Mclaren Sack Juan Pablo Montoya. Reaction! Sniffing Lewis Hamilton

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  • čas přidán 6. 05. 2020
  • Mclaren Sack Juan Pablo Montoya after taking out his own teammate Kimi Raikkonen at the previous race at the US GP in 2006. After it was revealed that Montoya had chose to drive for Nascar in 2007, Mclaren relieved him off his services with immediate effect.

Komentáře • 199

  • @leonardofabbri7930
    @leonardofabbri7930 Před rokem +118

    He did things his way during an era where everything went against his style and he's a Motorsport legend. FACTS.

  • @purplegorilla99
    @purplegorilla99 Před 2 lety +299

    Classic Kimi response lmfao

    • @arwyss
      @arwyss Před 2 lety +15

      I fucking love that guy.

    • @ddizon666
      @ddizon666 Před rokem +9

      Kimi cracked me up 😂

    • @vinuradesilva8261
      @vinuradesilva8261 Před měsícem +3

      Consistent on and off the track.

    • @dannycolverson6944
      @dannycolverson6944 Před 13 dny

      Guy is an a-hole. Always has been. Always will be. A hero to dullard, dumb people everywhere. Underperformed massively during his F1 career too

  • @porscheoscar
    @porscheoscar Před 2 lety +170

    "Didn't realize his potential in F1"... huh? Montoya finished on the podium in every third grand prix he entered. Which is precisely how you put together a championship season Mark Blundell. JPM Took six consecutive pole positions against the greatest Ferrari F1 car ever raced. Won the Monaco Grand Prix with two F1 World Champions standing below him. His qualifying lap was so on the knifes edge that you could not have passed a sheet of paper between the armco and his rear tires. He Recorded the fastest ever lap in an F1 car (without slicks) a record that stood for nearly 15 years. And still to this day put on the only overtaking on a F1 Champion and Championship car that had the entire F1 press room jumping out of their chairs. It's a pity Montoya never had a car worthy of his talent and got stuck in the groove tire era of F1. Had Montoya entered F1 during the Williams dominance era of the late 1990s he would have been a multiple world champion instead of Villneuve and Damon being the world champions. He was light years faster than both and could overtake better than Schumacher.

    • @danevukelic7065
      @danevukelic7065 Před 2 lety +14

      Da! Montoya je bio rijedak fenomen među vozačima F1. 👍

    • @solaimanelaissaoui4842
      @solaimanelaissaoui4842 Před 2 lety +19

      You forgot to mention that Montoya had the strongest engine (BMW) from 2001 till 2004. So the Ferrari may had the best aero, but the Williams wasn't a slow car. In fact, on all the races with long straights, or where engine performance played a big role, the Williams BMW always won if they didn't had reliability issues.

    • @porscheoscar
      @porscheoscar Před 2 lety +30

      @@solaimanelaissaoui4842 yes but Ralf Schumacher also had the same engine in the same car and he didnt take six consecutive pole positions against the greatest Ferrari of all time and arguably the greatest F1 car/engine combination ever... driven by a 7 times world champion driver no less. Ralf was a brutally fast driver who had not had a bother named Michael would probably have been that quickest German of his generation. And certainly better under pressure than Vettel, Heidfeld. Yet it was Montoya who had the distinction of finishing on the podium in every third race he entered. Montoya was the last of the slick tire era drivers who proved worthy of being in F1 in the Senna era Wiliams cars as a newbie test driver.

    • @porscheoscar
      @porscheoscar Před 2 lety +14

      @@solaimanelaissaoui4842 another point most dont realize about Montoya's six consecutive pole positions against the Ferrari is that the average margin when the Ferrari took pole over P2 was I think something like 3-4 tenths of a second. All of Montoya's pole positions over the Ferrari were by a cat's whisker. Including his Monaco pole position over Schumacher. You couldn't pass a sheet of paper between Montoya's car and the barriers on that lap.

    • @adrianyoungs8166
      @adrianyoungs8166 Před 2 lety +2

      lol Montoya could never overtake better than Schumi buddy, if anything he was more erratic and ended up taking other drivers out more often than not, he was quick and aggressive and certainly one of the ballsiest pilots ever seen, but he was no match for the seven time champion. Michael was the MASTER in overtaking, race craft, car setup, strategy, tyre management, wet weather, you name it.

