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Back O'the Grid
MotoGP Instanbul Special Report
Welcome to this special edition of Back O the Grid. Istanbul, the magic of the
Bosphorous sparkling in the warm mediterranean sun, the minnarets of the Golden
Mosque. The locals fishing from the bridges catching yet another pistachio
riddled turd. Seems as though Pistachios are an integral part of the local
cuisine. You can find them in pastries, main dishes and even in the starters. A
couple of days later and they provide endless fun for the local fishermen.
My weekend started with a 3am alarm call at Chez Rangi, my flight left at 7 so
it was a 5 am check in at Heathrow and a middle of the night start to my day.
Ther upside was that I slept through most of the in-flight movie, it starred
Will Smith so I didnt miss anything. After a four hour flight it was a relief to
spark up in the airport, Turkey is one place where smokers are'nt a dying breed.
A 35ytl ( ytl = local script for Turkish lira - we ended up calling them
lentils) taxi ride took me to our hotel for the weekend, the Bauhaus Guest
House, or as the locals call it "The Lucky Cockroach Motel". Since I arrived
first I snagged the single bed and Left Rangi and Darcy to fight over the bunk
beds. With a few hours in hand I took myself out for a Turkish coffee or two.
They got the strength right but the portions are just a touch small, you need
about ten to equal a cup of my morning Java. Suitably fortified with caffeine I
went for a long promised shave. Theres something about being in a barbers chair
while some Turkish Barber whirls a cut-throat razor around like its not even
sharp, and while talking to his pal is swipping the stubble from your chops.
While he was doing that a rather pretty young girl grabbed my hand and started
slapping oils on it and started to give me a manicure. Not understanding a word
I had been signed up for the full package. I can actually recomend it it was a
very pleasant experience and I ended up with smooth, clean nails and not the
ragged oil stained ones I'm used to. Personal grooming is something the Turks
are fiercly proud of and its not unusual to see them sporting neatly trimmed 'taches,
a lot of the men wear them as well.
Back at the "Lucky Cockroach" Rangi n Darcy had arrived and following a short
briefing from Tour Guide/GruppenFuhrer Rangi on our itineraray we went out for a
bite to eat and an early night for our 7 am start - 5am uk time - start the next
day. What I was unprepared for was the clogged drain snoring coming from darcy's
pit. By three 0'clock I'd had enough and smacked him as hard as I could - albeit
with my pillow - you never have a torque wrench when you really need one - and
this shut him up long enough to get some sleep.
If they ever re-make "Beau Geste" I can recommend our very own Rangi audition
for the part of the Seargent Markoff, the sadistic disciplinarian, fearing an
extra 40 lashes I was ready for inspection at 6:45. What I wasnt ready for was
Rangi driving a hire car through Istanbul. There was no way this poor car was
being returned with tread or a working clutch as Rangi practised 4 wheel drifts,
tyre shredding starts, stops and handbrake turns. All this with one hand on the
horn and a cheery colonial disdain for the safety of the locals as he scythed
through the local streets scattering pistachio vendors. At one point returning
from the Track I had nodded off in the back and was awaken by being thrown
against my seat belt while my ears were assaulted by the shreik of locking
wheels. I opened my eyes fully expecting to see a smiling Grim Reaper offering
me coffee and a fag.
Practise had been spiced up by the local support race - Turkish Superbikes. We
noticed them during our paddock walkabout, this down to Rangi securing passes
from Alpinestars. These guys were the highlight of the day as they played "Pin
the apex on the corner" and they couldnt hit it with a shitty stick - a couple
looked like they knew what they were doing - the rest looked like they had been
given a choice by the judge between Turkish Jail and taking part in this
spectacle. At least here they could only get lapped. Randy Mamola on the dual
seat Ducati was lapping with pillion in 2:09's - the race winner was doing
2:06's, the next finisher would have left Randy and Pillion in Second. Turkey
may have to wait sometime for its first WSB Champion.
As it turned out it was the anniversary of the Gallipoli landings and our
quarter of Istanbnul was awash with Kiwis and Aussie backpackers all drinking
their own weight in beer. Our waiter for the evening had also been imbibing and
our starters arrived with the main course - dessert was an option we didnt get
since I think the chef had passed out. Still a couple of beers helped put Darcy
into a deeper sleep and Sat night was snore free. Sunday dawned bright and clear
and as i rolled over I went from the crack of dawn to the crack of Rangi. Years
of an unequal struggle meant the elastic on his underpants had given up
and I found myself regarding something that looked like two enormous and
particilarly hairy pork scratchings seperated by the grand canyon. I did fumble
for my camera phone but at that range the lens wasnt wide enough to fit it all
into frame. Besides, its probably not something you'd want to see, I didnt.
Folly piled upon folly and that night we headed off to the Turkish baths and
after stewing for 20 minutes a large, hairy Turk started seeing if he could
seperate flesh from bone with his cast iron fingers during what had been
described as a massage on the brochure. On the plus side it does iron out any
kinks and after a couple of nights without sleep it was quite invigourating. So
give it a go if you get to Istanbul.
Having checked the race odds I stuck a fiver each way on Elias at 40:1. Now I'd
like to claim this was a profound insight based on my extensive knowledge of
MotoGP. Alas, I was at the track and though this reminds me of Portugal, maybe
Elias will go well here to. Rossi faded badly during the race but that may be
down to the Repsol Brolly Dollies. These were almost identical twins of
breathtaking beauty and about a week on the right side of being jailbait, last
seen being led off to meet "The Doctor". So it wasnt just his tyres that were
shagged out by all account. We hooted and cheered Casey Stoner and Elias on
every lap and revelled in baiting the sea of Rossi fans who looked dumbstruck by
his poor performance. We even hung around to watch the TSB's do their stuff and
were not dissappointed when one nearly took out half the grid at the first
corner on the warm up lap by forgetting to either brake or turn.
So that was it a hugely enjoyable weekend in Istanbul, beers, bikes and brolly
babes. Down side is a four hour flight home and then being left to the less than
tender mercies of our rail network which took longer to get me from Heathrow to
Ipswich than Turkish airlines did to fly me from Istanbul. Even after that I am
looking forward to returning next year.
This is George Watson for Back O' the Grid - wondering where I get a Turkish
race licence.