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Posts tagged with "Radio Le Mans"

Endurance Not Just For Cars

I spent much of last night live-commenting on the opening round of the Intercontinental Le Mans Cup, the Sebring 12 Hours. It is also the opening round of the American Le Mans Series.

 

The race proved very exciting but was difficult to follow. To the organisers' credit, there was an attempt to make the series easier to follow than ever and I've heard the ESPN3.com coverage was excellent, at least for some people. However, only viewers in the USA could watch it that way, for international coverage was on a separate stream on americanlemans.com. This was a good idea, except that it appears that interest in the race was severely underestimated.

 

The official site's video coverage seriously lagged. By halfway through the second hour, it was three minutes behind the action and the stuttering on the audio was so bad I had to mute it. Thankfully two alternative audio streams were available. Not trusting the one hosted at the same site as the stuttering video, I opted for Radio Le Mans.

 

Radio Le Mans worked well during the afternoon, being smooth and consistent. Then I went to swimming club just before 6 pm GMT (3 1/2 hours into the race). I wasn't around to see it, but apparently there was a point in the action where the only information source available was Twitter. The video, all audio streams and both live timing systems were all down. The audio was back up and running by the time I was home at 7:30 pm GMT (5 1/2 hours into the race) but from then on everything was quite shaky. I had to reset the commentary four times between that point and the end of the race (something which had been unnecessary prior to going out). Even using Twitter was chancy because some people (including some official sources) were following the race using streams of varying timeliness.

 

Naturally, this was unsatisfactory to the many people watching. Sidepodcast's hour-by-hour visit recording system (known as Heartbeat) demonstrates this vividly. After steadily increasing in views during the hours between the race starting and 18:00 GMT, there is a sharp fall in viewers in the two hours following, probably due to people getting fed up and leaving. Indeed, by 20:00 GMT, the figures are only about twice as high as for the morning commenting, which is the quietest time of day for the blog. Yes, the figures recovered as the night progressed (though ignore midnight onwards because a second event, the Red Bull Crashed Ice event, was being live-commented there later on) but think how many more viewers would have been there if everything had worked correctly.

 

This is a very widespread problem in motorsport but rarely is it put in such stark relief. I know it's difficult to cater to the multitudes, especially when you have no idea of the volume of those multitudes (it was the first time ESPN had attempted to provide a visual service to international ALMS supporters and it was only the second race of this level the ALMS had attempted to live-stream internationally). Nonetheless, the message is clear.

 

Improve reliability and the potential rewards are huge.

 

Low reliability will carry a heavy price.

 

Much like endurance racing for the teams themselves, really. Aim for the sorts of reliability the GTC class had. Not those of LMP2*...

* - I do not believe I am offering any spoilers by saying that all 8 GTC cars, even the ones that didn't see the flag, completed more than 70% of the race distance (in other words, enough to be classified had this been an LMS race) and only one of the four LMP2 cars did so.

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Obscure International Sportscar Racing

 

Warning! Long entry alert!

 

I spent quite a lot of the weekend attempting to find out information about Giancarlo Fisichella's latest adventure. Considering that it was an international sportscar race (link in Italian), this proved surprisingly difficult.

 

The race was the 6 Ore di Vallelunga (link in Italian), an endurance race slightly longer than a typical Le Mans Series race (because there is no maximum distance) for GT2 and lower. GT2 is the level Giancarlo races at in sportscars and the race is an independent one, so initially my reaction to him being on the entry list was excitement. Especially since, at fewer than 80 miles from Fisico's home district, it would definitely be his home race.

 

Then I spotted a slight problem. Coverage.

 

Sportscar racing is challenging to follow at the best of times. Pit stop counts that sometimes enter double figures, safety cars that pick up whoever happens to be convenient, high entry counts leading to multiple simultaneous incidents... At least the multiple classes would be a minimal complication this time. Usually Giancarlo races in ACO-sanctioned events these days, where GT2 is the slowest class, but in Vallelunga GT2 is the fastest permitted class. So winning the class would surely require a race win.*

 

Usually the way round all this confusion is to load up a live timing screen. By necessity more complex than any single-seater enthusiasts use for F1, the versions supplied by LMS, ALMS and the 24H Le Mans official websites all offer reasonable means to follow what's happening (when they load and update correctly). The Vallelunga organisers... ...didn't.

