Difference between revisions of "Gilles Villeneuve"

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[[Image:Gilles Villeneuve.jpg|thumb|right|220px|Gilles Villeneuve]]
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{| border=1 align="right" cellpadding=2 cellspacing=0 width=250  style="margin-left:3em; margin-bottom: 2em;"
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|-
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|colspan=2|[[Image:Villeneuve Monza 1981.jpg|250px]]
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!colspan=2 style="color: white; background: darkred;"|'''Gilles Villeneuve'''
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|-
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|Nationality:||Canadian
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|-
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|Years:||[[1977 Formula One season|1977]] - [[1982 Formula One season|1982]]
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|-
 +
|Team(s):||[[McLaren]], [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]
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|-
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|Races:||68
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|-
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|Championships:||0  (2nd in [[1979 Formula One season|1979]])
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|-
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|Wins:||6
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|-
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|Podiums:||14
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|-
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|Poles:||2
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|-
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|Fastest laps:||8
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|-
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|First race:||[[1977 British Grand Prix]]
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|-
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|First win:||[[1978 Canadian Grand Prix]]
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|-
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|Last win:||[[1981 Spanish Grand Prix]]
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|-
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|Last race:||[[1982 Belgian Grand Prix]]
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|}
  
'''Joseph Gilles Henri Villeneuve''' ([[January 18]], [[1950]] – [[May 8]], [[1982]]) was a world-renowned [[Formula One]] racing driver.
 
  
Villeneuve was born in the small town of [[Berthierville, Quebec|Berthierville]], [[Quebec]], [[Canada]]. His first Formula One win came in his native province in the [[1978]] [[Canadian Grand Prix]], held in [[Montreal]]. All told in his short career, he won six Grand Prix races. In 1979 he finished second by four points in the championship to teammate [[Jody Scheckter]].
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'''Joseph Gilles Henri Villeneuve''' ('''Gilles Villeneuve''' [[International Phonetic Alphabet|pronounced]] ʒil vilnœv) ([[January 18]], [[1950]] – [[May 8]], [[1982]]) was a [[Canada|Canadian]] [[Formula One]] racing driver. An enthusiast of cars and fast driving from an early age, he started his professional career in [[snowmobile]] racing in his native province of [[Quebec]]. He moved into single seaters - winning the US and Canadian [[Formula Atlantic]] championships in 1976 before being offered a one-off drive with [[McLaren]] at the 1977 British Grand Prix. He was taken on by reigning world champions Ferrari for the end of the season - in only his fifth season racing cars - and from 1978 to his death in 1982 drove for the Italian team. He won six Grand Prix races in a short career at the highest level. In 1979 he finished second by four points in the championship to teammate [[Jody Scheckter]].
  
Remembered for his frenetic style which seemed more like that of a rally driver, his wheel-banging duel with [[René Arnoux]] in the last laps of the 1979 French Grand Prix at the Dijon circuit was one of the most intense moments in Formula One racing. Despite this, his six Grand Prix wins represent some of the most tactically astute and mechanically sensitive in the history of the sport. Perhaps his greatest achievements came in [[1981]], where he wrestled an unwieldy turbo [[Ferrari]] to victory at [[Monaco]], followed by a classic of defensive driving at the Spanish Grand Prix, keeping 5 quicker cars behind him using his tactical acumen and the superior straightline speed of his car.
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Villeneuve died in a 140 mph crash with the [[March Engineering|March]] of [[Jochen Mass]] during practice for the [[1982 Belgian Grand Prix]] at [[Zolder]] (see more below). The accident came only two weeks after an intense argument with his team-mate, [[Didier Pironi]], over Pironi's move to pass Villeneuve at [[1982 San Marino Grand Prix|Imola]]. At the time of his death, Villeneuve was extremely popular with fans and with many journalists, on whom his death had a profound effect. Since 1982 he has become an iconic figure in the history of the sport, renowned for his car control, aggressive driving style, and a 'never give up' attitude. His son, [[Jacques Villeneuve]], became Formula One world champion in 1997.
  
Villeneuve went into 1982 a clear favourite for the crown. He was widely regarded as the best [[Formula One]] driver in the field, and [[Ferrari]], after two years of mediocre cars, produced an excellent design.  After glimpses of promise in the opening races, Villeneuve was back at the front for the [[San Marino Grand Prix]], only for his team-mate [[Didier Pironi]] to disobey team orders and beat him to the line.  Betrayed and angry, Villeneuve vowed never to speak to Pironi again. Tragedy struck at the next race on the calendar. On [[May 8]], [[1982]], on his final qualifying lap for the [[Belgian Grand Prix]] at Zolder, the front left wheel of his car came into contact with the right rear wheel of [[Jochen Mass]]'s car, which was on a slow 'in' lap. Villeneuve's car was launched into the air before nose-diving into the ground and somersaulting along the side of the track.  The violence of the accident reduced the car to its cockpit, the force ripping Villeneuve's seat from the back of the [[monocoque]]. Just before the car landed for the final time, Villeneuve, still strapped to his seat, was thrown out into the catch fencing at the other side of the track.  When the medical team arrived, he was not breathing.  He died shortly thereafter in hospital.  Mercifully, his fatal injuries were probably caused by the force of his car landing for the first time after the initial impact.
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==Personal and early life==
  
