WTF Happened to Jacques Villeneuve?

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  • čas přidán 3. 02. 2021
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    JOSHREVELL
    Jacques Villeneuve won the Formula One World Championship back in 1997. But since doing so, he's been looked upon as a bit of a joke. His comments in the media and lack of success after 97 have given the general public a negative perception of the guy. Why is this, though? WTF happened to this guy?
    Special thanks to Sim Dane and Zach (The Apex) for joining this venture! Be sure to check out their channels...
    Sim Dane: / @simdane5898
    The Apex: / @theapex8341
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    DISCLAIMER: This video is not intended for persons 13 years or under. Special mention to all the original sources of certain clips used in my videos. Please do check out their content for the full videos.
    Copyright Disclaimer: Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. There are certain scenes from the Formula 1 calendar where race footage is used. All those rights are property of FOM. Other photos and news elements are used solely for the purpose of assisting the original content illuminate a more in depth story
    #JacquesVilleneuve #Villeneuve #F1 #Formula1
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Komentáře • 2,5K

  • @Damemer
    @Damemer Před 3 lety +2128

    no instructions in the outro, I wonder if I can be a manus in the comments

    • @jorden8470
      @jorden8470 Před 3 lety +161

      It’s forbidden
      So do it

    • @IndiBrony
      @IndiBrony Před 3 lety +62

      I have no idea of I should like, comment, subscribe, be a manus, or not?

    • @marchelmberger6249
      @marchelmberger6249 Před 3 lety +3

      As long as you enjoy yourself

    • @TheDogInYard
      @TheDogInYard Před 3 lety +21

      Instructions unclear; became a manus.

    • @krishnashankar2675
      @krishnashankar2675 Před 3 lety +6

      And will we not see him later as always? **Gasp**

  • @razvanmazilu6284
    @razvanmazilu6284 Před 3 lety +3357

    Fun fact: Jacques Villeneuve scored more points in his championship winning year (81) than in all his following F1 seasons combined (76).

    • @someoneunseen5168
      @someoneunseen5168 Před 3 lety +173

      Haha. He was decent but even DC or Rubens would have won the title in that car

    • @greatkali5866
      @greatkali5866 Před 3 lety +166

      even 96 he scored more (78)

    • @greatkali5866
      @greatkali5866 Před 3 lety +47

      @@someoneunseen5168 I don't think so

    • @AlonsoRules
      @AlonsoRules Před 3 lety +89

      That's what happens when you have Newey versus not having Newey

    • @danny838
      @danny838 Před 3 lety +2

      That was fun...

  • @reidmcleod6630
    @reidmcleod6630 Před 3 lety +296

    Just a small fact mistake: BAR didn't just replace Villeneuve with Sato in Japan 2003. When Villeneuve learnt of Sato joining for the next season, he decided to quit one race early instead.

  • @senorsoupe
    @senorsoupe Před 3 lety +322

    I grew up in Quebec in the 90's (and JV was my racing hero) and you can't imagine how big he was in Quebec at the time. He was by far the biggest sports star in Quebec at the time

    • @hugolouessard3914
      @hugolouessard3914 Před 2 lety +32

      Yes, and that explains in part why he's not as popular as other canadian athletes. He's from Quebec, and there are many canadians who dislike the quebequois.

    • @ellaella5537
      @ellaella5537 Před 2 lety +4

      I know, lol I was young at the time but he got me into F1. I’m so confused by this guy, why would they interview him? Lol

    • @saltybread7500
      @saltybread7500 Před 2 lety +2

      Is it just me or is every Canadian F1 driver from Quebec

    • @noodle-cup
      @noodle-cup Před 2 lety +6

      @@saltybread7500 Stroll is from Montreal, Latifi is from Ontario I believe..

    • @milkshakemuncher
      @milkshakemuncher Před 2 lety +12

      @@noodle-cup so 🤔 maybe just the good Canadian drivers are from Quebec then🤷‍♂️

  • @SamuelSantos_
    @SamuelSantos_ Před 3 lety +1423

    His career aged like milk, he basically had Nico Rosberg’s career but in reverse.
    I think Villeneuve was still quite good up until 2001, but just didn’t have good machinery. I think 2002 onwards was when he got worse.

    • @tombo6245
      @tombo6245 Před 3 lety +97

      He kicked ass in the road course races he did in NASCAR in 2009-2011-ish, was super fun to watch him.

    • @DealorG
      @DealorG Před 3 lety +28

      his williams f1 car was atleast 2 seconds faster on average than the ferrari, the season coming to a titledecider just shows his inability behind the wheel of an f1 car

    • @JontieDesario
      @JontieDesario Před 3 lety +4

      Totally agree

    • @matrixpolaris679
      @matrixpolaris679 Před 3 lety +114

      @@DealorG What about Heinz-Harald though, he scored about half Jacque's points that year

    • @DealorG
      @DealorG Před 3 lety +6

      matrixpolaris he also didnt have 1st driver status and was probably one of the unluckiest drivers on the grid that year but id say that he wasnt too great of a driver either

  • @nemesizzlehd4k834
    @nemesizzlehd4k834 Před 3 lety +726

    Fun fact: In 1997 Villeneuve and Schumacher never shared a podium. They always were on the podium when the other isn’t

  • @butIwantpewee
    @butIwantpewee Před 3 lety +718

    One of my strongest memories of Villeneuve was just how dismissive he was of Button when he joined the team, a quote:
    "He (Button) brings to the sport what the boy bands bring to music. He is young and cute which is not bad, I guess, for the girls."
    Button then proceeded to absolutely batter him, poetic justice at it's very best.

    • @butIwantpewee
      @butIwantpewee Před 2 lety +44

      @Mike Jones That's fair enough but it was his attitude that irritated people, not his wages. I actually like how he says what he thinks and plenty of times he has said things everyone else is thinking but dare not say, I like that. He was very rude, and very wrong about Button though.

    • @UnleashthePhury
      @UnleashthePhury Před 2 lety +7

      Jensen Button sounds like the prefect for Hufflepuff

    • @MLV3645
      @MLV3645 Před 7 měsíci +5

      Going to BAR was OBVIOUSLY a HUGE MISTAKE

    • @ammarisrar2005
      @ammarisrar2005 Před 20 dny

      Yeah because his driving skills aren’t up to par with his wide mouth making noise skills

    • @ammarisrar2005
      @ammarisrar2005 Před 20 dny

      @@MLV3645coming back into F1 was a huge mistake, it was humiliating

  • @ropurifiedwater
    @ropurifiedwater Před rokem +70

    Love him or hate him, this man is really talented. Having snatched away a championship from Schumacher is not a joke.

    • @jimrustle270
      @jimrustle270 Před rokem +8

      He really isn’t very talented by F1 standards and wouldn’t have won without a Newey rocketship (like a certain former German driver). But he was far more sporting than Schumacher, which I think counts for a lot.

    • @chiragnegi6276
      @chiragnegi6276 Před rokem +5

      Especially when Schumacher is out for blood during the races just to win championship.

    • @Duval-In-The-Wall
      @Duval-In-The-Wall Před 10 měsíci +26

      @@jimrustle270
      I swear people think cars designed by Newey drive themselves

    • @rgb9795
      @rgb9795 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Love him or hate him hes a joke.. pure joke

    • @privateinformation2960
      @privateinformation2960 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Didn't snatch it. Schumacher did what he had done before and tried to smash his closest rival off the track. This time he failed.

  • @simdane5898
    @simdane5898 Před 3 lety +2439

    Thank you for the collab man. Now I'll go force my family and my friends to watch 40 minutes of Kiwi goodness 🙌🏻

  • @astrosleep9625
    @astrosleep9625 Před 3 lety +660

    Think about how scared his mom must have been when he said to his mom
    "I'm gonna be an F1 driver like dad!"

    • @gruphius
      @gruphius Před 3 lety +32

      "Mom, one day I'll die like dad!"

    • @vianhoho19
      @vianhoho19 Před 3 lety +60

      That reminds me of when Justin Bell told his dad, Derek Bell, that he wanted to race just like him.
      Derek went to him and said "how the fuck are we going to tell this to your mother?" 😂

    • @ash3r123
      @ash3r123 Před 3 lety +3

      MATEEEE, THIS IS A WIN FOR USSSSS

  • @glyman2720
    @glyman2720 Před 3 lety +26

    The overtake on Schumacher around the outside at Estoril 96 was pretty damn special.
    I quite liked how straight talking he’s always been, and he was a cast of multiple characters from F1 in the 90’s before they all became PR robots in the 2000’s
    Luckily we’re gaining a few characters in F1 nowadays, but the 90’s were spectacular for them.

