It's good that both drivers escaped relatively lightly, and that no spectators were injured, or worse. The car that finished up in the tunnel brought back memories of Alan McNish's crash at Donnington when he was in F3000, and parts of his car, including the engine, finished in the pedestrian tunnel after a collision, killing a spectator. Goodwood must be breathing a very heavy sigh of relief.

Motor racing is dangerous, and Goodwood is a very fast circuit - it's highly unlikely that any crash at Goodwood will be a small one.
Goodwood has become the pre-eminent circuit in the world for Historic racing, to the extent that many of the cars that now race there at the Revival and now the Members' Meeting, are "Goodwood Specials" and can produce lap times that the drivers who raced them there back in "the day" wouldn't recognise. They may all have the requisite FIA papers and be eligible for the classes in which they compete, but some of them are rather more equal than others, to paraphrase George Orwell.

A car which has achieved good results at Goodwood is often far more valuable than one which is, shall we say, rather more authentic but finishes sixth in class. As always, modern suspension components, brake materials and tyres will make a difference, but so will other, more specialist preparation.

I love Goodwood, and historic racing. When the sun is shining and the air is filled with the heady aromas of Castrol R and hot brakes there's no finer place to be. But the racing has started to become rather less than authentic, and has become more about spending vast amounts of money to achieve results which the cars may not have been capable of in period.