His spectacular driving is still considered an art form among Formula One fans. He is still remembered at Grand Prix races, specially those in Italy.  
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Villeneuve was born in Richelieu, a small town in the French-speaking province of [[Quebec]] in [[Canada]] and grew up in the nearby town of [[Berthierville, Quebec|Berthierville]]. He married Joann Barthe in 1970, with whom he had two children, Jacques and Melanie. During his early career Villeneuve took his family on the road with him in a motorhome during the racing season, a habit which he continued to some extent during his Formula One career. He often claimed to have been born in 1952. By the time he got his break in Formula One, he was already 27 years old and took two years off his age to avoid being considered too old to make it at the highest level of motorsports.
  
The racetrack on Île Notre-Dame, [[Montreal]], used for the [[Molson Indy Montreal|Molson Indy]] and [[Canadian Grand Prix|Grand Prix du Canada]], was renamed in his honour at the Canadian Grand Prix of 1982 after his death. Sadly, at the start of that race [[Riccardo Paletti]] died after crashing with the stalled Ferrari of [[Didier Pironi]].  
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Like certain other great drivers, including Clark and Senna, Villeneuve was a curious mixture of seemingly disparate personality types. Lauda wrote of him, "He was the craziest devil I ever came across in Formula 1... The fact that, for all this, he was a sensitive and lovable character rather than an out-and-out hell-raiser made him such a unique human being". Flying, snowmobiling or driving, he was a risk-taker of classic proportions. Yet his fellow drivers said that on the track he was scrupulously fair and did not put anyone's safety other than his own in jeopardy and those who worked with him usually referred to him as [[introvert]]ed. This combination of traits made him exceptionally popular not only with fans but with teammates and opponents as well.
  
Near the race track there is also a museum in his honour.
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His younger brother [[Jacques Villeneuve (elder)|Jacques]], known as "uncle Jacques", also had a successful racing career in Formula Atlantic, Can Am and CART. Gilles' son, also named [[Jacques Villeneuve|Jacques]], won the [[Indianapolis 500]] and [[Champ Car|CART]] championships in 1995 and became [[Formula One]] World Champion in 1997.
  
"I know no human being can do miracles but Gilles could really surprise us sometimes."
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== Racing career ==
- Jacques Laffite, 1982 -
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===Pre-Formula One===
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Villeneuve started competitive driving in local drag-racing events, entering his road car, a modified 1967 [[Ford Mustang]]. He was soon bored by this and entered the Jim Russell Racing School at Le Circuit Mont Tremblant to gain a racing license. He then had a very successful season in Quebec regional [[Formula Ford]], running his own two year old car and winning seven of the ten races he entered. The next year he progressed to [[Formula Atlantic]], competing there for four years, running his own car again for one of those seasons. He won his first Atlantic race in 1975 at Gimli Motosport Park in heavy rain. In 1976, teamed with Chris Harrison's Ecurie Canada and factory March race engineer Ray Wardell, he dominated the season by winning all but one of the races and taking the US and Canadian titles. He won the Canadian championship again in 1977.
  
Gilles was inducted into the [[Canadian Motorsport Hall of Fame]] [http://www.cmhf.ca] at their inaugaural induction ceremony at the [[Four Seasons Hotel]], [[Toronto]], [[Ontario]], [[August 19]], [[1993]].
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Money was very tight in Villeneuve's early career. He was a professional racing driver from his late teens, with no other income. In the first few years the bulk of his income actually came from [[snowmobile]] racing, where he was extremely successful and could demand appearance money as well as race money. His second season in Formula Atlantic was part-sponsored by his snowmobile manufacturer, Skiroule. In fact, he credited some of his success to his snowmobiling days: "Every winter, you would reckon on three or four big spills - and I'm talking about being thrown on to the ice at 100 mph. Those things used to slide a lot, which taught me a great deal about control. And the visibility was terrible! Unless you were leading, you could see nothing, with all the snow blowing about. Good for the reactions - and it stopped me having any worries about racing in the rain."
  