 

There was some news available on the official site, but as far as I could tell (with admittedly limited Italian language skills) there was no live timing. Or broadcasting. Which brought me to the second problem.

 

To a certain extent, it's possible to follow a sportscar race even without live timing if you have a decent commentary team. Having established there was no official version, my next port of call was Radio Le Mans. Having a commentary team I'd grown to enjoy in the past season (covering four different rulesets and three different continents) explain the complexities of this race (under a fifth ruleset) in my native language would be helpful. Alas, they appear to have gone on a well-deserved off-season break from commentating.

 

Bereft of alternative ideas, I asked my friends for help.  At the Fisichella Forum suggested half-a-dozen possible sites that could be used. One of them worked, and I looked forward to attempting to understand the race using the likely-sounding Italia-Racing.it (and secretly hoping everyone stopped for ice creams mid-race, since I'd just covered that topic in class!).

 

On Sunday morning, I duly tuned in... ...and heard "although no-one understood, we-were-holding-back-the-flood..." While I usually like that particular Take That song, I didn't think it was a good sign that I was hearing it 3 minutes before the start. Ah well, maybe it's one of those stations that thinks starting and ending 30 seconds the show either side of the flags is slick and efficient use of time.

 

The Shakira song that followed made me worried.

 

The Elvis song that started as the race was due to start made me very worried. "Suspicious Mind(s)", even...

 

By the end of the next song, I was ready to panic. I'd been checking my social networking services while listening to the radio and seen a photo proving the race had started during the song. It was some Italian pop track, but I was past caring who'd sung it as it was now at least 5 minutes into the race. The way the presenter was talking made it clear I shouldn't expect the station to be covering any racing today. Even if a station called Italia-Racing might be expected to do so.

 

I'd previously checked through the other 5 links I'd been offered and found that they didn't work or were Internet TV sites requiring registration. Checking against the official site, I noticed something buried deep in the qualifying report (link in Italian) - official broadcast rights were with Sky and they were showing it next week (or possibly the week after - by that stage I couldn't be bothered to get the calender out).

 

The next hour was spent rambling through every Italian internet radio station I could remember or research in case anyone was unofficially broadcasting the race. Highlights included a lovely club cover of Queen's "You Don't Fool Me". But all the synths in the world weren't going to tell me how Giancarlo was doing in his home race...

 

After scanning through my social networking, blog and fora contacts (and finding a few photos of practise), I concluded that nobody else I knew had any further information on the race. By this point, I elected to take out my frustration in a game of Worms.

 

An hour later, logging back in hope more than expectation, I searched on Twitter and found Laura Bonetti tweeting about the race in progress! I knew she was at the track, but I'd assumed that her lack of tweets since the start meant that she was concentrating 100% on what was in front of her. I was pleased to be wrong and even more pleased when I read Giancarlo's car was in the lead. That must have been an exciting couple of hours...

 

So that, eventually, proved to be my one source of live information - a spectator who was generous enough to spend a little time not looking at the cars in order to post little updates. There's a certain excited tension about following a race via short occasional messages - you start imagining everything that could have happened, refresh, decide nothing's happened, refresh a few minutes later... ...and find that everyone's lined up behind a safety car because of someone else going off.

 

I probably should have seen an omen in that particular tweet. Just over hour prior to the chequered flag, it started raining. Nearly everyone stayed on slicks. It was on this awkward combination that Giancarlo went off-track. Vallelunga doesn't feature the acres of tarmac run-off that adorn the average Tilke-drome, so it ended Giancarlo's race. The classified position of 7th does not show that he and his team-mates  Perrazzini and Cioci had led the majority of the way without much trouble from opponents.

 

AF Corse still won the race with a different car (the #10 - they'd sent 4 to the race), followed by the pole-sitting #7 Kessell Racing and the #26 Porsche, which was a GT3.

 

The race was an interesting and sounded quite exciting, but would have been better with a little more... ...something. A bit like my viewing experience of it, really. Hopefully when the organisers turn this event into a 4-race series the coverage will improve.

 

* - Just don't tell the LMP1 teams at the LMS at Hungary this year that. The fastest of them was beaten by 5 ostensibly slower LMP2s...

 

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