I'm a racer at heart more than anything else, and that will always be my priority: competing. But ultimately, if you can't drive, you can still have the competitive spirit outside of a car.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
You get around people who see us away from the track, and it's a pretty big contrast. You're still competitive, and you still want to win everything, but I think in the car, we're focused and passionate all the time. We get outside the car, and we're a lot more relaxed and easygoing, enjoying things away from racing.
I enjoy racing because I want to do it. No one's forcing me.
I've always had a fascination with cars and racing, not that I've ever competed.
I'm very, very competitive. If my grandmother asks to race me down the street, I'm going to try to beat her. And I'll probably enjoy it!
I've been racing for my whole life, and I know what I need to do to be able to win.
I love racing and I love doing well.
Racing is a very selfish, self-centred, self-glorifying thing. My wife's life for 14 years was centered around me. It was all about me. It was all for my ego.
We're involved in racing because there's that element of competition. But there's that desire to push yourself beyond the natural comfort zone and the boundaries that are preset if you like, and to be better than the rest.
When you are racing in an able-bodied competition, you're all equal and you go out there and try your best, and that's what counts.
It might sound stupid, but I don't enter a race to win - I enter a race because I love racing.
No opposing quotes found.