His brother [[Jacques Villeneuve (elder)]], known as "uncle Jacques", also had a successful racing career winning championships in the Formula Atlantic and Can Am series as well as becoming the first Canadian to win a race in the CART series. "Uncle" Jacques was inducted into the Canadian Motorsport Hall of Fame in 2001.
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===Formula One===
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[[image:1978_Brands_Hatch_Ferrari_312T3_Gilles_Villeneuve.jpg|thumb|right|Villeneuve in his first full season of Formula One]]
 +
After Villeneuve impressed [[McLaren]] driver [[James Hunt]] by beating him, and several other Grand Prix stars, in a non-championship [[Formula Atlantic]] race at [[Trois Rivieres]], McLaren offered Villeneuve a deal for five races in a third car during 1977 and the young Canadian made his debut at the [[1977 British Grand Prix]]. Villeneuve qualified an impressive 9th in McLaren's old [[McLaren M23|M23]], splitting the regular drivers Hunt and [[Jochen Mass]]. Delayed for two laps by a faulty temperature gauge he ran competitively, setting fifth fastest lap and finishing 11th. Despite this the team decided not to opt for Villeneuve's services again. Then in [[August]] [[1977]], Villeneuve met with Enzo Ferrari. Ferrari was immediately reminded by Villeneuve of the legendary [[Tazio Nuvolari]]. The obvious interest shown by Ferrari towards Villeneuve prompted [[Niki Lauda]] to leave at that years [[1977 Canadian Grand Prix|Canadian Grand Prix]], having already clinched his second championship. In the race, Gilles retired, after going off on another competitor's oil. He also raced in [[1977 Japanese Grand Prix|Japan]], but also retired. On lap five of the race, Gilles tried to outbrake the [[Tyrrell P34]] of [[Ronnie Peterson]], but the pair banged wheels. Gilles' Ferrari went airborne and crashed down onto two spectators watching the race from a prohibited area. Both were killed.
  
In June 1997, Canada issued a [[List of people on stamps of Canada|postage stamp]] in honor of its favorite racing son.
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After making his debut for Ferrari, he would later remark that: "If someone said to me that you can have three wishes, my first would have been to get into racing, my second to be in Formula 1, my third to drive for Ferrari..."
  
His son, [[Jacques Villeneuve|Jacques]], also had a successful racing career winning the [[Indianapolis 500]] and [[CART]] championships in 1995. He then followed in his father's footsteps and join the Formula One circuit in 1996 where he had pole position in his first race, winning the World Championship in 1997.
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The [[1978 Formula One season|1978 season]] saw a succession of retirements for Villeneuve, often after problems with the new [[Michelin]] [[radial tyre]]s, but also due to his own inexperience - this was his fifth season of car racing. Despite calls in the Italian press for him to be replaced, Ferrari persisted with him and Villeneuve scored his first Grand Prix victory at his home race at the end of the season in front of an ecstatic crowd.
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Villeneuve was joined by [[Jody Scheckter]] for [[1979]] after [[Carlos Reutemann]] moved to [[Team Lotus|Lotus]]. The pair finished first and second in the championship, with Scheckter beating Villeneuve by just four points. Villeneuve won three races during the year. The [[1980 Formula One season|1980 season]] was a complete disaster. Villeneuve had been considered favourite for the drivers championship by UK bookmakers, but would only score six points in the whole campaign in the unwieldy 312T5 which had only partial [[ground effect]]s. His world champion team-mate could manage only a single point and retired at the end of the season.
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 +
In 1981 Ferrari's first turbo engined car, the [[Ferrari 126 C|126C1]], was hardly an improvement. Although it produced tremendous power its handling was poor. Villeneuve, partnered by Didier Pironi, won two races against the odds during the season, at Monaco and in Spain. For 1982 Villeneuve's first few races were blighted by mechanical failures and accidents. At Imola he was overtaken by his team-mate near the finish, while leading. Gilles Villeneuve died in an accident in qualifying for the next race at Zolder.
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 +
==Notable races==
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[[Image:GillesVilleneuve ReneArnoux Dijion1979.jpg|thumb|Perhaps one of Villenuve's most memorable races, the [[1979 French Grand Prix]], where he and [[René Arnoux]] had a memorbale race, even if it was "''just''" for second place.]]