  • @elliotcrossan6290
    @elliotcrossan6290 Před 2 lety +91

    The first and the last time that Gary Paffett was mentioned in the same sentence as Lewis Hamilton 😂

    • @elliotcrossan6290
      @elliotcrossan6290 Před 2 lety +1

      @MrLewisBate ...It's called a joke mate

    • @elliotcrossan6290
      @elliotcrossan6290 Před 2 lety +7

      @MrLewisBate Isn't it fascinating that you know my own mind better than I do!
      The joke - and yes, it was a joke, because I have read the names Lewis Hamilton and Gary Paffett in the same sentence before - is the idea that Gary Paffett could possibly have been on level pegging with Lewis Hamilton in contention for the McLaren seat. The reason for that should be fairly self-explanatory. McLaren knew what they needed to know about Paffett, and concluded that he wasn't good enough for F1.
      On the other hand, they underestimated just how good Lewis was, but knew he was a rising star; Turkey 2006 in particular was a performance which made everyone in the F1 paddock sit up and take notice, and Lewis has only proven himself again and again to be not only good enough for a top F1 seat, but quite possibly the greatest driver to ever sit in an F1 car. He is at minimum one of the top five F1 drivers of all time. Are you trying to tell me Paffett would've beaten Fernando Alonso in his rookie season?
      Now, what I want to know is - why do people like you think they know better than everyone else? And why do they - why do you - feel the need to be so bloody rude about it?

    • @elliotcrossan6290
      @elliotcrossan6290 Před 2 lety +1

      @MrLewisBate "it wasn't funny at all"? Why does it have 4 likes then?
      The gall of you, talking about condescending.

  • @hughesgoh5582
    @hughesgoh5582 Před 2 lety +48

    Kimi: it's nothing to do with me so...

  • @jamblman
    @jamblman Před 2 lety +83

    As a JPM fan, I had a worse impression of Ralph. That was very classy of him.. glad I was wrong..

  • @jacobmassey3897
    @jacobmassey3897 Před rokem +56

    Jacques Villeneuve talking about jumping before you're pushed from F1 when he got sacked shortly afterwards 😂

    • @javiergarridobrito5054
      @javiergarridobrito5054 Před měsícem +2

      Hahahahaa unlike Montoya, he was fired for poor performance. Also he was fired prevoiusly at BAR Honda in 2003 and Renault didnt even take him account for 2005.

    • @mortenfrosthansen84
      @mortenfrosthansen84 Před 7 dny

      To be fair..
      Jacques had lost the passion, and therefore that edge, after winning the championship.. kinda like Niko Rosberg

    • @jacobmassey3897
      @jacobmassey3897 Před 7 dny

      @@mortenfrosthansen84 but Nico was sensible enough to retire straight away unlike Jacques. Tbh I still think Nico was the best teammate Lewis has ever had in terms of matching his ability Race after race after race.

    • @mortenfrosthansen84
      @mortenfrosthansen84 Před 7 dny

      @@jacobmassey3897
      Yeah he could easily have done more good, in racing, perhaps as a coach or team manager.
      But if you loose that hunger, you also loose the winning edge. It happens to many athletes..
      Jacques probably got fed up with politics in sport.. which there is a lot of in F1. Now the drivers are almost exclusive items, compared to back then when the changes to absolute professionalism came..
      You still see the occasional pay-to-drive driver, like Stroll, but they can't just jump in the seat by paying money anymore. So it is definitely different..
      It has become like a olympic sport, compared to something anybody can strive to achieve from pure skill

    • @TheRealD4
      @TheRealD4 Před 6 dny +1

      ​@@mortenfrosthansen84 The pinnacle of losing passion has gotta be Damon Hill in 99... He was totally destroyed by teammate Frentzen, but 3 years earlier he beat rookie Villeneuve who himself could beat Frentzen in 97!! 😂 So plz tell me, in what order should we rank Hill, Frentzen and Villeneuve? 🤔

  • @Kyle86910
    @Kyle86910 Před 2 lety +37

    Huge respect to Montoya for stating Facts

  • @nathanw9770
    @nathanw9770 Před rokem +18

    "McLaren are certainly more calm as a team without Montoya"
    McLaren next year: Both their drivers have such a big rivalry that they literally stop each other from winning the WDC...