  • @mawti
    @mawti Před 3 lety +29

    Thank you so much Josh for making this video. As a Canadian who was introduced to F1 by literally following Jacques into F1 having only watched him race Indy cars and Toyota Atlantic before, this was a great reminder to the younger generation who know him only as some crazy old uncle-that Jacques Villeneuve was a great driver that achieved so much early on. No one can take that away from him.

  • @mikeymike1792
    @mikeymike1792 Před 3 lety +1518

    Can we just mention Martin Brundle's glorious remark after the Schumi incident?
    'That didn't work Michael. You hit the wrong part of him my friend.'

    • @noahletwinski6955
      @noahletwinski6955 Před 3 lety +89

      "Oh out! Out goes Michael Schumacher!"

    • @krumhorniger1863
      @krumhorniger1863 Před 2 lety +54

      Brundle was always biased against Michael. Of course he wanted to knock them both out to win the title. But so did Prost and Senna in Suzuka. Michael did it himself in 1994. But 1997 was the first of this 4 crashes were you could not lable it as racing incident. But you cannot only blame Michael when two other driver did the same 10 to 8 years before.

    • @dw4484
      @dw4484 Před 2 lety +18

      @@krumhorniger1863 the context of prost and senna makes it a lot different I think though. Senna felt robbed because of the dq the year before and had pretty decent cause to be pissed at the FIA.

    • @krumhorniger1863
      @krumhorniger1863 Před 2 lety +27

      @@dw4484 but the result was the same
      Senna crashed out Prost on purpose
      because the FIA did not gave him what he wanted
      I cannot want something from a person then he does not give it to me and I shoot him
      I can say I felt robbed so it is okay
      I will go in jail anyway
      I does not want to say Senna was a bad person but he and also Prost did the same move as Schumi did so Brundle cannot talk like this about Michael when all the great champions did something like that

    • @dw4484
      @dw4484 Před 2 lety +3

      @@krumhorniger1863 I mean yes I agree with the result being the same, you're argument is totally valid. The context just matters to me a lot which is just my opinion of course. I'm pretty sympathetic to senna I guess for getting punted off the year before/getting screwed by the FIA, where as I feel like Schumacher was on the long end of the stick with the FIA a lot.

  • @barisaxmax
    @barisaxmax Před 3 lety +1412

    Fun fact: Because Jacques was two laps down, and made up those extra two laps, people used to call the 1995 Indianapolis 500 the Indianapolis 505, since two laps make up 2.5 miles, and he did that extra distance.

    • @StreetLugeNetwork
      @StreetLugeNetwork Před 3 lety +29

      @UCY_7a4hLkBKSckUJTwcRCGg actually that is exactly how it worked. they just straight up took 2 laps from him while on track. He didn't stay stationary, in the pits. just 2 laps gone from his lap count. look at the 1:54:24 mark in the video below. he was 3rd then instantly 27th
      czcams.com/video/lfCnsGtUj1s/video.html

    • @McPlayer8t
      @McPlayer8t Před 3 lety +9

      Wow, that is so true! Haha! 😂

    • @george4821
      @george4821 Před 3 lety +7

      Did you get that from WTF1? I certainly did lol

    • @THENAMEISQUICKMAN
      @THENAMEISQUICKMAN Před 3 lety +47

      Jacques Villeneuve - went back to 505, although it took him a bit more than a 45 minute drive, it wasn't a 7 hour flight

    • @rupertpupkin9630
      @rupertpupkin9630 Před 3 lety +16

      Still one of the greatest Indy 500 wins. Brilliant.

  • @impressivestory
    @impressivestory Před 2 lety +24

    I met him randomly at seaworld. Saw him there throwing food to the baby dolphins. I approached him and said, “You were supposed to be the pride of Canada! Canada’s big F1 star! What do you say for yourself?!”
    He replied, “I believe I’m serving a youthful porpoise.”

  • @tadroid3858
    @tadroid3858 Před 3 lety +25

    He hung out at the top for short while and lived to tell about it. I'd say that's a huge win.

  • @pyannaco
    @pyannaco Před 3 lety +1457

    Full disclosure: I am Canadian
    Great summary of his career, pretty fair overall.
    I was fortunate to work with him in 2014 and, while expecting an unreasonable diva from everything I had heard, he was very pleasant and humble, told good jokes and signed a few autographs for me. I was young when he was at his peak but I still knew who he was and I think Canadians are still proud to call an F1 champ their own.

    • @rupertpupkin9630
      @rupertpupkin9630 Před 3 lety +81

      Thanks for that insight, great to hear he's a good guy.

    • @zacuery5097
      @zacuery5097 Před 3 lety +15

      I am honoured to be your 69th like

    • @louiseboisverttrommer1686
      @louiseboisverttrommer1686 Před 3 lety +77

      He beat Schumacher in 1997 to win the World Championship. I will be forever proud of him and his father.

    • @pyannaco
      @pyannaco Před 3 lety +1

      @@zacuery5097 Nice.

    • @anbuselvan3856
      @anbuselvan3856 Před 3 lety +19

      dont worry youll get one more with stroll

  • @randomrexy2135
    @randomrexy2135 Před 3 lety +719

    who else is gladly suprised this is as long is it

    • @Citizenfour_
      @Citizenfour_ Před 3 lety +3

      same

    • @daninagy4173
      @daninagy4173 Před 3 lety +14

      At first, I was like: 40 minutes? What?
      To be fair, it didn't seem so much. I like this format, actually.

    • @kelvinfarrell119
      @kelvinfarrell119 Před 3 lety +4

      "That's what she said..." 👀

    • @jonmar4683
      @jonmar4683 Před 3 lety +1

      more like 30 minutes if you skip the bullcrap and the song at the end.

  • @kevinbashnick
    @kevinbashnick Před 2 lety +24

    Rest In peace Greg Moore. I loved watching him race

    • @johngancarcik5682
      @johngancarcik5682 Před rokem +1

      My uncle was a greg moore fan Greg was amazing

    • @WayneB27
      @WayneB27 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Met Greg at the Molson Indy ,Toronto , I was a guest of PPG and we were taken to the Players Lte Motorhome to meet Villeneuve , but he was being difficult and refused to speak with us. Greg was sitting on a stack of wheels and we spent an hour chatting with him, he was very friendly and easygoing .

  • @ellaella5537
    @ellaella5537 Před 2 lety +16

    It’s rare I’ll say this, but you should have had a person from Quebec, preferably in Montreal, who was alive at that time. I was quite young, but he got me and many others into F1. He was a HUGE HUGE star here and Quebec talked about him a lot.
    The reaction to him was definitely as important as the reaction for the Raptors and definitely more that for Bianca A over here.
    He also had a bar in Montreal after he retired, New Town, As an homage this his name, lol , as he moved back to Montreal.
    He’s not so loved anymore, as he’s too snobbish, he was found to have hid his money in fiscal paradise. His music career was also terrible, didn’t help him. He was just a disappointment, his dad was sooooo patriotic. He was sooo loved.
    As for the Montreal Canadians, he probably doesn’t know either that they had recently won their 24th Stanley cup in 93 and almost won again this year. :-)

    • @emilietan4914
      @emilietan4914 Před rokem +2

      Thank you, I was thinking the same regarding the Canadian POV in this video.
      Jacques was HUGE.
      And he actually had a special homecoming event at the Bell Centre, separate from a Habs game and he got one of the longest standing ovation ever. I remember watching in live, an early afternoon with some friends, I think it was on a public holiday or something.

  • @ricknineg
    @ricknineg Před 3 lety +1595

    Gene Haas growing a spine..... 😂

    • @louiswhitaker6997
      @louiswhitaker6997 Před 3 lety +59

      @@nickcarlsberg62 keeping on Mazepin for the dollar even tho he touched up a lass in the back of a car

    • @kingl3023
      @kingl3023 Před 3 lety +1

      @@nickcarlsberg62 10:01

    • @iloper
      @iloper Před 3 lety +1

      ouch

    • @sbinnala14
      @sbinnala14 Před 3 lety +2

      @@louiswhitaker6997 Lmao nicely said

    • @ratface7329
      @ratface7329 Před 3 lety +23

      @RoadhogTime13 Spot on. I find the reaction to this whole debacle rather dazzling. People care so much about punishing one asshole that they'd gladly potentially take down dozens of bystanders in the process. It's like gunning down a crowd of civilians just to graze a terrorist on the leg. Mazepin would have his ambition to be in f1 taken away, but due to his own actions, and he'd still live a rich and comfortable life. The employees would be hit by it way harder.
      Unless the woman decides to press charges, or the FIA decides to intervene, Haas will have a incredibly difficult time getting rid of that contract in a way that doesn't set them back financially, thus risking the survival of the team. If people are gonna bash or call on anyone other than mazepin for this, it should be the FIA. They have the power to change the situation without Haas getting completely screwed over.