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'''[[1979 French Grand Prix|Dijon 1979]]''': Remembered for his frenetic style which seemed more like that of a rally driver, Villeneuve's wheel-banging duel with [[René Arnoux]] in the last laps of the [[1979 French Grand Prix]] at the [[Dijon]] circuit, when he stubbornly refused to accept his [[Ferrari 312T|312T4]] was slower than Arnoux's faster [[Renault]] was one of the most intense moments in Formula One racing. Arnoux passed Villeneuve for second place with three laps to go, but Villeneuve re-passed him on the next lap.  On the final lap Arnoux attempted to pass Villeneuve again, and the pair ran side-by-side through the first several corners of the lap, making contact several times.  Arnoux took the position, but Villeneuve attempted an outside pass one corner later.  The cars bumped hard, and Villenevue slid wide.  Villeneuve then tried and inside pass at a hairpin turn and managed to make it stick.  He then held off Arnoux for the last half of the lap to secure 2nd place.
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'''[[1979 Dutch Grand Prix|Zandvoort 1979]]''': Remembered for Villeneuve's determination, as he had gone off the track and his rear-left wheel had come off; instead of retiring on the spot, he continued racing on three wheels, and in some moments on two wheels. He retired later on during the race.
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'''[[1979 United States Grand Prix|Watkins Glen 1979]]''': During an extremely wet practice session for this race, Villeneuve set a time 11 seconds faster than any other driver. His team-mate Jody Scheckter, who was second fastest, recalled that "I scared myself rigid that day. I thought I had to be quickest. Then I saw Gilles's time and - I still don't really understand how it was possible. Eleven seconds!"
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 +
'''[[1981 Spanish Grand Prix|Jarama 1981]]''': Perhaps Villeneuve's greatest achievements came in 1981 at Jarama, where he wrestled an unwieldy turbo [[Ferrari]] 126C1 to victory in a classic of defensive driving at the [[1981 Spanish Grand Prix]], keeping 5 quicker cars behind him using his tactical acumen and the superior straightline speed of his car. After an hour and 46 minutes of racing, Villeneuve led second-placed [[Jacques Laffite]] by only 0.22 seconds. Fifth-placed [[Elio de Angelis]] was only just over a second further back.
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 +
'''[[1981 Canadian Grand Prix|Montreal 1981]]''': Another example of Villeneuve's battling spirit was this drive in torrential rain. After severely damaging the front wing of his Ferrari, Villeneuve drove for most of the race with the wing obscuring his view ahead. There was a risk of being black flagged, but eventually the wing became detached and Villeneuve drove on to finish third with the nose section of his car missing.
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 +
==Argument with Pironi==
 +
Villeneuve went into 1982 a clear favourite for the crown. He was widely regarded as the best [[Formula One]] driver in the field, and [[Ferrari]], with new designer [[Harvey Postlethwaite]], produced an excellent design.  After glimpses of promise in the opening races, Villeneuve was back at the front for the [[San Marino Grand Prix]], (which was boycotted by some teams due to the [[FISA-FOCA war]]) and it was agreed that Villeneuve and his team-mate [[Didier Pironi]] would not contest for the lead past the final corner. However Pironi disobeyed this agreement and beat him to the line.  It is Villeneuve's widely believed claim that he was merely coasting at that point, in the knowledge that victory was in the bag and trusted Pironi to do likewise under orders. Feeling betrayed and angry, Villeneuve vowed never to speak to Pironi again.
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 +
==Death==
 +
On [[May 8]], [[1982]], on his final qualifying lap for the [[1982 Belgian Grand Prix|Belgian Grand Prix]] at Zolder, the front left wheel of his car came into contact with the right rear wheel of [[Jochen Mass]]'s car, who was on a slowing down lap. Villeneuve's car was launched into the air before nose-diving into the soft earthen embankment just outside the armco and somersaulting along the side of the track.  The violence of the accident reduced the car to its cockpit, and ripped Villeneuve's seat from the back of the [[monocoque]].  Villeneuve, still strapped to his seat, was thrown across the track and into the catch fencing just outside the corner.  When the medical team arrived, he was not breathing.  Villeneuve was resuscitated at the scene, but his injuries were fatal. He died in a local hospital that evening, his fatal injuries were likely caused by the force of his car landing for the first time after the initial impact. If his death was not greeted with great shock and surprise (everyone knew his style), that was more than offset by the profound sadness it produced. Even [[René Arnoux]], his adversary in the Dijon epic, confessed that he cried after discovering that Gilles had died.
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 +
==Legacy==
 +
 
