"I'd rather try and fail than not try at all, as they say"
About this Quote
Rahal’s line lands with the blunt moral clarity of a pit-wall decision: you either take the opening or you watch it close. Coming from an elite driver, “try and fail” isn’t a vague self-help bumper sticker; it’s a working philosophy in a sport where the difference between courage and stupidity can be a few inches of track and a fraction of a second. The phrasing is tellingly modest. “As they say” shrugs off grandiosity, signaling a locker-room pragmatism: he’s not pretending he invented the idea, just insisting it’s the only one that survives contact with reality.
The subtext is a quiet rebuke to the safest kind of ego. Not trying can masquerade as sophistication - as if withholding effort protects your identity from the stain of losing. Rahal flips that logic. Failure becomes evidence of participation, proof you showed up where the stakes were real. In racing culture, that’s also an ethic of responsibility: you prepare, you commit, you accept the outcome. The alternative is complacency dressed up as caution.
Context matters because Rahal’s career sits in a world that constantly audits nerve: qualifying laps, late-brake passes, strategy calls that look brilliant or reckless depending on the next corner. His intent isn’t to romanticize failure; it’s to normalize it as the price of ambition. The line works because it’s not lyrical - it’s procedural. Try. Risk. Learn. Keep moving.
The subtext is a quiet rebuke to the safest kind of ego. Not trying can masquerade as sophistication - as if withholding effort protects your identity from the stain of losing. Rahal flips that logic. Failure becomes evidence of participation, proof you showed up where the stakes were real. In racing culture, that’s also an ethic of responsibility: you prepare, you commit, you accept the outcome. The alternative is complacency dressed up as caution.
Context matters because Rahal’s career sits in a world that constantly audits nerve: qualifying laps, late-brake passes, strategy calls that look brilliant or reckless depending on the next corner. His intent isn’t to romanticize failure; it’s to normalize it as the price of ambition. The line works because it’s not lyrical - it’s procedural. Try. Risk. Learn. Keep moving.
Quote Details
| Topic | Motivational |
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