  • @JMSB-yg8ef
    @JMSB-yg8ef Před 3 lety +726

    Jaques title was just lifes way of giving his dad the title he deserved.

    • @mike04574
      @mike04574 Před 3 lety

      I don’t think gilles would have ever won a title

    • @aydankhaliq2967
      @aydankhaliq2967 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mike04574 yes

    • @agurobe
      @agurobe Před 3 lety +9

      @@mike04574 hmmmm??? do you even know who gilles is??

    • @simoneburini4036
      @simoneburini4036 Před 3 lety +14

      @@agurobe Gilles was a hothead, and he was always on the limit. I'm not sure that his consistency would have ever been good enough to win a championship. Talent and speed are not always enough. Add to that the rivalry with Pironi and the fact that Ferrari was competitive for the title only 3 times during the 80s, and there you have it.

    • @MrBazz420
      @MrBazz420 Před 3 lety +1

      oh yeah, it was ''life way'' cause thats how you win championship

  • @MultiTopgearfan
    @MultiTopgearfan Před 3 lety +20

    He may be the most unloved F1 world champion in history, but he should get all the respect that a champion deserves. And also, that song at the end about him was the peak of this video 😂

    • @Biffoaussie85
      @Biffoaussie85 Před 4 měsíci

      Max verstappen,surely the biggest tosser bar his own father 😂😂😂

  • @BadErnest
    @BadErnest Před 3 lety +11

    Eddie Irvine said that Jacques was not the best driver in F1 at that time, but that he was undoubtedly the bravest.

  • @astroknight5
    @astroknight5 Před 3 lety +332

    He often says Vettel's time is done. I think he just sees himself in Seb. How his career went downhill after his prime.

    • @Ruben-to9yk
      @Ruben-to9yk Před 3 lety +129

      Vettel after his prime at least won races and so far is the only man who threatened the hybrid Mercedes in a title fight.
      Villenueve never would see a race winning car again unless he got lapped.

    • @As-qz5lr
      @As-qz5lr Před 3 lety +79

      @@Ruben-to9yk again it is all down to the car. Villeneuve was never in a race winning car after 1997. So expecting him to fight for championships is crazy. His 1998 Williams is comparable to the 2020 Renault and after BAR is equivalent to the Haas.

    • @antonioblack7780
      @antonioblack7780 Před 3 lety +41

      Good thing for Seb is he has three more championships to boast about.

    • @As-qz5lr
      @As-qz5lr Před 3 lety +21

      @@antonioblack7780 if only Villeneuve stayed in Newey cars for as long as Seb

    • @naufalthirafi3876
      @naufalthirafi3876 Před 3 lety +13

      @RoadhogTime13 Geez, imagine what could have been a three way title fighting between MSC, Mika, and him...

  • @stonexl
    @stonexl Před 3 lety +537

    He's certainly an... interesting person, but he's also an Indy 500 winner, a CART champion, and an F1 world champion. That is FAR from average.

    • @mike04574
      @mike04574 Před 2 lety +6

      nobody said he's average, we all know him and think he's great just from his F1 win

    • @Nakazati
      @Nakazati Před 2 lety +39

      the fact people say Indy isn’t competitive and he came there to F1 AND won? Jacques is crazy fast driver.

    • @AlexConnor_
      @AlexConnor_ Před 2 lety +2

      @@Nakazati Indy isn't competitive, the only Indy drivers that did well in F1 were the ones too good for Indy. IE blitzed Indy, won title 1st or 2nd year and moved on to F1 as if it was a junior championship like F2. So JV and JPM, pretty much no one else since Mario Andretti.

    • @Nakazati
      @Nakazati Před 2 lety +19

      @@AlexConnor_ Oh I’m sorry we have a few super fast drivers that come here, but you really say it’s uncompetitive? Are you daft my g? Bro, Indy has more winners than F3, F2 and F1 with less rounds than F1. “Too good for Indy”, no, it’s because it’s the biggest sport in their country/nearing country, IndyCar is the most competitive open wheel sport in the world because it’s based around the team, not the car, over 10 nationalities of drivers come, and soon it may go back to being global. Your opinion has no facts.

    • @Nakazati
      @Nakazati Před 2 lety +13

      not to mention, we’ve had plenty of F1 drivers come here and do crap, and some do well, because they’re on the level of Indy, I’m not saying Indy is better than F1, but in terms of competition, it is.

  • @kitko33
    @kitko33 Před 3 lety +5

    He finished 2nd in LeMans 24 (in 2008) - second only to all-conquering Audis... IRL title, Indy win, F1 title, runner-up in Le Mans.... And he's still the ONLY Indy driver who first won the IRL and then F1 titles.

  • @glennward5898
    @glennward5898 Před 3 lety +56

    Well I have been alive long enough to remember both Jacques and Gilles and I'm from Canada.
    Yes Gilles and Bobby Orr were my two hero's growing up.
    Something you missed is how patriotic Gilles was and how he won the Canadian GP.
    Jacques was very patriotic. The Quebec separatists were always trying to get him to comment about politics. He refused many many times. So when he opened up his bar he named it Newtown.
    Villeneuve translated to english is Newtown. He sent all the separatist packing and has not been forgotten by patriots. Now for his driving. He was a very good driver until his crash at Spa. He was never the same driver after that. He was never in as good of a situation as he was at Williams in 96-97. But all the hate for him by people that weren't even born when he won is kinda useless. My thoughts are he was a fantastic driver in Indy car and in F1. Something happens to drivers after a crash that scares them. They never take the car to the limits or they try too hard to make something happen that really isn't there. Trying to prove they still have it. But being the big name and being able to speak 5 languages is attractive to sponsors. So it was like watching a wounded bird trying to fly with a broken wing. After Bar's many design failures and crashes destroyed his driving confidence.
    His pride kept pushing him long after the racing confidence was gone. Not a tragedy and I'm glad he is still alive. So many racing legends die. So many hurt themselves trying to prove they still have it.
    He is the only Canadian F1 champion and he will always be an F1 champion. No one can ever take that away.

    • @neile5893
      @neile5893 Před rokem +3

      You make a lot of great points. I was 17 when he won the championship and I remember a lot of attention being on him that year. It had started the previous year. As you said the French speaking and English speaking population here in Quebec were especially tense with eachother. The referendum for separation was held in 97 as well. I think it’s important to mention as well that the Canadian gp was the only North American circuit on the f1 calendar at the time as well. He was huge here

    • @emilietan4914
      @emilietan4914 Před rokem +3

      I completely agree with you 🙌🏻Québécoise here, I was 13 when Jacques won the Championship. He was always a proud Canadian AND a proud French speaker.
      The young Canadian in this video did not understand what Jacques meant in the Beyond the Grid podcast (listened to it as well). He said Quebec isn’t what it used to be when he was a child and I could not agree more. I’ve been away from Quebec since 2008 and I would not come back to live there. I absolutely love my country and I’m so proud to be francophone, but something happened in the last 10-15 years and I don’t like it.
      Also, Jacques said that he loves Europe because that’s « his origins » and he is right. I feel the same when I’m in Europe. We are first and foremost European by decent. Our families have only been in Canada for max 300 years.
      Anyways, all of that to say that I don’t doubt Jacques’ patriotism and I can easily say that when he won the championship I have never felt more proud to be Canadian and Québécoise. ❤

    • @andrecolpron5603
      @andrecolpron5603 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Discussion entre anglo-suprématistes et franco-colonisés ...

  • @PyroBun_2844
    @PyroBun_2844 Před 3 lety +991

    Imagine becoming a champion only to never win a race in f1 ever again.

    • @Tyler_Evans0411
      @Tyler_Evans0411 Před 3 lety +107

      Hell I’d be happy if that happened to me 😂

    • @kevinhanandi
      @kevinhanandi Před 3 lety +172

      It is worth it, people like perez, hulkenberg, and even bottas would kill for a one time world champ

    • @mslo7312
      @mslo7312 Před 3 lety +151

      *Almost* Felipe Massa

    • @azam829
      @azam829 Před 3 lety +27

      @@mslo7312 0,5 Championships lmao

    • @robinthebobin6537
      @robinthebobin6537 Před 3 lety +96

      💥💥💥 Nico Rosberg has entered the chat💥💥💥

  • @lorddrac_dontaskmetodance
    @lorddrac_dontaskmetodance Před 3 lety +204

    It's sad he went from potential GOAT in the '90's to average in the 2000's. He's one of four F1 drivers to win both F1 and IndyCar championships and only one of two to win the IndyCar (CART) championship before the F1 championship.

