivers. The staff is made up of doctors, athletic trainers and physiotherapists, led by Dr. Riccardo Ceccarelli, who has been working in Formula One since 1989.

Medical check up at "Centro Medico Don Bosco"Every driver has to go through a complete medical check-up before starting the athletic programme. The medical examinations are organised by Formula Medicine in co-operation with Centro Medico Don Bosco, a modern diagnostic centre which can provide
fast consultations in "day hospital" thanks to the collaboration of more than 60 specialists.
Atheletic evaluation and training in Formula MedicineFormula Medicine has a modern gym, equipped by Technogym, available exclusively for motor-racing drivers. Formula Medicine trainers also support the drivers in many outdoor activities: kayaking on lake, cycling, jogging, swimming, tennis,...

Panasonic Toyota Racing works close together with Formula Medicine. The F1 Team entrusts Formula Medicine with the following activities:

* F1 drivers fitness
* Managers wellness
* Breeding ground for the Junior Team drivers

The man behind Formula Medicine is Dr. Riccardo Ceccarelli. Ceccarelli is born in Viareggio, Italy, on May 27, 1960. He is Doctor of Medicine and Surgery, he's specialised in Sports Medicine and highly experienced in physiotherapy and postural diseases.
He has experience in Formula One since 1989. He worked with the March Leyton-House, Scuderia Italia, Ferrari, Minardi, Toyota Motorsport Team.

In short without that fitness level you would never walk away from high impacts like shown in Groomerguy's clip.
 

jwstewar

Active member
Nevermind the fact that they are doing this in a fire suit in 130 degree heat while 3+gs is trying to rip their head from their shoulders. As if this weren't enough that are literally pulling on the steering wheel of a car whose momentum is wanting to carry the car straight while doing it less than an inch from the guy in front of you (or behind) and less than 3 inches from the guy beside you. These guys are more of an athlete than most of the other "athletes".

Auto Racing, it is the only real sport, the rest are just a game.
 

OhioTC18

Gone But Not Forgotten
GOLD Site Supporter
My son and I have this same discussion all the time........he loses every time, but then again he's in my house at the time. I WIN, they are athletes.
 

American Woman

New member
Site Supporter
I always saw it as competitive, but not as a sport....so I guess I have a new found respect for race car drivers....:thumb:
 

pirate_girl

legendary ⚓
GOLD Site Supporter
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t3v8RsSfrs4&feature=related"]YouTube - Indy Car crashes[/ame]

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3tl-6oqN0i4&feature=related"]YouTube - Greg Moore's Fatal Crash *Live*[/ame]
 

Deadly Sushi

The One, The Only, Sushi
SUPER Site Supporter
NASCAR is a sport.

Athlete: a person who is trained or skilled in exercises, sports, or games requiring physical strength, agility, or stamina

They require stamina, so I guess they ARE athletes. :unsure:
 
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