Ferrari
126C 1981
Salut,
Gilles is written on the track at the start-finish line
of the Montréal Grand Prix circuit named after
him. Some have thought that Gilles Villeneuve personified
everything good about motor racing, his astonishing
natural speed complemented by a diminutive physique
coupled with a boyish face and irreverent character.
Others said his flamboyance bordered on the reckless.
Both are perhaps right,
as this dearly loved driver won the hearts of the Ferrari
Tifosi to whom he is still revered today
and was affectionately called the "High Priest
of Destruction" by the commendatore himself,
Enzo Ferrari. Gilles had a talent for taking anything
mechnical and "utterly destroying it," according
to Ferrari, who compared Villeneuve's will to win to
that of the legendary Tazio Nuvolari of the 1930s.
Rocketing
to prominence in the Formula Atlantic scene in the mid-1970s,
Villeneuve replaced Niki Lauda
at Ferrari for the end of the 1997 Formula One season.
Remaining with the Scuderia for his full career, Gilles'
statistics (just six wins and 2 poles in six seasons)
appear paltry beside his reputation. But a closer look
reveals that Villeneuve had such raw natural talent and
an enthusiasm for GP racing that the World Championship
would have been inevitable. He scored his first win at
the Canadian Grand Prix the next season, and in 1979 posted
three wins and seven podium finishes while standing honorably
by team orders driving nearly the entire race in
2nd place at the Italian GP at Monza so that team
mate Jody Scheckter could win the title. Described then
as "perhaps the most tenacious fighter seen in racing
for years," Gilles took 2nd place in the World Championship
by a slim four points and in the '79 French Grand Prix,
won by Jean-Pierre Jabouille in the first victory for
a turbocharged engine in the modern F1 era, waged a fantastic
duel with René Arnoux for second
place, with Villeneuve crossing the line 0.3 seconds ahead
(in the first race announced by Murray Walker for the
BBC).
Saddled
with an inferior car, Gilles nonetheless won at Monaco
in 1981 pictured above and in the Spanish
GP two seeks later. That would sadly prove to be his
last F1 victory, however. Just as Ferrari were developing
a promising turbo engine for themselves, the FOCA-FISA
controversy led to a virtual boycott of the 1982 San
Marino GP. There, in a far from full field of just 14
entries, the Ferrari 126C2 turbos were running 1-2,
with Villeneuve leading from Didier Pironi, when the
team ordered the drivers to slow to conserve fuel. Yet
Pironi passed Villeneuve before the Tosa hairpin with
1/2 lap remaining and took the win, causing Villeneuve
who said "I was cruising along so easily
and believed that Pironi was being honest until he slid
past me with all wheels locked" to vow he
would never speak to his team mate again.
That
would not happen. Consumed with dismay and disbelief
at being betrayed, Gilles was determined to beat Pironi
in the Dutch Grand Prix at Zolder two weeks later. Taking
the track in practice to top Pironi's slightly faster
qualifying time, Villeneuve was on a hot lap when the
dawdling March of Jochen Mass strayed into his path.
Unwilling to lift, Villeneuve ducked inside but was
launched over Mass' left rear wheel, the Ferrari instantly
cartwheeling to destruction across the track, nose in
the sand, flinging the driver out of the cockpit. The
suicide-in-installments that was Villeneuve's life had
reached its final phase, driving Enzo Ferrari to tears
and leading Villeneuve's own son, 1997 World Champion
Jacques, to adopt a calculating and far different approach
to the "art and genius" of Grand Prix racing.
As Nigel Roebuck of Autocourse wrote in 1982,
"Gilles has gone, and with him the light of genius
in Grand Prix racing. In time, of course, another star
will emerge, but it will never twinkle with the same
intensity again. We are back to normality once more.
The impossible cannot happen."
Gilles
Villeneuve 's Career Profile |
Seasons |
Races |
Wins |
Poles |
Fastest
Laps |
Points |
F1 Titles |
6 |
67 |
6 |
2 |
8 |
107 |
|
|