    • @42much1
      @42much1 Před 11 dny +1

      That was possible to avoid, Ron Dennis was not clever at the time.

  • @kben24
    @kben24 Před rokem +45

    This was devastating for me as a kid… I loved Montoya’s driving style. Lewis Hamilton was coming fast, and I was watching him in GP2… Once he got to F1, I couldn’t connect with his driving style the way I did with Montoya.

  • @pedroasif6844
    @pedroasif6844 Před 2 lety +14

    "Ted Kravitz looks at the talent and personality that Formula 1 has lost" The way he worded this sounds almost like Montoya died smh.

  • @garethbraint
    @garethbraint Před 2 lety +14

    It always makes me chuckle when people with money always say its not about the money

  • @spikespiegel5760
    @spikespiegel5760 Před 2 lety +16

    2:33 kimi being kimi

  • @azapro911
    @azapro911 Před rokem +8

    Imagine the social media reaction if Schumacher had taken those shots at NASCAR today. 😂

  • @johnsimonwijaya
    @johnsimonwijaya Před 2 lety +11

    Kimi always being Kimi

  • @mattjc1021
    @mattjc1021 Před 2 lety +43

    I remember at the time Ron wasn’t exactly slamming the door shut on a JPM return. It probably would’ve been Alonso and Montoya in the team in 2007. No doubt Alonso would’ve shown him the door. Hamilton would’ve slotted in, in 2008. Who knows what would’ve happened. Woulda, shoulda, coulda. There are no asterisks in life.

    • @nostalfan
      @nostalfan Před 2 lety +9

      ¿Alonso would beat Montoya? maybe.. McLaren was not a car for Montoya, just as the Mercedes was not a car for Schumi. the truth is that the only one who stood up to Schumi without having the best car on the grid (2001-2004) was Montoya, nobody else. There was no faster and more aggressive driver in a good car...
      A year later Hamilton showed Alonso the door at Mclaren and they lived through one of the most embarrassing seasons in their history. Montoya left at a good time...
      Now he is dedicated to continue winning in other categories...
      And he Son...

    • @ciaronsmith4995
      @ciaronsmith4995 Před 2 lety +2

      Who says? Montoya was just as fast. Alonso could barely keep up with Trulli.

    • @flazone4486
      @flazone4486 Před 2 lety +9

      @@ciaronsmith4995 in 2003 his first year in Renault Alonso destroys Trulli, and in 2004 he lost only by 1 point and without the bad luck he was going to finish ahead of him without any problem, he lost a lot of points by mechanical failures or getting out by other drivers.

    • @thegreatafrican3367
      @thegreatafrican3367 Před 11 měsíci +1

      ⁠@@nostalfan2007 one of the most embarrassing seasons of their careers??
      Do you even hear yourself?

    • @CharlesDarkson
      @CharlesDarkson Před 6 měsíci +2

      ​@@thegreatafrican3367 Spygate and being kicked out of the Constructors Championship was the embarrassing part.
      It was also what broke the Mclaren-Mercedes partnership. Merc's parent company Daimler was not happy they had to pay 40% of the 100 million fine due to having a 40% stake in McLaren at the time.

  • @sanfordcurtis8242
    @sanfordcurtis8242 Před rokem +8

    Montoya was really bad in F1 in 2006, probably because of the lack of motivation

  • @memoalonso3317
    @memoalonso3317 Před 2 lety +30

    Juan Pablo should have stayed in F1. Wrong decision.

    • @captainjosue
      @captainjosue Před 2 lety +4

      Nah, I don't think so. He has no regrets about leaving F1. He loves racing in America. He was interviewed several years and was asked if he thought he left F1 too soon and he responded HELL NO!!! I really think he disliked F1. Not the cars or racing but the off track stuff.

    • @pedroasif6844
      @pedroasif6844 Před 2 lety +3

      Yes, the man should've sacrificed his and his family's happiness to keep us fans happy. That's totally how it works.

