11-23-2020, 03:00 PM
(This post was last modified: 11-23-2020, 03:21 PM by Martin Smith.)
It's impossible to answer withut specifics, but I cn tell you after hundreds of races I'm still learning how to avoid incidents.
What I would suggest is to approach every incident as if it was your fault. Even if the other guy came blasting up behind you without braking, ASSUME you did something wromg and look for ways you might have avoided the incident.
If you can't find anything different you could have done then your fate will be to continue having incidents in that type of scenario over and over. But you might be surprised to find there are a lot of situations where you *can* do some things differently, and your incident rating and race results will be better off because of it.
What I would suggest is to approach every incident as if it was your fault. Even if the other guy came blasting up behind you without braking, ASSUME you did something wromg and look for ways you might have avoided the incident.
If you can't find anything different you could have done then your fate will be to continue having incidents in that type of scenario over and over. But you might be surprised to find there are a lot of situations where you *can* do some things differently, and your incident rating and race results will be better off because of it.