View Single Post
Old 12-14-2009, 11:16 PM   #68
a_Username


 
a_Username's Avatar
 
Drives: 2010 2SS Camaro
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Murfreesboro, TN
Posts: 3,890
Quote:
Originally Posted by The_Blur View Post
I'll reply anyway. GM is confident. We have no background on this guy, but we can be sure that this driver probably has more skill than the average amateur. I would go so far as to guess that he's been to several tracks and earned a few trophies in a few amateur divisions. The principle of the challenge still stands. The CTS-V is a beast. A guy in a BMW beat Bob Lutz, a senior employee of GM. Do we really expect GM's top personnel to spend their time racing? I'd rather leave them to running the company into the future rather than into the ground. Some people will claim that Lutz was too bold to offer this challenge. Some will say that his loss to this driver who's barely old enough to hit the bar for a victory drink after the challenge punctuates the failure of GM to deliver the fastest luxury sedan—actually, make that all-encompassing sedan, not just luxury—in the world. I would argue that this campaign has served an important purpose. It made even the great and respected automakers take aim at GM. Until Lutz issued the challenge, no one had a reason to beat his track time. They didn't have a chance to lose to a CTS-V; to realize its performance prowess; to discover that GM truly makes a world class performance and luxury sedan that makes the hyped M3 a frequent loser despite its record against other great products.

Lutz lost to a kid who probably has better reflexes and more recent experience driving at high speeds. As I said, Lutz has a job at GM that I expect he spends a lot of time performing. This doesn't spell out the end of GM. I'm not crying at night, and neither is anyone else who rightly thinks that GM truly competes with and oftentimes defeats the best. Without this challenge, this kid could not have so easily been so recognized for his exemplary driving by BMW. It turned out well for him. Without this challenge, the CTS-V might not have so many other companies desperately trying to keep up. It's a marketing campaign. It promotes a product. Without this challenge, and perhaps this single loss, none of us might be paying attention. In the end, Lutz still wins.
I would like to add that Lutz lost the race, not the CTS-V. People are taking this as the CTS-V losing, and obviously it is Lutz who lost. (Again idk why BMW is so cheery about finally beating a 77 year old man? His age has everything to do with it. That's just like saying you playing Peyton Manning when he's 80 years old and beating him and thinking you are the better football player lol.)
a_Username is offline   Reply With Quote