    • @russellking9762
      @russellking9762 Před rokem

      Don’t agree…he drove better in an Indy car doing 230mph..and he was with ‘his people’…too many snobs in F1

  • @javiergarridobrito5054
    @javiergarridobrito5054 Před měsícem +1

    I think is absurd to blame Montoya on that multiple accident in the first corner of the 2006 US grand prix. it was just an incident. And well the truth was that Montoya only chose to leave the team and F1 to return to the United States with his family. For some reason he did not receive any compensation when he broke up with McLaren... Ron Dennis did a terrible job with him, letting himself be carried away by what the tabloid press at that time said.

  • @shay_6r
    @shay_6r Před 2 lety +9

    He left and literally the very next year they had a world championship winning car

    • @kiwimontoya
      @kiwimontoya Před rokem

      What was the spy gate was it 2008?

    • @kodakwhite1696
      @kodakwhite1696 Před rokem +1

      @@kiwimontoya no 07 that’s why they threw the championship away

  • @marvinblackheart623
    @marvinblackheart623 Před rokem +15

    A very sad moment for F1, losing a driver with his racing skills is always very hard to handle for fans. He had the potential to become World Champion but Ferrari at that time was in a different league besides his last two seasons.

  • @CharlesDarkson
    @CharlesDarkson Před 2 lety +43

    Mark Blundell had a blunder here saying that JPM didn't fulfill his potential. Without the harsh penalty in Indianapolis and the Engine Failure whilst leading in Suzuka, he would have been World Champion in 2003.

    • @adrianyoungs8166
      @adrianyoungs8166 Před 2 lety +6

      harsh penalty my arse, he took out rubino and payed for it. And no he wouldn't have been world champion if you include Schu's misfortune in Australia with the barge boards, being taken out by montoya at Nurburgring, the puncture at hockenheim, etc.

    • @sadsadasdsadasdsadas
      @sadsadasdsadasdsadas Před 2 lety +16

      Kimi deserved 2003.

    • @jasepaul91
      @jasepaul91 Před 2 lety +9

      @@adrianyoungs8166 Schumi taken out by Montoya at Nurburgring...It was a legit overtake, even Schumi himself said as much. There was only Ross Brawn crying about it🤣🤣

    • @adrianyoungs8166
      @adrianyoungs8166 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jasepaul91 even still it was bad luck on Schu's part he was looking solid for second place, 3rd if you include Kimi's engine blow up when he was leading comfortably.

    • @jasepaul91
      @jasepaul91 Před 2 lety +1

      @@adrianyoungs8166 Very true. Imo it was a fine overtake and Schumi got unlucky that it caused him to spin

  • @JanVolski
    @JanVolski Před 12 dny +1

    Short and clear from Kimi, as always.

  • @Heisenberg2K
    @Heisenberg2K Před 2 lety +35

    Racing Professionals like JPM made F1 great. It was entertaining and exciting back then. Not like current era of borilton dominance.

    • @alexlacl8730
      @alexlacl8730 Před 2 lety +4

      Schumacher domination was more boring

    • @Heisenberg2K
      @Heisenberg2K Před 2 lety +4

      @@alexlacl8730 I disagree. Except 2004, Schumacher era was entertaining

    • @KimiButNoDrink
      @KimiButNoDrink Před 2 lety +2

      @@Heisenberg2K and 2002 was shit too. But 2003... what a season that was

    • @0megalul309
      @0megalul309 Před 2 lety +2

      @@alexlacl8730 Schumacher won in a Benneton. That 2 championships alone is worth more than Hamilton's career.

    • @alexlacl8730
      @alexlacl8730 Před 2 lety +8

      @@0megalul309 he cheated to be world champions in 94 and 2008 is more impresive than 1995

  • @BanjoLuke1
    @BanjoLuke1 Před 2 lety +23

    I rather liked watching him in F1.