 +
Villeneuve had already become an iconic figure before his death. His determination to win was obvious from outside the cockpit in the frequent oversteer and wheel-banging with his competitors. This endeared him to the crowd, and combined with his unusually open and honest approach, to many of the press as well. After the tragic death of [[Ronnie Peterson]], Villeneuve was seen as his natural successor as the fastest natural driver on the grid.
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 +
At the funeral in Berthierville, former team-mate, Jody Scheckter, delivered a simple eulogy: “I will miss Gilles for two reasons. First, he was the fastest driver in the history of motor racing. Second, he was the most genuine man I have ever known. But he has not gone. The memory of what he has done, what he achieved, will always be there.”
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Villeneuve's spectacular driving is still considered an art form among Formula One fans. He is still remembered at Grand Prix races, especially those in Italy. There is a bronze bust of him at the entrance to the Ferrari test track; a challenging corner at the Imola Track, site of the San Marino Grand Prix, is named Curva Gilles Villeneuve; a Canadian flag is painted on the spot where he started his last race.
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The racetrack on Île Notre-Dame, [[Montreal]], used for the Formula One [[Canadian Grand Prix]] and [[Champ Car]] [[Grand Prix of Montreal]], was renamed in his honour at the Canadian Grand Prix of 1982 after his death. His homeland has continued to honor him. In Berthierville, a museum was opened in 1992 and a lifelike statue stands in a nearby park named in his honour. Villeneuve was inducted into the [[Canadian Motorsport Hall of Fame]] at their inaugaural induction ceremony at the [[Four Seasons Hotel]], [[Toronto]], [[Ontario]], [[August 19]], [[1993]]. In June 1997, Canada issued a [[List of people on stamps of Canada|postage stamp]] in honor of its favorite racing son.
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 +
There is still a huge demand for Villeneuve memorabilia at the race-track shops, and several books have been written about him. The number 27, the number of his Ferrari for several years, is still closely associated with him by fans. A film based on the biography by Gerald Donaldson was announced in 2005, intended for release in 2007.
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 +
==Helmet==
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 +
Villeneuve's helmet carried a stylised 'V' in red on either side - an effect he devised with his wife Joann. The base colour was black. His son, [[Jacques Villeneuve|Jacques]], uses the same basic design, but like his contemporary, [[Christian Fittipaldi]], has changed the colours.
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 +
==Complete Formula One results==
 +
(Races in '''bold''' indicate pole position)
 +
{| table BORDER=5 CELLSPACING=4 CELLPADDING=5 style="font-size: 90%"
 +
|-tr BGCOLOR="darkred"
 +
! Year
 +
! Team
 +
! 1
 +
! 2
 +
! 3
 +
! 4
 +
! 5
 +
! 6
 +
! 7
 +
! 8
 +
! 9
 +
! 10
 +
! 11
 +
! 12
 +
! 13
 +
! 14
 +
! 15
 +
! 16
 +
! 17
 +
! Team
 +
! WDC
 +
! Points
 +
|-
 +
| [[1977 Formula One season|1977]]
 +
| [[McLaren]]
 +
| [[1977 Argentine Grand Prix|ARG]]<br><small></small>
 +
| [[1977 Brazilian Grand Prix|BRA]]<br><small></small>
 +
| [[1977 South African Grand Prix|RSA]]<br><small></small>
 +
| [[1977 United States Grand Prix West|USAW]]<br><small></small>
 +
| [[1977 Spanish Grand Prix|ESP]]<br><small></small>
 +
| [[1977 Monaco Grand Prix|MON]]<br><small></small>
 +
| [[1977 Belgian Grand Prix|BEL]]<br><small></small>
 +
| [[1977 Swedish Grand Prix|SWE]]<br><small></small>
 +
| [[1977 French Grand Prix|FRA]]<br><small></small>
 +
|| [[1977 British Grand Prix|GBR]]<br><small>11</small>
 +
| [[1977 German Grand Prix|DEU]]<br><small></small>
 +
| [[1977 Austrian Grand Prix|AUT]]<br><small></small>
 +
| [[1977 Dutch Grand Prix|HOL]]<br><small></small>
 +
| [[1977 Italian Grand Prix|ITA]]<br><small></small>
 +
| [[1977 United States Grand Prix|USA]]<br><small></small>
 +
|| [[1977 Canadian Grand Prix|CAN]]<br><small>12</small>
 +
|| [[1977 Japanese Grand Prix|JPN]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
| [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]
 +
! -
 +
! 0
 +
|-
 +
| [[1978 Formula One season|1978]]
 +
| [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]
 +
|| [[1978 Argentine Grand Prix|ARG]]<br><small>8</small>
 +
|| [[1978 Brazilian Grand Prix|BRA]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1978 South African Grand Prix|RSA]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1978 United States Grand Prix West|USAW]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1978 Monaco Grand Prix|MON]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1978 Belgian Grand Prix|BEL]]<br><small>4</small>
 +
|| [[1978 Spanish Grand Prix|ESP]]<br><small>10</small>
 +
|| [[1978 Swedish Grand Prix|SWE]]<br><small>9</small>
 +
|| [[1978 French Grand Prix|FRA]]<br><small>12</small>
 +
