NATION

PASSWORD

World Grand Prix Championship 20 [RP/Results Thread]

A battle ground for the sportsmen and women of nations worldwide. [In character]

Advertisement

Remove ads

User avatar
Former Citizens of the Nimbus System
Ambassador
 
Posts: 1891
Founded: Jul 21, 2016
Left-wing Utopia

4. Long Overdue Competition

Postby Former Citizens of the Nimbus System » Sat May 27, 2023 9:49 pm

(OOC: With thanks to Hapilopper for collaboration on the narrative of this first scene!)

Talbott Autodrome, Talbott, Liventia
InfoInternet Grand Prix of Liventia presented by Liventia Airways; Lap 11


Whether Victoria’s reassurance, the work of the team or simply that simmering ecstasy of driving, Coalescence all about him and bound by him once again, Ryker qualified on the front row for the Grand Prix of Liventia. He almost led from the first turn, barely prevented by Vilau’s late and daring dive. Five years of experience told him that determined pressure would avail him better than risking an early strike; so it proved when the Togoni driver, pushing hard to break away from him, slid off the track on Lap 6. That left him with no cars ahead.

So it was that Ryker Lane, piloting a car that ought to have been wholly unsuited to a track that he himself had truly hated in the past, led the field onto Lap 7.

Not that that lead remained at all comfortable for long.

“Martin!” Ryker flicks away the rear view on his helmet’s HUD, the afterimage of Rudy Edwards’ blue and orange machine pulling into the pits fading from his eyes as he focuses on the track ahead.

“I see it.” His engineer’s words are as soothing and melodious as ever. “Requesting additional power from Max and Janne; cannot promise much.”

“Anything’s a help!” Ryker replies, Coalescence’s Imagikinetic convertors tugging it towards the ground as he brakes for the first corner. Cannot lose track position, not on this circuit. No way to count on overtaking. Can’t expect a repeat of Drosopol. Ryker wills the car on through the shatteringly painful complex of 3, 4, 5, 6, brakes for 7; the whole business feels far, far too slow, the grip from his supersofts fading alongside the light of their Imaginational self-repair. The hairpin of 7 lasts an age…

“Alright, Ryker, burst ready.”

Imagination, yes!

Halfway down the start-finish straight, Janne Laukkanen’s Chase Cutter’s ICAST protocol activates for the briefest of moments, the power from his Paragon Warp array rapidly oscillating in its choice of target. Mostly, it remains powering Janne’s own car.

What remains impels Ryker’s alongside his own. Coalescence launches from the corner as an iron ball from a cannon, the surge of momentum accompanying its driver’s surge of joy and determination. “Thank Janne for me!” he calls out.

A soft laugh sounds from the other end of the radio. “Understood, Ryker – more at acceleration points. Box this lap; sticking to the plan.”

“Understood!” Superhards to the end… It’ll be a task, especially coming in this early, but better than trying to carve through the field here. The rest of the lap passes quickly, corners that would rob a car of momentum powerless in the face of the power of two Chase Cutters briefly dedicated to one task. And so, when Ryker emerges from the pit lane…

He’s down the grid – inevitably – but, more importantly, Edwards’ Preston is behind. Closer, but still behind.

“Okay, Ryker. Edwards’ compound looks similar to yours; you’ll be fighting to the end.”

To the end. Another flick of the button on his wheel to check the rear camera shows an Edwards dashing from Turn 2 with just a touch too much confidence, barely keeping the rear-left off the dust away from the track. Not that he’s waiting for that. Just have to hold him off until he runs out of juice.

Ryker breathes, then feels the tyres biting through Turn 3, shining blue as they heal and heat themselves to up to temperature under the influence of Coalescence’s Imagithermal convertor. “Alright, Jean, let’s see if any of your defensive skill rubbed off on me.”

The next two laps are a waiting game. Ryker’s rear view is increasingly dominated by flashes of azure; by Lap 13, Edwards’ car is sliding and swerving as he pushes it to its limits. He holds his nerve. If Edwards is willing to be the onrushing waves, foaming towards him with verve and vigour, he will be the steady cliffs on which they break, knowing the tide will recede in time.

As he powers down the start-finish straight, Rudy is for the first time in theoretical striking distance, tucking into the slipstream of Ryker’s Chase Cutter. Ryker monitors him, lets the supercomputers back at base predict his opponent’s line on the HUD. They confirm his own thinking. Not close enough for anything but a dive. Stay to the middle, ready to close off the inside, brake late enough – okay, good, turn in –

The wave comes crashing down.

Mostly literally.

Ryker’s eyes go wide as Edwards’ Preston sails right through where his car had been a second before, front wheels angled but entirely irrelevant to his direction of travel. A sea-foam plume of tyre smoke from locked brakes and kicked up dust heralds his rapid passage to the barrier; then a terrible, crunching, thudding sound; a car flicked, spinning into the air with debris all around it –

He rounds Turn 2. Out of sight.

“Martin,” Ryker pronounces in a low tone, “please tell me when –”

“Understood, Ryker. Just carry on for now.” A moment’s pause. “Yes, he’s climbing out of the car now.”

Ryker releases a breath he doesn’t entirely know he’s been holding. “Good – tell me if you hear anything more… Imagination, that was…” A realisation. “That’s a safety car.”

“It is.”

And, by the next time he crosses the line, and everyone else has taken the opportunity to pit…

Maelstrom.

Post-Race

“…from then on… Well, this track doesn’t suit our cars as much as some others, and it isn’t the best place for overtaking in any case. I offered what ICAST power I could to Janne to try and challenge for the points. We help each other.” Ryker smiles with just a touch of melancholy. “These things happen and it’s only the first race of the season. We move on and make the best of it.”

“And surely you have to be happy with the potential of the car, after all of it, at least!” The journalist speaking to him, an eager, brown-haired man standing on the balls of his feet who he recognises but doesn’t remember – Ryker refocuses, refusing to let that sad direction of thought take hold – holds the microphone back up to him encouragingly.

“Sure!” And, indeed, he does feel a little encouraged. “For that phase at the start, we had enough pace to run at the front. At a place like this, after everything that’s happened back at home –” Stop. “– and with the team, yes, I’m happy.” Ryker smirks. “Not that that’s going to stop us from pushing on as hard as we can to be better, though.”

“Ryker, tha–”

“One more thing!”

A slightly younger woman towards the back of the crowd, one he is confident he hasn’t seen before, memory or no. Ryker nods, smiling, gesturing for the other journalists to make space; with it, she approaches, nervy, excited determination in her stride and spark in her eyes. His mind flashes to Victoria in the course of answering some great challenge, and the momentary ache is palpable.

“…interviews with his team –” he refocuses again – “they said that Rudy Edwards’ crash was largely down to the Chase Cutter’s considerable wake of turbulent air. Is that something that other drivers need to be worried about on track?”

Ryker re-evaluates – it’s clear that at least part of that spark was accusatory. Nothing that a relatively short briefing from Karl Rain beforehand didn’t prepare him for, though his answer will still be his own. “Well, yes – it’s never good to see another driver crashing like that, and I hope that Rudy’s doing alright. I’ve been in that position before too.” He feels the echoes of that catharsis, of that day in Filindostan and all that came after it, and he holds his head slightly higher. “But then, driving’s full of changing circumstances and challenges like that – adapting to them is a part of our work.”

“Obviously, we can always do more to make it safer for us when we don’t manage to, which our team’s always been at the cutting edge of – and I’m proud of that. If we decide as drivers that dirty air’s becoming too much to adapt to even then, then we can make new regulations to fix it.” He pauses, gathering his thoughts. “So, yes – something to worry about, like anything else on the track. It’s what our teams give us the tools to deal with and then it’s up to us to use them. And, beyond any of that, I hope that Rudy’s going be on track to do it with all of us next time out.”

The woman gives a nod – not entirely satisfied, maybe, but satisfied enough. With a wave, Ryker sets out back to the garage… Not feeling quite right either. A sense of imbalance that he can’t quite shake.

‘Success is a process’. Keep going. We’ll work it out.

In Motion Workshop, Celina Community, the First City, the Nexus Wardship of Former Citizens of the Nimbus System
23rd of May


Image
-----
BLOG
-----



THE ALTERNATIVE TYRE SUPPLIER CHAMPIONSHIPS: THIS TIME WITH CONSISTENCY!


So, that was an exciting first race of the season! Congratulations to Eminent and to Anneliese Devereux for pulling a remarkable result out of an equally remarkable event. Of course, we’re more than proud of the fact that they did so on our rubber and I’m sure we can say the same of our counterparts of Phoenician. We hope it continues!

Speaking of – let’s give this another try.

For those who didn’t read my previous blog post on the subject or who aren’t familiar with ‘tyre championships’ in international WGP racing, here’s a little background. Since WGPC 17, Tropicorp (at that point the largest, and soon to become the dominant, tyre supplier for WGPC and WGP2) have run a semi-formal ‘Performance Standings’, ranking the results of the various suppliers. That ranking, whether by incidental bias or by design, ended up massively favouring Tropicorp. That’s because they decided to score only the fastest car on each tyre (plus the fastest lap point, if the scoring system that season used it). That system’s obviously fairer than just aggregating all of the points from every team using a given manufacturer’s tyres but it still gives a major advantage to those with the most teams on their books.

Image
The thirds-of-a-team in the WGPC 18 bar result from the three Motorworks drivers, only two qualifying per race, being allowed choice of tyres.
Essentially, Tropicorp’s rankings punish manufacturers for ‘bad days’ – races where none of the drivers attached to a given supplier score well. It should be clear what that means when you have different numbers of drivers on any given tyre. Back in WGPC 17, when Tropicorp’s rankings were introduced, Tropicorp had contracts with four teams to use their tyres, twice as many as any other supplier in the field – meaning that they were half as likely as them to even have a bad day. No surprise that they came out on top then and in subsequent seasons.

As such, this is going to be the first in a series of blog posts here attempting to run a counterpart and counterbalance to Tropicorp’s rankings, hopefully giving as much weight to smaller suppliers as larger ones. I’d hoped to be able to do the same last season but things obviously went a little awry, for all of us. Hoping we won’t repeat that now!

So, how do we resolve the imbalance in Tropicorp’s rankings? The success in signing teams that we have had at In Motion after partnering with Phoenician means that we aren’t affected to a great deal any longer but that shouldn’t stop us from trying to work out something more equitable. This is especially true with Brústeinn still on the grid from last year and a new entrant in Tabtac joining us (A warm welcome to them!), each of whom are supplying a single team. To evaluate both our and Tropicorp’s performance alongside both in any way that’s meaningful and fair, we need a different system for rankings.

The simplest solution is to take a mean average of the points of every team using a given tyre. That comes with some advantages and disadvantages. While strictly fairest in the sense that it considers all drivers and teams using a given tyre without any advantage or disadvantage for the numbers of those drivers, it also means that a manufacturer is penalised for supplying to less successful teams. If a manufacturer strictly wanted to optimise for the rankings, they might decide to cut off those teams, which we obviously don’t want to see happen. On the other hand, it does seem right that a tyre manufacturer should be rewarded for working with those teams to bring the best out of their tyres as much as those that are more successful. At the very least, this ranking system seems worth pursuing to evaluate at the end of the season.

That said, it’s likely also worth looking at a more traditional ranking, at the very least for comparison’s sake. Can we eliminate the ‘bad days’ problem and prevent more prolific tyre manufacturers from being more consistent than their smaller peers by weight of numbers alone? We can try! Instead of adding the fastest driver on a make of tyres in every race to a manufacturer’s point totals, we can instead treat the manufacturers a little like teams by using the point totals for a given make of tyre’s best two drivers at any point in the season. That means that a larger supplier still has to account for the errors of individual drivers rather than having every race go perfectly, even if they do get a larger pool of drivers to work from. That said, unlike the prior ranking, they still aren’t on a level playing field with a manufacturer with fewer teams. Tabtac and Brústeinn, in our case, are supplying proven competitors in Portland-Carvenlo and Pressley Racing, so they will hopefully be able to make some impact, but we and Tropicorp both have a larger pool of drivers to find success in to make up our chosen two.

There is, of course, no ranking system that can perfectly capture what everyone wants from a tyre manufacturer competition – people want different things, not least Tropicorp’s representatives! Still, I do think that you could argue that both of the systems outlined above are better than Tropicorp’s at something, even if you could also argue that they are weaker in others. These, after all, are alternatives!

Thank you for bearing with me for that preamble; with it done, I’m pleased to be able to introduce the Unity and Elite Tyre Manufacturer Championships!

Image
Image


The fact that Brústeinn and Tabtac are supplying one team each means that their points will be identical across both Championships, which is wonderful for making comparisons. Straight away, the difference in approaches is visible. With Eminent scoring so well in Liventia, we’re able to take advantage to streak ahead in the Elite rankings, while Tropicorp can fall back on Fitzpatrick’s excellent podium to slot in behind. That just isn’t true in the Unity rankings, where R.L. Cruisin’s fourth place and so many drivers running Phoenician-In Motion tyres not yet scoring allows Tabtac to keep up, while the same issue weighs down Tropicorp. It remains to be seen whether this persists to the same degree as the season goes on.

That’s enough setup and analysis for one post, I’d say! There is, as ever, more research and testing to do to benefit our cars out on the racetrack and the road. I hope that you’ll come back to read the next instalment in the series, whenever I next have time to write it up; until then, best of luck to all the teams and drivers and a fond farewell from me!

Celia Speck, Co-Founder


Previous Post
Catching Up…
Grace Speck


With a sigh, Celia pushes away from her desk, chair half-rotating across the semi-polished floor. She stares at the screen for a moment. Then she stands, steps back towards the desk. Stares for a few moments more.

A few more.

Rests her finger over the ‘Enter’ key.

More.

Closes her eyes, and presses her finger decisively down.
We are the Nexus Wardship of Former Citizens of the Nimbus System, not just a collection of people; please shorten to the pre-title or use the full name!

Emmet: You might see a mess -
Lord Business: Exactly: a bunch of weird, dorky stuff that ruined my perfectly good stuff!
Emmet: Okay. What I see are people, inspired by each other and by you - people taking what you made and making something new out of it.

The central Nimban cultural ideal summed up in an exchange from The Lego Movie.

Supporter of the campaign to add Economic Freedom to the home page!

User avatar
Auruna
Chargé d'Affaires
 
Posts: 423
Founded: Jun 09, 2016
Democratic Socialists

Postby Auruna » Sun May 28, 2023 8:21 am

Re:Genesis Workshop, Viska Factory
Sterlennau, Auruna


Untested. Unproven.

After the takeover of Schkeska's WGPC engine operations resulting in complete independence, Viska's Re:Genesis had some troubles ever since. It was expected for it to not go smoothly. Pushing for new designs and technologies, new materials and new research thanks to more freedoms in development would usually end up with an unproven design, even if it's a derivative of a previous, more reliable product. Viska wasn't known to make their own engines even back home in Auruna as they would just take Schkeska engines and modify them to the point of being way different from the original in a bit for more performance, more power. But alas, they had to change their approach this time.

It wasn't their strongpoint.

Hori worked tirelessly with her team after the sudden engine failure in Liventia. Encountering several teething problems along the way. Problems that the team missed in testing. We weren't so thorough, unfortunately. She muttered while inspecting the broken power unit. With Viska being the only team using the Re:Genesis engines after failing to grab a customer this season, Hori could only have much data about the engines which made her work a bit more difficult. I need to tell Jöna about this.

Going through the engine for one more time, she starts writing on her notepad. Every single detail she and her team managed to observe. This time, it's a more thorough inspection, with separate groups for different sections of the power unit that was laid out on the workshop. Every detail, even the most minute ones are not to be missed. They go through all of the components for several hours until Hori said that they would be done for the day after getting all the necessary data she needed. She remained in the workshop to finish up her notes of their findings which she would then pass on to Jöna and Artur.

The cause of the sudden engine shutoff is due to a malfunction of several internal components. We will look into it further throughout the season. Other units are cleared for use but the risk of failure is still present.

Hori couldn't rest easy knowing that her work has some problems. She failed to attract any customers and an engine failed during a race. She rests her head on her desk, resisting on banging it on the way down. This isn't right. Her discouraging thoughts persisted throughout her head as she feared that the engine department would be a sole cause of every setback the team experiences. Hori groans as she lifts her head up. There's no point in complaining without actually doing anything about it. And after looking at the time, she stands up and calls it a day. The engine work continues the next day, she just hopes that the engines would hold up this weekend.

The rebirth suddenly went down a bumpy slope.

Perhaps this was a risk that didn't pay off.



Nisko, Auruna

Within the cold breeze of the northern city of Nisko, Laura stood by a lake for an important meeting. Coming early, she waited as people passed by around her doing their leisurely activities in the park the lake is situated at. She already knew who was coming, but knowing what he was like, he could be a bit unpredictable. She keeps looking around, checking if he has already arrived until a voice calls for her from behind. Finally. Laura whispered to herself before turning around to greet Lauri Vorlen.

"Whew, I know I'm old but I didn't expect to be this fit." Lauri said while panting. "Also, the meeting went on for a bit longer than expected."

"Heh, quit the jokes, old man. I knew you'd be slow." She says, teasing Lauri.

The two then start to walk to a less crowded part of the park. As they walked, the two started to catch up with each other about their personal lives. Not even realising it, Laura enjoyed listening to his stories, especially whenever he talked about racing against her mother. "You and Aina are basically similar." She heard, taking it as a nice compliment. After a while, Laura brought up her first race of WGPC 20.

"I know, I saw it live."

"Ah, I didn't have to tell you then."

"No, no, you may continue."

"Alright." Laura started telling him about the race afterwards, mentioning several key moments like her start and the battle during the final laps of the race. As she tells her story, she quickly takes a look at Lauri who was clearly impressed by her performance. She found it fun to tell someone of her achievement.

"That's nice to hear. I think you have the potential to win."

"Yeah, I've only had two podiums so far and my last win was in WGP2."

"Let's see here... I think I can help you with certain aspects of your driving."

"Yeah?"

"Didn't I say I could be your mentor for this season?"

"I remember you saying that."

"Well then, let me come with you for the next race so I can directly be of help."

"Well, I guess that should be okay for you to come."

"Great! I'll contact your team after this."

"Hey, hey! You got too excited there."

"I'd never miss a chance to witness the action first-hand."

"You can be childish sometimes."

"That's what Aina said to me as well!"

"Heh."

Hwoarang Racing Circuit, Togonistan
Grand Prix of Togonistan
Post-Qualifying


"Eleventh. Do you need rain to be quick?" Lauri commented after seeing Laura's final result. Even though she made it through to all qualifying sessions, her qualifying pace is still lacking. She probably used it all up in Crossbay last season but Laura knew that her race pace took priority to actually get results. Still, it didn't excuse the fact that she qualified 11th so afterwards, she sat down beside Lauri as he pulled out his laptop to show her a replay of her lap.

Laura listened closely as Lauri pointed out where she could improve, pausing at certain parts and explaining in full detail what she did wrong and what she did right. He was very thorough and explained everything clearly to her. He even suggested what she could do during the race. It was an overwhelming amount of information to take in but Laura persisted. It was clear that she had to improve somewhere but she couldn't see it, and it was something only Lauri, being the intense analytic driver he is, could.

"You can completely apply certain aspects of rallying into open wheelers, but it takes practice to figure out which one works. I know you'll understand." Lauri advised her. "I can help you point it out but it's ultimately your decision to choose what to do in a situation."

"I get it now."

"There's more to it than just understanding the concept, you need to try it as well. That's all for now."

"I think I get it."

"You should, you're a great learner."

"I think I need to prepare for tomorrow."

"Aye, don't bin it, you need to actually finish."

"Heh, I know..."

I know.



Hwoarang Racing Circuit, Togonistan
Grand Prix of Togonistan
Qualifying


It was an alright qualifying for one Viska driver but an unexpectedly bad one for the other. Viska's Aaron Deering, after getting to Q2 managed to qualify 16th in his second WGPC race weekend. A mistake costed him a chance to get into Q3 but Artur was noted in saying that they would work from his starting position for points, something Viska didn't have as of yet. It wasn't the time to get desperate though as it is still the second race weekend. Meanwhile, Sara Luna was knocked out early, only qualifying 25th. While she struggled in this circuit with the VK-03H, Artur was still optimistic of her performance with Jöna sharing his thoughts. The race is the most important part and the team is focusing on recovering from their awful qualifying.

The Viska team hopes to see some points this weekend as the first race blew their morale followed by sudden issues with their power units. It may as well be a repeat of WGPC 18 where they scored their first points at their fourth (and home) race of the season. They knew what struggle is. How it was to perform badly. How to fail expectations and question their reputation.

It was just unexpected for it to repeat this time.

Nelikari, akeattamme.
suikaanttamme.
Ienne.
#RiseAuruna!
#NagrüvaAuruna!


Note: I don't primarily use NS stats
Auruna's attackers in wars, in a nutshell
Clarkson : "Richard Hammond...
how's the braking going?"
Hammond : Sliding down the slope
"That's going well... it's going well."

FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF AURUNA
Litävinnenazyonalla Auruna



#ConLangGang
"Logistics is a fun mess of confusion and ammunition." - Auruna, 2020

User avatar
Mertagne
Diplomat
 
Posts: 528
Founded: Oct 24, 2013
Inoffensive Centrist Democracy

Postby Mertagne » Sun May 28, 2023 9:44 am

“... And in the WGPC this week, Mertagnian Bryce Yannec started strong in the Free Practice, posting an identical time to Cygnus’s Brendan Faloe. Faloe, who posted their lap time on the Hwoarang Racing Circuit in Togonistan before Yannec, managed to clinch second place, just three thousandths of a second off of leader Darian Vilau. Elsewhere on the field, Náttmörðsdóttir in the Sivaleinen car put in a top-ten performance in the practice session, and Kingston Walcott placed the car in 20th place. With just two tenths of a second separating the top 20 cars in this practice session, the pace was incredibly close going into the qualifying session.