  • @Ze1990ify
    @Ze1990ify Před 2 lety +9

    Montoya made numerous mistakes and then the car only became truly competitive after the Austrian GP (A1 ring), curiously another engine failure. But I'll tell you more, he didn't win the Australian GP through his own fault, etc. Furthermore, the FIA ​​decided on the 2003 championship after the Hungarian GP and Michelin had to make a new tire in record time. The rain in Indianapolis didn't help either, because if it hadn't rained, Kimi would probably have been champion in 2003. A lot of ifs, but if Williams had won a title in 2003 (and if it weren't for the Suzuka 2003 disaster, I would have had that of constructors) maybe even today we would have BMW in F1 and Williams would have had another path.

    • @user-dq2ms1dd8r
      @user-dq2ms1dd8r Před rokem

      Именно так!

    • @javiergarridobrito5054
      @javiergarridobrito5054 Před měsícem

      hahahahaa youre talking about his debut 2001 season mate, your history even doesnt add up what really happend in 2003. numerous mistakes wtf are you talking about hahaha

  • @mortenfrosthansen84
    @mortenfrosthansen84 Před 7 dny

    JP always reminded me of Senna, in his passion and uncompromising style.
    A athlete and a talent with the spanish temperament..
    Like Alonso.. doesn't always think before speaking.
    But my goodness what a driver, who could rival the best in better cars even.
    Edit*
    Added the first sentence.

  • @SaadKidwai
    @SaadKidwai Před rokem +6

    Jenson's words are so ironic now, since he made his Nascar debut recently. Also, Kimi is the coolest guy to have ever been captured on Camera, this man's entire brain only operates on Legend.

  • @williamc4309
    @williamc4309 Před dnem

    It’s a pity Michael didn’t find Skiing boring

  • @acescok
    @acescok Před 4 měsíci +2

    Kimi being Kimi…

  • @speedypaul2314
    @speedypaul2314 Před 2 lety +26

    Montoya was quick. Spa 2005. He qualified pole, Kimi second. Nuff said.

    • @sharlesleglerc
      @sharlesleglerc Před 2 lety +14

      Really, Who won the race?

    • @flintey360
      @flintey360 Před 2 lety +10

      @@sharlesleglerc Montoya taken out by a backmarker. Context matters

    • @speedypaul2314
      @speedypaul2314 Před 2 lety +2

      @@sharlesleglerc Kimi. Doesn't mean he wasn't quick to put it on pole and had true speed.

    • @sadsadasdsadasdsadas
      @sadsadasdsadasdsadas Před 2 lety +8

      Kimi had more fuel, look at the entire season. Nuff said.

    • @javiergarridobrito5054
      @javiergarridobrito5054 Před měsícem

      @@flintey360 And that back marker was Pizzonia. The same driver who ruined montoya race in Sepang 2003.

  • @eujunwong4300
    @eujunwong4300 Před rokem +10

    Kimi: “It's got nothing to do with me, is it?” 💀

  • @ciaronsmith4995
    @ciaronsmith4995 Před 2 lety +6

    Any teammate that went up against Kimi at McLaren, had their reputation destroyed.

    • @nistauglavi7855
      @nistauglavi7855 Před rokem +10

      Yep, because Kimi was always Rons first man to focus on, just as was Hamilton in 2007 season, and after Alonso felt that, everything went downhill for mclaren…
      Ron got what he deserved years later

    • @NavyaSagittarius
      @NavyaSagittarius Před měsícem

      @@nistauglavi7855 Had more to do with Kimi's raw talent than being the first driver which Kimi was not as both JPM and Kimi were given equal treatment.

    • @nistauglavi7855
      @nistauglavi7855 Před měsícem

      @@NavyaSagittarius I’m pretty sure that JPM had more ‘raw talent’ than Kimi, but he was not commited as Kimi was (at that time anyways). He showed that less of a commitment at the beginning of the 2005 season by “playing tennis” and injuring his shoulder, it was later obvious that Mclarens favorite was Kimi. If JPM did not have his shoulder injury, he would surely stand closer to Kimi, maybe even perform better than him.

    • @NavyaSagittarius
      @NavyaSagittarius Před měsícem

      @@nistauglavi7855 so he lost his motivation RIGHT AFTER signing the contract with McLaren? Doesn't add up lol

    • @nistauglavi7855
      @nistauglavi7855 Před měsícem

      @@NavyaSagittarius no, he lost
      his motivation after that shoulder injury (which happened before 2005 season started as far as I remember). After that he was not in a good relationship with Ron (he even said in his interview, since Ron found out about that he tried to make a fool of him by lying about his incident) which caused operational issues further in the 2005 season (example is JPMs DNF in Canada where he should have won a race, but they did not warn him about yellow flag).