    • @YourFavouriteDraugr
      @YourFavouriteDraugr Před 3 lety +3

      The statistic about winning different championships is not relevant, and he was definitely not "average" after his title win.

    • @colinsweetzir3403
      @colinsweetzir3403 Před 3 lety +3

      @@YourFavouriteDraugr given that he never won an f1 race again after his championship, I don’t think it’s unfair to call him average in the 2000’s

    • @YourFavouriteDraugr
      @YourFavouriteDraugr Před 3 lety +5

      @@colinsweetzir3403 Way below average literally from 1999-2003, and unacceptably bad in any returns since.

    • @lorddrac_dontaskmetodance
      @lorddrac_dontaskmetodance Před 3 lety +11

      @@YourFavouriteDraugr to be bad in F1, it's a mix of bad equipment and just being average. I don't think it was a decline of skill compared to not adapting to new style cars and just not driving as hard.

    • @YourFavouriteDraugr
      @YourFavouriteDraugr Před 3 lety

      @@lorddrac_dontaskmetodance That's so painfully disingenuous...

  • @KonnieW12
    @KonnieW12 Před 3 lety +10

    Imagine you beat Schumi to a world championship and are just considered a footnote of F1 history 🥴🥴

  • @ikecanada
    @ikecanada Před 3 lety +9

    You couldn’t find a Canadian that was around at the time? He won the Lou Marsh award. Best Canadian athlete.

  • @patrickracer43
    @patrickracer43 Před 3 lety +694

    Jacques is honestly the Motorsports equivalent of that guy who peaked in high school and gets into bar fights every weekend

    • @Crosby69
      @Crosby69 Před 3 lety +30

      Every jock basically.

    • @valerierodger7700
      @valerierodger7700 Před 3 lety +28

      That really does describe him perfectly.

    • @cooramoor100
      @cooramoor100 Před 3 lety +1

      lmfao So true, i am deceased haha

    • @Yiannis2112
      @Yiannis2112 Před 3 lety +2

      Peaking at high school, is being a world champion?

    • @patrickracer43
      @patrickracer43 Před 3 lety +25

      @@Yiannis2112 I'm saying he acts like one of those guys who peaked in high school, and that 1996 world drivers title is basically his varsity lettermen jacket

  • @NoBrainSilent
    @NoBrainSilent Před 3 lety +142

    He's the co-host of French F1 broadcasts on Canal+ nowadays, seems like a very cool dude, humble and funny. Dunno where the hate's all about. He shits on most drivers when they commit mistakes, it's more funny than evil actually.

    • @anitanzeyimana6768
      @anitanzeyimana6768 Před 3 lety +36

      Some people just don't like those who tell the truth however difficult it maybe to admit and Villeneuve is a culprit of that unfortunately

    • @vacsad
      @vacsad Před 3 lety +36

      I met him at a GP a few years ago, he was very normal, patient, smooth, not what I expected, handled the fans well.

    • @SN4KEBYTE
      @SN4KEBYTE Před 3 lety +10

      @@anitanzeyimana6768 no Villeneuve isn't a culprit of that. The problem with him is the exact opposite- he just constantly talks bullshit

    • @Markell1991
      @Markell1991 Před 3 lety +31

      He's opinionated for sure, just like Eddie Jordan. But they've both been there and done that; they have experience and know what they're talking about.

    • @YoyoF37
      @YoyoF37 Před 3 lety +10

      Yeah I like him, he makes the races entertaining

  • @gorillachinchilla1668
    @gorillachinchilla1668 Před 2 lety +6

    I was actually in the stand at Raidillon when both BARs atomised themselves in the barrier within minutes of each other. It was a real "WTF?!" moment. I never knew until now that it was the result of a bet!

  • @azaz911c
    @azaz911c Před 3 lety +9

    Villeneuve's Indy 500 win is one of the most amazing car races of all time.

  • @rhaydde
    @rhaydde Před 3 lety +373

    He's also commentating Formula 1 for French TV and he's absolutely great at it. Knows his stuff, says what he thinks, doesn't take himself too seriously, and he does not seems to think too high of himself (often when he is reminded by his partner that he won such race, he doesn't seem to remember)

    • @yannickhardow6819
      @yannickhardow6819 Před rokem +16

      For me, he's a complete buzz killer. Every time Febreau has one of his great one-liners exciting the fans with his commentary, Villeneuve comes in with a "Well, but *insert boring buzz-kill-line here*". I would prefer if Canal+ made Montagny the permanent partner for Febreau, because they feed well of each other's energy. Perfect example for this was Silverstone 2021.

    • @freddiefreihofer7716
      @freddiefreihofer7716 Před rokem +15

      He gives an alternate take on a lot of important F1 things and he's usually right, and entertaining!

    • @hugo94608
      @hugo94608 Před rokem +3

      He is pretty cool as a TV consultant yes, but I hope when Romain Grosjean stops driving, he will be joining his friend instead

    • @nendwr
      @nendwr Před rokem +5

      I sincerely hope he's doing a James Hunt and describing drivers from neighbouring countries as "idiots".

    • @louisrobitaille5810
      @louisrobitaille5810 Před 11 měsíci

      Uh… Why do you talk as if he's still alive?

  • @_xndrzt
    @_xndrzt Před 3 lety +250

    technically, BAR later became the modern Mercedes F1 team..

    • @douglaspealing5608
      @douglaspealing5608 Před 3 lety +45

      Wow. True. Turned into Honda, then brawn f1 in 09, then Mercedes. Who would have thought it

    • @theNewTomSawyer
      @theNewTomSawyer Před 3 lety +24

      And came from Tyrell when the team was purchased by British American Tobacco

    • @_xndrzt
      @_xndrzt Před 3 lety

      @@theNewTomSawyer yup

    • @PiousMoltar
      @PiousMoltar Před 3 lety +12

      You can look at this two ways.
      You can thank Jacques for Mercedes' success, if you're a fan.
      Or you can blame him for their annoying dominance!

    • @Halbi1987
      @Halbi1987 Před 3 lety

      He should have just stayed there :D

  • @derin111
    @derin111 Před 3 lety +37

    Really good in depth biographic video which really held my attention. Thank you.
    And let’s face it, whatever we think about Jacques, he’s done an awful lot more really good, fun stuff than most of us could eve4 dream of in our lives.

    • @user-kf5cg6ln3l
      @user-kf5cg6ln3l Před 2 lety +2

      He accomplished the three things an open wheel racer dreams of winning

  • @stefaniefournier4117
    @stefaniefournier4117 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you! Well done! As a kid in Quebec I first discovered F1 with Gilles Villeneuve. His tragic death was a sad and memorable moment in my childhood and when his son started making a name in racing it was exciting for sure. Completing his father's unfinished work.
    I remember both Indy 500s of '94 and '95 which led him to the ultimate goal of F1 and the championship. The 1997 season with it's highs and lows. My mother had even became a huge F1 fan or should I say Villeneuve fan. The final race and the Schumacher controversy. The championship and seeing the standing ovation at the Canadiens game. Then the dreaded Mechachrome engine 1998 season. Then the continued fall to the bottom of F1 hoping for a turn around that never came. The Nascar and other failed ventures. The embarrassing comments etc.
    It was definitely a great ride for a few years and the championship year was a lot of fun to follow. When I think about the Jaques I remember '96 and '97 along with the two Indy 500s. His father's driving was so pure though and his never give up attitude and heroic races like Dijon in '79 are the stuff of legends. His father seemed more down to earth and lovable.

  • @he1ar1
    @he1ar1 Před 3 lety +261

    Villeneuve started like Hamilton and ended up as Andrea de Cesaris.

    • @Yiannis2112
      @Yiannis2112 Před 3 lety +3

      Unlike you, who failed your driving test. Twice...

    • @BigCat553
      @BigCat553 Před 3 lety +3

      Andrea de Cesaris ended up dead.... not from f1 though, but from motorcycle crash.

    • @nightdriver7216
      @nightdriver7216 Před 3 lety +4

      @Ryan T Mansell "cleaned up" CART the year after he "cleaned up" F1.

    • @Romax-pg2is
      @Romax-pg2is Před 3 lety +1

      @Ryan T I doubt you’re taking age into account when calling Hill a “one hit wonder”.......... He started out, challenged for, and won the title at an age where most drivers would start seeing a physical decline. To win the title after starting out so late, especially for the time he raced in, is an achievement in and of itself, and that might partially explain why his performance dropped after he left Williams.
      And with the mention of “two mediocre drivers”, I presume you’re implying that the 1999 Jordan could’ve won the title with ease if it wasn’t held back by a mediocre driver and a washed up champion who had little to no motivation to perform.