Unfortunately, Bryce would find himself outclassed in evolving track conditions in Q1, finding himself down in 27th place by the end of the session, with just a banker lap to rely on after his more on pace track time was deleted by exceeding track limits on turn 8. Yannec finished nearly three seconds off of the pace of the Eminent driven by Anneliese Devereux, who topped the timing sheets in Q1 and will be starting 8th. The Sivaleinen cars also found themselves outmatched on the sweeping corners posed by Hwoarang, with the Preston engine failing to make up the gap for the team on the long back straight. Walcott had but a single lap to impress after a lock up on turn 11 caused the car to kiss the barrier and rattle the suspension, causing him to limp neatly to the pits under yellow flags.”

“Okay, Lillý, that’s P26. Good effort out there. You pushed well, the car’s just not where we want it today.”

“Come in now, Kingston. P23 overall. Just slid above Jordan Crowe at the end there, great lap when it mattered.”

Vitaliy Aaltonen stood, arms folded, looking at the timing screen with a furrowed brow. The ashy blond-haired Polarian was rapidly becoming a favourite cut of the television coverage, with a dramatic zoom in on his unyielding face whenever either of the Sivaleinen drivers would rush across the line. The Sivaleinen car seemed to struggle at this more power focused circuit, with its wide high-speed corners demanding good traction and an effective power placement which did not complement the Sivaleinen aero package too well. Finding a good setup had proven tough for both drivers, and with Walcott’s engineering team working overtime to fix the car in order to get a lap in, resources were focused on avoiding the back of the grid. While the team had managed at the expense of who many on the team shared a respectful reverence to, fellow countryman Bryce Yannnec, Aaltonen posited that the Sivaleinen cars would be looking to make the most of DRS on the straights and would try to make up most of the time in Sector 1 come Race Day.

Gathering the drivers in the garage as the remaining 21 cars set out for Q2, Vitaliy asked a mechanic to keep an eye on the timing sheet as he addressed the drivers.

“It was a good performance out there today. Clearly the other teams have learned a lot from the race at Talbott, and have brought along good upgrades. The track clearly does not suit the car this weekend, so to have avoided the bottom is good work. Kingston, I know that this session didn’t go as well as you had hoped, but this is just one race weekend in a long season. We’re bound to have a setback or two, but you can certainly bounce back from this in the race despite the technical challenges that have come our way. This is certainly a learning experience for us all.”

“Lillý, I can understand you may be disappointed too, but I know you’re a resilient driver who has seen this kind of hardship before, right? This position doesn’t define your skills or the capabilities of the team - let’s just hope the wind is with us on that back straight come race day, and if we get the tyre strategy right, it might pay off.”

“Is Ms. Sivaleinen going to kick up a fuss about our performance?” asked Lillý.

“I’ll deal with that myself, don’t worry. Just make sure your head is in the game for tomorrow, we’ll have a long way to climb.”
“So, Bryce, it’s not been the start to the season you really wanted with Pressley, is it? Are you struggling to get your eye in with the Pressley car?” asked the interviewer as they managed to catch Bryce at the end of qualifying at Hwoarang.

“Hi, how’s it going.” Bryce cleared his throat. “No, it’s not been fantastic, has it? Technical gremlin last race ensured I didn’t really get much actual race experience out in Talbott, so I’m hoping that I’ll at least make it all the way around here in Togonistan. The Pressley, it’s a good car - just look at Sophie, she’s on the front row of the grid for race day. I’m doing okay, last week just wasn’t my week at all and today I was looking to be on pace, but those track limits just… they weren’t on my side. We dust off and try again tomorrow.”

“Will you be looking to fight your way up to the front of the grid? Are you looking for points?”

Bryce looked puzzled. “It’ll take a lot to get points here, but yes, I’m always looking for points? Pressley Racing are looking to do well this season, and I’m expecting to put in as solid a performance as my teammate across the next few races, you can be sure of that.”

The interviewer thrust the microphone a little closer to Yannec. “And how are you feeling about seeing the silver and green of Sivaleinen on the grid? Worried you’ve burned some bridges there with your fellow blondes?”

“Well, we look like family, don’t we? I’m sure if I ask nicely they’ll let me on the Christmas calendar.” Bryce tapped to the Sivaleinen logo that stood, albeit less prominently than his other sponsors, on his racing suit. “I’m very much still here. As for the Sivaleinen cars - I look forward to some close racing."
user pronouns: he/him

The Nation of Mertagne
Capital: Dannin ⨳ Trigram: MRT ⨳ Demonym: Mertagnian ⨳ Map: Here!Else: Here!
first to make a 'poor life choice'ANAIA NATIONAuthor of NS Issue #1508

User avatar
Lisander
Minister
 
Posts: 2375
Founded: Feb 09, 2013
Ex-Nation

Postby Lisander » Sun May 28, 2023 11:25 am


XII. Anneliese's Blog in FT_DEV Fan Site

Hwoarang, Togonistan


Hello, supporters!

Last night I spent a long time looking at the charts, and do you know what I got out of them? Nothing. Nothing at all. Take a look at this... It's my gap to P1 in every Practice and Quali for the track so far this season. We are generally and so far in the hundredths of a second range. The only point outside the curve is that Practice at Liventia (where the order was to save resources and do the laps at 'granny speed' to do the best possible fine-tuning):

Image


What does that mean? Well, it means that everyone is still at the same level. No one has had time to stand out that much. The cars, or at least most of them, are still in a stage of refinement. It takes time to get to their best, and also when it comes to the production of the WGPC challengers.

One thing that fans usually end up missing: Teams have specifications to follow. And that can mean that a car needs to be altered to make it meet the specifications. Making a winning car is both an easy and difficult task.

To comply with the same rules, the overall structure must follow a common idea, with the differences left to the creativity and R&D of each team. The Nimbus Chase Cutter has more wheels, which gives the advantage of a bigger distribution in the braking area, but its suspension would certainly be more difficult to handle, if you consider the conditions we have in the E20, for example. Of course, they, with their "Imagination", have found a way to cope. The Cygnus car has added what appears to be a polycarbonate shield to the cockpit, but I wonder what the difficulty of air conditioning that contraption must be. If it were on the E20, it would certainly be a mobile sauna. It would take dozens of cooling vests. Besides that, I wonder, by God, how is the driver going to get out of there in two seconds, just as the regulation dictates? I hope with all my heart that this type of emergency never happens.

Our car, on the other hand, is much simpler, being more faithful to the technical regulations in their pure state and adding much less extra technology. Structurally, apart from the small details we have a car very similar to Viska, Kaylann and Pryfors-Bilar. This last one is even because of the engine contract we share. But it all stops right there, in the word "similar". If even between two drivers of the same team there are already considerable differences in ballast and handling configuration, what will we say between different teams, different structures, and even different technological levels?

In a simple analogy, which you could use to explain to your children: WGPC is a big cake competition. You get a basic recipe (Technical Regulations, which say what your cake-car has to have and how it should be made, how big it should be). But each cake-car ends up being completely different from the other. Imagine, how would be a cake-car made for me and a cake made for my teammate, Adriana Kowalski. My cake-car will be small compared to hers. We have different sizes, different weights, completely different biological structures (in Adriana's case, would it be biobiotic? I'm embarrassed to ask...). Sometimes, it is necessary to redo and redo until we reach a balance between the weight of the car plus the driver and the speed obtained.

And this, as expected, takes time. A time that is the same for everyone. While these adjustments are being made, and nobody launches a new aerodynamic package, we will keep fighting on the track for these minimal differences of hundredths or thousandths of a second.

In other words, there is much more excitement ahead! By the way, this cake talk has made me hungry. Does anyone know a good bakery in Togonistan that delivers on the circuit? Let me know in the comments.
Last edited by Lisander on Fri Jun 02, 2023 4:45 pm, edited 3 times in total.
The Principality of Lisander, a sports loving, very highly developed nation in Astyria.
Disappointing people and missing deadlines since 2013.

User avatar
Abanhfleft
Senator
 
Posts: 3852
Founded: May 26, 2008
Capitalist Paradise

Postby Abanhfleft » Sun May 28, 2023 11:41 am

The first qualifying session of the first race of the 20th season of the World Grand Prix Championship could not have gone much worse for William Archer than if someone had literally set fire to his car just before quali. William was only supposed to be five tenths of a second away from provisional pole position at the end of Q1 at the Talbott Autodrome in Liventia, but such was the parity between pretty much every team in the competition at the start of the season that five tenths of a second from pole put William dead last in the grid for Sunday. Any other day and five tenths off would have still been good enough for a place in the top 10, but the Saturday of the weekend of the Liventian Grand Prix was not one of those days.

To say that William was disappointed with this result would be something of an understatement. If one was to forget the year-long gap between seasons 19 and 20 of the WGPC, William had been on a hot streak, winning two straight grands prix while claiming pole position for both races, the Hapiloppian and Vilitan Grands Prix. William was hoping that he could keep that little streak of his going once they went back to Liventia, not only because doing so would be a massive boost for his campaign to win the WGPC drivers’ championship but also because he had already taken pole here in Talbott before. Sure, one could argue that the light showers hitting the track on that day affected the whole session, but someone still had to set the fastest lap time at the end of the day, and William Archer had been that guy. Back in that day, five tenths of a second away from pole would still have been good enough for P4, although once again, the weather could have been playing a factor in that. That said, William had managed to beat the likes of R.L. Cruisin, Gregori Krupin, and Rustom Ibuna to pole position then, which only further convinced William that he was in control of a championship-winning car.

The dry weather might have been the gamechanger on this occasion, because while William still felt like he had turned in a good couple of laps in his new Preston PGP-03, but it was still five tenths off, and at the risk of repeating himself, five tenths was not good enough to get him into the top 10 shootout. Heck, it wasn’t even enough to bring him anywhere near the cutoff line. William Archer, two-time grand prix winner from last season, would be starting this Liventian Grand Prix at the back of the grid. That said, William was still feeling confident that he would be able to get something out of this non-optimal start and get himself a good start in the drivers’ championship fight. William therefore made the executive decision to put on the hardest available compound from Tropicorp’s offerings on the day and go for the mother of all overcuts in an attempt to claw back some points from last on the grid.

William knew that he was taking a big risk. Many drivers around him were going to start the grand prix on softer compounds and would therefore theoretically have better traction than him in getting off the line. But the overcut was a strategy that had worked out for William many times before; after all, he had used it to great effect to win both in Hapilopper and Vilita a few years ago. The strategy then was going to be pretty much the same that William was going to try to employ now: go for as long as he possibly could on his hard compound tires, gain positions to those whose tires were going off quicker than his own, and then build up a gap for his own pit stop before chasing after those still in front of him on his fresh set of soft tires. At least that was the plan. But as the saying goes, no plan survives first contact with the enemy. And the enemy in William’s case was the absolutely poor traction that he got out of his hard tires once the five red lights had gone out. In William’s eyes, it looked like the rest of the grid had gone on without him before he could finally get himself going, and it really wasn’t that far from the truth.

William wouldn’t gain any positions in the race until the second lap, and even then it wasn’t because he finally managed to overtake someone on track. No, all that happened was that Bryce Yannec had retired on that particular lap, although the cause was still not yet known at the time. A few laps later, William found himself looking at the diffuser of one iBen Toralmintii, the current and defending WGPC drivers’ champion who was also surprisingly further down the order than expected. William immediately got to work trying to get past the man whom many, even William himself, saw as a contender for the title fight, but a combination of factors such as William’s own tire selection and the years of experience that Toralmintii had accumulated meant that William ended up wasting more than just a few laps trying to get around a car that was supposed to be five years behind the rest of the grid. William’s efforts to get past Toralmintii were further complicated when the safety car came out; William had just about got his nose past that of the defending champion when the message appeared on the screen on his steering wheel, and he also heard his race engineer call out to him and say, “Safety car has been deployed, William. Take the position from Toralmintii and maintain delta.”

“Oh come on, man!” William shouted. “I was just about to get him for real! I didn't need a safety car to make it stick! Which idiot drove his car into the wall this time?”

The engineer took a few moments before replying to William’s question. “It was Rudy, William,” he finally said. “Rudy crashed and brought out the safety car.”

“Oh shit,” William muttered. “Well, shit for all of us, right?” he said as he realized that his mouth had just run away from him yet again. For most of Season 19, William had been under the impression that Preston Autos had been favoring his teammate Rudy Edwards simply because he was Hapiloppian just like most of the rest of the team, with William being the unfortunate “number two driver” that such favoritism involved. In William’s defense, slightly flimsy thought it might be under something more than just cursory scrutiny, it was easy to make that impression considering how Preston had even brought in the one and only Drake Stevenson to help out Rudy after the latter had a rocky start to Season 19. However, as it turned out, Preston (more specifically team principal Marty Lewis) had brought in Stevenson because he felt like Rudy wasn't taking in any of the advice being given by the rest of the team, and eventually Stevenson himself gave up on the project because he thought that Rudy didn't want his help at all, and that he was no longer going to work with someone who, in Stevenson's own words, "didn't want to help himself."

Meanwhile, Marty Lewis and the rest of Preston were actually keen to secure William's services, and they were willing to pay him however much was needed in order to get William's signature on the dotted line of his contact for next season. William had secretly felt guilty that he thought ill of the whole team when it turned out that he was the one driver that they were really after, and he tried not to think too much about it as he named his demands and asked for guarantees that the team would back him once William put himself into the title fight. Now, coming back to the present day, the present in which William was struggling to make overtakes on the track where he had once had the race of his lifetime and claimed a podium in light showers despite a broken DRS that kept deploying even when it wasn't supposed to (it had long since been overshadowed by his masterclass at Hapilopper), William knew that there was nothing about his situation that he could blame on Preston. They had given him a fantastic car, and he had found that it fit him like a glove. Once again, it circled back to that five tenths of a second that had relegated William to the back of the grid. He wasn't that slow compared to the rest of the grid; times and tolerances were simply too tight at the moment, and every hundredth or even thousandth gained out on the track could mean the difference between pole position and getting mired in the backfield.

The safety car went back into pit lane after only a couple of laps; perhaps Rudy had crashed into a place where his car could be collected quickly by the marshals. In any case, once the safety car was gone, William resumed his work in trying to overtake those in front of him. However, because a lot of people had chosen to take advantage of the safety car to get fresh boots on their cars, William no longer had the tire wear advantage that he thought he did. He didn't box for new tires during the safety car period because he still believed that his strategy of going for the overcut and pitting for softs in the last laps would still help him go further up the order. Therefore he once again didn't have much traction compared to those drivers around him on fresher tires, and he found himself falling away from the rest of the pack. The ultimate insult finally came for William when, just after he finally swapped his worn-out hard tires for fresh and springy softs, he was informed that he was about to be lapped by the race leader, Anneliese Devereux. "How the fuck did she get up there?" William asked, more rhetorically than anything else.

A couple of seconds later, his race engineer was back on the radio. "Fitzpatrick coming up behind you," the engineer said. "He is in P2; we are not racing him for the position. Watch for blue flags, and find a place to let him past."

"At least someone's enjoying himself today," William muttered. He chose the main straight as the place where he would allow his friend Adonis Fitzpatrick to lap him. As the familiar red and green UrGa machine sped past William with the help of DRS, William took his right hand from his steering wheel and waved at Donny as he zipped past. And then William raised his middle finger at Donny to tell him to go after Devereux in P1.

Finally, William saw the checkered flag being waved, and as he flew past the flag, his engineer said, "That's P23, William. Not the best of results, we know, but at least we're not plum last."

"Yeah, we got P23 only because Rudy and some other guys crashed or blew up their engines or whatever," William muttered in a dejected tone. His second Liventian Grand Prix was going to be memorable to William Archer for all the wrong reasons. There would be no podium waiting for William here this time around even though this time, his DRS was finally working and not cracking open in rainy conditions. But speaking of podiums, even though he couldn't get Devereux at the end of the day, Donny Fitzpatrick managed to keep hold of P2 and found himself not only being the UrGa meat in an Eminent sandwich but also taking his and UrGa's first podium in WGPC. William was feeling more than just a little bit shitty about the way the day unfolded, but he would be damned if he didn't congratulate his friend on converting a P11 start into a podium finish.

Pare, you got a fucking podium in your very first race in WGPC!” William said as he ran up to Donny and clapped the latter's back. “Not everyone can say that! Heck, even I can’t say that!”

“I’m fucking shaking, man!” Donny said back. “Is it always supposed to feel this way?”

“If it’s your first time, of course it is!” William said. “Now go up there and enjoy that champagne for me, will you? At least one Fleft’s gonna celebrate today!”

“Sure thing, man,” Donny nodded before breaking off from William to make his way up to the cooldown room and the podium itself.

William couldn't help but feel more than just a little pride at the sight of Donny Fitzpatrick raising his second place trophy during the podium ceremony. Sure, it was only for P2, but William had a feeling that sooner or later, Donny was going to be on that top step, and the Fleftic national anthem was going to ring out once again. At that moment William wondered when he was going to be on the top step again, and if he could do it enough times to claim a championship for himself.

The Liventian Grand Prix was a writeoff for William Archer. That much he knew, and he had already accepted it once he finally saw the checkered flag. He also knew that none of this was the fault of Preston Autos, much as a deep and dark corner of his mind would love to convince him otherwise. Preston had given William a great car, and it could even be argued that it was William's fault that he couldn't put together a good enough lap time during qualifying. Five tenths of a second was the difference between pole position and plum last on the grid. Those five tenths of a second were units of time that William knew he would never get back again, so there was no more use agonizing over them anymore. It was time for William to look ahead, and look forward to the Togonistan Grand Prix. And there might also be something else for William to look forward to once he found the time to set everything up.

TO: Lane Carter and Ted Pressley
FROM: William Archer
SUBJECT: Wanna Hang Out? Part 2

Hey guys! Long time no see, everyone. Well, it's more like long time no see to Ted because I've run into Lane a few times while we were all waiting around for WGPC to get back underway. Anyway, I thought that the last time we three got together was a success, so why not do it again? I'm trying to find a bar or a restaurant in or near the Hwoarang Circuit where we could hang out, have a drink or two, and chat after the grand prix. If I find one, I'll send y'all the details within the week.

Also, I think it's time that we expanded our little group a little bit more. We're not the only young guys on the grid right now, and if there are of us to take the fight to the likes of iBen Toralmintii, R.L. Cruisin, and Sara Luna then they'll surely have to notice us all. I've already invited my friend Adonis Fitzpatrick (Donny for short) to the gig in Togonistan, and I want to ask you guys if you could bring someone else along with you.

Lane, I want you to bring Batu Tüvshinbayar to our little shindig. He already knows me, and he knows Donny too, so I think it's time we brought him into the fold. We're all friends here, so I think this should be easy for you, and good for Batu.

Ted, I was unsure of who I want you to invite to the hangout. At first I wanted you to ask the guy who helped you out when you collapsed last season. I think his name was Janne or Jonny or something like that. But then I noticed that I was inviting a fellow Fleft into the group, and I was asking Lane if he could bring his fellow TJUN-ian Batu in as well. So that gave me a thought: why don't we go all Noah's Ark on it? Two drivers from Abanhfleft, two drivers from TJUN-ia, and two drivers from Tumbra. So that means Sophie McCreary. I don't know how close you two are, but she's a young driver like all of us, and if you can talk her into joining us after the race, that would be cool.

Anyway, that's all that I have for you guys at the moment. I'm not gonna lie, I was very disappointed by what happened in Liventia during the grand prix. So I want to wash it all away, and hopefully I do better in Togonistan later this week and we can all celebrate each other doing well.

Looking forward to what you guys have to say!

William
The Democratic Republic of Abanhfleft
Leader: President Rako Novoire

Territories and dependencies:
Trans-Dniesters (Client state)
Oontaz Dert Li Ng
Copper Cuprum
Trendstart
Economic Left/Right: -1.72
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: 0.88
Second place winner in the International Baseball Slam VI
Third place winner in the World Lacrosse Championship XIX
Winner of the Baptism of Iron XVI!
Third place winner in the 33rd Di Bradini Cup!

Third place winner of the International Baseball Slam VIII
Winner of World Lacrosse Championships 22!

I also write stories. Would you like to read my works?

User avatar
TJUN-ia
Minister
 
Posts: 3269
Founded: Oct 04, 2019
Inoffensive Centrist Democracy

WGPC pt 7 (I) - Saturday Strikes!

Postby TJUN-ia » Sun May 28, 2023 12:04 pm

WGPC20
ZX-Flow Energy Grand Prix of Togonistan
Hwoarang Racing Circuit
Hwoarang, Tongonistan


Round 1 was...interesting if nothing else. It saw a podium that practically no one really saw coming, a Top 10 filled with faces old and new and some of the perceived stronger drivers in this grid not being in the points at all. Talbott certainly taught everyone a multitude of things and for the two TJUN-ian drivers on this grid, they certainly did so too. Sure, they both came out of Liventia with no points to show for it, but they both made inroads on their qualifying position and so positives were certainly taken indeed. Both drivers made their way to Hwoarang in Tongonistan looking to try and make good on those positive steps, though both through their different teams of course. Lane was looking to use Fast Cocoabo's point from Liventia as a staging point to try and get some points of his own. Batu, on the other hand, was looking to improve from his 11th place last time out and hoped that the experience gained from his first WGPC weekend would improve his chances this time around.

Hwoarang Racing Circuit could be described as a flowing circuit, one where the 12 turns scream throttle control and one where you have to make sure you know exactly how much speed you take into each and every one of them. Practice may indeed make perfect around this track and it would end up being Darian Vilau who claimed the fastest time on Friday over Brendan Faloe and Bryce Yannec. Jordan Crowe would be up to P11 with a time that was only 0.047 off Vilau while Fast Cocoabo was 0.476 down in P25...but that was still better than what the two TJUN-ians managed in this session - with Batu 0.631 down and Lane 1.104 down. They did give some excuses for this outcome, with both of them claiming that they were focusing on race pace during most of the session, but it still didn't look good to see both TJUN-ians in the bottom two.