  • @andresardila7267
    @andresardila7267 Před 12 dny +1

    Wrong decision to go to NASCAR. How can a driver change F1 for NASCAR? Completely no sense.

  • @antoniestrada1972
    @antoniestrada1972 Před 2 lety +8

    I find it ironic Michael talking all this and that about NASCAR little did he know that his son would be driving for someone that owns a NASCAR team

  • @42much1
    @42much1 Před 11 dny

    Actually in 2003 the championship was going his way until in the midseason FIA decided to change the tires width that shifted the pendulum towards Ferrari , a very strange move by FIA to say the least, that compromised the sport.

  • @grantcarncross5380
    @grantcarncross5380 Před 15 dny

    Love Kimi so dry so honest.

  • @Atomanti400
    @Atomanti400 Před 2 lety +3

    Villeneuve said the true, but Kimi's comment is the best

  • @thekoukikid7
    @thekoukikid7 Před 2 lety +15

    Daniel Ricciardo is the new Juan-Pablo Montoya. If you look at Danny Ric, he's just like JPM

    • @Amaljacob999
      @Amaljacob999 Před 2 lety +2

      Wouldn’t surprise me either if he moved to America and join McLaren at Indy

    • @porscheoscar
      @porscheoscar Před rokem +11

      Ricciardo was kicked out of F1 for poor performance. Montoya left F1 while teams were still asking for him. JPM is still to this day the only driver I can think of that did that. He had no interest in driving a mediocre car. Also I cant name one memorable overtake by Ricciardo that comes anywhere near Montoya passing 2 cars on the same corner in France, the overtake on Schumacher at the bus stop chicane at Spa, the overtake on Schumacher seen all around the world at Interlagos where he was knocked out of the lead of the race by none other than Max Verstappen's father.

    • @georgiosioannispappas6311
      @georgiosioannispappas6311 Před rokem

      No, Leclerc is.

    • @patrykfabiszewski1510
      @patrykfabiszewski1510 Před rokem +3

      No even close

    • @RANDOMZBOSSMAN1
      @RANDOMZBOSSMAN1 Před 11 měsíci +1

      No way near the same Montoya left before he got dropped Danny Ric got sacked

  • @alexanderacostaosorio
    @alexanderacostaosorio Před 2 lety +7

    All driver's opinion's were on point I think.

  • @Samuel-gc6js
    @Samuel-gc6js Před měsícem

    2:33 LOL classic Kimi 😂

  • @benchurchill9735
    @benchurchill9735 Před 4 dny

    It seems that people who come from money don't get anything out of making more money. He did the best thing and chased what he enjoyed.

  • @ivorharden
    @ivorharden Před rokem +1

    Kimi being Kimi

  • @arelortal6580
    @arelortal6580 Před 2 lety +19

    What Michael says is what millions of people think about f1. In both cases it is debatable depending on your preferences.

    • @chakko007
      @chakko007 Před 2 lety +12

      Nah, not really. People criticize other things about F1 than being "under developed, heavy cars running in ovals, which are no challenge to drive".
      He's absolutely right, BTW. I don't know what Montoya is smoking, but, going from F1 to Nascar is probably something we will never see again. No wonder that he went Indycar later.
      I think Montoya fits better into a US race series, for sure. F1 wasn't the right thing for him. He's neither fit enough, nor is he the right person for the politics in F1, and to conform to the way a driver has to act there (especially in terms of statements, and dedication to the car brand).

    • @kennethkilleen8758
      @kennethkilleen8758 Před 2 lety +1

      @@chakko007 Only driver that could have gone from Nascar to F1 and be good was Jeff Gordon.

    • @minigungaming5915
      @minigungaming5915 Před 2 lety +1

      @@chakko007 >no challenge to drive
      They're overpowered with little tires that drop off a performance cliff very quickly. They are extremely challenging to drive because you need to be so gentle and precise to keep from spinning the tires, sliding around, locking the brakes, etc.