    • @kg0173
      @kg0173 Před 3 lety +1

      Not that bad, he had good runs with average cars.

  • @that.guy11
    @that.guy11 Před 3 lety +412

    Jacques Villeneuve: doesn’t have the attitude, skillset or desire to lead a team
    Also Jacques Villeneuve: hired at BAR to lead the team

    • @azam829
      @azam829 Před 3 lety +28

      That was literally the worst thing BAR could've been done. But I was still thinking which driver it would be, if not Jacques.

    • @rimbusjift7575
      @rimbusjift7575 Před 3 lety +12

      Yeah, the driver was the problem. Morons.

    • @andrewcarter1747
      @andrewcarter1747 Před 3 lety +5

      Hired, the team was built around him. And the other commenters are wrong, BAR's worst mistake was hiring Adrien Reynard. I can see why, Reynard had won the first race of every championship they'd ever built a car for, including Indycar, but 98/99 was the point where the company started to implode so were never going to design a race winning F1 car.

    • @rupertpupkin9630
      @rupertpupkin9630 Před 3 lety +4

      Ahhh hate to burst your bubble lol.... but Villeneuve part owned BAR. He was always going to drive there. A little known fact 🤦‍♂️

    • @hellknightf1
      @hellknightf1 Před 3 lety +2

      Lol people just like to bash and talk bs without doing research..
      Villenueve partly owned the team..

  • @albertorodriguezfernandez5956

    One of my childhood heroes. Between '94 and '98 he was consistently one of the top 5 racing drivers in the world, and one of the 3 best between 96 and 98. His first three seasons in F1 were AMAZING. He had everything. The speed, the charisma, the pedigree. Fantastic car control. His exterior overtake in Portugal ' 96 was a thing of beauty, to Michael Schumacher. He basically did everything he could until 1998. In '99 he decided to go for the money, very clearly, and compromised everything. In my opinion, he should have tried to join McLaren instead of Coulthard. And i NEVER, EVER understood why he never joined Ferrari, having his father being the ultimate Ferrari driver, and himself being WDC. Smells like a veto from Schumacher to me.

    • @brapa1190
      @brapa1190 Před 2 lety +2

      If you wonder where he is now, he's gonna do NASCAR part time next year with his own team and car only racing on road courses that means hes only gonna race for 7-8 races he's gonna drive his own car

    • @Lazbotable
      @Lazbotable Před 2 lety

      Who knows, I've read that Damon had an offer from Ferrari for the 97 season

    • @Lazbotable
      @Lazbotable Před 2 lety +1

      And as the video states Schumacher was the captain now, he would have certainly been number 2 at Ferrari for sure, his father's legacy would have meant little.

    • @albertorodriguezfernandez5956
      @albertorodriguezfernandez5956 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Lazbotable I think that Villeneuve, in case of joining Ferrari, he would be a real menace to Michael. Because in '98, he was really as fast as Michael if not more. And Michael had a 3 year contract, for '96, '97 and '98. To me it was very political that Ferrari did not decided that Irvine should be out, because as a team they could clearly be better.

    • @Lazbotable
      @Lazbotable Před 2 lety +1

      @@albertorodriguezfernandez5956 Good point, given Schumacher's broken leg in 99 that would have given Villeneuve an opportunity to win the title, but after that im not so sure.

  • @noeffeli
    @noeffeli Před 2 lety +7

    I love you Jacques and will always do! Started watching Formula 1 a few years before you entered the scene, but you definitly gave me the reason to watch it until today. Again, i love you, thank you for amazing moments in Formula 1!

  • @StoltzSTS
    @StoltzSTS Před 3 lety +115

    “...and starring Heinz-Herald Frenzen as the woman he loved.” 😂😂 amazing

  • @andrewcarter1747
    @andrewcarter1747 Před 3 lety +337

    I think you're being a little harsh on Villeneuve on his post title years. He was brilliant in 98, widely regarded as the only driver on the grid performing at the same level as Schumacher and Hakkinen race in, race out and dragged some real speed out of the crap box that was the BAR, a team that was litterally built for him with a ton of money from BAT. Unfortunately having Reynard design the car for you while his company was going tits up didn't make for a good car. He was also regularly challenging the faster Jordans and Williams's in 2000 but I think after 2001 car turned out to be crap again he kind of gave up. One thing I remember about that stint at Sauber, he spent a lot of the early part of the season fighting with his mechanics on how to set the car up and after they relented he performed better.
    One thing to say about that 97 win in Argentina, Villeneuve had been very sick that weekend and the team ran the slower 3 stop strategy to give him a bit of a breather with the pitstops and he still won.

    • @largol33t1
      @largol33t1 Před 3 lety +7

      B.A.R. did not exist in 1998. He was still at Williams and never won a single race after 1997. Even in his championship year, Gerhard Berger wiped the floor with him in Germany while Villeneuve spun out and managed only 5th. It went all the way down to the wire and critics still say he should have EASILY wrapped up the championship long before the season got to Japan...

    • @andrewcarter1747
      @andrewcarter1747 Před 3 lety +26

      @@largol33t1 At no point did I say he raced for BAR in 98, I'm well aware they replaced Tyrrell for 99, the rest is you just seeing what you want to see.

    • @andrewcarter1747
      @andrewcarter1747 Před 3 lety +6

      @Mike Jones Lol, the 94 Williams was not the best car.

    • @keanuuuu
      @keanuuuu Před 3 lety

      @@andrewcarter1747 just the way it read at first glance, I thought you had put that at first but realised you didn’t say that.

    • @keanuuuu
      @keanuuuu Před 3 lety +1

      @@andrewcarter1747 the 94 Williams car was a difficult car even though very fast

  • @skippythealien9627
    @skippythealien9627 Před 3 lety +3

    I mentioned this in another video, but I remember I had an old sports magazine that did a year in review for 1995 of all sports (mostly North American sports). For auto racing, 1995 was the year when three guys had incredible years: Villeneuve winning the Indy 500, Michael Schumacher winning his second consecutive World Drivers' Championship, and Jeff Gordon winning his first NASCAR cup championship
    I remember this like it was yesterday. THe writer said Villeneuve would wind up with the best career among the three men. Oh boy....

  • @Minato14a
    @Minato14a Před 3 lety +3

    Today he's one of the two french braodcasters alongside Julien Fébreau (which I assume you know since his legendary ACCELERE ACCELERE right before Gasly's win in Monza) and we love him!

  • @teebird94
    @teebird94 Před 3 lety +138

    He made one fatal error...he left winning for a big cheque ...from a reallllly crappy team.and could not recover from that fatal error.

    • @juhosten3463
      @juhosten3463 Před 3 lety +11

      Exactly. Irvine did the same.

    • @johngancarcik5682
      @johngancarcik5682 Před 3 lety +10

      Chasing checkers to chasing checks

    • @reznov4291
      @reznov4291 Před 3 lety

      pretty sure he only switched teams because he wanted to lead them tho

    • @rupertpupkin9630
      @rupertpupkin9630 Před 3 lety +1

      It was his team... he part owned it....

    • @iviv1316
      @iviv1316 Před 3 lety +2

      @@juhosten3463 hill too

  • @dudewuttheheck
    @dudewuttheheck Před 3 lety +379

    Wow, does this guy ever wear glasses that don't make him look like a failed architect?

    • @anubeia
      @anubeia Před 3 lety +14

      I was thinking “twat”, but your assessment is a lot better! 😂

    • @tailsneon556
      @tailsneon556 Před 3 lety +3

      Jacques Villeneuve.. AKA Art Vandalay

    • @mistertheking
      @mistertheking Před 3 lety +5

      You mean an importer exporter?

    • @marshjohnwarren4178
      @marshjohnwarren4178 Před 3 lety

      @@mistertheking no a wealthy philanthropist

    • @yommish
      @yommish Před 4 měsíci

      I think they looked pretty cool

  • @cliftonmadden1992
    @cliftonmadden1992 Před 3 lety +1

    Wow, great VLOG! I was a bit a of a fan of Jacques when he was winning and before he went weird. Thanks for doing this VLOG and the song and montage at the end was fantastic!

  • @shubham4india
    @shubham4india Před 3 lety +3

    Great of you to shed some light on the career of this underrated and slightly forgotten champ ..
    No matter his later endeavours, he still is a part of a elite group of men to win a F1 championship .
    Things don't always play out the way one plans.. but you gotta appreciate his fight .. He's still going at it racing cars all over the world coz that's what he loves
    Great video Josh 👍

  • @gavalant366
    @gavalant366 Před 3 lety +204

    I always wondered what happened to this guy, He's literally F1's version of a one hit wonder.

    • @bl41ck97
      @bl41ck97 Před 3 lety +35

      Tbh After 1 winning a world championship 2 beating the best driver and the team of the time /the era
      What's left to do ?