Then qualifying arrived and this time in the Elimination format of Q1-Q2-Q3 which we are all certainly familiar with. Q1 would see race winner Anneliese Devereux set the fastest time and while both Lane and Batu certainly did enough to make their way through, the same couldn't be said for Jordan Crowe in P24. Q2 is where things slowed down as the emphasis shifted on trying to just move further up the pyramid and into the shootout for pole. Only the Top 14 would make it through to that session and it would be rookie Sophie McCreary that was the shock leader as the battle to make it in intesified. Lane did make it in and Batu did too, but only by the skin of his teeth in a tight session that saw iBen Toralmintii (P17) and Cocoabo #23 (P21) both bow out. Q3 was all about making the best out of being in that position and in the end, it would be Dom Falepeau who benefited the most by taking pole over McCreary and Janne Laukkanen in a session as tight as you'd expect from this season. Lane pulled off a brilliant lap to end up in P5, 0.021 down and just ahead of Adonis Fitzpatrick (which would mean Lane telling Donny "Good luck for tomorrow" this time) while Batu ended up beating Will Archer to P13 at 0.072 down (which meant a more cheerful Archer was there to receive the same message from Batu).

It certainly was a good day overall and both drivers will feel a lot better about their Top 10 chances tomorrow all things considered...but not totally confident. Race day can always throw up unexpected surprises, especially up here with the very best this sport has to offer. It will be interesting how tomorrow plays out on track and both drivers will be hoping for a kick start at the 2nd time of asking.


A passage from Lane Carter's personal diary
Quali was absolutely better, P5 is brilliant.
Will hope to claw home some points tomorrow.

Batu seems OK, as did Donny when I saw him.

....

And now I got an email from Will.
The gang is getting back together after this race...and Will wants me to let Batu into the fold.
Will will bring Donny. I will bring Batu. And Ted (who I want to get to know more) may bring McCreary.
McCreary. Something about here seems...too reserved, I guess? Like I feel she wants to be something more...but she just cannot for some reason.

I told Will I'm so fucking down. Ad I'll bring Batu too. It should be fun and I hope we can all get to know each other a bit better.
Last edited by TJUN-ia on Thu Jun 01, 2023 10:12 am, edited 1 time in total.
1st: ECC4/5, NSSCRA13, RLWC22, IBS20, EBT3, EIHT2, ET20V
2nd: NSCF24/26, ARWC4, WC:TOTS, IBC34, IBS17, RUWC33/35, ECC6, EKT, WCoH52 T20WC18
3rd: ARWC3, IBC32/41, ECC3/7, ARWC6, ET20IV, ECT, RUWC37, WCoH56
NSSCRA - JR
T1: #07 Michael Stefan (S13 T1 Champ)/#64 Alfonso Mercado/#03 Maddison Riley-Jones (S10 T2 Champ)
T2: #96 Alice Jepkosgei/#70 Gongming Gao [NCR]/#79 Axel Chase

WGPO: #11 Lane Carter/ #9 Batu Tüvshinbayar (WGP2 S5 Champion)
NSTT: 4 S-Titles (3 RU)/2 D-Titles (6 RU)

UN - U1
TJUN (Ta-Jun) - An organ of the UN that focuses on "international role-play" (i.e. USA = Fang the Sniper) (U2)
TJUN-ia (Ta-Jun-ee-a) - The testing grounds of TJUN members, but operates as an independent nation. (U3)

User avatar
Chromatika
Minister
 
Posts: 3445
Founded: Aug 05, 2015
Democratic Socialists

Postby Chromatika » Sun May 28, 2023 2:31 pm

A Taste of Quebec
Chromia, Capital District, Chromatika


"And Ji So-Yeong will have a tough test in front of her, as she will start nineteenth, with her teammate iBen only two places ahead of her. Tropicorp-Colourworks will hope to overcome this abysmal starting place and at least earn a point in the second race of the season..."

The sportscaster from the restaurant's TV droned on in the background as Lily McCloud finished her dish of mixed fried rice. Of all the joints in Chromia, A Taste of Quebec was her favorite. It had the prefect Quebecois-Korean cuisine for the Chromatik palate, and when one had a job that could take them anywhere around the world, it was smart to eat what you liked when you could.

She was supposed to get her next assignment very soon; as a plainclothes bodyguard working for the Chromatik Secret Service, it was her job to go to wherever the asset was and make sure that they would be safe; she had all kinds of certifications to make it possible to pass as many menial jobs - including food service, janitor, simple mechanic, or even electrical. She had entered this job right out of college, and it had suited her well. Not a single person had died on her watch - and she intended it to be that way.

As expected, when the hostess handed her her check, there was an extra line at the bottom - a series of symbols that if one wasn't aware, they'd just think were scratches. It told her to go to Franscesca Larriet-Cortes International Airport, at the usual terminal, by eight PM that night - and that the travel details would be taken care of.

Eventually, she was on a plane to Tropicorp - to keep Ji So-Yeong safe in the middle of the trail regarding the death of Anola Melani. As her disguise, she was going to be a personal assistant - which was fine, as she was pretty good at styling, personal accounting, and other such things.

Really though, she was there for martial arts, for hand to hand fighting, to be the barrier between Ji and anyone who would seek to harm her.

She'd never been the bodyguard to a sportsperson before. This would be something new...
Former User of the Nations of Yesopalitha and Falconfar

Champion: WBC 52, NSCF 24, 26, 28, and CoH 82
Regional Tournaments: AOCAF 55 Champions, 52 & 63 Runners-Up
WC Proper Appearances: Second Place: 93 Semifinals: 76 Quarterfinals: 77, 78 Round of Sixteen: 79, 80, 87, 88, 92, 94, 99 Round of Thirty-Two: 98, 100 Group Stage: 81, 83, 84, 86, 89, 95, 96, 97
CoH Appearances: 77 (Ro16), 85 (Ro16), 90 (Champions), 91 (QF)
KPB Ranking: 16 (Post 100)
RP Population: 22 million

User avatar
Ethane
Minister
 
Posts: 2895
Founded: Sep 26, 2015
Ex-Nation

Postby Ethane » Sun May 28, 2023 3:45 pm

Team Memorandum - Qualifying Session Notes

Pre-qualifying. Cars appear set up and ready to go.

Driver no. 40 looks revitalised. Confidence has grown since weaker pre-season practice and qualifying sessions with result in the last race. Hoping to qualify well to prevent the need for a recovery drive. Set-up appears optimal following practice. Will have to wait and see if it will transfer into qualifying conditions, as set-up primarily built to focus on race pace. Focus on providing grip in fast corners while maintaining speed down the straight. Note: Front and rear wing angles have been adjusted slightly from recommended setup due to feedback from driver no. 40 during the practice sessions, to prevent induced oversteer. Driver has adjusted well to the changes, remarked they feel "far more confident".

Driver no. 7 is confident and ready to go. Win in last race has given driver exceptional confidence levels. Result from last weekend reassures that our car is/can be competitive. Noted that qualifying times in the first race were extremely tight. Fine margins are evidently part of WGPC perhaps moreso than other events, so the gap between P1 and P8 can be milliseconds. Driver no. 7 aware of this, focusing on putting together the perfect lap. Setup has been adjusted slightly at the request of the driver, also to reduce induced oversteer. Practice result was promising - will it translate into qualifying?


Lights out.

Driver no. 40 is first out on the track. Message to driver is to get an early run in as a banker. If we can get through on one run, then we'll be looking to do that. Clear from the outset that there are some issues with the car. Car appears reluctant to turn in, with unexpected brake locking in heavy braking zones. Team encourages Adriana Kowalski to complete the lap to set a time, then brings the driver back into the garage to assess the issue with the car. Damage was discovered from practice which was not dealt with at the time. Team rapidly deployed to attempt to fix the internal damage in time to get another run in during the session.

Driver no. 7 heads out and the car seems stuck to the ground. Anneliese appears able to extract the absolute maximum from the car. Clear that kerb usage is possible around the circuit, but there are areas, especially on high speed corners, where the kerbs can unexpectedly cause a loss of traction if approached in the wrong way. Drivers advised to be cautious and avoid kerbs if possible on these sections, unless there is a need to send it in a final run. Anneliese sets provisional fastest time.

End of qualifying.

Driver no. 40 unable to set another lap as the damage was too critical to complete the fix during the qualifying session. Internal fault led to damage to interior, including some internal wiring, which needed certain components to be switched out. Some of these components required the removal of part of the modular sidepod, leading to a delayed repair period. Brake locking identified as an issue with the brakes overheating on just Adriana's car due to a previously undiagnosed partially-collapsed brake duct. New components are en-route and should arrive to fix this evening ready for the race tomorrow. Adriana due to start from the back of the grid due to the technical issues with the car - possibility of considering a new engine to exploit this opportunity at the rear of the grid?

Driver no. 7 sets a really good time in Q1, with her lap proving fastest of the session. Anneliese continues to appear confident and in control of the car, and there are no notable issues with the car or its performance. Slightly enhanced tyre-wear was noted compared to practice simulations. However, there may be mitigating factors at play, such as changes in weather and temperature, as well as the track evolution. Important to keep an eye on our and other team's tyre wear during the race where possible, to ensure we have accurate and up-to-date data on the best strategy for Anneliese and Adriana.


Lessons for the race
- Keep an eye on tyre wear as this could be exaggerated compared to practice simulations and expected tyre strategies. We may want to consider opting for a slightly more conservative tyre strategy during the race if the opportunity presents itself and it is something other drivers adopt too.
- Anneliese appears to have mastered control of the car. Apply further development feedback so that the car and aerodynamics can continue to develop and evolve throughout the season to support her performance.
- Adriana did better in the first race than qualifying. A recovery drive is possible, and for Adriana we should be exploring an ambitious tyre and fuelling strategy to give Adriana the best chance of success in her recovery drive.
- The issues Adriana has in qualifying have been technical issues, and it is important any technical gremlins and weak points are ironed out for the race and future weekends, as we want to replicate the success we had at the Talbott Autodrome.
- Our drivers feel more confident at technical circuits. The ZX-Flow Energy Grand Prix of Togonistan is a notably more aggressive track, which might leave our drivers a little bit exposed. The set-up has been adjusted to try to exploit the Eminent car's strengths in high speed corners and straights, with some downforce shedded from last race.
- We are aiming for the podium with Anneliese, and it is within reach from her qualifying position. Keep it clean, and adopt a strategy that leaves this open. Consider starting on medium tyres to keep strategy options open.
Esportivan and Proud.
<drawk> If the entirety of the nation of Ethane was covered in a single cubic foot of Ethane on its surface, lighting it all on fire would cause a 5.44 megaton blast.
Best WorldVision Finish: 2nd. Best World Cup Finish: Quarter-Finals. Best KPB Rank: 8th. Best WBC Finish: 1st.

User avatar
Delaclava
Negotiator
 
Posts: 5232
Founded: Jul 30, 2008
Scandinavian Liberal Paradise

Postby Delaclava » Sun May 28, 2023 3:59 pm

After a strong second practice session at Gernarche, followed by meeting his sexy new mentor Sandro Perez, Kingston Walcott was managing to ride a wave of confidence that he took with him all the way to the Talbott Autodrome in Liventia. Armed with a new swagger and a reliable, savvy engineer in Erno Swain, Walcott romped to a second-place standing in the practice before doing one better in the first round of qualifying, being the only one to sneak under 1:40 and winning the round. Swain and the crew reminded Kingston (not that he needed it) that there were a lot of improvements to be made by all teams, and sure enough, despite Walcott's improvement in the second round, he would end up getting leapfrogged by several faster contenders.

Walcott, nonetheless, was beaming with pride after that Saturday. He had never even started in Prix del Á. Eighth was a perfectly fine place to start his first World Grand Prix—and as it turned out, it was even a finer place to finish it. It was a topsy-turvy race where just about nobody else held their starting position. Yet to the surprise of no one who knew him as a driver, Walcott was entirely unrattled. Well clear of Blaatschappen, Walcott was free to cross the checkered flag in eighth place all by himself, snagging the first three GP points in Delaclava and Sonnelite history.

"Yes! YES!" Kingston screamed into the radio, on the verge of tears.

"Well done, lad." Swain replied. "Heck of a ride. That was your own race."

And although much of the attention was on the podium—Devereaux, Fitzgerald, and Kaczynski, I think—much of the female attention was on the young, blond fashion twink, the newcomer that was beginning to fascinate observers of the sport. And for the first time, Walcott, didn't hate it. He even managed to make some brief eye contact with a few admirers, throw them a few smiles that left them whispering and gushing as he walked away. He might have been ready to even try saying words if he hadn't been so excited and adrenaline-struck from the race.

All of a sudden, he felt a tap on his right elbow. He glanced to the side, and there was the petite yet commanding presence of his teammate Lilly, whose hair was immaculate despite fifty forty-nine hard, hot laps of racing.

"Congratulations. Great race," she said, reaching her hand out.

Kingston hesitated; never had Lilly approached him before like this. Grinning, he accepted her handshake. "Thanks."

They talked for a few moments; Kingston was unaware that cameras were on them during this exchange, and that certain Delaclav outlets were going to frame this interaction in a certain way. Kingston made his way back to his team, to his father—who, uncharacteristically, gave him a big hug, as did Ashley; even Curtis let out an approving nod. They made their way back to the hotel.

Kingston had just returned to his room when he got a phone call from none other from Sandro Perez.

"Hey, kid," the smooth, sultry voice said on the other end. "Heck of a race."

"Thank you," Kingsley smiled. "Yeah, it felt good. Your advice has helped too. Getting all sorts of girls wanting to talk to me after the race."

"And?"

"Well, it was hard to keep my head straight after the race. But I, like, wasn't scared of them. Oh, and I actually talked to Lilly!"

"Nice going, man."

"Can't wait to see what I can manage next week."

"No," Sandro said sharply.

"Huh?"

"Do you know where you're going next week?"

"Um..." Kingston searched his brain. "Togonistan?"

"Yeah. Novapax," Sandro said with disgust. "Right around Covidini. Those chicks are randy. You've gotta watch out."

"Watch out?"

"Yeah, I mean, completely shut it down. The air you breathe might not even be safe. Look, I'm so sorry, but... I just want to look out for you. Alright."

"Yeah."

"It's a weird place. Just focus on your race, focus on staying safe. But I'm gonna meet up with you back in Tropicorp, alright?"

Kingsley brightened up again. "Oh, okay! Yes, that would be awesome."

"Take care," Sandro hung up. On his end, he shook his head in surprise. Typically, he wouldn't have cared if a rival picked up some kind of disease abroad, especially not one as preppy and upper-class as Kingston Walcott. Maybe, just maybe, he actually cared about this kid...
Sports Honor Roll
Football: 2x WORLD BOWL CHAMPIONS (13 & 15), 1x Runner-up (11), 4x Third Place (41-44), 1x Regional Champions
Hockey: World Cup 16 Third Place, 2x World Juniors Champion (18 & 22), 3x World Junior Runners-up (16, 17, 19), 1x Regional Silver
Basketball: 2x IBC Runners-up (31 and 36), 4x Regional Medal (1 Silver, 3 Bronze)
Lacrosse: 2x Worlds Runners-up (16 and 41) 1x Regional Silver
Soccer: Olympic Gold (V), 3rd at IAC 18 3rd at Di Bradini Cup 15, 4th at Baptism of Fire 34
Host of WC 55; CoH 44, 46, 84, and 87; BoF 72; World Bowl 11, 15, 39, and 43; IBC 7 and 31; AOCAF 31; WJHC 16 and 18; etc. Founder of Scott Cup and World Team Tennis Championship.

User avatar
Nico Hulkenberg
Attaché
 
Posts: 95
Founded: Aug 02, 2020
Ex-Nation

Postby Nico Hulkenberg » Sun May 28, 2023 4:35 pm

Image
IS IT ME, OR IS IT HOT IN HERE


GRANTFELT - Whilst the situation at Pressley Racing has been public knowledge, what was not known was that the situation had been heating up - in some cases, entirely too literally. Sources close to Dario Nülkeschläger have verified eye-witness accounts of a fire at Pressley's Grantfelt Raceway test circuit, with the team's "rushed, yet overcooked" methods of upgrade implementation being touted as a direct factor in the PRE-023's combustion. The Pressley machine was reported as having pulled to the side after a "rapid, unscheduled disassembly of some of the fuelling components" and "a slight yet vital failure of an innovative, weight-saving active suspension system" necessitated an early end to the Hülkenberger's testing session. This is just one in a long list of bad rumours from the Pressley camp, with many pundits beginning to doubt whether they have what it takes to compete amongst those at the top.

"From what I've heard, they had a bit of a false dawn in testing. Since then, it's been carnage." began one pundit. "WGPC in general is a high-pressure environment, and when you're a fledgling outfit like Pressley, that pressure really can build up - pressure to perform, pressure to improve, pressure to impress, the lot. When said pressure gets to this level so early, and the team and its personnel get sent into overdrive trying to develop the latest and greatest bits of tech to shoehorn into their chassis, that's when a few concerns need to be raised. I mean, just how many upgrades does a car need from race to race? It's not seven, I'll tell you that much. Pressley - and particularly Jack Brook himself - need to hold their horses, lest the ever-demanding Charlie Pressley boot them from the team without so much as a 'sorry to see you go' cake."

Former HMG Head of Development Jöhan Turbringer, however, thought differently. "I've been in that position before - it's tough. When faced with the decision of staggering or forcing through, it's often said that you should just 'trust the process', keep a steady ship, and make linear progress. If you're lucky, though, forcing through your upgrades and making your engineers sleep at the factory and live off of energy drinks can work out! I couldn't possibly comment, though. Not at all. Nope."

Ultimately, Pressley will be relying on Dario's input in their efforts to propel themselves further up the grid - any further difficulty could really see sparks start to fly, and more sparks can only mean more flames and an even larger dumpster fire.

AOGP - UH-OH GP


MYRILSK - Despite all but confirming her season's plans with the announcement that she would take up the role as a test and reserve driver at UrGa, the rumour mill just doesn't stop turning for Nepö Kinder. Reportedly unsatisfied at her role within the team, there are rumblings of a seat elsewhere in the works - and it may come in the form of Atlantian Oceania's regional championship, AOGP. Whilst unheard of in Hülkenberg, the series has garnered a reputation as a serious option for drivers who just aren't at the level desired; much like our very own HMG Challenge GT series, just with single-seaters. This comes as the result of an impressive test day, wherein she showed more class and skill in general than some other more established and well-respected names in the sport - or so we’re told.

With the size of the grid, and therefore availability of spots, there should be no difficulty for Kinder, who is likely to slot into an open AOGP seat if the chance arises. Whichever team that may be will most likely be determined by UrGa, which elevates the chances of said team having UrGa engines. We tried asking our local motorsports pundits for AOGP info, but not a single one of them could answer our questions. Thus, we enlisted the help of the Magic 8-Ball.

Q: Is this a good move for Nepö, considering her pace in testing?
A: It is certain.

Q: How so? Do you believe Nepö still needs to freshen up - hone her skills, so to speak?
A: You may rely on that.

Q: Okay… so why should she go to AOGP and not, say, Tumbran Super Formula, or another year in Hülkenberg?
A: Better not tell you now.

Q: So, what, do you know something we don’t?
A: Reply hazy, try again.

Q: Are you well versed in AOGP, like?
A: My reply is no.

Q: So, what’s with the adamance about going to AOGP?
A: Most likely.

Q: What? That’s not even a valid answer!
A: Don’t count on it.

Q: Oh for fu-
A: Concentrate and ask again.


With the Magic 8-Ball seemingly choosing not to help with our inquiries, it really seems as if nobody knows what this season holds for Nepö Kinder, except maybe Nepö Kinder herself. Unfortunately, when we approached her for comment, we did not receive a response. Pity.


Dario

Hurtling round Grantfelt Raceway in an updated version of the PRE-023, Dario was running a programme in an attempt to make the new components last a full race distance. With the installation of a mass damper, an active suspension system and further developments in the works, it was important that these sorts of things went without a hitch. And thus, after thirty-two laps around the circuit, with the car seemingly running better and quicker, it felt as if Mr. Pressley’s intense demands would be met. At least, until everything fell apart. Dario had been in constant communication with his race engineer, who in turn was relaying his feedback back to the factory. All was well, until the factory had one more demand.

“How’s the balance?”

“All good. The ActSus is functional. No issues to report.”

“Okay, Dario, I’m going to need you to use the kerbs a bit more. Dev team wants to see if they’ll handle the vibrations.”

“Copy.”


Pushing the car to its limit, Dario made sure to force the car through each corner, tapping kerb after kerb. The active suspension vibrated more and more as the tyres degraded, and he felt like reporting this info back to the team.

”Kerb vibrations severe. Not sure the ActSus is a fan.”

“Keep at it, the pace is good and the data’s useful.”

“Understoo-“


A loud [thud] came from the rear left as the car exited turn fifteen, and the fuel flow to the engine suddenly cut out. The steering wheel immediately displayed ‘ENG FUEL OFF’, with the additional warning just below of ‘ACTSUS RL NOT FOUND’.

”Uhhh, I think something broke - puncthre, maybe?”

“Negative - tyre pressures not an issue. SUSTOG 9-0, SUSTOG 9-0, and slow down.”

“How many laps was that - 43? 44? If that was the suspension… I wouldn’t be running that.”

“Just try and limp it home, we’ll diagnose the issue when you get back.”

“Yeah, guys? I don’t think my arse should be starting to feel this warm…”

“Stop the car, stop the car, stop the car. Bring it to a halt and jump out.”

“That doesn’t feel like it’s supposed to happen.”

“We’ll discuss after.”


Unbeknownst to Dario, the active suspension was still in its early development stages, and its flimsiness had been exposed by the vibrations - allowing it to puncture the fuel tank, igniting the contents, and sending the highly-hyped active suspension components straight back to the drawing board. Standing next to the smoking car, Dario couldn’t help but wonder if not having the upgraded suspension would be harm the team for the next few races. He hoped not.