|| [[1978 British Grand Prix|GBR]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1978 German Grand Prix|DEU]]<br><small>8</small>
 +
||[[1978 Austrian Grand Prix|AUT]]<br><small>3</small>
 +
|| [[1978 Dutch Grand Prix|HOL]]<br><small>6</small>
 +
|| [[1978 Italian Grand Prix|ITA]]<br><small>7</small>
 +
|| [[1978 United States Grand Prix|USA]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1978 Canadian Grand Prix|CAN]]<br><small>1</small>
 +
|
 +
| [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]
 +
! 10th
 +
! 17
 +
|-
 +
| [[1979 Formula One season|1979]]
 +
| [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]
 +
|| [[1979 Argentine Grand Prix|ARG]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1979 Brazilian Grand Prix|BRA]]<br><small>5</small>
 +
|| [[1979 South African Grand Prix|RSA]]<br><small>1</small>
 +
|| '''[[1979 United States Grand Prix West|USAW]]'''<br><small>1</small>
 +
|| [[1979 Spanish Grand Prix|ESP]]<br><small>7</small>
 +
|| [[1979 Belgian Grand Prix|BEL]]<br><small>7</small>
 +
|| [[1979 Monaco Grand Prix|MON]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1979 French Grand Prix|FRA]]<br><small>2</small>
 +
|| [[1979 British Grand Prix|GBR]]<br><small>14</small>
 +
|| [[1979 German Grand Prix|DEU]]<br><small>8</small>
 +
|| [[1979 Austrian Grand Prix|AUT]]<br><small>2</small>
 +
|| [[1979 Dutch Grand Prix|HOL]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1979 Italian Grand Prix|ITA]]<br><small>2</small>
 +
|| [[1979 Canadian Grand Prix|CAN]]<br><small>2</small>
 +
|| [[1979 United States Grand Prix|USA]]<br><small>1</small>
 +
|
 +
|
 +
| [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]
 +
|| '''2nd'''
 +
|| '''53'''
 +
|-
 +
| [[1980 Formula One season|1980]]
 +
| [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]
 +
|| [[1980 Argentine Grand Prix|ARG]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1980 Brazilian Grand Prix|BRA]]<br><small>16</small>
 +
|| [[1980 South African Grand Prix|RSA]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1980 United States Grand Prix West|USAW]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1980 Belgian Grand Prix|BEL]]<br><small>6</small>
 +
|| [[1980 Monaco Grand Prix|MON]]<br><small>5</small>
 +
|| [[1980 French Grand Prix|FRA]]<br><small>8</small>
 +
|| [[1980 British Grand Prix|GBR]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1980 German Grand Prix|DEU]]<br><small>6</small>
 +
|| [[1980 Austrian Grand Prix|AUT]]<br><small>8</small>
 +
|| [[1980 Dutch Grand Prix|HOL]]<br><small>7</small>
 +
|| [[1980 Italian Grand Prix|ITA]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1980 Canadian Grand Prix|CAN]]<br><small>5</small>
 +
|| [[1980 United States Grand Prix|USA]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|
 +
|
 +
|
 +
| [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]
 +
! 12th
 +
! 6
 +
|-
 +
| [[1981 Formula One season|1981]]
 +
| [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]
 +
|| [[1981 United States Grand Prix West|USAW]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1981 Brazilian Grand Prix|BRA]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1981 Argentine Grand Prix|ARG]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| '''[[1981 San Marino Grand Prix|RSM]]'''<br><small>7</small>
 +
|| [[1981 Belgian Grand Prix|BEL]]<br><small>4</small>
 +
|| [[1981 Monaco Grand Prix|MON]]<br><small>1</small>
 +
|| [[1981 Spanish Grand Prix|ESP]]<br><small>1</small>
 +
|| [[1981 French Grand Prix|FRA]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1981 British Grand Prix|GBR]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1981 German Grand Prix|DEU]]<br><small>10</small>
 +
|| [[1981 Austrian Grand Prix|AUT]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1981 Dutch Grand Prix|HOL]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1981 Italian Grand Prix|ITA]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1981 Canadian Grand Prix|CAN]]<br><small>3</small>
 +
|| [[1981 Las Vegas Grand Prix|LAS]]<br /><small>DSQ</small>
 +
|
 +
|
 +
| [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]
 +
! 7th
 +
! 25
 +
|-
 +
| [[1982 Formula One season|1982]]
 +
| [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]
 +
|| [[1982 South African Grand Prix|RSA]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1982 Brazilian Grand Prix|BRA]]<br><small>Ret</small>
 +
|| [[1982 United States Grand Prix West|USAW]]<br /><small>DSQ</small>
 +
|| [[1982 San Marino Grand Prix|RSM]]<br><small>2</small>
 +
|| [[1982 Belgian Grand Prix|BEL]]<br><small>DNS</small>
 +
| [[1982 Monaco Grand Prix|MON]]
 +
| [[1982 United States Grand Prix East|USAE]]
 +
| [[1982 Canadian Grand Prix|CAN]]
 +
| [[1982 Dutch Grand Prix|DUT]]
 +
| [[1982 British Grand Prix|GBR]]
 +
| [[1982 French Grand Prix|FRA]]
 +
| [[1982 German Grand Prix|GER]]
 +
| [[1982 Austrian Grand Prix|AUT]]
 +
| [[1982 Swiss Grand Prix|SWI]]
 +
| [[1982 Italian Grand Prix|ITA]]
 +
| [[1982 Las Vegas Grand Prix|LAS]]
 +
|
 +
| [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]
 +
! 16th
 +
! 10
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
==References==
 +
 