    • @bumblebity2902
      @bumblebity2902 Před 3 lety +8

      Williams then was still fastest car of the grid, McLaren misfortunes helped him to win the title.

    • @deeptenduganguly8530
      @deeptenduganguly8530 Před 3 lety +37

      @@bl41ck97 Ferrari was nowhere near the Williams that season, Villeneuve regularly took pole by a second, that tells you the pace of that Williams

    • @rimbusjift7575
      @rimbusjift7575 Před 3 lety +4

      @@deeptenduganguly8530
      Not at all factual.

    • @deeptenduganguly8530
      @deeptenduganguly8530 Před 3 lety +27

      @@rimbusjift7575 the Williams outqualified the rival team by more than half a second gap in Australia, Brazil, Argentina, San Marino and Spain, with a more than second gap in Australia, Argentina and Spain
      The car took 11 out of 17 poles that season, now you tell me which car was quicker, Put Schumacher in the Williams and the Title gets decided way before the last race

  • @jean-baptistepiron7910
    @jean-baptistepiron7910 Před 3 lety +83

    He is really good on French tv. Perfect balance between sassiness and expertise.
    No hatred in France for sure. Really part of the resurgence of F1 in France.

    • @SolarLiner
      @SolarLiner Před 3 lety +14

      As a French I had no idea of his reputation across the pond. Jacques makes watching boring F1 races worth it.

    • @fearlessjoebanzai
      @fearlessjoebanzai Před 2 lety +2

      Wtf is a France???

  • @LeoElso
    @LeoElso Před 3 lety

    I Love this tradition of finishing every video of yours with a comedy song, it really adds a lot of character!

  • @nickblack9470
    @nickblack9470 Před 12 dny +6

    Who’s here after what he said about Danny Ric

  • @ELSTERLING
    @ELSTERLING Před 3 lety +154

    Fun fact: Not only did Damon beat Jacques to the 1996 WDC he also comfortably outclassed him as a musician. Other than Damon being a member of an albeit mediocre punk band in his youth whilst Jacques sold a humiliatingly small number of copies of his album Damon Hill officially earned a gold record for his guitar work on Def Leppard's song Demolition Man. It's very very rare that a collab with Def Leppard is the less embarrassing option.

  • @CzarOfMars
    @CzarOfMars Před 3 lety +87

    Nowadays he's the french equivalent of martin brundle, backing up the french commentator for F1. They're actually hilarious together.

    • @zangtar31
      @zangtar31 Před 3 lety +8

      « LA HONTE POUR BOTTAS »

    • @Yiannis2112
      @Yiannis2112 Před 3 lety +3

      Well, he was light years better in his field, than you are in yours

    • @michaelskoomamacher5652
      @michaelskoomamacher5652 Před 3 lety +5

      More like Francophone James Hunt, since he talks shit during commentaries more often than not.

    • @zvexevz
      @zvexevz Před 3 lety +1

      What channel? Is a Quebec or France broadcast, or is it just the French language audio on TSN?

    • @CzarOfMars
      @CzarOfMars Před 3 lety

      @@zvexevz broadcast in france on canal+

  • @dentonator96
    @dentonator96 Před 8 měsíci

    I love this channel! Thanks for the history and amazing laughs. Keep it up!

  • @MegaLester3
    @MegaLester3 Před 2 lety +6

    And he just qualified for his 1st Daytona 500... alrighty then 😂

    • @LeafFerret
      @LeafFerret Před 2 lety

      That alone is an achievement.

  • @czn2100
    @czn2100 Před 3 lety +58

    If Jacques F1 career was reversed, he would be recognized as one of the best. Guy pushed those BAR-Honda's hard.

    • @cambyses1529
      @cambyses1529 Před 3 lety +7

      Ultimately Button played that role instead.

    • @ianjurkiewicz2432
      @ianjurkiewicz2432 Před rokem

      @@cambyses1529 Button is still shit-talked to this day, so IDK

  • @y_fam_goeglyd
    @y_fam_goeglyd Před 3 lety +149

    The '96 season always felt like there was a sense of destiny to it. Two sons of great, late, drivers. Damon treated him like a kid brother that year, brought him on as an F1 driver, won the championship and got shafted. It's one of the few things I've never forgiven Frank Williams for. He was always shitty to most of his drivers.
    I'll give Jacques one bit of credit - _that_ race in Hungary. He said that it was the worst he'd ever felt on winning, and had the championship not been at stake, he'd have stayed behind Damon. And I actually believe him because he genuinely did sound it. Damon, of course, was a total gent and didn't blame him in the slightest, saying he had to do it.
    Ironically, Damon's a really good guitarist...
    I was never surprised by Schumacher's behaviour in any of his "controversial" moments. What always surprised me was that he ever cheated (yes, that's the best description) when with his talent, he didn't have to.

    • @Lazbotable
      @Lazbotable Před 2 lety +12

      Frank Williams never did think of the big picture too much, he was just after the next best thing, the team hasn't done much since

    • @milkshakemuncher
      @milkshakemuncher Před 2 lety +10

      @@Lazbotable Frank was sure of his car doing the work in those days.
      They lost Newey, Patrick Head stepped back, they went down hill

    • @Lazbotable
      @Lazbotable Před 2 lety +11

      @@milkshakemuncher He also showed little faith in engine manufacturers, every 2-3 years beginning in 98, they would switch to a new one, gaining little progress and leaving little time for development and testing.

    • @Miwna
      @Miwna Před rokem +5

      Damon Hill even recorded a guitar solo on a Def Leppard song released in 1999.

    • @y_fam_goeglyd
      @y_fam_goeglyd Před 10 měsíci +6

      @@Miwna Didn't know that! Thanks :)
      He used to play with Eddie Jordan and his band (yes, that EJ!) on stage at the circuit after races. Definitely in Silverstone, maybe elsewhere but I can't remember all that time ago! He did play with George Harrison (the Beatle, just in case there's another these days) and some other big names.
      I was a huge fan - total fangirl lol - before I even knew he was a great guitarist, but as a (very amateur) guitarist myself, it popped him even higher up in my estimation! The first race I remember seeing (vaguely, I was about 7?) was Graham's last Monaco race, and my Dad told me how great he'd been as a racer and a gent, so I think I was predisposed to be a complete Damon fan from the word go lol.

  • @TheMNrailfan227
    @TheMNrailfan227 Před 2 lety +2

    Jacques was in the Daytona 500 on Sunday. It would be really cool to see him do a full NASCAR cup season

    • @nukclear2741
      @nukclear2741 Před 2 lety

      Where did he finish? I was legitimately there, but didn’t remember where he placed.
      Although I do think he was planning to go part time for Nascar, but I was waiting for the race and wasn’t paying attention to the pre race show.

    • @TheMNrailfan227
      @TheMNrailfan227 Před 2 lety +3

      @@nukclear2741 22nd

    • @nukclear2741
      @nukclear2741 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheMNrailfan227 that’s not too bad, especially for his first time at the top level.

  • @CanaldoDaniloQueiroz
    @CanaldoDaniloQueiroz Před 3 lety

    Josh's script and narration are so captivating that make an almost 40-minute video to be so appealing

  • @simbarocksone
    @simbarocksone Před 3 lety +173

    Still can’t believe that this man went from hero to zero after beating SCHUMACHER when he TRIED TO CHEAT. Nothing lasts forever I guess....

  • @crusherbmx
    @crusherbmx Před 3 lety +178

    "the one and only, Jacques Villeneuve" not counting his uncle, Jacques, also a racer....

    • @louiseboisverttrommer1686
      @louiseboisverttrommer1686 Před 3 lety +1

      Forget the uncle, think of the father !

    • @alexm.s4000
      @alexm.s4000 Před 3 lety +11

      @@louiseboisverttrommer1686 thats not the joke

    • @Hagonian
      @Hagonian Před 3 lety +7

      And his uncle is a crazy sucker! Used to watch him and race ice ovals with him.
      Dude raced into his 60's and was being kids half his age!

    • @unofficialpolitics9553
      @unofficialpolitics9553 Před 3 lety +5

      His uncle Jacques was a solid car driver but his real talent lay in racing snowmobiles on ice. My brothers were running OSRF events back in the day when both Gilles & Jacques raced in the Sno-Pro division (factory). Good times back in the days of banked tracks.

    • @louiseboisverttrommer1686
      @louiseboisverttrommer1686 Před 3 lety

      I knew Gilles very well, he was great ! No joke at all., sagi alex !

  • @jamesbehra2690
    @jamesbehra2690 Před 3 lety

    Great video man! That 1997 season was awesome.