    • @antoniestrada1972
      @antoniestrada1972 Před 2 lety +2

      @@chakko007 no bro Michael was a one-trick pony that got his ego boost when he joined F1 but people like Montoya and Villeneuve see challenges and other Motorsports one matter what type and take it I mean shoot Kimi had a couple races in NASCAR and was planning to do more so there's clearly a challenge there

    • @antoniestrada1972
      @antoniestrada1972 Před 2 lety

      @MrLewisBate if that's the case then why hasn't Fernando Alonso won the Indy 500 yet and why did Michael Schumacher need to hit his opponent to win a championship and they the next year hit a IndyCar championship and indy 500 winner to win the f1 championship But ultimately failed and got disqualified from the whole year

  • @anidiotinaracingcar4874
    @anidiotinaracingcar4874 Před 2 lety +5

    3:30 Who the fuck was that? Gary Pafet?

  • @user-je7qe4he9l
    @user-je7qe4he9l Před 2 lety +13

    Ron dennis the biggest clown eever in f1 no one come even close to him

    • @OpusArchive
      @OpusArchive Před rokem +2

      Mercedes also back then. Designing these poor engines every year.

    • @CC-wk6zn
      @CC-wk6zn Před 8 dny

      Hamilton comes very close.

    • @1greenMitsi
      @1greenMitsi Před 3 dny

      youre the clown bud, Ron legend

  • @King_Ears
    @King_Ears Před 5 měsíci +1

    Crazy to think he only raced 6 seasons in f1. Such a wasted talent

    • @GameArmorGameplay
      @GameArmorGameplay Před 3 měsíci +1

      Actually discovered JPM when he was dominating CART/INDY. Then followed him to F1.

  • @pete5534
    @pete5534 Před 2 měsíci

    He did it his way.

  • @pascalb.7126
    @pascalb.7126 Před měsícem

    I guess Kimi does not like Montoya in their time there they are both great riders but one is the iceman and one with a lot of emotions. Was not good to put their together on a team I guess

  • @Kibouo
    @Kibouo Před 4 měsíci +2

    1:43 savage from Schumacher 😂

  • @toxy3580
    @toxy3580 Před 11 dny

    Gary Paffet f1 champion

  • @sametozkan9175
    @sametozkan9175 Před 8 měsíci

    2:02 Him too

  • @alexlazebat839
    @alexlazebat839 Před 2 lety

    there talking about lewis hamiltion but alonso had already signed so it might of been kimi and fernando

    • @CharlesDarkson
      @CharlesDarkson Před 2 lety +1

      Kimi had already signed for Ferrari when Montoya decided to leave F1.

    • @chrisreadman4282
      @chrisreadman4282 Před rokem +3

      He wanted out. He was only be offered a contract for 2007 then Lewis was gonna be in for 2008. He felt he had more than that so left to America where he get a longer career. JPM on his days was as fast as anyone but the period of f1 at the time didn’t really suit JPM style

  • @haokalian256
    @haokalian256 Před rokem

    When was JPM joined mclaren after he stayed in williams ?

    • @OpusArchive
      @OpusArchive Před rokem +2

      JPM joined McLaren in 2005 and won 3 GPs that Season.

  • @Daniel-Dest
    @Daniel-Dest Před 2 lety +2

    Alguien que pueda traducir todo lo que se dice?

    • @swiftsportcolombia
      @swiftsportcolombia Před 2 lety +1

      Aprenda inglés

    • @sebastiancv4595
      @sebastiancv4595 Před 2 lety +4

      En pocas palabras montoya dice que, se canso de hacer dinero en f1 y de la exigencia, y que pasar a nscr le iba a dar más tiempo con su familia y ser más feliz por que podía estar con ellos en un motorhome y dentro de Estados Unidos, no por todo el planeta con f1 de ahí para adelante en el video los demás pilotos opinan sobre la decisión muy neutrales todos...

  • @user-kt3qs9ki8p
    @user-kt3qs9ki8p Před 3 dny

    Doing WHAT to Lewis Hamilton????