 +
All Formula One race and championship results are taken from:
 +
* ''Official Formula 1 Website. Archive: Results for 1977 – 1982 seasons'' [http://www.formula1.com/archive/driver/detail/1977/71/68.html www.formula1.com] Retrieved 18 July 2006
 +
All Pre-Formula One race and championship results are taken from:
 +
* Donaldson, Gerald (1989, 2003) ''Gilles Villeneuve'' Virgin Books ISBN 0-7535-0747-1, Gilles Villeneuve race results p.310 - 315
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
+
 
 
*[http://www.ventisetterosso.com/ Tribute to Gilles]
 
*[http://www.ventisetterosso.com/ Tribute to Gilles]
*http://www.ddavid.com/formula1/vill_bio.htm
+
*[http://www.cmhf.ca/ Canadian Motorsport Hall of Fame]
 +
*[http://bodieofci5.tripod.com/asgv/ Tribute to Ayrton Senna and Gilles Villeneuve]
 
*http://www.gilles.villeneuve.com/english/
 
*http://www.gilles.villeneuve.com/english/
 
*http://www.gillesvilleneuve.com
 
*http://www.gillesvilleneuve.com
 +
*[http://archives.cbc.ca/IDD-1-74-339/people/gilles_villeneuve/ CBC Digital Archives - Gilles Villeneuve: Racing at the speed of light]
 +
*[http://www.gpracing.net192.com/drivers/careers/600.cfm The career of Gilles Villeneuve]
 +
 +
 +
{| border=1 align="left" cellpadding=2 cellspacing=0 width=250  style="margin-left:3em; margin-bottom: 2em;"
 +
|-
 +
|Title:||[[List of Formula One Drivers]]
 +
|-
 +
|Before:||[[Ronnie Peterson]]
 +
|-
 +
|After:||[[Riccardo Paletti]]
 +
|-
 +
|Years:||May 8, 1982
 +
|}
 +
  
[[Category:1950 births|Villeneuve, Gilles]]
+
[[Category:Ferrari Formula One drivers|Villeneuve, Gilles]]
[[Category:1982 deaths|Villeneuve, Gilles]]
 
[[Category:Canadian Formula One drivers|Villeneuve, Gilles]]
 
[[Category:Indy 500 drivers|Villeneuve, Gilles]]
 
[[Category:Fatally crashed racecar drivers|Villeneuve, Gilles]]
 
[[Category:Quebec sportspeople|Villeneuve, Gilles]]
 

Revision as of 22:28, 25 July 2007

250px
Gilles Villeneuve
Nationality: Canadian
Years: 1977 - 1982
Team(s): McLaren, Ferrari
Races: 68
Championships: 0 (2nd in 1979)
Wins: 6
Podiums: 14
Poles: 2
Fastest laps: 8
First race: 1977 British Grand Prix
First win: 1978 Canadian Grand Prix
Last win: 1981 Spanish Grand Prix
Last race: 1982 Belgian Grand Prix


Joseph Gilles Henri Villeneuve (Gilles Villeneuve pronounced ʒil vilnœv) (January 18, 1950May 8, 1982) was a Canadian Formula One racing driver. An enthusiast of cars and fast driving from an early age, he started his professional career in snowmobile racing in his native province of Quebec. He moved into single seaters - winning the US and Canadian Formula Atlantic championships in 1976 before being offered a one-off drive with McLaren at the 1977 British Grand Prix. He was taken on by reigning world champions Ferrari for the end of the season - in only his fifth season racing cars - and from 1978 to his death in 1982 drove for the Italian team. He won six Grand Prix races in a short career at the highest level. In 1979 he finished second by four points in the championship to teammate Jody Scheckter.

Villeneuve died in a 140 mph crash with the March of Jochen Mass during practice for the 1982 Belgian Grand Prix at Zolder (see more below). The accident came only two weeks after an intense argument with his team-mate, Didier Pironi, over Pironi's move to pass Villeneuve at Imola. At the time of his death, Villeneuve was extremely popular with fans and with many journalists, on whom his death had a profound effect. Since 1982 he has become an iconic figure in the history of the sport, renowned for his car control, aggressive driving style, and a 'never give up' attitude. His son, Jacques Villeneuve, became Formula One world champion in 1997.

Personal and early life

Villeneuve was born in Richelieu, a small town in the French-speaking province of Quebec in Canada and grew up in the nearby town of Berthierville. He married Joann Barthe in 1970, with whom he had two children, Jacques and Melanie. During his early career Villeneuve took his family on the road with him in a motorhome during the racing season, a habit which he continued to some extent during his Formula One career. He often claimed to have been born in 1952. By the time he got his break in Formula One, he was already 27 years old and took two years off his age to avoid being considered too old to make it at the highest level of motorsports.

Like certain other great drivers, including Clark and Senna, Villeneuve was a curious mixture of seemingly disparate personality types. Lauda wrote of him, "He was the craziest devil I ever came across in Formula 1... The fact that, for all this, he was a sensitive and lovable character rather than an out-and-out hell-raiser made him such a unique human being". Flying, snowmobiling or driving, he was a risk-taker of classic proportions. Yet his fellow drivers said that on the track he was scrupulously fair and did not put anyone's safety other than his own in jeopardy and those who worked with him usually referred to him as introverted. This combination of traits made him exceptionally popular not only with fans but with teammates and opponents as well.

His younger brother Jacques, known as "uncle Jacques", also had a successful racing career in Formula Atlantic, Can Am and CART. Gilles' son, also named Jacques, won the Indianapolis 500 and CART championships in 1995 and became Formula One World Champion in 1997.