Nepö

Much like her compatriot, Nepö had also been tasked with making sure that the UrGa machine wouldn’t fall apart in Talbott. As it turned out, after several dozen laps of the Myrilsk Test Track, there weren’t any notable issues. Pretty impressive, considering UrGa’s status as a new entrant to the championship. This had the unexpected and unfortunate effect that testing sessions quickly became boring for young Nepö, who really needed a failure of some sort to get her pulse going, to give her the urge to perform, to light the fire in her belly. If anything, the most interesting part of her test was the letter she had received afterwards, containing a relatively interesting proposal…

”Who is this ‘Prince Bismillah’?”

She genuinely didn’t know, but she suspected she’d get to know him a lot more in the future.

User avatar
Aboveland
Ambassador
 
Posts: 1704
Founded: Dec 04, 2013
Scandinavian Liberal Paradise

Postby Aboveland » Sun May 28, 2023 6:23 pm

Hwoarang Racing Circuit
Hwoarang, Togonistan


Edvin's right leg bounces incessantly to the side of his pit-wall stool. His right hand, in a fist, serves as a support for his face; his left-hand digits move across his teeth as they seek leftover loose ends of flaky skin or fingernail. Every few seconds, he rubs his hands, palms together, and perches his face between his thumbs and indexes. Occasionally, he blinks harder and longer than usual — iBen is fourteenth, three places ahead of Ji, and time is running out in the second session to make up ground and advance to Q3. And the Colourworks pace nightmare seems to have no end in sight.

The active suspension system, in all honesty, had been hastily grafted into the car. In theory, the removal of the active aero controllers for the fins above the car's rear wheels should have spared some weight, and the focus given to the under-floor downforce by controlling the ground clearance of the rear axle should have been a net-beneficial change for AGP005. The first race in Liventia had been a good trial of fire for the new system, and a lot of data had been gathered — and wired over to the Comprehensive Test Facility, to make amends before the next weekend in far-away Togonistan. Seemingly, it hadn't been enough. Likewise, it appeared that the new power unit, Tropicorp's redesigned twin-turbo V8, lacked something against its rivals. The gap had been notoriously large: only one Tropicorp-powered car had scored any points at all in the first weekend: a single measly point to Lane Carter's name. Alongside all the other turmoil surrounding the team — Rallygate, the change of scenery, and now Ji's convoluted judicial status, plainclothes bodyguards and all — the car's lack of pace is the most pressing to Edvin.

Until qualifying for the Togonistani Grand Prix began, however, the team — and Edvin in particular — chalked up the result to the whims of luck. Truthfully, Tropicorp Racing Ælund had never been an unfortunate team — in fact, much the opposite. Colourworks’ change of fortune had been violent; even though Liventia hadn’t been a catastrophically disastrous weekend, it had felt even more dreadful that the issue simply was not apparent at all. Maybe it’s the power unit, or the chassis, or the suspension, or all of those, or neither. Whichever the reasons, Hwoarang is supposed to be one of the car’s best circuits, but the team’s pace seems stuck in Rushmore.

iBen circles around the final corner to start his last flying lap, as the clock nears zero to signal the end of the session. Ji, a bit further back, is locked to her time, and tumbles down an extra place as Skiia Vialiv crosses the line. It’s all on iBen now to pull a time out of his sleeve: if anyone can, it should be the world champion. Edvin’s legs tremble quicker as the Turorian reaches the first sector split: green, a tenth up his best so far. To his right, Ji’s race engineer, Agreka Rimanti’i, mutters words of encouragement to her driver.

Past the second sector, iBen’s delta remains green, up a thousandth from sector one. It’s a slim advantage, but it’s there, and with how close the gaps have been in the season up until now, every infinitesimal counts. He blinks long again, and when he opens his eyes, he spots another driver, further back from iBen, also on his final time’s-out flying lap: Ryker Lane.

Edvin’s eyes are glued to his monitors, one one side showing the timing screens, and in the corner of the other a small live broadcast of iBen’s onboard. As he launches towards turn eight, he jerks at his wheel, and a plume of smoke billows from his front right when he starts to brake towards the corner. It’s an almost imperceptible lapse; he regains traction almost instantly, the car squatting out of the turn towards the final right-hand hairpin, but as he rockets through the start-finish line, the delta changes color.

Yellow. Five thousandths below his best. And it’s Ryker Lane, just about flying out of the same corner some moments later, that sentences the Turorian. It only takes a single thousandth to send the world champion back to the garage.

Edvin’s hands split open, as his face sinks into his palms and his fingers dig gently into his eyes. Beside him, Terho mutters the quintessential sigh of Abovian lament “Oi oi oi…”.

"ICARS on you, Janne."

The Abovian grinned. "Copy, Max." His chest rose as he spoke, the safety harness wrapped around him pleasantly and reassuringly tight — a welcome snuggle to ease the strangeness of speaking in English over the radio. The team's Imagination reserves had been fluctuating equally between his car and Ryker's throughout the weekend, unlike the allocation agreed upon for the first race, wherein Ryker enjoyed the largest share of the energy until he dropped far behind from second on the grid. Liventia had been tough after qualifying, but making up eight places? Not too shabby.

In Togonistan, however, the door was wide open. It was, on paper, one of Nexus’ best possible venues: a fast, aggressive, and relatively straightforward circuit setup-wise, with constant radius hairpins and 90-degree turns the brunt of the challenges faced by the conically-wheeled spaceship he had the pleasure to strap himself into. After the first weekend debrief, Max and Janne had agreed to an intense simulator training regime in the downtime before Togonistan — after a season away, the Abovian’s grasp on the Chase Cutter’s n-plus-one assists and systems had waned enough to warrant a reinsertion campaign.

The simulator sessions he’d done had been eye-opening: a lot of his consistency, already a factor of his driving more often absent than not, had been lost during the off-season — as had, it seemed, the team’s grasp on the car as well. He didn’t think to remark on any of it, but at times, it almost felt as if his almighty, ethereal higher-ups were… recalibrating.

In any case, the simulator sessions had paid off: as qualifying began, the effect was notorious. He felt significantly more at ease with his machine than a week prior, and it was evident as early as the end of his outlap. Every one of his inputs now matched perfectly with his expectations: his Chase Cutter dove, rose, and danced across the circuit with relentless, mind-boggling composure and precision. At moments — try as he might to quench his emotions during his hotlaps — he felt the same rush of euphoria as he had way-back-when, the last time he saw himself embroiled in a title fight.

Before he knew it, Janne found himself in the final qualifying session — not for the first time in his career, but certainly the first under his new old employers. The first of his flying laps had been unremarkable: a slow Sophie McCreary on her in-lap had held him back through turn nine, and though he’d managed to make up enough time on the straight to post a top six time, there was most definitely room for improvement. While he lounged in his car in the paddock, with Ryker out on the tarmac in a bid to improve his time for one final time, a familiar acronym popped up on the timing screen just above him, his HUD visor flipped away from his face while in the garage, signaling the driver who'd just posted a time ahead of him.

PRE -0.049

A shiver ran strangled up his spine, trapped in the confines of his skin-tight shark-skin colored suit. Not now, Janne, not now! he droned to himself. He’d done a good enough job in Liventia to stay out of the Tumbran’s gaze — unless he had noticed that one time, with Ted submerged under a barrage of pundits, where they crossed a scathing glance as they both turned opposite directions, and Janne snapped his neck harder away from the gentle-eyed man — and, in return, he’d stayed out of his headspace throughout it as well. If anything, his next fastest lap should, hopefully, land him clear of the Kaylan driver.

During his outlap, the sickly sweet words of his Esmerelian engineer landed neatly on his ears. With Ryker unlikely to manage a third timed lap before the session ended, all eyes — and all of the team’s hopes — were on him. Even so, he felt little pressure; it was as if the old, hungry, naïve, and unwaveringly committed Janne was finally coming back to him.

By a stroke of luck, his final flying lap had come at a moment where the track in front of him had cleared: no dirty air in front; condolences to the drivers behind, as Rudy Edwards had found out in Liventia. His Chase Cutter, as large and cumbersome as it looked — the cosmic “bathtub”, as Ted’s… the Pressley team principal had christened it — felt alive. It whirred, swooshed, glowed, croaked, and hissed as it skipped across the tarmac: squatting into turn one, hanging loose towards two, dancing over three and four, and leaning precariously on its oblong rubber across all the constant radius turns leading up to the long straight. By the midpoint of his lap, he’d set himself a green sector one — through the sector two timing gates, his split was purple.

Out of the corner of his eye, the timing clock struck the end of the session just past the apex at turn 10 — in time to not prove a distraction into the braking for the penultimate corner. For all his aggressiveness and commitment during raceday, he held on tight to his wheel to finish off his lap cleanly, and as he powered past the finish line, his HUD glowed excitedly to relay the news.

1 LAU 1:10.829

He inhaled through his teeth at the sight, but the congratulations through the radio were yet to come — and just moments later, the final time still flashing on his visor, the number to the left of his trigram tumbled twice down. The gap to the front: eight thousandths of a second. His first career pole would have to wait.

Still, back at the pit-wall, it seemed it was all joy from the team.

“Excellent work, mate!” said a clearly excited yet carefully professional Max. “P3 — big improvement.”

Janne giggled almost involuntarily. “Thanks, Max!” he replied, sighing heavily. For a moment, the image — or a mental audiobyte — of Antti rang in his ears. “Head down now for tomorrow,” he added, as the elder Abovian would say.

Back in the paddock, Janne laid his Chase Cutter parallel to the garage and hurried to unstrap himself, as the car was hoisted lazily into the garage. He snapped his harness off, undid his neck brace, pushed his helmet off and forwards, and clung on to the DIADEM halo to pull himself out of the monocoque. In the Nexus Garage, it was all smiles and claps and thumbs-up around him: before he could construe the team’s reaction as an eerily-appropriate reassurance to his fragile ego, he quickly realized how it was that they knew exactly what made him feel warm and fuzzy inside.

Nexus Racing was more than his team, at this point. They were his family; and as he searched for the nurturing look of Gertrude across the paddock, and just outside the garage doors, he fell upon those cursed, icy, fucking unavoidable eyes. Suddenly, it was him and Ted, both paralyzed mid-unrelated-task, staring down each other’s souls; the melancholy in each other’s pupils so raw it was visible from ten meters away, for a moment so ephemeral he would have avoided it in any of the million parallel universes where he blinked right at that instant.

Rather obviously, Janne looked away to the side and held his eyes shut while biting his lip. If he hadn’t noticed what he was cooking in Liventia, he’d surely caught on now. Maybe the ignore treatment had its days numbered.
AUTONOMOUS TERRITORIES OF THE ABOVIAN UNION: Nykipiflugpuu

Home to Terho Talvela, three-time WGPC World Champion, and one-time WSRC World Champion

User avatar
Esmerel
Diplomat
 
Posts: 575
Founded: Aug 09, 2016
Democratic Socialists

Postby Esmerel » Sun May 28, 2023 6:23 pm

CHAPTER 5a
Chance Two


May 26 - Practice

It was a fairly quiet day in the Hwoarang garage.

Jean Mercer-Daly stood arms crossed in the Nexus garage, not doing much to change that fact. It wasn’t his job anymore, after all.

He had agreed to give Nexus one more year of his services as a test driver, working on the car through simulations at Nexus’s HQ and helping interpret data at race weekends like this one. He’d been to Liventia previously and worked through the team’s first of many recovery weekends, but it was only now that anything felt like he was settling into a routine. Not a dull, monotonous one, but a routine nonetheless.

Did Jean like it? Well, somewhat. He didn’t feel confident anymore about a race seat, and that was his decision- though as Max had pointed out, he still had an itch to go fast. This at least seemed to serve him well in solving that. He wondered if at any point he could take over driving one of the cars in a practice session, but that probably wouldn’t be allowed by the WGPC for fairness to the other teams, some of which didn’t sign test drivers out of a lack of necessity this season.

It helped that Max Rykinsvik was still working with him. Max had been one of the few people in his life who he could still rely on at pretty much any point: his father Kristophe was in his 60s and missing a leg, his mother Joanna was constantly abroad, coddled by her extended family, and his brother Evyn had since disappeared again, going street racing who knows where.

At the moment, Max was busy guiding Janne through the various practice programs. The team needed as much data as possible to understand where it was they needed to improve the most. And they really did need to improve- after a year at the top in 2017, they spent two years coming close, then started to drop further and further- and now, out of the season’s returning teams, they were in last place. Jean reasoned to himself that the Wardship might not put up with Nexus failing to save themselves from their downfall.

As their second driver for four seasons, he knew he could be of great use. He owed them that much.

“Janne, you’re doing alright so far- laps are in the mid 1:16s,” Max said to Janne over the radio. “We’ve got some pace still to find, but the data is looking really promising so far. Keep running a few more laps.”

Max lowered his headset to focus on looking more and more thoroughly at the telemetry being sent to him. Jean decided now was a decent moment to talk.

“Max, I wanted to say… thanks for getting me out here,” Jean mentioned.

“Hm? Oh, well… If you had to pinpoint why, even though I know you didn’t ask, I wanted to repay some favors,” Max replied. “Move through everything as smoothly as possible. Nexus gave us both great chances, plus you to me, and all that- I’m more than happy working to get them on their feet again after the blip.” He paused for a few seconds. “As it is, how about you? You drove the car a bit at Crossbay between Liventia and now; how did it feel?”

“I… I honestly enjoyed it.”

“Really? Good to hear,” Max noted.

“It’s an interesting design, absolutely, going all-in on a prototype,” Jean continued. “We had it last year, I guess, but I don’t think I’ve commented on it much- I do like it; just hoping it can perform any better than it has so far. There was the blip, sure, but maybe part of the downfall came from abandoning the tried-and-true methods in favor of this. Not disparaging this machine, just…”

“We’re not Nimban, of course, I can see why you have a bit of apprehension towards the new design,” Max said. “But I think that we can still put things together, if we work hard enough. Progress is progress. Plus, you can help with that.”

“I do know that… So how about you? Satisfied with Janne?” Jean asked.

“I think so. Sort of like you, I was unsure of what exactly I wanted to do; maybe go for something new,” Max answered. “But I think staying and working with a new driver has done the trick well. As for the troubles, I do have faith, and honestly? You should too. This team has a championship under their belt. They can have another, even if it takes time. Few more weekends, and it’ll all be a lot clearer.”

“I don’t know… Well, I mean that I feel weird for caring more about it now that I’m not in the races anymore,” Jean said.

“...Weird thoughts, I know. But again, give it time- and you’ll feel clearer,” Max said. “If you’re really hanging up the gloves for good, I want you to do so with a clear mind and confidence you were satisfied with it all.”

“Thanks for that,” Jean replied.

__________

May 27 - Qualifying

Located on the outskirts of the city of Hwoarang, the Hwoarang Racing Circuit uses old airfield runways to combine together several short straights and fast, sweeping turns. It has minimal elevation changes and plenty of opportunities to overtake, as well as large runoff areas to catch drivers that make mistakes. The track has been built to serve purpose to several categories of racing, with the WGPC visiting it for its shortest lap on the calendar, and one of its fastest.


Brendan read the Lapiz Point Post’s description of the track he was currently at while he cooled down from his Q1 run.

Coming into the second weekend of the year, he felt a little more confident in his driving. A bit of practice back at HQ, some small adjustments to the chassis, and coming to a track that suited the C101’s aggression better- it added up to what felt like a better chance. And Brendan was taking advantage of it, securing second place in Friday practice- just.003 off the top time- and now a fast enough time to advance to Q2 today.

That’s one more difference between last weekend and this one, he thought. More qualifying rounds, plus it’s easier to get into the next one. Top 21, then top 14.

As he continued to wait for the next session, he went over to speak with Cole and overview his progress so far.

“Brendan? I’m starting to like your pace,” Cole replied. “I think you ought to be faster in qualifying, since you’re fast in practice, but you’re still doing better.”

Brendan didn’t like Cole when he was disappointed. This was a nice change of pace to experience- caring, sort of, by pushing for more.

Now, Brendan had done a bit more. Two tenths away from the top time in Q1 was enough to get him into Q2. Another lap like that, and it'd be Q3 and a chance at a solid starting position.

-

A short time later, Brendan had begun another flying lap, his last of Q2.

The circuit at Hwoarang was much better suited to the C101, as Dr. Emerson had mentioned. With plenty of opportunities to open up the throttle and medium-speed corners balancing out the aerodynamic needs of the lap, it truly was a lightning-quick experience. One that Brendan had to step up and master if he wanted to do even better than he previously had.

Turn 1 was a heavy brake into a smooth left- well, all the turns were fairly smooth- and then into a short sprint to Turn 2, a longer right-hander. That took Brendan into a brief kink and another straight, which counted as Turn 3, and a miniature chicane he managed to handle flat-out. All the while, as Brendan handled the opening sector, he soared through the track with high speed and precision, building on the experience he had been gaining here, at Liventia, and the tests before then.

The sector- at least, he guessed, as he didn’t see the sector lines- closed up approaching turn 6, which was a reversal of Turn 5 before it. The next two turns ahead were much slower and sharper than most of the rest of the track- where the C101 would struggle just a bit- and yet Brendan felt confident to attack. He had the pace, and the will. Those, and the desire not to disappoint certain spectators.

”Pace is good, you have some room to use high boost, keep going!” Cole directed him as he shot past an alternate layout’s short pits.

Another large, round, smooth 180 was the form of Turn 9, and then came the back straight. Brendan opened up the rear wing and turned the power to the maximum, focusing on the right moment to undo said changes so as not to compromise the critical moments of the lap that were approaching: two sharp right handers separated by a short straight to close out the 4 kilometer lap, one much shorter and quicker than most racing circuits Brendan had driven on, simulator or not.

The brakes on the C101 were adequate for their job, but not as good as some other teams, leading to them faltering slightly into Turn 10 and costing Brendan the slightest of margins. But he knew it could have happened, so he didn’t let it get him down. The clock had expired. This was his attempt. Countless cars ahead had finished, and it was up to him to exceed them and not let others pass him by.

Almost as soon as he felt the lap had begun, it had ended. Brendan rounded the final corner and put all the power he had down to the checkered flag, watching his MFD’s lap timer count up and up.

The lap came to a close, and Brendan began to slow and set his car to inlap specs. His final lap was better than his previous. The top 14 would move on.

But as his MFD displayed the result, it revealed Brendan wouldn’t be one of them. P15. 1:11.339, +0.208. NEXT: LAN, 1:11.338.

Just one thousandth between him and Q3. Between Brendan and his engineer’s elated approval.

”Pick up some rubber for the weighbridge; I’m afraid you missed it,” a dejected Cole radioed in.

“...Sorry about that, Cole. I guess things like that just happen,” Brendan replied. “I’ll bring it in. We’ll have a better race.”

”...Hate for this to be taken the wrong way,” Cole began, ”but you really need to be better, Brendan. You have pace elsewhere. Why not when it matters?”

Brendan hated to hear it, but he knew there was a semblance of truth in Cole’s words, and he said nothing.

”Well, maybe there will be another chance for you to find wherever you put that pace tomorrow,” Cole continued. ”You know… it’s supposed to be a pretty huge day for motorsports in general tomorrow. For your own sake, Brendan… I hope you can play your part with a little more… emphasis. Because like I’ve said already, you clearly can.”

Brendan drove his car around Hwoarang one last time for the day, slowly but surely going back to where he started. There was a twinge of confidence in the air. One he could feel. But it wouldn’t come to him freely, much as he didn’t like how that was conveyed to him.

Yeah, Brendan didn’t like Cole when he was disappointed.
"They condemn that which they do not understand."
-The national motto of Esmerel, translated
A near-future tech nation ruled by science and reason. Offers great civil liberty but minimal political or economic liberty, leaning authleft. Population of roughly 90 million on an island about the size of Latvia or West Virginia, 800km east of Maryland, US and 500km south of Nova Scotia. Visit today.
Want to know more about Esmerel? My factbook is seriously outdated, but feel free to peek.
WGPC participant from S15-S20. Achieved 8 poles, 7 wins, 15 podiums; runner-up WDC in S16 and WDC in S20. Brief but unsuccessful stints as team owner in WGP2 and NSSCRA.

User avatar
Mlima Kijani
Bureaucrat
 
Posts: 50
Founded: Jan 26, 2021
Ex-Nation

Postby Mlima Kijani » Sun May 28, 2023 6:52 pm

Selection of articles from Kijani news media.

    Wretched qualifying amplifies doubts about Náttmörðsdóttir's role

    Sivaleinen driver Lillý Náttmörðsdóttir endured a fairly miserable qualifying session at Hwoarang to amplify doubts about her place in the WGPC paddock amid rumors some at the Mertagne-based team are starting to regret bringing the relatively untested Kijani driver on as driver for their debut season. "We picked her based on her doing well in our test drive, but her record otherwise is really bad, the warning signs were all there," said one mechanic on condition of anonymity after Náttmörðsdóttir finished 26th in qualifying for the Togonistan Grand Prix. Another source familiar with discussions at Sivaleinen said: "In hindsight, the job ad, 'Looks like an Aryan super-child (essential); almost capable of driving a car (optional)' may have needed some more workshopping." Náttmörðsdóttir will start on the penultimate row, one row behind teammate Kingston Walcott in 23rd. With neither Sivaleinen driver advancing to the second qualifying round, some questions have been asked about the car, but the team continue to back their frame. "I'm not saying there aren't some technical fixes, but I think we all know the real problem is in the cockpit," said a team official who declined to be named. Náttmörðsdóttir for her part said she was disappointed that the Hwoarang circuit, thought to be a better fit for her skills, had not been a good qualifying. "I'm not picking good racing lines. There was an opportunity to thread the chicane well and go tight into that first corner, but I kept going wide and losing a lot of speed." She said she would work with the mechanics on the car's aero but "didn't now expect to take much" from the race "except experience".