  • @elsi54098
    @elsi54098 Před 2 lety +1

    Fun fact: now Jacques Villeneuve is now in the nascar cup series driving the 27 for ford

  • @troyderks899
    @troyderks899 Před 3 lety +105

    I met him at a track where euronascar goes only 30 mins away from my home, thing is.. he won that race. Very nice guy tho. Took the time to take pictures with everyone and talk to everyone.

  • @stratis722
    @stratis722 Před 3 lety +79

    "passing at suzuka is about as tricky as gene haas growing a spine"
    *[insert kimi at suzuka 2005]*

  • @martinhambleton5076
    @martinhambleton5076 Před 2 lety +3

    I thought he was a very complete talented driver.
    He came over to me as a modest unassuming person during interviews.
    When he raced F1 we followed Jacques career.
    The 1997 season was one of the toughest for a long time with shenanigans from Eddie Irvine as well as Michael Schumacher.
    Very well deserved Jacques. 👏👏👏👏

  • @davidwarr8600
    @davidwarr8600 Před 3 lety +1

    I think part of the problem with the popularity of drivers and motorsport in general is that you have to be a car guy to appreciate the sport. Millions of people that watch stick and ball sports are just casual observers and the games are so simple that it doesn’t take much thought to understand what is going on. It is hard for the general public to understand F1, IndyCar or IMSA racing.

  • @Zugaikotsu775
    @Zugaikotsu775 Před 3 lety +40

    both BAR drivers playing chicken at Spa was the perfect example of his downfall

  • @dw235
    @dw235 Před 3 lety +86

    "...the Canadians try to lose the Stanley Cup again." LOL -- didn't ever expect a hockey reference on this channel. Brilliant.

    • @althafrafianto
      @althafrafianto Před 3 lety +5

      fucking hell that pfp is ancient

    • @dw235
      @dw235 Před 3 lety +5

      @@althafrafianto I am a relic.

    • @whetsaw
      @whetsaw Před 3 lety +4

      Except they've won 24 cups in their history, 11 more than second place

    • @idiragnaou7935
      @idiragnaou7935 Před 3 lety +4

      The Canadiens*

    • @dw235
      @dw235 Před 3 lety +1

      @@idiragnaou7935 Of course. Let's just go with Les Habitants while we're at it.

  • @mattdobz
    @mattdobz Před 3 lety +6

    Actually BAR could claim a rich history of F1 racing, as it was previously known as Tyrell.

  • @trentonmackey440
    @trentonmackey440 Před 2 lety +1

    My first experience with him was in what is today the NASCAR XFinity Series. I used to root for him in the two or three races he'd run a year, simply because he wasn't a regular and actually had several chances of winning, but also because of the sheer chaos that would ensue in every race he'd take part in. He was a total wrecking ball, and I loved it lol

  • @mattdickie4696
    @mattdickie4696 Před 3 lety +85

    Gather round folks, while Josh spins a tale of a mythical time when championships were contested right down to the last race.

    • @robh9577
      @robh9577 Před 3 lety +8

      It's like a lifetime ago...

  • @TomHarrowven
    @TomHarrowven Před 3 lety +69

    Jacques Villeneuve's music career needs the power of Squarespace

  • @Lorijenken
    @Lorijenken Před 2 lety +1

    I was 17 when I was watching that season, was also lucky to watch him racing in Montreal in 1998, really proud of him :3

  • @AD-df5tm
    @AD-df5tm Před 2 lety +2

    JV's accomplishments are criminally underrated in Canada.

  • @SandroDoulis
    @SandroDoulis Před 3 lety +73

    9:12 Can’t ignore the fact Damon’s car literally got covered in oil

    • @Joopyter724
      @Joopyter724 Před 3 lety +10

      Step 3:

    • @csanadhorvath
      @csanadhorvath Před 3 lety +11

      I'm going to hijack your comemment, but I got to mention this: THERE WERE SO MANY FREAKING RETIREMENTS?!? Like jesus christ, how could anyone make predictions, oil, clutch, engine, wheel nuts, pit stop screw ups, crashes, it was always exciting, you never knew who was going to win.
      The new era is so reliable, Hamilton had like 3 retirements (not crashes with Rosberg, actual mechanical malfunction retirements) in his 7 years at Mercedes, of course he is fucking awesome! Try doing it back then, its like everyone was driving red bulls, you never knew if you were gonna finish. It was a 50-50, today its like a 95-5, its surprising when something goes wrong :(( makes it really boring and predictable sadly!

    • @andrewcarter1747
      @andrewcarter1747 Před 3 lety +5

      @@csanadhorvath Honestly I think the complete opposite, having half the cars drop out leaves you with strung out races with no on track action, it can really ruin races.

    • @jigglediggle29
      @jigglediggle29 Před 3 lety

      Not oil, it's rubber from the good old Goodyear slicks.

    • @andrewcarter1747
      @andrewcarter1747 Před 3 lety

      @@jigglediggle29 It was oil, Villeneuve's car had an oil leak that was spraying out the back for half the race, why else do you think Damon's car was brown at the end of the race, it sure as hell wasn't rubber.

  • @TheGabman234
    @TheGabman234 Před 3 lety +60

    A bit of insight from a Canadian who lived through Villeneuve's prime...
    When I was a kid, I got into F1 because of Villeneuve. My first sports memory is him winning the championship, this created a lifetime passion for me, and I'll always be grateful to Jacques for that.
    He was huge for a little while in French Canada. I think a lot of it had to do with nostalgia with Gilles, but people from Quebec tend to be very extreme towards hometown sports stars. For a little while after that, you had F1 fans everywhere, particularly with people in their 30's and 40's (A lot them probably also saw Gilles). I remember it flaming out quite fast when things started going south for him. I think the media put expectations extremely high for him, although BAR probably had some blame for talking a big game.
    What always saddened me about Villeneuve is I got the feeling that Canada was his failover plan. He seemed to keep his relations with his fans here just good enough so that if things went bad, he could come here and continue being famous. I remember really getting that vibe when he debuted his album.
    I remember particularly one incident we had when he did an interview for the French Canadian CBC (Radio-Canada). He walked out of the interview because he got asked a question he didn't like. Only once his agent got him back on track did he agree to continue the interview. The channel showed the complete interview and him walking off. It seemed extremely petty and it fit with the soret of image he cultivated in F1. Sad I can't seem to find this video anywhere...
    Another thing I always found weird was how much he seemed to avoid contact with the reporters affiliated with our Quebec brodcasters. I remember back in the day, we used to get more French interviews with Olivier Panis, Jean Alesi, Jarno Trulli and even Nico Rosberg than with Jacques. I understand he related more to Europe, but it felt like it wouldn't have been that much to send us a bone once in a while.
    One last anecdote relating to Villeneuve and Canada. For a guy who states he doesn't relate to Canada that much, he still got in hot water over the years for dumb and poorly researched comments about things happening in our country. Particularly, he got in a lot of heat in 2012 when he made comments telling students to go back to school while they were on strike because of higher university fees. Coming from a millionaire who lived in Monaco, that felt extremely out of place.
    My dad and I often wonder how things would have been different if Gilles had not died. I guess we will never know, but it's pretty sad that he's seen as a joke nowadays here. I remember when he made the Stroll comments, just thinking that he could have just kept that to himself once again.
    Today, I have to say that while they never made F1, I relate much more with Alex Tagliani and Patrick Carpentier as Canadian drivers I remember from my youth and that I consider role models. While they never found the same amount of success and competed in their prime mostly in CART/Champ Car/Indycar, they seem like much more approachable guys than Villeneuve. Greg Moore probably also would have been mentioned here had he not sadly died.

    • @dharmabum2389
      @dharmabum2389 Před 3 lety +3

      TheGabman234 Just out of curiosity: had he ever mentioned or paid any respect to greg moore's memory? I have never read or seen anything like that, which I consider it odd being them both canadian, but again maybe Jacques didn't have the time or opportunity to develop those connections.

    • @TheGabman234
      @TheGabman234 Před 3 lety +8

      @@dharmabum2389 If I recall correctly, Villeneuve attended an event in Moore's memory and I believe he did mention feeling sad about the whole ordeal. What sort of sucks is most of the archives of that period from Canadian broadcasters don't exist anymore or are simply not available on the internet. Sad because I'd like to see some of those interviews again... I used to have a bunch of those on VHS, but those don't exist anymore :(

    • @dharmabum2389
      @dharmabum2389 Před 3 lety +5

      TheGabman234 thanks for your insight! It's nice to know Jacques said something nice on Greg's memory. I miss the 90's footage too and ocasionally stumble across some old WIlliams footage or a cool interview, but Jacques' stuff is rare.

