Diarrhoea is hereditary - it runs in your jeans
If my nose was running money, I'd blow it all on you...
Do you not realize that flag marshals control the area between them & the next flag marshal, therefore they have to look in the same direction that the racers are going (with back to riders).... not much point looking at riders coming if someone has come off behind you & you don't warn the coming riders...Flag marshals have to trust the other marshals to be their eyes!
Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?
MSTRS, it really depends on who is running it. While not a race day, Hampton's uses one marshal per point, as the marshals do not move, do not attend incidents, and therefore, you simply wave flags. One person per point suffices for that.
I have always seen inexperienced marshals placed with more experienced marshals, with the idea that the experienced ones teach the inexperienced, and I've helped instruct plenty over the years.
Jabez, I think in the planning, 4.30pm was the initial cut, but the event could be run until 5pm. The circuit needed to be restored to roads by 6pm...
Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?
I'm specifically talking about the marshal waving the flags (except the blue flag, which is another marshal looking at the riders coming toward him) not the other marshals at the point.
Of course you (flag marshal) are aware of the riders coming passed, but you have to trust that the ones looking the other way will warn/push you out of harms way.
If the marshal turned to look at the oncoming riders (while others are passing) then their attention and reaction time would be impaired, thus reducing the advanced warning to riders (crashes happen at a very rapid rate & I'm sure that the racers want as much warning as possible).
BTW I am referring to the kink before the hairpin at Paeroa here, other tracks/corners may enable different techniques.
Also bearing in mind that you have to watch the next flag marshal who can react to situation around the next corner that you can't see or hear, but must react as well (IE. stationary yellow).
Personally I would love to watch more racing action, but we are there for the riders safety!
Point 2: (this comes from one of the racers themselves) scrutinise those who have entered the race more closely. Some of the accidents last sunday were caused by rider fault (inexperience) which didn't need to happen.
Yes on that one. A few (a lot) of years ago I got cleaned up by a PE250 riden by some guy who lied about his experience on his entry. I don't remember the actual crash but Warren New, who was marshalling said he had to literally sit on me to stop me running about like headless chook. I was out for 45 minutes then got a meat wagon ride to the Thames hospital where I shared a room with the PE rider. At the time I didn't know who he was. I remember him bragging how he had lied on his entry about his raceing experience. He had actually done zero events before this. He said he rounded the sweeping corner past the pits, fucked it up and hit a bale. Apparently I was next on the scene and got skittled by his bike sliding back onto the track.
Always blow on the Pie......safer communities together.
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