    Mlima Kijani names first ever female Vice President

    Rasida Ngalula has been named as Second Vice President, making her the first woman ever to hold the office of Vice President in Mlima Kijani. The Democratic People's Republic has three Vice Presidents, one each of the three major ethnic groupings, Ruhangoro, Kayura and Mkusesa. As Second Vice President, Mrs Ngalula will represent the Mkusesa people, and have responsibilities for government departments including economic development, health care and families, and environmental control. The latter has already aroused controversy given her husband, Chilemba Ngalula, has previously been implicated in a corruption scandal involving leasing oil drilling rights to Akhdari petroleum giant AOPIC at sub-market rates in exchange for kickbacks. Mrs Ngalula has denied all charges. She replaces Nyo Malanji, who has passed away at the age of 83. One of the leading figures of the Mkusesa People's Spear Front of the Kijani independence and anti-colonialist movement, he served as Vice President for over 30 years under Chane Njuguna, with whom he briefly shared a cell when captives of Græntfjall. The two later shared more salubrious quarters in government mansions. Malanji, the subject of numerous sanctions by foreign governments for his alleged corruption and misappropriation of aid funds, leaves a mixed legacy of an inspirational anticolonialist leader who was central to securing an equal role in the new nation for the historically marginalized Mkusesa people, but whose poor management of the VODAIS crisis and personal venality undid much of his popular acclaim. Mrs Ngalula was previously Director of the Regional Autonomy Council.

    Also in the news:
  • Barefoot Kijani runner smashes record in Hannasean Olympic trials
  • Meet "Maliki!" Lillý Náttmörðsdóttir's pet Kijani day gecko takes racing world by storm
  • Drugs crisis in rural Mlima Kijani as youth turn to illegal substances in face of poor economic, social prospects

User avatar
Commonwealth of Baker Park
Minister
 
Posts: 3196
Founded: Jan 10, 2018
Democratic Socialists

Postby Commonwealth of Baker Park » Sun May 28, 2023 6:57 pm

There was a good deal of bemused consternation in the aftermath of qualifying for the second race of the season.

Batu Tüvshinbayar had gotten through to Q3 after a practice session that saw him at the back of the field, although as in Liventia the spread from front to back wasn't that huge and he was able to find speed to make a midfield starting spot possible; Jordan Crowe on the other hand was unable to translate his speed in free practice into qualifying pace, consigned to the 12th row after going out in Q1.

On a shorter tack layout where there would be less importance placed on top end speed, the SOC engineers had several avenues to pursue in search of a strategy for each driver based on the circumstances. Studying how the runners starting at the back ended up in the top ten in the last round, the idea of Jordan going on a long early stint then switching over to new softer tires to run to the end appeared to be a good plan A, with the ability to switch to a two stop plan if there was a significant safety car period; for Batu, the initial options were more varied, but would require a certain degree of outside factors falling into place. A shorter stint on the softs followed by a long harder tire run with the option at the end to pop in for softs again to sprint to the end would involve more variables, including track position and cars ahead going with just a one stop strategy.

Just as in their first season of WGP2, one of the main points of emphasis that Mike Lambert and the rest of the top people in the team stressed to the drivers, crew, mechanics & support personnel was consistency of standards: paying attention to details, speaking up about quality control, being accountable and holding others accountable. One of the mechanics who was a wheel changer had mentioned in the aftermath of Liventia that he felt like he needed more live speed practice, which is one of things they'd not had a lot of prior to the first weekend. So extra pit stop practice was worked on during the leadup to Togonistan, and everyone agreed that they felt better and more confident because of it.

The marketing staff had brought a larger selection of merchandise to sell at the track than they'd had at the first race, as there had been a slight delay in getting some items finished before the start of the season; the mobile 'Orange Cow Pavilion' that was the swag HQ for the team had a much better first day of sales here than at the previous race.

Back in Haskins, Sammi and Nick were now well into the testing for the AOGP season with the new iteration of those cars, which were an evolution of the previous season's machines but overseen by a new member of the design department, Dennis Hogan. Like the GP cars, these were manufactured entirely in-house with the new autoclave for producing the carbon fiber components.
Rugby World Cup 36 Champions/AOCAF 62 & 66 Champions/WLC 42 Champions
2x Under-18 World Cup (SWC 5&9) Champions
DBC 53/74th U21 World Cup Champions
Eagles Cup 13 Runner-Up
Baptism of Fire 67 Runner-Up
AOCAF LVIII (co-host), LX 3rd Place
World Cup 85, AOCAF LXIII, Women's World Cup 15 4th Place
World Cup 90 Quarterfinals (Co-host)
World Cup 81/82/83/84(co-host)/86/87/88/94 Round of 16
World Cup 80/89/91/92/93 Group Stage
Basketball
AOBC 5 Champions
Football
NSCF 5x Mineral Conference Champions (18/19/20/21/23)
Lacrosse
WLC President
WLC 38/43 3rd Place
WLC 34/41 4th Place
WLC 30/31(host)/32/33/35/36/37 (host)/39/40 Quarterfinal
WLC 29 Playoff Round

Rugby 7s AORC 1&2 Champions
AO Twenty20 Runner-up

User avatar
Vilita and Turori
Ambassador
 
Posts: 1296
Founded: Nov 20, 2011
Ex-Nation

Postby Vilita and Turori » Sun May 28, 2023 6:59 pm

Image


Image
InfoInternet Grand Prix of Liventia presented by Liventia Airways, Talbott Autodrome, Talbott, Liventia :: One race into the World Grand Prix Championship's 20th season and four of the campaign's Rookie Drivers have already scored in the points to break through for the first time. The shining star of the group was of course Adonis Fitzpatrick, the Urotovsky-Gatutin driver who was the last driver officially named to the grid for the season. Fitzpatrick nearly took the victory in their very first Grand Prix Start and may well have done so if not for the surprising speed shown by the two Eminent Grand Prix Cars - who themselves were the last team named to the grid for this World Grand Prix Season 20. While the podium places were all filled strictly by drivers and teams who were late to the grid, they would beat out the local favorite R.L. Cruisin who was one of the first drivers signed for the season after returning to the very same Portland-Carvenlo racing outfit that they had driven for one season ago when they had won the Grand Prix of Liventia.

While Adonis Fitzpatrick was the only Rookie Driver to finish on the Podium in Liventia, they would not be the only Rookie Driver in the Points. Sophie McCreary was impressive in her debut for Pressley Racing and put the Brústeinn Tyre supplier in the points with a 7th place run in Car #42. McCreary would lead a trio of rookie drivers finishing 7th, 8th and 9th in the results with Kingston Walcott putting Sivaleinen GP into the points on their debut - the only team that is completely new to World Grand Prix motorsport to place in the points on the opening race of the season, though other teams such as Urotovsky-Gatutin have recently graduated from the World Grand Prix 2 Circuit. Sam Blaatschappen of Diarcesia was the third in the trio of Rookie Drivers at the back end of the points positions putting the GPA Pryfors Bilar #33 across the line in 9th position. It was very nearly four consecutive rookie drivers at the end of the points, but reigning World Grand Prix 2 Champion Batu Tüvshinbayar was bested to the line by Cocoabo #23 for the 10th and final spot in the points. While only four Rookie Drivers are in the points - and thusly ranked in the Toys '4' All Rookie of the Season standings so far in World Grand Prix Championship Season 20, with the competitive balance shown from start to finish on the grid so far it is all but certain that other Rookie Drivers will soon rise up to contend with Fitzpatrick and the others for the Rookie of the Season Honors.

Pos # ▍DRV Name                      Team [Engine]                                        Tyres                    Pts
1 74 ▍FTZ Adonis Fitzpatrick Urotovsky-Gatutin [Preston] Tropicorp 18
2 42 ▍MCR Sophie McCreary Pressley Racing [Kaylan] Brústeinn 4
3 91 ▍WAL Kingston Walcott Sivaleinen [Preston] Tropicorp 3
4 33 ▍BLA Sam Blaatschappen GPA Pryfors Bilar [Sidus] Phoenician-In Motion 2






Image
Grand Prix of Togonistan, Hwoarang Racing Circuit, Togonistan :: It has been a fast start to the World Grand Prix Championships' 20th campaign for Togonistan Licensed drivers as Darian Vilau claimed pole position for the season opening Grand Prix of Liventia driving for Togonistan flagged Kaylan Motorsport, followed by another pole position by a local driver one week later at the Grand Prix of Togonistan itself. Dom Falepeau, one of the favorites to win the World Grand Prix 20 Championship after a top 3 finish in the points one season prior would take Pole Position at their home circuit after turning the best time in the 3rd Qualifying Session. It was far from a surprise to see Falepeau on pole position at their home race, even if they were driving for a competing Portland-Carvenlo team. Dalepeau led the World Grand Prix Championship Circuit in total pole positions one season ago and with their pole win at the Hwoarang Racing Circuit, Falepeau would move into a tie for 5th in the modern World Grand Prix era (Inclusive from WGPC Season 8 ) with their fifth career World Grand Prix Championship Pole Position. The only active driver with more career WGPC Pole Positions than Dom Falepeau is their Portland-Carvenlo teammate, R.L. Cruisin. It also moves Carvenlo into a tie for first place in the modern era among teams with 10 Pole Positions, along with Vilita and Turori Motorsports and the defunct Velog GP Team.



Image VILITA & TURORI RACER
Image
Image
@VTRacer

Dom Falepeau is back at it again, Taking Pole Position for their home Grand Prix and marking their 4th Pole Position in the last 2 seasons. R.L. Cruisin and iBen Toralmintii will both start outside the Top 15 while Race Eelandii VTGP's Lane Carter may be the teams best opportunity for points this weekend.

#WGPC :: #GPTogonistan :: #twiiturpole


Image
Last edited by Vilita and Turori on Sun May 28, 2023 7:01 pm, edited 3 times in total.

User avatar
Aboveland
Ambassador
 
Posts: 1704
Founded: Dec 04, 2013
Scandinavian Liberal Paradise

Postby Aboveland » Sun May 28, 2023 7:01 pm

for the ZX-Flow Energy Grand Prix of Togonistan at Hwoarang Racing Circuit
AUTONOMOUS TERRITORIES OF THE ABOVIAN UNION: Nykipiflugpuu

Home to Terho Talvela, three-time WGPC World Champion, and one-time WSRC World Champion

User avatar
Aboveland
Ambassador
 
Posts: 1704
Founded: Dec 04, 2013
Scandinavian Liberal Paradise

Postby Aboveland » Sun May 28, 2023 7:11 pm

Week 4: Race
Conditions:      	Dry	
Laps: 76
Nation: TGN
Circuit: Hwoarang Racing Circuit
Event: ZX-Flow Energy Grand Prix of Togonistan
Safety Car Deployed on Laps:
Cars on Grid: 28
Image


Start       	POS  # ▍DRV Name                     Team                     	Time      	Pts		
1 FAL 1 23 C23 Cocoabo #23 Race Eelandii VTGP 01:38:03.225 25
2 MCR 2 5 EDW Rudy Edwards Preston Autos 00:00:21.591 18
3 LAU 3 42 MCR Sophie McCreary Pressley Racing 00:00:51.212 14
4 EDW 4 17 LAU Janne Laukkanen Nexus Racing 00:01:09.877 10
5 CRT 5 19 FAL Dom Falepeau Portland-Carvenlo Laps Down: 1 8
6 FTZ 6 74 FTZ Adonis Fitzpatrick Urotovsky-Gatutin Laps Down: 1 6
7 VIL 7 94 LAN Ryker Lane Nexus Racing Laps Down: 1 4
8 DEV 8 11 CRT Lane Carter Race Eelandii VTGP Laps Down: 1 3
9 PRE 9 37 HAU Laura Haukanna GPA Pryfors Bilar Laps Down: 1 2
10 ANG 10 50 LUN Sara Luna Viska Racing Laps Down: 1 1
11 HAU 11 87 YAN Bryce Yannec Pressley Racing Laps Down: 1
12 LAN 12 28 DEE Aaron Deering Viska Racing Laps Down: 1
13 TUV 13 88 PRE Ted Pressley Kaylan Racing Team Laps Down: 1
14 ARC 14 12 VIL Darian Vilau Kaylan Racing Team Laps Down: 1
15 FAE 15 14 VIA Skiia Vialiv Urotovsky-Gatutin Laps Down: 1
16 DEE 16 84 ANG Angela Tan Fang Ling Cygnus Motorsports Team Laps Down: 1
17 TII 17 71 FAE Brendan Faloe Cygnus Motorsports Team Laps Down: 1
18 VIA 18 51 CRU R.L. Cruisin Portland-Carvenlo Laps Down: 1
19 JSY 19 33 BLA Sam Blaatschappen GPA Pryfors Bilar Laps Down: 1
20 BLA 20 24 JCR Jordan Crowe Scuderia Orange Cow Laps Down: 1
21 C23 21 40 AKS Adriana Kowalski Lilian Eminent Laps Down: 1
22 CRU 22 9 TUV Batu Tüvshinbayar Scuderia Orange Cow Laps Down: 2
23 WAL 23 1 TII iBen Toralmintii Tropicorp-Colourworks Laps Down: 2
24 JCR 24 13 JSY Ji So-Yeong Tropicorp-Colourworks Laps Down: 2
25 LUN 25 10 NAT Lillý Náttmörðsdóttir Sivaleinen Laps Down: 2
26 NAT 26 91 WAL Kingston Walcott Sivaleinen Laps Down: 2
27 YAN 27 7 DEV Anneliese Devereux Eminent Laps Down: 2
28 AKS DNF 96 ARC William Archer Preston Autos Ret. lap 8


Driver's Standings

Pos # ▍DRV Name                      Team [Engine]                                        Tyres                    Pts
1 23 C23 Cocoabo #23 Race Eelandii VTGP [Tropicorp] Tropicorp 26
2 7 DEV Anneliese Devereux Eminent [Sidus] Phoenician-In Motion 25
3 74 FTZ Adonis Fitzpatrick Urotovsky-Gatutin [Preston] Tropicorp 24
4 42 MCR Sophie McCreary Pressley Racing [Kaylan] Brústeinn 18
4 5 EDW Rudy Edwards Preston Autos [Preston] Tropicorp 18
6 40 AKS Adriana Kowalski Lilian Eminent [Sidus] Phoenician-In Motion 14
7 37 HAU Laura Haukanna GPA Pryfors Bilar [Sidus] Phoenician-In Motion 10
7 51 CRU R.L. Cruisin Portland-Carvenlo [Carvenlo] Tabtac 10
7 17 LAU Janne Laukkanen Nexus Racing [Paragon Warp] Phoenician-In Motion 10
10 19 FAL Dom Falepeau Portland-Carvenlo [Carvenlo] Tabtac 8
11 88 PRE Ted Pressley Kaylan Racing Team [Kaylan] Phoenician-In Motion 6
12 94 LAN Ryker Lane Nexus Racing [Paragon Warp] Phoenician-In Motion 4
13 11 CRT Lane Carter Race Eelandii VTGP [Tropicorp] Tropicorp 3
13 91 WAL Kingston Walcott Sivaleinen [Preston] Tropicorp 3
15 33 BLA Sam Blaatschappen GPA Pryfors Bilar [Sidus] Phoenician-In Motion 2
16 50 LUN Sara Luna Viska Racing [Viska] Phoenician-In Motion 1


Teams' Standings

Pos NAT ▍Team [Engine]                                        Tyres                    Pts
1 ETL Eminent [Sidus] Phoenician-In Motion 39
2 V&T Race Eelandii VTGP [Tropicorp] Tropicorp 29
3 PDN Urotovsky-Gatutin [Preston] Tropicorp 24
4 TMB Pressley Racing [Kaylan] Brústeinn 18
5 HAP Preston Autos [Preston] Tropicorp 18
6 LEN Portland-Carvenlo [Carvenlo] Tabtac 18
7 NIM Nexus Racing [Paragon Warp] Phoenician-In Motion 14
8 DCS GPA Pryfors Bilar [Sidus] Phoenician-In Motion 12
9 TGN Kaylan Racing Team [Kaylan] Phoenician-In Motion 6
10 MRT Sivaleinen [Preston] Tropicorp 3
11 AUR Viska Racing [Viska] Phoenician-In Motion 1
12 ESM Cygnus Motorsports Team [Tropicorp] Tropicorp 0
13 ABL Tropicorp-Colourworks [Tropicorp] Tropicorp 0
14 CBP Scuderia Orange Cow [Tropicorp] Tropicorp 0

User avatar
Mertagne
Diplomat
 
Posts: 528
Founded: Oct 24, 2013
Inoffensive Centrist Democracy

Postby Mertagne » Mon May 29, 2023 5:01 am

STYLE OVER SUBSTANCE?: SIVALEINEN CEO CRITICISED OVER POOR WGPC PERFORMANCE
The Mertagnian team is questioned on their choice of hires

WGPC Team CEO Annikki Sivaleinen was notably absent from the Sivaleinen LCR Origas Racing Team’s second WGPC outing in Togonistan, and was recently questioned in Mertagne over her team’s lacklustre performance in the race. During the race, the team’s drivers sat at the back of the pack, finishing 25th and 26th, only making places to Eminent’s Anneliese Devereux, who seemingly had issues with the Eminent car, and a retired William Archer. The Sivaleinen cars were ultimately 2 laps down by the end of the race, being blue-flagged to make way for the top four cars that managed to pass them with ease on the track’s long back straight.

“I’m not sure what exactly caused us to have a bad weekend, I guess it was a perfect storm of things going wrong. Poor car performance, bad strategy calls, and issues with driving to boot, the wind was on our fronts the entire weekend”, said the team CEO, who until the appointment of Team Principal Vitaliy Aaltonen, had had her sights set on managing the team herself with a council of mechanical engineers at her beck and call to advise her on race procedure. Ultimately, the appointment of Aaltonen was likely the correct one, but Annikki Sivaleinen was also instrumental in the hiring of the team’s two rookie drivers, both of which appear to have been hired in order to compliment the fashion brand, rather than on their driving skill. While data has shown that Kijani driver Lillý Náttmörðsdóttir impressed in the car during the team’s internal test, she has not shown the race pace reflective of other drivers in the season to date.

While the blondes may be putting on brave faces and talking about improvements and the power of bouncing back, in the background there are rumours that the team may be looking to replace one of their drivers at the halfway point of the season. Regrettably, second-choice Ji So-Yeong was scouted by Tropicorp-Colourworks, and Aaron Deering, who showed race-pace in the Sivaleinen internal test but didn’t find the car palatable, is currently also outpacing the Sivaleinens in the Viska Racing car. A driver swap is unlikely, but of the two blondes in the cockpit of the Sivaleinen cars, Náttmörðsdóttir in the number 10 is the one likely to be spun out of the team structure in favour of a driver like Ricardo Schmidt, a closer-to-home option for the Mertagnian team. Kingston Walcott, while not on the chopping block just yet due to a points finish in the opening race of the season, found himself sliding backwards in the last race and was significantly off the pace in qualifying due to a driver error in the session meaning he had a single chance to escape the knockout session.

Sivaleinen’s hiring of blond-haired, pale-skinned drivers and staff like herself has drawn a lot of ire on the internet, claiming that she’s not doing enough for “diversity in the sport”, and that the team’s about us page looks like a Corvidae dog whistle. Responding to these claims via social media, Annikki Sivaleinen claims that the team are “commited to maintaining a diverse and inclusive workplace” and that the team has “only ever focused on hiring the top talent available to them, regardless of creed.”

When asked if Sivaleinen regrets losing Bryce Yannec, who managed a strong drive in Togonistan by clawing his Pressley Racing car from 27th to 11th after a conservative tyre strategy on a decent tyre paid off, Annikki seemed hurt by the accusation that she’d lost him in the first place. “Yannec clearly wasn’t ready to be a team leader here at Sivaleinen, and has instead chosen to play second fiddle to Sophie McReary over at Pressley. Instead, we’re attempting to cultivate a strong driver pairing that will work together to improve their performance. As both are new to the WGPC scene, I’ve been told it will inevitably take time for that to emerge. Don’t let one bad week put a damper on a whole season - it’s not a botched handbag launch.”

Reports that the car is underperforming based on current expectations has also had many questioning the team’s technical ability. Reports have found that the team have found integration with the strong Preston Skychief V6 engine difficult, with the car proving “draggy” on the straights. The Preston appears to be acting as an adhesive plaster over a poor straight line aero-package, and this was clearly seen over the race weekend in Togonistan, as the cars struggled to keep up with the pack even with the Drag Reduction System. Sivaleinen was asked to comment on this, and a response was given by a senior engineer in the LCR Origas team. “We’re looking to bring some upgrades to Cocoabo Park, as a part of our ongoing improvement to the vehicle. A new rear wing design that has been in development since the pre-season testing should be ready to implement by the time we get to Tropicorp. The circuit looks to suit our current car setup, and hopefully the drivers will find the car easier to drive than it has been previously. The Preston Autos folk have been very useful in their continued commitment to allow us to get the most out of the engine, and in the coming weeks we should see Sivaleinen step up our game and bring something more to the table.”

Team Principal Viltaliy Aaltonen, however, seems less convinced. In a post-race press briefing, he seemed aloof when asked by the media about the race performance. “We weren’t on pace today in the race, it’s as simple as that. We made a strategy call to choose the option tyres in what we felt would be a more aggressive strategy to close the gap. The tyre degradation on the Tropicorps was much worse than qualifying seemed to suggest, and we felt the sting of that, alongside Colourworks, it seems. In combination with our setup, it’s no wonder that we were two of the six cars that finished two laps down.” when pressured to comment on the drivers, he claimed that they "worked as hard as they could" but that "the distraction of nursing the tyres clearly got to the drivers, some more than others".

