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Sliding Doors... an epilogue

FEATURE BY MAX NOBLE
20/08/2024

Two of my recent articles explored "What's the point?" in terms of the points system over the years and the point of getting into and racing a race car in the first place. We then carried out a brief examination of the magnitude of George Russell's 1.5 kg weight disaster. Now, in some ways as an epilogue to those musings, I offer a sliding doors moment for our gentle readers.

For those not familiar with the term, the movie "Sliding Doors" plays out a time travel tale with an intelligent twist. A lady both just catches and just misses getting on a London Underground train due to the sliding doors closing. The movie (1998, starring Gwyneth Paltrow) then does a fantastic job of tracking how her life paths vary based on that single sliding door moment (making the train, missing the train). It had such an impact at the time that, "It was a sliding door moment" has passed into popular, casual usage and most know the concept being stated.

So sliding doors for F1? Who might have made the train, missed the train? How would their life paths vary? I'll start with my favourite automotive engineer on the planet, Adrian Newey. What if Adrian had studied accounting? What if he had never gone to University but started to illegally import records and flog them at a good profit? What if he qualified as he did but went into medical science? What if, he had turned to a life of crime and become a gangland boss with the swagger of Tom Hardy in Legend, but the genius of, well, of Adrian?

So many sliding door moments to explore! I believe Colin Chapman is the most likely F1 genius to have modelled the Kray twins in a sliding door moment. Yet, what might Adrian have achieved in the world of medical physics or the ganglands of London? Where would F1 be today without his genius to chase down in the never-ending hunt for race winning glory?

What if Max Mosley followed his father into politics? What if Bernie had simply kept selling stuff? What if Alain and Ayrton had shaken hands, made up and never clashed, twice, in Japan? What if that all caused Ayrton to be in a car other than a Williams on that horrid day?

What if Frank Williams was never in that road car crash? What if that horrid Mercedes Le Mans crash never happened...?

What if us humans gave up on the obsession with winning and simply cheered one and all for taking part and went home after a rousing chorus of "I should be so lucky!" simply for the fun of being there?

Quite. No points and pointless, like comparing drivers over the eras. Like wondering what Adrian would have done at NASA or St Bartholomew's, a renowned medical teaching hospital in London. Adrian chose automotive excellence and executed with a mythical vengeance. Heracles and Odysseus could not have been more complete in their delivery of ultimate victory. Did that have a point?

Well yes.

Like music, art, good warm English ale or a fine French red, there is a point. It is the wonder, joy and sheer delight of the crazy universe which is human life on Earth. The Olympics have whizzed past for another four years. The pinnacle of human sporting endeavour. It was, as ever, a non-stop delight of people giving all they had. Yet the humanity, the spirit of respectful competition was the finest I've witnessed in many years. Wimbledon and the Tour de France have both come and gone for another year. I've no doubt something super-super is happening in America, some World Series or something, I'm sure. So sport has a point for us humans. It allows us to express, push against bounds and show the joy of being alive and achieving. A struggle for a reason, a limit to reach and exceed.

Sport is battle and war by means more measured. Bloodied bodies are not dragged from the battleground as the sun sets. Sport allows us the thrill of competition without the horror of hand-to-hand combat to prove "My tribe rules". That's a bonus for those of us who would have been thrown to the lions. The pity is the extent to which the likes of Liberty Media have monetised our love of fearless competition. Don't, please gentler reader, get me going on pay TV sucking the blood from one and all (Name a world title boxer right now, anyone? Anyone!).

So the point is to care for the battle at hand. The fight well fought. Adrian is an F1 engineer. We shall never know what sliding door moments might have gifted us in other arenas as a result of his mighty striving. He's generated sporting moments for the ages. He's helped employ many more engineers. He's helped F1 become a global sport. A new pacemaker? A refined anti-cancer drug? Others need to achieve those milestones. Adrian selected his sliding door and has never looked back to see if his coattails are caught dragging him elsewhere. They are not. He has a forward biased focus.

So as we get ready to throw the doors wide open on the second half of a fascinating season we should all mind the gap, and watch our fingers. Each of us every single day, nearly every single minute, has endless choices to make. Steve Jobs famously stated he wore the same turtle neck sweater, jeans and sneakers every day as it was one less decision to make, thus freeing his mind for other things. Adrian embraced his sliding door into F1, as did Gordon Murray, Colin Chapman, Jim Clark, Senna and Schumacher, more recently, George, Lando and Lewis. Would we prefer they all became lawyers? Double-glazing salesmen? Or simple home bodies who could relax any cat with sweet, soulful ear fuss?