  • @mauriciocaroaldana8115
    @mauriciocaroaldana8115 Před 8 měsíci

    I would love to see the greatest driving that Ferrari..... 😅

  • @Mexxx65
    @Mexxx65 Před rokem

    Certainly JPM has enjoyed great success in other categories of Motorsport, Endurance racing etc. AS many F1 drivers have done exactly the same before him.
    But JPM, like Michael Schumacher, Ayrton Senna, and as Ralf Schumacher has pointed out in this video, JPM was a F1 driver through and through. He was "F1" for a short time, as Michael was for a long time, and as Ayrton Senna was for a short time. IE he was the perfect F1 driver, never to land a F1 championship. Buts thats motor racing!

  • @RyanFitrieTheBerkiansKid10

    Kimi......

  • @luisanamillan877
    @luisanamillan877 Před 7 měsíci

    ante los piloto de f1 tenia hijos y llevaba a sus esposa ya no ahora los piloto de ahora solo piensa en ganar carrera

  • @kennethkilleen8758
    @kennethkilleen8758 Před 2 lety

    F1 or Nascar mmm. I know what I'd pick

  • @johnsimonwijaya
    @johnsimonwijaya Před 2 lety

    imagine if Lewis replace him in that time..

    • @Test-bz6sv
      @Test-bz6sv Před rokem

      If je was dedicated @100% to formula 1, he should won at least more races and even championishp. On the other side, Bad Luck in 2003, Williams should put him as N 1 compare to Ralf and also Bad décisions from Williams in Usa GP. Mc Laren did it lately in 2005 and choose n1 Kimi

  • @antoniestrada1972
    @antoniestrada1972 Před 2 lety +17

    Although Michael Schumacher is a legend in Formula One he was a one-trick pony he was just a Formula 1 driver driver not a racing driver anything else besides Formula 1 he acted like it was beneath him and just blew it off as not challenging

    • @insertwittynamehere8947
      @insertwittynamehere8947 Před 2 lety +2

      Although he did finish fifth at Le Mans 24hour in a Mercedes in 1991. Would have been nice to see him back there too

    • @antoniestrada1972
      @antoniestrada1972 Před 2 lety +4

      @@insertwittynamehere8947 yeah but that F1 money changes you and your ego

    • @jarrydmckenna1720
      @jarrydmckenna1720 Před 2 lety +12

      Schumacher was a very good sports car driver... I did remember some interview in his Mercedes f1 days when he was linked with a move to DTM that his excitement was the pinnacle of technology, and racing something else wouldn't give him the same excitement.

    • @aroldoarielzambrano
      @aroldoarielzambrano Před 2 lety +2

      if he was a "one trick pony" as you said, he would've never made it into F! in the first place

    • @nostalfan
      @nostalfan Před 2 lety +1

      @@aroldoarielzambrano Llegó por casualidad casi, en reemplazo...

  • @walkermorgan1710
    @walkermorgan1710 Před rokem +3

    Lol shcumi trying to give him a jab with his ovals comment he was just scared of JPM

  • @AAA310
    @AAA310 Před rokem +3

    Wow that actually surprised me how insulting Michael Schumacher was towards Nascar. I thought he would respect it and be interested in it as a true motorsports fan. Kinda disappointing tbh.

    • @OnlineHipHopTV
      @OnlineHipHopTV Před rokem +4

      Michael was quite an asshole a lot of times

    • @leonardofabbri7930
      @leonardofabbri7930 Před rokem +3

      He's known to be an asshole. Reason why there's was a huge rivalry with Juan who was full of flaws, but extremely genuine and kind of driver for fans and motorsports in the whole entirety of terms.

    • @solitaryclusterofneurons598
      @solitaryclusterofneurons598 Před 5 měsíci +2

      I think that was more of a mind game comment to make Juan doubt himself more than anything, but yeah was a bit disrespectful. Thing is with Schumi is he had some sociopathic tendencies like that. He's the best ever if you're on his team (as a team principle, engineer, mechanic, etc), but if you're his opponent he's very cloak and dagger.

    • @j.s3300
      @j.s3300 Před 7 dny

      Smart man

  • @jeffmattel7867
    @jeffmattel7867 Před rokem +3

    2:33
    Reporter: 'How do you feel about loosing your teammate?'
    Kimi: "Who?"