In the coming weeks, the WGPC heads to Cocoabo Park, and the Sivaleinen cars will be looking to impress with their new upgrade, and fight their way into Q3 and eventually secure a double points finish. The team, having initially set their sights on a rivalry with Tumbra’s Pressley Racing Engineering, will be looking to take a chunk out of the Pressley points gap and climb higher up the table in the constructors championship. Sivaleinen currently sit 10th with three points from two races, and internal communications suggest the team are looking for a top half finish in the constructors by the end of the season.
Last edited by Mertagne on Mon May 29, 2023 6:14 am, edited 1 time in total.
user pronouns: he/him

The Nation of Mertagne
Capital: Dannin ⨳ Trigram: MRT ⨳ Demonym: Mertagnian ⨳ Map: Here!Else: Here!
first to make a 'poor life choice'ANAIA NATIONAuthor of NS Issue #1508

User avatar
Esmerel
Diplomat
 
Posts: 575
Founded: Aug 09, 2016
Democratic Socialists

Postby Esmerel » Wed May 31, 2023 9:14 pm

CHAPTER 5b
Perspectives


The Grand Prix of Togonistan was uneventful and unfortunate for almost everyone involved. As it happened, Cygnus was further down that list of poor fortunes than most.

Lap 28 of 76. Both C101s were still out on track, but struggling far down the order. The track, whose characteristics should have coalesced perfectly with the car’s, had seemingly betrayed them- though at least Cygnus were far from the only cars affected.

The Togonistani weather had already taken its toll. The tires, and those that had chosen them, were caught off guard by the track’s abrasiveness, brought on in part by the heat. It was a stark contrast to what the simulation data had read. To that end, both Brendan and Angela had started on soft tires, hoping to make up early ground or at least keep up with the field. Said tires were forced to be changed just 15 laps into the event, refitted for mediums, which were also starting to struggle.

On a track like this, harder compounds would usually be a death sentence for a points finish- at least, if they weren’t carefully studied. A few cars- and by few, just four- seemed to find an effective footing and run away from the rest of the field; even those cars that changed their race strategies couldn’t pick up the pace effectively enough. That ship had sailed.

It was a sour mood, then, for Cole Schmied. His mind didn’t go as far as default to chastising the team for underperforming- he knew of the external factors, and had gone through situations similar for years. But it stung him that he was at the very bottom again. A team trying to punch desperately over their weight. When was it that they would get their act together and… well, act?

“Brendan, keep the power on set 2, turn it up to defend, but we need to ease our way through this or we’re not finishing,” he radioed to Brendan, dejectedly.

Just across the station from Cole was his twin brother Carol, continuing his own work as Angela’s engineer. It didn’t take much to understand that the two worked differently, but proof was always welcome:

“Angela, we might have been caught out by the conditions, but you’re doing a good job. Keep the power low and I’m sure we can still salvage something to mend our spirits. You’re doing great,” was their message.

The brothers had both been engineers in the EGTC, Esmerel’s premier GT race series since 1982. They had worked for separate teams- Cole for Team Pevensey, a backmarker-turned-championship contender, and Carol for Woodson, a plucky underdog that everyone was just happy to see keep turning up and doing the best they could. Their approaches to the task of engineering the best race for their drivers to run had thus gone down two different paths.

And here they were, together for the first time, both of them stuck in a team going nowhere. Carol seemed to like it. Cole’s feelings were inconclusive- but whether or not Cygnus changed course would finalize his thoughts.

If anything could help soothe his ailing-at-the-moment mind, however, it would be understanding just why Carol was still so gleeful. “Carol… Why is this how you handle a disaster?” Cole asked.

“Excuse me?” Carol reacted, scrambling to lower his mic so as not to confuse Angela.

“I mean what I said; don’t make me repeat it for the class to hear,” Cole sternly continued. “I want to know why the both of us are stuck in something worse that we could have even expected- and you’re handling it like we’re the dominant party.”

“...You know, I could ask the same of you and how you treat everything short of perfection as useless,” Carol replied. “And weren’t you the one who knew it would be like starting over? We’re only on our second race. It’s going to take time.”

“Time we might not have, if the investors get their say,” Cole retorted. “If we don’t start to perform soon, our sponsors might withdraw. They have the money we need to stay in this game for longer than a season- or even just a few races.”

“Unlike you, they know the meaning of the word ‘patience’,” Carol said. “Now can you stop this useless bickering? At this rate, the cameras will be on us.”

“I guess we won’t agree on things, like we’ve always seemed to avoid,” Cole admitted. “...Look, all I’m asking this team is to replicate the success they’ve already found. We have potential. Can’t we use it?”

-

The brothers continued to glare at each other briefly. In the garage, both Lianna and Dr. Emerson watched on.

“I suppose you had a valid reason to hire them?” Lianna asked.

“Yes, I did. I know they don’t mean us, or each other, any true vitriol,” Dr. Emerson defended. “I think it provides a solid balancing act. Push for success, but be not afraid to criticize failure- fairly and constructively, anyway.”

“...I’m left wondering how they were nurtured, for twins to become so separate,” Lianna continued. “They aren’t identical, but at first glance you wouldn’t guess a relation.”

“...We all have to have confidence. Especially through today,” Dr. Emerson said. “If we’re struggling while the upper hand is in reach, we’ll have to find every other opportunity we can get.”

“Phenomenal,” Lianna remarked.

A few quiet seconds passed. Lianna, sensing that nothing much else was going to come of this day, brought out a small tablet, opening an Internet browser.

“While this opportunity is upon us,” she began, “I’d like to have your thoughts on something I found.”

“Something to show me? Go ahead.”

Cygnus, Nexus cars "unfit to be called open-wheelers"; Cygnus car "particularly dangerous" with ambitious closed-cockpit concept: Pressley Racing CEO


“This was a headline in Tumbran news from around the Liventian Grand Prix, actually,” Lianna said. “It seems that we’ve a serious detractor from the word ‘go’.”

“...I wonder if it was worth it to avoid controversy,” Dr. Emerson wondered aloud, fazed slightly by the news. “It seems that it always finds its target.”

“True, but Charles Pressley is somewhat of an inflammatory man,” Lianna noted. “We may not even be sure if this claim is genuine, or what you might call ‘clickbait’.”

“Well, once I have an opportunity, I’ll be ready to offer a genuine answer,” Dr. Emerson said. “Once we’re through this weekend- and the feelings of missed opportunities while we’re at it.”

“All in good time. I’m sure.”

“...So long as that good time comes- not just in our perspective, but in others’.”

__________

THE LAPIZ POINT POST
The biggest news in Esmerel and beyond, brought to you as it should be

-

SPORTS:
CYGNUS- OUT OF THEIR DEPTH AND UNDER ATTACK?

________________________________________________________________________________________

This is a LPP original article, which may be rehosted on other sites.

The start of the WGPC season has not been kind to some, and one of the teams facing poor results is the plucky local hero, Cygnus Motorsport Team.

With finishes of 17th, 20th, 16th, and 17th in the first 2 races, the team sits on no points in the World Constructors’ Championship, only ahead of Tropicorp-Colourworks Grand Prix on countback- and that’s owing to the latter team’s incredible misfortune and aging chassis, which pundits say are both likely to turn around before the year is out.

Some race fans have already taken to preparing the coffin for the newest Esmerelian team to hit the international stage, as early on it appears to be following its predecessors despite every attempt not to. However, team principal Dr. William Emerson has rebuked these claims, stating that “We are not quitters. We may be struggling, but we knew it was a tough climb, every one of us, and so did our investors. We’re in it for the long haul, and until the swan sings their song we’re going to fight. And they won’t be singing for a while, trust me- Cygnus University doesn’t even have a choir department.”

We reached out to Dr. Emerson for further comment, to which he was happy to respond. On the topic of making gains on the rest of the field, he had this to say: “Our basic design was just that: basic, and we should be able to make light adaptations to each race track we visit over the next few weeks. Our suppliers at Tropicorp are working equally hard to bridge the gap to the other suppliers after a shaky start, and we have every confidence that a reliable organization such as theirs will have little issue doing so. There’s still more than enough time to gain as much ground as we can- particularly for the final few races of the calendar, which will suit our car nicely.”

In other news, Dr. Emerson had a reply for a series of inflammatory remarks made by rival team principal Charles Pressley of the Tumbran team Pressley Racing Engineering. In those remarks, Pressley drew attention to a few cars on the WGPC grid, focusing on Cygnus and their competitor, the C101, stating it was “dangerous” and “unfit to be called [an] open-wheeler”.

“The comments made by [Charles Pressley] are short-sighted and disingenuous,” said Dr. Emerson. “We have spent a solid 2 to 3 years developing the C101 for racing, slowly building on the design bit by bit after each new possibility came to us. All four wheels are without fenders, making the car an open-wheeler regardless of the comments. In addition, our closed-cockpit concept has been strenuously tested, and operates identically in protection to the standard halo bar.”

It is believed that Pressley made those comments after a difficult weekend at the Liventian Grand Prix, to distract the public from his team’s struggle. Pressley Racing Engineering currently sits in P5 in the World Constructors’ Championship, in the middle of a three-way tie on 18 points.

Further comments have also been made about Cygnus’s car from international onlookers, ranging from praise:

“Such a science-fiction future look, it’s beautiful” -a fan from Hapilopper

To neutrality:

“It almost looks like an RC car” -a fan from Saint Kanye

To concern:

“Man, those Cygnus (sic) should be hot as hell. Call their car a mobile sauna” -a fan from Lisander

Dr. Emerson has been more than ready to address other concerns, stating, “The cockpit meets all WGPC safety regulations. The steering wheel and seatbelt both have the mandated quick-release that enables them to be removed within two seconds each, and the cockpit lid has two easy-push levers, either of which will open the cockpit. For further safety, it uses a ‘soft-lock’ system that enables opening with sufficient force even when the lever is shut, in the event of electrics failure. Alternatively, it can be opened remotely if the driver cannot. Finally, to alleviate cooling issues, specifically-designed air channels in the chassis enable precise airflow into the cockpit, cooling the driver and engine while minimizing aerodynamic disruption. These are design choices we hope other teams may someday adopt, or at least study to create versions of their own.”

The next race of the WGPC calendar is the Cocoabo Preservation Grand Prix, 02-04 June, at the Cocoabo Park Circuit in Tropicorp.

DRIVERS’ CHAMPIONSHIP STANDINGS
After 2 of 10 Rounds
POSITIONDRIVER (NAT)CONSTRUCTORPOINTS
01Cocoabo #23 (TRP)VTGP-Tropicorp26
02Anneliese Devereux (LIS)Eminent-Sidus25
03Adonis Fitzpatrick (AFT)UrGa-Preston24
04Rudy Edwards (HAP)Preston18
05Sophie McCreary (TMB)Pressley-Kaylan18
06Adriana Kowalski (VEZ)Eminent-Sidus14
07Janne Laukkanen (ABL)Nexus-Paragon Warp10
08R. L. Cruisin (VIL)Portland-Carvenlo10
09Laura Haukanna (AUR)Pryfors Bilar-Sidus10
10Dom Falepeau (TGN)Portland-Carvenlo8


CONSTRUCTORS’ CHAMPIONSHIP STANDINGS
After 2 of 10 rounds

POSITIONCONSTRUCTOR (NAT)POINTS
01Eminent-Sidus (ETH)39
02VTGP-Tropicorp (V&T)29
03UrGa-Preston (PDN)24
04Preston (HAP)18
05Pressley-Kaylan (TMB)18
06Portland-Carvenlo (LEN)18
07Nexus-Paragon Warp (NIM)14
08Pryfors Bilar-Sidus (DCS)12
09Kaylan (TGN)6
10Sivaleinen-Preston (MRT)3
Last edited by Esmerel on Thu Jun 01, 2023 6:50 am, edited 1 time in total.
"They condemn that which they do not understand."
-The national motto of Esmerel, translated
A near-future tech nation ruled by science and reason. Offers great civil liberty but minimal political or economic liberty, leaning authleft. Population of roughly 90 million on an island about the size of Latvia or West Virginia, 800km east of Maryland, US and 500km south of Nova Scotia. Visit today.
Want to know more about Esmerel? My factbook is seriously outdated, but feel free to peek.
WGPC participant from S15-S20. Achieved 8 poles, 7 wins, 15 podiums; runner-up WDC in S16 and WDC in S20. Brief but unsuccessful stints as team owner in WGP2 and NSSCRA.

User avatar
TJUN-ia
Minister
 
Posts: 3269
Founded: Oct 04, 2019
Inoffensive Centrist Democracy

WGPC pt 7 (II) - Good? Better? Eh?

Postby TJUN-ia » Thu Jun 01, 2023 3:29 pm

Race time...and this time, things were hoped to be different in a good way. As Sunday came into being as the hype began to build for the ZX-Flow Energy Grand Prix of Togonistan, the feeling surrounding both TJUN-ian drivers was actually one of hope above anything else. Both Lane Carter and Batu Tüvshinbayar managed to make it into Q3 yesterday and that certainly instill a bit of confidence into both of their heads, with the Galarian looking to try and produce some magic from P5 and Batu looking to score from P13. Lane got into race mode across the morning by simply focusing on his race and nothing else while Batu focuses on strategy with the guys over at SOC. There was a bit of excitement in the air for what was to come and with a little shindig going down later on, there would certainly be a lot of time for fun after the five lights went out.

This race was 76 laps long due to the short track with no safety cars being deployed at all, so most of the battling was for position apart from Will Archer's retirement on lap 8. Batu didn't exactly have the best of times out there. sliding down the field at a rate that seemed to emulate the NN days more than anything else. Pitstops helped but it didn't feel good to end up 2 laps down in P22. As he would end up saying in his post-race interview, "I don't know what went wrong today. The car felt good yesterday and I hoped that I could make up some ground today...but it just wasn't to be. I'll come back stronger but...yeah, I'm feeling good right now.

For Lane Carter, his race was a bit quiet but while he did end up a lap down, he still managed a good race to finish in the points for the first time - P8 and 3 points to be exact. He would be overtaken by 3 drivers in this race - Adonis Fitzpatrick, who ended up in 6th, Ryker Lane, who passed late on to finish in 7th, and his teammate Fast Cocaobo...who came from P21 to win the fucking race. Cocoabo #23 beat Rudy Edwards and Sophie McCreary to that win with Janne Laukkanen, Dom Falepeau, Donny, Ryker, Lane, Laura Haukanna and Sara Luna rounding out the Top 10. Of course, he was happy for the team and for Fast Coacobo, who he gave a big hug after the race, but there was something inside that made him feel that maybe...he could've been up there with the Cocoabo. It was a sentiment he shared post-race in a way that wasn't meant to be bad - just saying that "Faast Cocoabo did what they needed to do and I wish I held up my end of the bargain. It's nice to get points on the board but...I guess I wish I had more of an impact today."

Fast Coacobo leads the Drivers standings with Lane now on the board in P13, the combined score helping Race Eelandii to 2nd in the Constructors while SOC is one of 3 teams left to get off the mark alongside Cygnus and Tropicorp-Colourworks. The next event will be the Cocoabo Preservation Grand Prix in Cocoabo Forest, a track both drivers are familiar with - especially Lane, who got his WGPC start by performing well at this very track.

But before all that...it was time for BOLT to do their magic in time for the 2nd Meeting of the Young Driver's Communion - Will Archer's group of young drivers. Ted Pressley should be there as should someone else, Will was obviously going to invite Donny so Lane had the honour of making Batu join the fold of this little community. Despite all the previous consternations Batu has had about "interfering" with Donny since his WGPC step-up, Batu was happy to accept the invitation...and they were going to roll into this location in style. Smart shirts, black leather trousers, denim sleeveless jackets and some cool shades - all provided by BOLT via their sponsorship. Acquiring sponsors for this season was a personal choice they both made but in this environment, it certainly came in handy...and they were ready to chill out and have some fun.
1st: ECC4/5, NSSCRA13, RLWC22, IBS20, EBT3, EIHT2, ET20V
2nd: NSCF24/26, ARWC4, WC:TOTS, IBC34, IBS17, RUWC33/35, ECC6, EKT, WCoH52 T20WC18
3rd: ARWC3, IBC32/41, ECC3/7, ARWC6, ET20IV, ECT, RUWC37, WCoH56
NSSCRA - JR
T1: #07 Michael Stefan (S13 T1 Champ)/#64 Alfonso Mercado/#03 Maddison Riley-Jones (S10 T2 Champ)
T2: #96 Alice Jepkosgei/#70 Gongming Gao [NCR]/#79 Axel Chase

WGPO: #11 Lane Carter/ #9 Batu Tüvshinbayar (WGP2 S5 Champion)
NSTT: 4 S-Titles (3 RU)/2 D-Titles (6 RU)

UN - U1
TJUN (Ta-Jun) - An organ of the UN that focuses on "international role-play" (i.e. USA = Fang the Sniper) (U2)
TJUN-ia (Ta-Jun-ee-a) - The testing grounds of TJUN members, but operates as an independent nation. (U3)

User avatar
Diarcesia
Powerbroker
 
Posts: 7562
Founded: Aug 21, 2016
Inoffensive Centrist Autocracy

Postby Diarcesia » Thu Jun 01, 2023 6:04 pm

The Rebuild of PF-2

The atmosphere is electric as the cars line up on the grid for the ZX-Flow Energy Grand Prix of Togonistan at Hwoarang Racing Circuit. The crowd, mostly Togonistani and international fans of open-wheel racing, cheer on their favorite drivers with the Ferraesque anthem "One Love" playing over the loudspeakers. Hwoarang Racing Circuit is a relatively new circuit for international racing; it was part of the inaugural WGP2 season race calendar. That season's Hwoarang GP gained notoriety when local favorite (and now an established WGPC player) Dom Falepau qualified dead last in what was also his first season in an international stage.

As Grid Announcements begin, Laura Haukanna takes her usual place at the sixth row beside Ryker Lane. Her teammate, Sam Blaatschapen, was entertained to an upbeat race engineer's radio chatter:

CREUSA'S GREETING - GIRL POWER EDITION!

Greenlight: "Welcome to the ZX-Flow Energy Grand Prix of Togonistan, Sam! This is CREUSA, and we are going to have a LIVELY race at Hwoarang Racing Circuit!"
Gatekeep: "We have a full grid of 28 cars ready to go. Can you get past the 19 that are ahead of you?"
Girlboss: "Can you win this race and do burnouts afterwards?!"

"Yeah, yeah, Creusa, I get it. Starting at 20th is no joke," Sam sighed. "But I'll do what I can. It's my fault I'm in here to begin with. Thanks for encouraging me though."

"Aww, it's OK! It's racing after all. You're not the only one who have a bad start this season."

"That is true," conceded Sam. "What of Laura? She is starting P11, and she's in a head start. Is she gonna run into the sunset?"

"She will try to," Creusa replied. "It's too early to declare that she'll grab a good points haul though. Lighting's about to flash - good luck!" That was her code for the imminent lights out.

*static*
*static*

*static*

*static*


The first half of the race went as predicted. Laura Haukanna did a spectacular job at driving away from the rest of the drivers, and Sam was stuck in an uphill battle to get past cars that were ahead. She was 17th by Lap 10 and 19th by Lap 15, with her only consolation being that she was separated from Ji So-Yeong who started 19th beside her. The second half saw her constantly making improvements on lap times, even if it meant going off-track once or twice: "Slowly but surely," she kept repeating to herself through her radio. She was talking about her laps. Her approach to driving is anything but slow and sure.

A moment of breakthrough came on Lap 28. Having overtaken the majority of drivers in front, she was closing in to Brendan Faloe who had started from P15 that race and seemed like his pace was slowing down. She got past him shortly after he made a pit stop, allowing her to close in with other cars ahead: "I'm coming up on So-Yeong now," she announced calmly while increasing speed gradually but steadily. They were going side by side towards Turn 9 (So-Yeong was slower), but as Sam tried to pull off an overtake:

"Contact. I think there's damage, Creusa," Sam desperately announced. "I'm losing speed."

The race engineer looked at the relevant cameras. Both the Pryfors Bilar and the Colourworks cars had visible damage. An unscheduled pit stop would be required.

"It's not enough to retire your car. Box box!"

"Copy that. Sorry guys, I messed up again. This is an altogether shitty day."

When she came in for a pit stop, the mechanics took time to assess the extent of damage on her car. The front wing was ruined, and there were some cuts in their chassis. The only good news was that they could repair it during that stop with the spares at hand. But still, Sam set off again with new tyres and bodywork ready to go: "We will get you to the checkered flag," said Creusa into her earpiece as she watched the #33 car released. "We need you to do it now."

The remaining laps were a foregone conclusion. Sam, who was once within points range, would finish without one. The team did not conclude the grand prix empty-handed; Laura, in much better condition than last week, finished ninth with an additional two points to her name and the team's.



The Cocoabo Preservation Grand Prix will be the third round of the WGPC season. The circuit, situated not far from the Cocoabo Park, has no long straights to speak of. It was built by the Cocoabo Preservation Society as part of their plans to enhance and highlight the skills of the eponymous endagered species of bird. In addition, it was hoped that the circuit would highlight the Pryfors Bilar cars' acceleration and its Sidus engines' power delivery. The team is also keen to promote the local area as a "home ground away from home" of its cars, where spectators can witness the PF-2s in their "natural habitat".

Image
The Cocoabo Park Circuit, Cocoabo Forest. Image @toby_coburn


You Are (Not) Pointless

With the way the cars were laid out in the grid, it meant that Sara Luna was at the back and so far, Viska was points-less. To put her team in the board meant that it would be a long race for the Diarcesian.

Back to Aaron. The Unit'd Adaik'sian looked down at his phone and saw an alert from Sara: "Hey, I see you've got a little something going on. Hope you're enjoying it!" Looking up from his phone and over to the crowd gathered at the main grandstands, he smiled as he saw Sara Luna in her full outfit. The violet suit and white helmet was something pretty unique... and it certainly didn't go unnoticed by the Auruns around her who seemed to like what they were seeing. She waved at Aaron as if inviting him over but... he didn't have time just yet due to other duties having to be done first before meeting up with the mechanics...

After her own race, Sara in the pit garage met up with the mechanics and gave them a pat on the back. While this was going on, Aaron headed out to meet with some fans before getting ready for his post-race interview. The race had been demanding, both physically and mentally, but Sara persevered and gave her all. There was little time to rest as the team makes the preparations for the next event in Cocoabo Forest.