Finally to all those of us who never had a sliding door open to offer a racing driver lifetime. I set a few unofficial lap records on karting tracks and I like to think I could have inhabited the back half of the grid without undue disaster. Yet the sliding door never slid my way. I've no doubt many of our dear readers could say the same. What if... what if... what if...?

Adrian and the gang are doing just fine pushing the bounds of physics in the racing world to the delight of millions of fans. Then we fans go and run society, busy being dentists, farmers, shop assistants, insurance salespersons and all those things which keep the wheels on the bus of humanity. Would Adrian swap his sliding door for something more mundane? I think not. Would I leap through a sliding door for just one chance at being on the gird in Monaco...? Dear reader I think we know I'd leap the gap, and risk losing my arm in the sliding door for one shot at that.

May the sliding doors of the second half of the season both surprise and delight in equal measure. We shall witness what those who leapt to their special path continue to achieve. We all have a ticket to ride, just on different trains. Now please, mind the doors!

Max Noble

Learn more about Max and check out his previous features, here

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READERS COMMENTS

 

1. Posted by airman1, 08/09/2024 1:14

"In the end, does it matter if we do not know? If you do not see what your destiny might have been, then the destiny you have is the one you should have had all along. Would Adrian's mind work equally well in an entirely different environment, differently structured? Who's to say? He is where he should have been, and funny but I think for people with this terrible determination, that leads them towards some goal, it does not matter which door they choose. Any will lead them to the place they were supposed to be. Too often we forget the road, over the destination, a process over achievement. And it is the road, and the process where it all happens, good, bad, fun, and not so much fun. Many professional sports are all about the goal and not the process. Get them out there as young as possible, pay them as much as one dares to, and create as much hype as you can for as long as they can. The process be damned, particularly in motorsports and tennis, where rich parents of fat sponsors are the difference between life and death. There are no doors there, just cheques and money orders. "

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2. Posted by Max Noble, 22/08/2024 9:43

"@ClarkwasGod - indeed… endless sliding door moments, swimming in “What if…? What if…?”

…on a happier note… what if the sliding door had allowed Sir Stirling a Driver’s Championship…? How wonderful would that have been…! :-)
"

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3. Posted by ClarkwasGod, 21/08/2024 20:12

"I wonder what would have happened if Alan Mann had sent the written confirmation of his verbal invitation to drive the Ford 3L at Brands Hatch in April '68 to Jim Clark.......

As for sportsmen being nice to each other at (or post) Olympics, AusCycling seem to be lacking in the spirit of bonhommie following Matt Richardson's decision to change allegiance to the UK (he holds dual citizenship)."

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4. Posted by dejan, 21/08/2024 15:54

"Great article @Max Noble!

The end result is that in modern society we value outcomes way more than process. We don't value that the right decision was being made all the time if the outcome was subpar. And we way overvalue positive outcome that came by pure chance even if the wrong decision making was the chosen path.

But in any case, anyone's current state is the result of these outcomes and we only live once so we might as well enjoy it as otherwise there are too many possibilities for our minds to grasp"

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5. Posted by Tyrbiter, 21/08/2024 15:32

"In the 1980s there were Swan Lager adverts on the London Underground. The ad started by extolling the virtues of the Swan Light lager, how it danced on the tongue and refreshed the various parts.

Then it explained that, if you were drinking the Swan Premium Export lager, that the tube train was the big silvery thing with the headlights and the sliding doors.

Mind the gap indeed."

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6. Posted by Max Noble, 21/08/2024 12:59

"@spindoctor - so true. I really hope the youth of today learn the lessons of yesterday… and have a massive outbreak of simply being nice to one another. Heck… if nothing else it’s good for business…!!!

Olympic showdown or Ypres? Handshakes on the podium or the Somme? I choose sport 100% of the time…
"

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7. Posted by Spindoctor, 20/08/2024 13:50

""...Yet the humanity, the spirit of respectful competition was the finest I've witnessed in many years...."

A brilliant summary. I'm no great fan of "Olympic" Sports, but the young athletes were wonderful & I'm almost hopeful that humanity might *just* survive the current disastrous collapse into warfare, greed, violence, disorder & hatred into which we seem determined to plunge ourselves."

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