    • @mqh8879
      @mqh8879 Před rokem +2

      It appeared to me the same way growing up. Aside from his canadian heritage, he seemed like a distant european cousin on television. I didn't relate to him or see him as you know a kid's hero. Also maybe the fact that he was raised in Monaco didn't create much appeal for your average canadian habitant.

    • @CandlestickSec7
      @CandlestickSec7 Před rokem +2

      @@mqh8879 If you watch the Villeneuve/Pironi documentary, you hear his mother and sister speak and they both sound like your average French Canadian. Emphasis on Canadian, you wouldn’t even really know they were francophones except for the very odd word and when they pronounce French words and names, of course.
      Jacques sounds completely different. I wouldn’t say he sounds French, but he sounds completely different. Sort of like a kid who went to international school or something.

  • @TankkOneFGC
    @TankkOneFGC Před 3 lety +3

    Now he is the F1 commentator along side Julien Febraud for the french channel CANAL +, and he is very cool as a commentator :)

  • @eliskagray1546
    @eliskagray1546 Před 3 lety +1

    One of my biggest sport crushes. I still have magazine with him on the cover. I was hooked watching him.

  • @Roulov
    @Roulov Před 3 lety +129

    As a 44 year old canadian, he got me interested in F1 and the love of the sport is still there. Unfortunately for him, he made the worst career choices but to be fair, he was consistently faster than his teammates for the majority of his career.

    • @ado5182
      @ado5182 Před 2 lety

      He belove in hos friend...and bild team...yes its be mistake because McLaren want him...Ferrari to...but MS fly to italy get on knees and ask ferrari i MS be ferrari s***t just not buy JV...
      Bit JV is true fighter in clear speed he is one of fastest and if some body watch telemetry he undarstandt what i said. But much in f1 dont like true JV... Richards hate him...honda start to do dirty thinks...eh sauber be good but dont give him his settings for car :(.

  • @Farseglarna
    @Farseglarna Před 3 lety +83

    Say what you want. Jacques was bloody fast in f1 96-2001. Did things his own way and was exciting to watch. As schuey put it "he was the one I didn't beat".

    • @mjk06
      @mjk06 Před 10 měsíci +1

      He was pretty fast for like 2 years hahaha!! He was useless outside of the OP Williams. And even then he barely beat Schumi in 1997

    • @Pantha242
      @Pantha242 Před 10 měsíci

      That move around the outside in Portugal.. I can't believe it wasn't shown in this video.. 🤔

  • @jtdavis62
    @jtdavis62 Před 3 lety +4

    33:15 The unofficial "Triple Crown of Motorsports" is to win three races: Indy, Le Mans, and Monaco. Jacques never won Monaco.

    • @marc-andrehogue114
      @marc-andrehogue114 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Yeah but its more impressive to win a F1 championship then Monaco

    • @yommish
      @yommish Před 4 měsíci

      There is some disagreement about whether it should be Monaco or the WDC. Look up an article titled “Triple crown: Monaco or F1 championship?” Graham Hill is the only one to complete the triple crown (both definitions) and he thinks it should be the WDC. But yeah the prevailing definition just includes Monaco. I guess it depends on whether you think it should be the 3 biggest achievements in racing, or the 3 biggest races.

  • @ravenxplode985
    @ravenxplode985 Před 2 lety +1

    10:00 "AND HE THREW IT AWAY AT THE START WITH A RUBBISH GETAWAY!" That quote made me laugh uncontrollably

  • @marklittle8805
    @marklittle8805 Před 3 lety +62

    Jacques is a strange duck, no two ways about it. He squandered his talent however.

  • @CrimsonReaver
    @CrimsonReaver Před 3 lety +99

    Never knew he could have gone to McLaren, it's a bit like Alesi passing up the chance of going to Williams, hindsight is a wonderful thing. Great video!

    • @davidporeilly1
      @davidporeilly1 Před 3 lety +1

      Or Webber passing up Benetton to go to Williams.

    • @gamefan56
      @gamefan56 Před 3 lety

      @@davidporeilly1 Renault*

    • @gigsawsoljier1408
      @gigsawsoljier1408 Před 3 lety +2

      alesi actually didn't go to williams because of a delay in contract stuff plus ferrari bought him out. totally different

  • @nukclear2741
    @nukclear2741 Před 2 lety +1

    He was at the Daytona 500 this year. Not even joking. Starting from… dead last.
    I was legitimately at that race and I don’t even remember where he placed at the end.

  • @Diego-yl2ri
    @Diego-yl2ri Před 3 lety +5

    I totally bought into his hype. Loved him and Greg Moore (RIP).

  • @clicheguevara9917
    @clicheguevara9917 Před 3 lety +38

    the more i see it the more im convinced: had schumi not turned in on him, jacques would have missed the corner.

    • @michaelwilkie35
      @michaelwilkie35 Před 3 lety +5

      There was another video on YT explaining that he gave so much into that overtake, (he was running out of time to make a move) he would have gone off track if Schumacher didn’t hit him.

    • @BigCat553
      @BigCat553 Před 3 lety +1

      Schumi helped him turn the corner, and schumi retired from the race, how nice of michael? he ended up letting villeneuve win... lol! ironic

    • @louiseboisverttrommer1686
      @louiseboisverttrommer1686 Před 3 lety

      Well, he did not, too bad !

    • @louiseboisverttrommer1686
      @louiseboisverttrommer1686 Před 3 lety

      Well, he did not, too bad !

    • @BeardieD
      @BeardieD Před 3 lety +2

      Jacques has proven many times he can out manoeuvre Schumacher, unfortunately both Schumacher brothers are terrible sportsman and view the track as a war ground and drive as such. Michaels nasty tactics of basically cheating throughout his career paid of for him far too much as far as im concerned. Jacques however proved he is a decent sportsman and has what it takes to win. He was so nice he turned down McLaren to help his mate start a new team, would Either Schumacher do that?! I rest my case!

  • @Minx5892
    @Minx5892 Před 3 lety +138

    *"For him one world title was enough, he proved what he needed to prove"*

    • @gibbar3335
      @gibbar3335 Před 3 lety +20

      "To himself, and anyone who doubted him."

    • @sidiox7857
      @sidiox7857 Před 2 lety

      Hunt was a legend as a human and as a driver!

    • @brapa1190
      @brapa1190 Před 2 lety +2

      For anyone wondering, He's now driving for NASCAR he now owns a team in NASCAR, It's gonna start racing in 2022 as part time #27, only racing in 9 races because there's only 9 road course, 9/38 races he's gonna running

    • @KaushalNara
      @KaushalNara Před 2 lety

      This guy reminds me of Nico Rosberg. Cause he also said he had nothing left to prove in F1 after 2016

    • @stpbasss3773
      @stpbasss3773 Před 2 lety

      @@brapa1190 that's actually pretty cool

  • @akvk9500
    @akvk9500 Před 2 lety

    Great vid. Thx Josh

  • @uweclaunitzer7170
    @uweclaunitzer7170 Před 3 lety +1

    Little mistake: The so-called "Triple Crown of motorsports" consists of wins at the Indy 500, 24 h of Le Mans and the MONACO Grand Prix (instead of the F1 world championship).

  • @DankBoyy00
    @DankBoyy00 Před 3 lety +33

    I love this dude, he gave my favourite team their final title, but he didn't know when to give up!

  • @samuelbrandt5702
    @samuelbrandt5702 Před 3 lety +35

    Great video. I'd love to see a "WTF happened to Jan Magnussen" as his F1 stint was hopeless

    • @samuelbrandt5702
      @samuelbrandt5702 Před 3 lety

      @Iron Chef Palm Beach True

    • @williamsfan9237
      @williamsfan9237 Před 3 lety

      Christijan Albers

    • @stephanecormier6894
      @stephanecormier6894 Před 3 lety

      Eddie Irvine???

    • @davidwarr8600
      @davidwarr8600 Před 3 lety +2

      Jan has only just retired from a very successful racing career with Corvette racing in IMSA.

    • @samuelbrandt5702
      @samuelbrandt5702 Před 3 lety

      @@davidwarr8600 absolutely. His sportscar career was super successful but unfortunately his Formula 1 career was hopeless

  • @B4R0N.
    @B4R0N. Před 3 lety +1

    He happens to be one of the two F1 commentators in France. And gosh is he delightfully sarcastic! His commentary's bloody awesome!

  • @mikeyoc24
    @mikeyoc24 Před 2 lety +9

    One bit to note that wasn’t mentioned in the video. While Jacques venture to BAR wasn’t as successful as he had initially hoped, BAR is still the origin for the Brawn GP and the all conquering Mercedes team to win multiple world titles. So you could say everything turned out alright in the end. Even though Jacques and his management team were long gone by the time the team became Brawn.