Earlier...

"Thanks for sticking with us this far, Sara. You did great. What went right?" asked the interviewer as she stood in front of the camera and looked at her notes on a clipboard.

"I think the car felt good. I mean, it's has a new engine so...there's that. The result spoke for itself," Sara said with a chuckle before continuing, "The mechanics did an awesome job and everything was spot on. The feedback from the steering wheel was great as well."

"So Nils must have given you some tips then?" asked the interviewer again. Sara smiled for a moment before replying, "He sure did! He gave me some helpful pointers on how to drive these cars and he helped out with my setup too." She paused for a bit to take in what she had just said but continued nevertheless: "That being said though...the credit goes to everyone behind me who made this possible today."

"It's great to see a repeat of your top form, where you were able to overcome a P25 start to grab a championship point. Who would have thought that the constant pressure from Kaylan and Pryfors Bilar would push you into greater heights?"

Sara laughed at the last part before replying, "I know right? I mean...look at us now! We're fighting for points!" She looked over to her left and took in what she had just said. A few weeks ago when Viska announced a new engine in the preseason testing, it was hard not to say that her chances of being competitive were close enough to zero that they could probably be written as 0%. But here she was today - surviving one hell of an intense weekend with so many onlooking eyes judging her every move while also trying desperately not let herself get carried away by all these emotions swirling inside her. It seemed like ages since this whole thing began...

"Any final comments before finishing this interview?"

"Once again, I have my gratitude to everyone in Viska. We had setbacks, but with everyone together, and the new Re:Genesis engine, we turned it into euangelium. 'Good news' in Diarcesian Latin."

"Well, it's been a pleasure speaking to you Sara. Good luck with the next race!"
Last edited by Diarcesia on Fri Jun 02, 2023 4:27 pm, edited 8 times in total.

User avatar
Aboveland
Ambassador
 
Posts: 1704
Founded: Dec 04, 2013
Scandinavian Liberal Paradise

Postby Aboveland » Thu Jun 01, 2023 7:45 pm

Tropicorp Racing Ælund Comprehensive Testing Facility
Tropicoast, Tropicorp


Image
Æ-NOPEA NEWSREEL_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Colourworks Lead Designer Sacked, Team to "Re-evaluate" AGP005 Amid Continuing Struggles
Three time WGPC team's champions Tropicorp-Colourworks has sacked long-time lead designer Aada Hødmakker as the team's WGPC20 chassis, AGP005, landed a best result of 19th across the season's first two weekends. Høddmakker's position in the team was rumored to be at risk since WGPC18, when she was largely absent from the development of the team's highly successful AGP003. The team's recent shake-up amid the Rallygate scandal saw the return of Høddmakker to her lead designer role, which ultimately proved fruitless. "We're going to re-evaluate the continued running of AGP005," Pekkanen revealed, without commenting on Høddmakker's position in the team. "We haven't had access to our state-of-the-art aerodynamics facilities in Lintulahti to test our active suspension properly; that was a huge mistake in development." With tooling for previous chassis still installed at the team's Tropicorp base, Colourworks could potentially revert to running WGPC19's AGP004 chassis as early as the Cocoabo Preservation Grand Prix, returning to the team's proven combination of active aerodynamics and passive rear-wheel steering.


Edvin clears his throat. In the media for all the wrong reasons, he laments to himself, as he locks his tablet's screen and pushes it under his crossed arm. The low rumbles and hisses of an incoming AGP004 bring him back to the present as he steps out onto the softly-lit pitwall, drenched in the bluish glow of the heavy duvet of overcast storm clouds above. The twin turbo V8 inside — of a slightly different timbre to Tropicorp's latest powerplant — shudders to a halt before the driver inside pulls his gloves off. As their visor comes up, Edvin approaches.

"Incredible," yells a muffled voice from beneath the closed-face helmet, through clicks and snaps which precede it coming off of their head. The driver pulls off their balaclava and shakes their head as their full hair settles into a chaotic swarm. "It's night and day, to be honest." They scratch their nose before grabbing one of the gloves set out before them. "God, I wish this said Talvela," the namesake driver muttered, pointing at the TII trigram on the cuff.

"Shit," Edvin replies, towering over the parked car, ignoring Terho's reminiscing. He brings his thumb to his mouth to nibble at his nail — at this point, long gone. "The suspension was such a fucking stupid idea," he continues.

Terho unstraps himself from the navy and gold car with a spring in his step, glancing over at the timing screens in the garage. Another AGP, the current-spec chassis, is nearing the start finish straight, as the echo of the newer-spec Tropicorp powerplant reverberates across the inland landscape surrounding the facility. "Skiia is five tenths down," he says, pointing with a flick of his head upwards. "We were close in this car."

Edvin shakes his head again. "You know when things should work in theory, and then in practice they absolutely don't?"

"Yeah," shrugs Terho. "Exactly. Better to stick to whatever the fuck works in practice, unless we can get access to the aero lab in Aboveland."

The Tropicorp V8 of Skiia's car rockets through the start finish straight, the sound of the underbody scraping against the tarmac a discordant shriek in their ears. "Our latest appeal was rejected," Edvin sighs. "We're not getting back into that building anytime soon; we're going to appeal again this week, though."

"Well then, here's no point in running this car anymore," Terho replies, as he bends over to stretch his back. His voice grows in pitch as he pulls on his ankles. "Something's fucked in that suspension and we won't get it right until we... we get access to the wind tunnels — agh!" His face warps with pain then flutters into relief while he twists and cracks his back. "Ahh, that's it."

Edvin's foot taps on the concrete, the distant rumble of the new V8 approaching in phase. "You think the engine is fine?"

"Yeah," Terho croaks, snapping his neck side to side. "It's better. But the chassis is so much worse. Whatever drag the moving fins created — whatever lift they ever made on accident —" he hisses, referencing his horror crash in Esmerel years ago "— it never felt as unbalanced as whatever is going on now." Edvin inhales to speak, but the former champion replies to his question before it's even escaped his mouth. He raises his voice as the approaching AGP005 comes nearer. "Ji won't have any problems with it," he assures. "It's very predictable, and plus, we have all the aero data for Cocoabo Park already. Just do it."

"Alright, fine," Edvin yells, Skiia's test car now sat beside him. As it growls to a stop, he pulls his tablet out from under his arm, taps the screen, and extends it to Terho while facing towards Skiia. "We'll have a new livery to mark the occasion."

Terho, confused, takes the tablet in his hands and reads.
ImageNewsletter

Raising Kijanian Voices with Tropicorp-Colourworks
As the World Grand Prix Championship moves to Cocoabo Park for the Cocoabo Preservation Grand Prix, the rights of the protected Cocoabo population in the forests of the Vilitan Union, as well as the conservation efforts undertaken to protect the islands' rich and diverse ecosystems, are on everybody's mind. Of all the teams in the WGPC, only one of them has always shown their unwavering support for Cocoabos through their sponsorship deal with the Cocoabo Preservation Society: Tropicorp-Colourworks Grand Prix. It is the team's commitment to the cause that has motivated Dempet-ääniä, Aboveland's largest human rights organization, to partner with the team to bring attention to one of the most pressing human rights situations in the multiverse today: the situation in Mlima Kijani.

Rampant inequality and endemic corruption have condemned almost 40 million Kijanis to some of the most difficult human rights conditions in the world. The nation's languishing extraction-based economy, functional to foreign mining giants and the white land-owning elite, means that what little economic growth Mlima Kijani enjoys stays in the hands of less than 4% of the population. Economic mismanagement by President Chane Njuguna has put the country at risk of stagnation with hyperinflation: a death sentence for the most vulnerable sectors of the Kijani population. Rising food and fuel prices have strained the already thin budgets of Kijanis — Njuguna's oppressive, authoritarian regime violently suppressed the voices of the people who took to the streets in protest. Recently, the government appointed its first female vice president — a small step in the right direction for the traditionally conservative nation.

A lack of meaningful investment in education and healthcare places Kijanis at risk of contracting diseases such as VODAIS, suffered by 27% of the population, and cholera, as a recent epidemic in western Mlima Kijani has affected over 50 thousand people owing to sparse access to clean water and sanitation. A widespread feeling of "hopelessness" among the country's rural population has seen the rise of substance abuse among rural youth, while the absence of the state has seen an increased adhesion to "miracle cults", which promise prosperity and health through dangerous homeopathic practices in exchange for extortive monetary contributions.

In addition, civil war and inter-ethnic violence are commonplace and institutionalized in Mlima Kijani, with key government ministers identified as the driving forces in stoking latent tensions. Islamist extremist groups in the south of the country have been waging a bitter civil war against the Kijanian government in the wake of the southern provinces' independence movement; though Græntfjaller intervention in the conflict has served to quell violence to an extent, Rushmori involvement is seen as unpopular both in Mlima Kijani and abroad, and runs the risk of delegitimizing local authorities while exacerbating the activity of violent groups — or encouraging them to split and evolve altogether.

Image

As a result, Dempet-ääniä will run its logo on both Tropicorp-Colourworks cars in the upcoming Cocoabo Preservation Grand Prix, with a message to the Kijani people to "speak up" in the face of oppression, corruption, violence, and poverty. By raising awareness to the situation, the world can come together to encourage Kijanis abroad to speak out against oppression, and to spur local authorities in driving meaningful change and morphing the realities of the country's blighted population.
AUTONOMOUS TERRITORIES OF THE ABOVIAN UNION: Nykipiflugpuu

Home to Terho Talvela, three-time WGPC World Champion, and one-time WSRC World Champion

User avatar
Tropicorp
Diplomat
 
Posts: 569
Founded: Jul 18, 2013
Ex-Nation

WGPC20 :: Cocoabo Park Preview

Postby Tropicorp » Fri Jun 02, 2023 4:25 am

Event Guide :: Cocoabo Preservation Grand Prix presented by Tropicorp


Image

Track Location: Cocoabo Park, Atlantian Oceania
WGPC Lap Record: N/A
WGP2 Lap Record: 1:52.216 (Fast Cocoabo, WGP2 S1)
NSSCRA Lap Record: 2:03.668 (Cocoabo #78, NSSCRA S9)
Track Lap Length: 6.63km (Track Layout)

Overview:

The World Grand Prix Championship series will descend on the Cocoabo Park Circuit for the very first time as the popular tourist destination out-muscled its more traditionally sports-centric regional counterpart in the Eelandii Grand Prix Course to get a race date on the World Grand Prix 20 calendar. While the decision was not without some controversy and debate within the Island Emirate of Turori, it has been a massive boost for the Cocoabo Park Educational Resort which has been operating near or at full capacity in the weeks leading up to the Grand Prix.

The Cocoabo Park Circuit is a picturesque road course cut out of the original old growth Cocoabo Forest just a few kilometers from the Cocoabo Park Resort. The course was originally designed for the Cocoabo Enrichment and Enhancement Project (CEEP) where Cocoabo are trained under the leadership of Tropicorp Scientists and the Cocoabo Preservation Society and continues to be the hub of the Cocoabo Enrichment and Enhancement Project's driving program.

When the course is not in use by the CEEP or hosting an international race weekend it is occasionally used as part of an extended driving tour of the Cocoabo Park. Freelance Cocoabo can often be seen grazing the hilltops on the Eastern side of the course between turns 1-3 and along the river delta under turns 5 and 6.

During events Shuttles run every 5-30 minutes from the central Cocoabo Park Resort to various locations around the Cocoabo Park Circuit for guests to seamlessly transfer between the Park and the Race Track for the full event weekend.

Access to grandstand seating requires event specific ticketing available at both the Resort Ticket Center and the main track entrance at the Cocoabo Park Circuit. Any guests of the Cocoabo Park Resort without a race ticket can still access the general admission areas of the Cocoabo Park Circuit during race weekend including the complete fanzone and limited non-seated race viewing areas. All official World Grand Prix team members, media and sponsors with WGPC credentialed Paddock access will be also have reciprocal access to the Cocoabo Park Resort area.

Racing Line:

Drivers will hug the line along the tributary between the hills around turns 1, 2 and 3; speeding out of turn 3 toward the over taking zones at turn 4, 5 and 6. Crossing the river they will bend around to set themselves up for the long, slow turn 8 - another prime opportunity for overtaking. Getting through the 'Esses' will be critical to set up back across the river for the 90 degree turn 12. Sweeping through 13 to set up for the Hairpin Turn 14 and then accelerate back across the line to complete a lap. While the turns are varied a moderately skilled driver will be able to handle them. The biggest challenge for drivers will be maintaining focus as a lack of any truly 'straight' sections means that the driver will always be on the wheel, setting up for the optimum line in every section of the track.

Racing History at the Cocoabo Park Circuit:

It is with little doubt that there will be a fan favorite at the Cocoabo Park Circuit as Cocoabo #23 returns to the very track they learned to drive on. Having secured their first World Grand Prix Championship victory just one week prior, Cocoabo #23 will be able to compete at their home circuit without that added pressure of hunting for their first ever race win at the WGPC level. Cocoabo #23 will also be the only previous race winner at the Cocoabo Park Circuit in the field having won from Pole Position at the track during World Grand Prix 2 Season 2. Olivia Stone is also a former winner at the Circuit but the Nimban Driver does not as of yet have a ride secured for the race, though 2 seats remain available in AOGP.

Cocoabo #23 and Dom Falepeau are the only two drivers who compete in the inaugural World Grand Prix 2 Cocoabo Preservation Grand Prix who have made it through to the World Grand Prix Championship Circuit to compete in WGPC Season 20. In that first race, won by Jan Xiaopeng of Vangaziland, Cocoabo #23 finished as runner up as fastest car on the track but lost by strategy while Dom Falepeau only completed one lap around the circuit before retiring from the race.

Other current World Grand Prix Championship driver who have competed at the circuit include Jane Laukkanen with a best finish of 14th during WGP2 Season 2 and a handful of drivers who survived a very Wet Cocoabo Park Circuit during WGPC Season 3 including Sara Luna, Adriana Kowalski, Lane Carter, Drake Stevenson and 3rd place finisher William Archer. Only Cocoabo #23 and Dom Falepeau have competed in each of the three previous World Grand Prix sanctioned races at the Cocoabo Park Circuit, with Cocoabo #23 by far the top performer between them with two Top-2 Finishes at their home track.

World Grand Prix 2
WGP2 S1: 1. Jang Xiopeng (VMR) | 2. Cocoabo #23 | 3. Timo Jänkirinää || Pole: Jannik Markner
WGP2 S2: 1. Cocoabo #23 (TRP) | 2. Jama'obo Pegasii | 3. Karli Schmitt || Pole: Cocoabo #23
WGP2 S3: 1. Olivia Stone (NIM) | 2. Taras Matviyenko | 3. William Archer || Pole: Jama'obo Pegasii
WGP2 S4: --Test Only-- || Sakinomi Rikikida (KYC) : 1:53.722

NSSCRA Multiversal Cup Series
NSSCRA8: 1. Yraaga Gilli'i (V&T) | 2. Skip Stiller | 3. Thea Alvarez || Pole: Oberst Eva Kerman

NSSCRA9: 1. Jeremiah Brooke (STK) | 2. Anavella Ariiki | 3. Frank Bronson || Pole: Cocoabo #78

NSSCRA10: 1. Frank Bronson (HAP) | 2. Stacie Houston | 3. Clarissa Alanis Star || Pole: Stacie Houston

NSSCRA13: 1. Kai Qiang (SHE) | 2. Thea Alvarez | 3. Holly Starlight || Pole: Gwen Tracer Allison Oxton

NSSCRA14: 1. Gwen Tracer Allison Oxton (VEZ) | 2. Maddison Riley-Jones | 3. Centur Tiones || Pole: Koshiro Kawai


NSSCRA Everlong Contenders Series
EVERLG11: 1. Robin Dragonovic (TJU) | 2. Rustam Ilyich Yudin | 3. Barnabas Mate || Pole: Al Shelton

EVERLG12: 1. Agata Kosaryova (AFT) | 2. Turakki Mayelli | 3. Alice Jepkosgei || Pole: Lotara Novorali

EVERLG13: 1. Gongming Gao (TJU) | 2. Alex Remington | 3. Pyotr Lavrentiev || Pole: Gongming Gao

EVERLG14: 1. Cocoabo #37 (TRP) | 2. Michelle K E V Pavlína | 3. Axel Chase || Pole: Sage Caldwell

AOCAR Stock Car Series
AOCAR-S1: 1. Annike Jensen-Aakstern (ABL) | 2. Anavella Ariiki | 3. Cocoabo #23 || Pole: Annike Jensen-Aakstern

AOCAR-S2: 1. Jill Singletary (STK) | 2. Juracai Klianiota | 3. Jama'obo Pegasii || Pole: Jama'obo Pegasii

AOCAR-S3: 1. Jama'obo Pegasii (VIL) | 2. Juracai Klianiota | 3. Glen Reid || Pole: Glen Reid

AOCAR-S4: 1. Olavi Vile Ruusuvuori (KIM) | 2. Juracai Klianiota | 3. Devin Whitaker || Pole: Hossem Nasri





Event Sponsors & Activities:


Image

:: Cocoabo Park

As the host of the Cocoabo Preservation Grand Prix and the events major sponsor, Cocoabo Park is the publicly accessible portion of the Cocoabo Project, itself a joint venture between the Cocoabo Preservation Society, Tropicorp and the Island Emirate of Turori to Preserve, Study, Highlight and in some cases improve the existence and appreciation of Turori's Native Cocoabo.

While the original Cocoabo Forest itself is a vast land where Cocoabo flocks are allowed to roam free, at Cocoabo Park visitors from around the multiverse are treated to intimate tours, close encounters and educational experiences all with the Cocoabo at the center. With limited on site lodging and a fully equipped village at the entrance area to the Park, visitors could spend days at Cocoabo Park without even venturing on one of the Park's tours into its different Cocoabo training enclosures or even further into the Cocoabo Forest. While the modern Cocoabo Forest is split by an organic portal between two regions, the Cocoabo Park Circuit and Cocoabo Park itself remain in the Atlantian Oceania Region.

In addition to the commercially driven aspect of the Park, and as a critical part of the relationship with the Cocoabo Preservation Society, the Park also serves as a hub for the team of Scientists and Researchers from both the Cocoabo Preservation Society and Tropicorp many of whom reside full time at the park. While the Cocoabo Preservation Society led efforts are more focused on passive studying and preservation, the Tropicorp team lead the CEEP - the Cocoabo Enrichment & Enhancement Project out of the Park. Beyond just researching and understanding the Cocoabo Genome, the CEEP team are tasked with focused training and enrichment activities to hyper-focus Cocoabo to hone their talents and skills and bring them to the forefront. One of the most popular enclosures on a tour of Cocoabo Park is the CEEP's sporting enclosure where Cocoabo can be found participating in activities such as Footsport and even on a lucky day, Motorsport.

Admission to the central areas of Cocoabo Park inclusive of all Educational Exhibits are included in the cost of admission to the Cocoabo Preservation Grand Prix. Guided Tours, Educational Sessions and Childrens events will double in frequency throughout the race weekend up until one hour prior to the start of the grand prix. Any patron with a ticket to the race will also receive a "Cocoabo Passport" book where they can collect stamps for attending various sessions, exhibits and tours throughout the Park. Completed Passports are redeemable for a free Race Programme or can be used for 50% off admission for up to four guests on a return visit to Cocoabo Park.




Image

:: Tropicorp Racing Supply

Tropicorp Racing Supply is the retail and distribution entity managing the Motorsports related output from Tropicorp Sports and Tropicorp Engineering.

Tropicorp Sports was one of the first new divisions created at the quasi-governmental entity of Tropicorp. With the acquisition of templates and production equipment from 3WD, Tropicorp Sports began producing special edition kits for the Turori National Team. From there the scientists, researchers and engineers at Tropicorp Sports began focusing on improving sporting equipment, ultimately developing the Tcp-X1, one of the most scientifically advanced footsport balls ever developed and a regularly used match ball in domestic and internationstatal sporting events throughout the multiverse. Tropicorp Sports have since developed into a leading supplier of cutting edge sportswear, sporting equipment and even sporting technologies used in the betterment of the experience for players, officials and fans alike.

Tropicorp Engineering developed the special Calanian rubber to create high performance racing tyres for testing purposes. After the tests proved successful, It wasn't long before the tooling was done and Racing Tyres were popping out on an hourly basis from the workshop and Tropicorp Racing Supply was born. Tropicorp Racing Supply's standard product line includes everything from Crew Uniforms to Composite-Material suspension parts as well as experimental Tropicorp Engineering developed products such as adjustable Chassis and Hybrid Power systems.

While Tropicorp Racing Supply have made a name through their high performance tyres which have earned championships in the NSSCRA, World Grand Prix Championships and Formula Hodori, they also supply parts for every component of a racing vehicle in addition to pit crew, engineering and data analytics solutions for racing teams.

Tropicorp Racing Supply is the biggest supplier of racing Tyres for the World Grand Prix Championships and the Atlantian Oceania Grand Prix through its Sifaka and Storm branded racing tyres.



Image

:: Inura Tea

The Inura Tea company grew from a little known local Tea and Herbal offering business to a nation-wide popular hit during the World Cup 93 Finals thanks to a viral marketing campaign on twii.tur where Inura Tea leveraged the play on the word Tea and the growing rivalry between the Turori National Team and host nation Tumbra to bring attention to their brand.

Starting out with their Tea Time Tee Time for Two competition when Turori and Tumbra met in the Round of 16, Turori's triumph in the head to head matchup allowed Inura Tea to continue their social presence transitioning quickly into a "Best T/Tea in the Multiverse" campaign.

Inura Tea Leaves are extracted from the Inura Forests of central Turori. The brand name "Inura Tea" itself is a play on words as Inura is a region in central Turori consisting of lush Forests and many ancient sites. The Inurahtii (Inuh-ra-tee) were the most prevalent pre-Turorian culture to occupy the Island lands. The Inura (Inuh-ra) Tea (tee) company takes its name as an audible copy of the name of the sometimes mystically considered ancient culture of central Turori and uses some of the symbols and sites of the culture on its packaging. It is also believed that the origins of the Turorian Language come from the Inurahtii which also feature prominently in Inura Tea marketing material.




Image

:: Cocoabo Preservation Society

The Cocoabo Preservation Society is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to spreading awareness about Turori's native and endangered Cocoabo species, as well as collecting donations and raising funds to help protect, care for and breed Turorian Cocoabo. The Cocoabo Preservation Society has long been a major player in many aspects of the Turorian way of life. From being the 'go-to' place for high society to mingle and philantropicly dump finances in return for generous tax write-offs, to being an organization that prides itself in bringing educational programs to the children of the Island Emirate, the Cocoabo Preservation Society was a microcosm of an embodiment of everything that it means to be Turorian. However, the Cocoabo Preservation Society had always been an entity. An organizing body responsible for overseeing, for logistically ensuring existing commitments continued and the best interest of the Cocoabo was always at the forefront. A reactionary entity, and an entity charged with maintaining the status quo.

Under the guidance of former Turori National Team player Noa-Isinao Wioauoi, a transformation of the Cocoabo Preservation Society took place. To Wioauoi, there was more to the Cocoabo Preservation Society than counting heads in the flock, hosting benefit events and visiting elementary schools. Wioauoi had a vision of greater things for his beloved Cocoabo, and that Vision would be as grand as they would come. Wioauoi sought the assistance of the regions largest quasi-governmental super corporation, Tropicorp, who had the capital, infrastructure and sheer manpower to implement the new vision for how the Cocoabo Preservation Society could achieve its primary mission. As a result of Wioauoi's vision, The Cocoabo Preservation Society has partnered with Tropicorp to develop to Cocoabo Forest just north of Turori.

The Cocoabo Preservation Society does not pay to associate itself with major sporting events or venues such as the Cocoabo Preservation 300K, however commercial relationships sometimes arise through market sharing arrangements or donations. Examples include donations directly to the Cocoabo Preservation Society but earmarked as only to be used for marketing purposes as there are certain selections a donor can choose; a Donor who may directly donate to an entity and ask to remain anonymous, but instead request that the CPS logo be displayed; Proceeds sharing arrangements where the CPS logo is used on merchandise with a portion of the proceeds going to the CPS and the remaining portion used to cover the costs associated with the Marketing or Sponsorship. The most prominent example has existed with Vilita & Turori Motorsports who have in the past displayed the CPS logo on the vehicles to increase awareness for the Cocoabo Preservation Society but also sells special CPS merchandise with a portion of the proceeds going towards Cocoabo Conservation. The CPS typically are open to all donor or market sharing relationships so long as the --- official Cocoabo Preservation Society Neutral Color Logo Template --- is used to ensure a consistent image. The Cocoabo Preservation Society has a close relationship with the Kionao Locals of the Vilitan League including primary kit sponsorship where a portion of all Kit Sales go back into the preservation efforts. The CPS also offers special donation packages including exclusive corporate tours of Cocoabo Park and the Preservation Society headquarters for selected donors.

At least 10% of the cost of every ticket sold to the Cocoabo Preservation 300K goes directly back into the Cocoabo Preservation Mission. The remainder of the ticket revenue covers staffing plus ups for race weekend events, temporary seating and infrastructure improvements and maintenance for the racing track section of the park. The Cocoabo Preservation Society will have decals available at the track for any race team that wishes to show their support for preserving the Cocoabo in as natural a habitat and lifestyle as possible by displaying the CPS logo on their cars or pitboxes during this weekends events.





AOGP of Cocoabo Park presented by the Cocoabo Preservation Society

Image

The Atlantian Oceania Grand Prix series will kick off its second season with a combination race weekend with the World Grand Prix Championship and its first ever visit to the Cocoabo Park Circuit. During the inaugural Atlantian Oceania Grand Prix season, the series kicked off its season at the Alikki-Corra Street Course in Vilita in combination with the World Grand Prix 2 Official Test session at the Cocoabo Park Circuit. However, with the World Grand Prix Championships coming to Cocoabo Park, AOCAR and Atlantian Oceania Grand Prix organizers quickly jumped on the opportunity to increase exposure for its teams and drivers by sharing a paddock with the teams, drivers and sponsors that most AOGP competitors aspire to one day be. AOGP drivers will certainly be aware that World Grand Prix Championship team owners, principles and sponsors will have the opportunity to watch their performance first hand. With a number of AOGP competitors having competed in trial sessions for a drive in the World Grand Prix Championship this season but failed to impress enough to secure more than a test seat, they will also be looking to prove those owners wrong and perhaps give them a second thought if the driver they chose instead is under-performing at the mid-season mark.

Reigning AOGP Champion Gus Perry will return to defend their series title with a new supporting cast member as White Unicorns Racing have replaced Miles Tulau with Lacfroid's AOGP debutant Driver Sebastien Dupont. White Unicorns will certainly be up against stiff competition from Vilaye EnergySport Grand Prix - the reigning Constructors Champions who return both of their drivers from the previous season, Tomii'i Lopinka and Rokksin Lavalhi. While there are a number of shake-ups in the Drivers Lineups for the Atlantian Oceania Grand Prix season, thus far only two new teams are confirmed on the grid: The Race Eelandii AOGP team with driver Nini Johnsilvaturr and the Chan Racing team out of the Jovannic.





Tropicorp Challenge :: WGPC/AOGP Crew Members Stock Car Pit Event

Image

While at its core an un-equal comparison, nonetheless it is common to see the occasional back-and-forth on twii.tur discussing the speed of Pit Stops on the World Grand Prix Championship series and comparing them with the speed of pit stops in the Stock Car Racing World, such as the NSSCRA. Of Course, fundamentally they are two different things with NSSCRA typically having a live pit area with a wall separating teams from their cars, limitations on the number of crew members who can service a car in a pit stop and a requirement that no equipment be left in the pit box at any point before or after the race car has arrived for service. Contrast this with a typical Grand Prix style pit stop where tyres and crew members are often Pre-Staged in position in the box before the car even heads down pit road.

Fans of the World Grand Prix Circuit will often point to the Speed of the Grand Prix Style pit stops - regularly on the order of single digit seconds - to display superiority over those twii.tur users of the Stock Car Fan base. NSSCRA supporters, however, will often point out that Pit Crew members in Stock Car Racing are often Athletes themselves, an extension of the team whose performance heavily influences the outcome of a race requiring a lot more skill and training than "Sitting on the ground and waiting for the car to come to you".

Now, hosting its first ever sanctioned World Grand Prix Championship race, Tropicorp Racing Supply is bringing the Stock Car Pit Crew Challenge to the World Grand Prix Championship circuit, offering World Grand Prix Championship teams the opportunity to see first hand what it is like for their NSSCRA Counterparts to change a tire - having to leap over a wall carrying two tires or a 70 pound gas can while crossing the direct path that the 3000+ pound stock car is about to traverse. Teams interested to participate in the Stock Car Pit Crew Challenge will compete on Saturday in a timed pit stop where they will also be judged not just on speed but on quality, with 2 second infractions for things like loose lug nuts or improperly filled Fuel Tanks.

Tropicorp will also have its Pit Crew Challenge interactive display in the concourse area where fans can learn all about the evolution of the pit stop through history in a variety of Motorsports and try their hand at stations such as the tyre changing station featuring both an NSSCRA Style and World Grand Prix Style tyre. There will also be a Tropicorp Engineering World Grand Prix Two spec race car in the Fan Zone that fans can actually sit in and get their picture taken by a representative from the twii.tur media team.
- Tropicorp -

User avatar
Hapilopper
Ambassador
 
Posts: 1692
Founded: Apr 30, 2019
Ex-Nation

Postby Hapilopper » Fri Jun 02, 2023 9:18 am

Preston Autos Grand Prix Racing Headquarters, Hapilopper City
Two days after the Grand Prix of Togonistan
The Preston Grand Prix headquarters in Hapilopper City was a flurry of activity as the team had returned home from what was a decidedly bittersweet race in Togonistan. Yeah, Rudy got 2nd, got the result everyone figured he had deserved, and had proven the worth of the Preston PGP-03. But William Archer had retired on the 8th lap of the race and finished bog-ass last. And that was massively frustrating for the Preston crew – and frustrating for Marty Lewis, who had faith in Archer that he was a driver capable of winning a World Grand Prix Championship, but here he was after a fifth of the season complete with no points to his credit.

Rudy Edwards, meanwhile, had proven the worth of the PGP-03, and had come home second behind Fast Cocoabo. The car had handled properly, it had been set up right and worked perfectly for him. But Togonistan was in the past, and now it was time to get ready for the race at Cocoabo Park in Tropicorp. So for that, Rudy was in the simulator at the team HQ, running laps around the Cocoabo Park so he could hit the ground running when he got to Tropicorp.

Instead of thinking about how well he had done in Togonistan, Rudy was calmly and methodically working his way around the simulated Cocoabo Park circuit, making sure he had every corner on the circuit understood, making sure every braking point was correct, every line on the track was right – down to the inch. For several hours, Rudy turned laps in the simulator as the crew watched. It was a businesslike approach for Rudy Edwards, who wasn’t letting anything else enter his thought process as he taught himself the proper way to get around the track with his car, the proper braking points, the proper turn-in points and the right way to get the car properly rotated through the corners.

By the time the day was over in the simulator, Rudy felt decently comfortable enough in the sim that when he took his first actual laps with the PGP-03 around Cocoabo Park, he could get up to speed almost instantly.

Meanwhile, Chet Worthy, the wedding photographer that had been poached by Preston to go to Togonistan, was reviewing his photos with chief designer Todd Stroud. It was the first time that Chet had ever gone to a motor race, and the first time he had ever shot racing cars, but he had some really nice camera equipment and some guys at Preston Autos had overheard him talking about his gig that weekend had been cancelled due to some marital screwups with the couple that was set to be married. So Preston Autos paid him triple what he was supposed to make that weekend and sent him to Togonistan – on their dime, not his – to get photos of every other car that the 13 other teams had built.

For Todd Stroud, this was all a part of research so he could design the new PGP-04. While his staff were working on upgrades to the PGP-03, such as some modifications to the sidepods, Todd was doing preliminary research work on the PGP-04, the next Preston Grand Prix car to come out, and he wanted to see what the other teams were doing.

First of all, to Todd’s delight, Chet was a good photographer, and he understood one of the first tenets of being a good photographer – take a ton of photos. That meant that Todd had no shortage of photos to look at. Also to Todd’s delight were the resolution of these photos – 150 megapixels meant he could zoom in real closely on a lot of the shots and get a good idea of what the other teams were doing with these cars.

“Are you sure you’ve never shot a race before?” Todd asked Chet.

“Positive,” Chet said.

“And never with a race team?” Todd asked.

“Never,” Chet said. “Racing isn’t really my thing. I mean, I watch it on TV but I don’t follow it religiously like most people do. I just go to Andrew’s because it’s the closest place to my apartment.”

“Sure got me fooled,” Todd said. “These are really, really good photos. I’m seeing a lot in these photos that I normally wouldn’t see on television, and you know, we can’t really get a photog close to these cars without someone figuring out, so we have to be covert about it. If someone knew about you, they’d probably rat you out to one of the teams. But the thing is, I wouldn’t be surprised if every team on the grid has photographers to spot minute details of the cars like we do.”

“Why’s that?” Chet asked.

“It’s all about doing whatever it takes to find a competitive advantage,” Todd explained. “The other teams aren’t going to tell you what they’re doing. The only teams we share data with is UrGa and Sivaleinen, and even then, that just pertains to engines. UrGa and Sivaleinen run our engines, so we try to help them out to make sure they can get the most from the engines as they can. Aside from that, nobody’s going to give you any of their secrets. I’m sure there’s some teams that would love to give their secrets away, but we wouldn’t want those.”

“Why not?” Chet asked.

“Well, I’d imagine there’s some teams out there – I think Colorworks comes to mind – that, judging from the first few races this season, completely missed the mark,” Todd said. “Based on their results, they went for something and they failed. If anyone could benefit from a little healthy espionage, it’d be them. But we do it so we can look out for anything new and unusual that the other guys are working on.”

“Marty said something about the Eminent Bitten Heroes car…” Chet started.

“Right, the Eminents were real good in the first race for some reason, so we wanted someone to take a closer look at that. I’m glad you got pictures of them, and same with the Eelandii and Pressley cars,” Todd continued. “I see you also got some great pictures of the Chase Cutter, but I don’t think we can use those. I mean, I guess we could but I don’t think we can.”

“Why not? I guess they could have some ideas,” Chet said.

“The Nexus guys are literally the polar opposite of everything we do, it seems,” Todd said. “If Nexus Racing told us the sky was blue, I’d believe it was green. That said, I am interested in how that fan setup at the back of their car works. I might try to set up some kind of simulation to see how that would work on our cars.”

Eventually, Chet was dismissed and sent on his way, but before he left, Todd informed him that, if he wanted, he would be able to travel to Cocoabo Park with the Preston team again, since his work was so good. Such a move was necessary, Todd argued, as the other 13 teams were likely working on upgrades to their cars and that Preston would have to get a closer look at those changes – you know, for their own research. A little healthy espionage.
-Hap.
To be on hiatus April 27 - October 17.

User avatar
Tumbra
Minister
 
Posts: 2183
Founded: Aug 29, 2013
Civil Rights Lovefest

Postby Tumbra » Fri Jun 02, 2023 11:14 am

Pressley Racing
Cocoabo Preservation Grand Prix: Thursday Team Principal's Press Conference


Press: My question's for Jack Brook of Pressley Racing. Actually, I've got two questions.

Brook: Is-is that in order? (He sees a nod) Go ahead.

Press: The first one is: The Colourworks team is reverting back to their old AGP-004 chassis, which brought them to second in the previous season of WGPC. Notably, one thing that's absent from the AGP-004 is the active suspension system that was present on this year's ill-fated AGP-005. Add to the fact that your test driver, Dario Nülkeschläger, has been reported to have had a crucial active suspension part on the PRE-023 fail in testing in quite spectacular fashion —

Brook: So what's your question exactly?

Press: Will the Colourworks' team failure to implement an active suspension concept, alongside your own failure to put the active suspension concept on your car, mean that the upgrade will be scrapped?

Brook: I'll start by acknowledging that a crucial part of an upgrade that we were testing did indeed fail in the final part of testing. We're not going to be putting that upgrade onto the car in our mid-season upgrade package, though we're going to keep the technological advances on our car going for as long as we're partaking in WGPC. We have noted the difficulty that the Colourworks team have had in applying the car to their AGP-005 — I think we're all looking on at Mr. Toralmintii's title defence going a little less well than he hoped with a bit of a pity — but I think that won't have any implication on whether our own active suspension system will be implemented or not. Worst case scenario, we delay it until next season, or otherwise; but the plan is in the pipeline.

Press: Certain comments made by Pressley Racing CEO have seemingly become the talk of the paddock, with your boss Charlie Pressley having singled out two teams — Cygnus and Nexus — for having unusually shaped cars. Do you agree with the comments that your boss has made? What of the response that Dr. William Emerson made in The Lapiz Point Post, defending his car as having been 'strenuously tested' and deriding Mr. Pressley's comments as 'short-sighted and disingenuous?'

Brook: I've not been able to read Dr. Emerson's comments in full, but I think that Mr. Pressley was simply concerned for things like driver safety and fairness in this series. You look up and down the grid — of the fourteen teams participating in this series, twelve have gone with a design that looks largely with what we think a WGPC car looks like. The other two? Sure, they were cleared by the WGPC to be legal, but we have our doubts that we probably won't escalate. My only hope is that we won't have any situation in which that safety system will have to be tested; I've come across their driver, Brendan Faloe, and he seems a kindly chap.

Another member of the press raises their hand.

Press: One question. Your team has made quite a splash, with Sophie McCreary putting the PRE-023 on the front row and then finishing third in the race, landing a podium in just their second race. Have Pressley's expectations been raised by this podium finish?

Brook: I think a podium has served as a brilliant vindication of what we and the team have worked for across the past two seasons. As I'm sure everyone here knows, we were originally meant to be a WGP2 operation, before ramping up to WGPC in a few seasons' time. I think what we've got a brilliant effort going back home with Grantfeldt, with Nülkeschläger putting the car through its paces — we're thrilled to have him join us this weekend in Tropicorp. Our expectations, however, remain the same; I think the pace shown by our other driver, Bryce Yannec, is more realistic of where we're expecting to be this season. Sophie's performed stellar, way above expectations at this point, and Bryce's race pace has shown to be stellar, too — as evinced by his wonderful climb up the rankings last time out. So, to give you your soundbite; no, I don't think the expectations have been raised by last week's third place, and we'll be managing them accordingly.

Sophie

"You're doing real good, kid. The whole world will be looking at you."

Rudy Edward's words on the Togonistani podium echoed in Sophie's mind as she sat in silence, clutching her helmet, in her tiny room inside the motorhome. The curtains were sellotaped shut — she wanted the place to be as dark as possible, another lesson she'd learned from Ted — and only the quiet hubbub of the team ramping up its activities was audible outside.

Even in the darkness of the room, she knew that the pressure was on. She'd scored eighteen points to Bryce's nil — sure, he couldn't be blamed for the car shitting it on lap two of Liventia, but his performance in Togonistan left much to be desired, to her, at least, even if it was a brilliant recovery drive. She had to take charge; she had to be the team leader.

And yet...she still felt like the car was a big beast that she wasn't ready to tackle. Edwards ran rings all around her, beating both her and Janne Laukkaken off the line and sailing off into the distance, and she'd been told to hold back when the Cocoabo had charged through the field. She'd grappled with the car all afternoon, with various little offs; even if the end result had been clear and Laukkanen had finished more than ten seconds behind. Give it ten or so more laps, though, and she had no doubt that she'd have been overtaken by the Nexus either.

She didn't feel ready. And yet, now she had to take charge — Bryce was still trying to get his season on track, and she was receiving most of the new parts that were coming through from Grantfeldt. Every time she went across the white lines, shaking the cars to bits, driving up back into the pits with a banged up livery, she could feel Jack Brook's disapproving gaze on her; every time she posted a time that was below average, she knew that Charlie Pressley, back at home, would be wondering if she was the right driver for the job.

She just wanted to lie down and float away, sometimes; back to the day when she'd first gotten back into a go-kart, and won her first-ever race at a tiny little go-karting circuit at the Torrenwald factory. She wanted to talk to Ted again...she wondered if the team would be a little less nosy on her whereabouts if she just slipped off a little bit, messaged Ted, told him that she wanted to meet up to talk, and to hug, and to deal with all the pressure that was mounting on her.

Just somewhere where she could be free of all the expectations and stress.

Ted

"P13, P13, Ted, bad luck, but it was just that kind of day."

"Aagh, we had it, and then...we didn't. Sorry, guys. Hopefully...ah..with the upgrades, we can do better."

It had been a disappointing home race for Kaylan; from a promising grid position, Ted and Darian had ended out of the points. The car was beginning to feel like it had substantially more pace on Saturdays than on Sundays; which boded extremely well for the qualifying sessions, most of the time, but didn't do the same when it came to race pace.

He'd tried to take some time off by looking forward to William's meeting; but Ted's heart sank when he'd said to bring Janne or Sophie. He didn't want to be the One Guy who didn't bring anyone, so he'd told William to go ahead without them and he'd join them next time. He didn't exactly feel like baring his heart in front of two people he didn't exactly know, either.

Which meant he was, once again, alone. In the fast-moving series that was WGPC, being alone was part and parcel of the experience; but here, he felt even more alone. Xander didn't have as much time for him, having to deal with the rest of the Kaylan infrastructure; Sophie was still resolutely avoiding him, and Janne...well, Janne had barely acknowledged his existence. He didn't know if their one encounter in a sauna would be the last.

The mood on the plane back to the Kaylan headquarters was sombre; even though it was a short flight, everyone was getting some shut-eye. All he could do was look out the window as the plane flew over the light-dotted Togonistani islands; he didn't know how secure his future in the series was, in general. He was 2-0 up on Darian in race pace, but was also 0-2 down on Darian in qualifying. And race pace was something that the Kaylan junior was strong in; after all, he'd not come second in the WGP2 series for naught. Who else would want him, if Kaylan decided that they were done with him after this season? Colourworks, where he'd need to work with iBen Toralmintii? Viska, with Sara Luna? There was nowhere for him to stretch his legs and properly be a team leader in the grid, and he doubted that the teams he wanted to drive for would want him anyway.

A few days of practice led to the flight to Tropicorp soon; and as he geared up for another long flight, Ted started to listen to a WGPC podcast. The host was particularly controversial; he seemed to think that Colourworks needed more time with the AGP-005, Eminent's success in Liventia was a one-off, and that Pressley Racing wouldn't be back next season, because Charlie Pressley was a man that was 'easily bored'. Ted sniggered as he heard that last one; he knew that his dad was in for the long run.

What he didn't expect, though, when he touched down in Tropicorp, was a text on his phone from a surprising source.

your dad isn't at the race this weekend
meet up on saturday?


It seemed like Sophie McCreary did want to meet up after all.
THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF TUMBRA
Tumbra - a sprawling, modern federal democratic republic located in Esportiva. Strong economy, strong civil rights, strong freedoms.
Population: 125 million | TLA: TMB | Capital City: Straton | Largest City: Couno
Constitution | Domestic Database | Domestic Newswire | Domestic Motorsports | Wiki Article
President: Bertram Andrews (Labour) | Prime Minister: Sandra Campbell (Labour)
U-18 World Cup 13, 21 Champions | Di Bradini Cup 51, 57 Champions | Campionato Esportiva 31, 33, 34, 38 Champions | Eagles' Cup 13, 14 Champions
World Grand Prix Championship 21 — World Drivers' Champion (Ted Pressley — Ælund)

PreviousNext

Advertisement

Remove ads

Return to NS Sports

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Pasarga, United Empires of the Seven Seas

Advertisement

Remove ads