Racing career

Pre-Formula One

Villeneuve started competitive driving in local drag-racing events, entering his road car, a modified 1967 Ford Mustang. He was soon bored by this and entered the Jim Russell Racing School at Le Circuit Mont Tremblant to gain a racing license. He then had a very successful season in Quebec regional Formula Ford, running his own two year old car and winning seven of the ten races he entered. The next year he progressed to Formula Atlantic, competing there for four years, running his own car again for one of those seasons. He won his first Atlantic race in 1975 at Gimli Motosport Park in heavy rain. In 1976, teamed with Chris Harrison's Ecurie Canada and factory March race engineer Ray Wardell, he dominated the season by winning all but one of the races and taking the US and Canadian titles. He won the Canadian championship again in 1977.

Money was very tight in Villeneuve's early career. He was a professional racing driver from his late teens, with no other income. In the first few years the bulk of his income actually came from snowmobile racing, where he was extremely successful and could demand appearance money as well as race money. His second season in Formula Atlantic was part-sponsored by his snowmobile manufacturer, Skiroule. In fact, he credited some of his success to his snowmobiling days: "Every winter, you would reckon on three or four big spills - and I'm talking about being thrown on to the ice at 100 mph. Those things used to slide a lot, which taught me a great deal about control. And the visibility was terrible! Unless you were leading, you could see nothing, with all the snow blowing about. Good for the reactions - and it stopped me having any worries about racing in the rain."

Formula One

File:1978 Brands Hatch Ferrari 312T3 Gilles Villeneuve.jpg
Villeneuve in his first full season of Formula One

After Villeneuve impressed McLaren driver James Hunt by beating him, and several other Grand Prix stars, in a non-championship Formula Atlantic race at Trois Rivieres, McLaren offered Villeneuve a deal for five races in a third car during 1977 and the young Canadian made his debut at the 1977 British Grand Prix. Villeneuve qualified an impressive 9th in McLaren's old M23, splitting the regular drivers Hunt and Jochen Mass. Delayed for two laps by a faulty temperature gauge he ran competitively, setting fifth fastest lap and finishing 11th. Despite this the team decided not to opt for Villeneuve's services again. Then in August 1977, Villeneuve met with Enzo Ferrari. Ferrari was immediately reminded by Villeneuve of the legendary Tazio Nuvolari. The obvious interest shown by Ferrari towards Villeneuve prompted Niki Lauda to leave at that years Canadian Grand Prix, having already clinched his second championship. In the race, Gilles retired, after going off on another competitor's oil. He also raced in Japan, but also retired. On lap five of the race, Gilles tried to outbrake the Tyrrell P34 of Ronnie Peterson, but the pair banged wheels. Gilles' Ferrari went airborne and crashed down onto two spectators watching the race from a prohibited area. Both were killed.

After making his debut for Ferrari, he would later remark that: "If someone said to me that you can have three wishes, my first would have been to get into racing, my second to be in Formula 1, my third to drive for Ferrari..."

The 1978 season saw a succession of retirements for Villeneuve, often after problems with the new Michelin radial tyres, but also due to his own inexperience - this was his fifth season of car racing. Despite calls in the Italian press for him to be replaced, Ferrari persisted with him and Villeneuve scored his first Grand Prix victory at his home race at the end of the season in front of an ecstatic crowd.

Villeneuve was joined by Jody Scheckter for 1979 after Carlos Reutemann moved to Lotus. The pair finished first and second in the championship, with Scheckter beating Villeneuve by just four points. Villeneuve won three races during the year. The 1980 season was a complete disaster. Villeneuve had been considered favourite for the drivers championship by UK bookmakers, but would only score six points in the whole campaign in the unwieldy 312T5 which had only partial ground effects. His world champion team-mate could manage only a single point and retired at the end of the season.

In 1981 Ferrari's first turbo engined car, the 126C1, was hardly an improvement. Although it produced tremendous power its handling was poor. Villeneuve, partnered by Didier Pironi, won two races against the odds during the season, at Monaco and in Spain. For 1982 Villeneuve's first few races were blighted by mechanical failures and accidents. At Imola he was overtaken by his team-mate near the finish, while leading. Gilles Villeneuve died in an accident in qualifying for the next race at Zolder.

Notable races

File:GillesVilleneuve ReneArnoux Dijion1979.jpg
Perhaps one of Villenuve's most memorable races, the 1979 French Grand Prix, where he and René Arnoux had a memorbale race, even if it was "just" for second place.

Dijon 1979: Remembered for his frenetic style which seemed more like that of a rally driver, Villeneuve's wheel-banging duel with René Arnoux in the last laps of the 1979 French Grand Prix at the Dijon circuit, when he stubbornly refused to accept his 312T4 was slower than Arnoux's faster Renault was one of the most intense moments in Formula One racing. Arnoux passed Villeneuve for second place with three laps to go, but Villeneuve re-passed him on the next lap. On the final lap Arnoux attempted to pass Villeneuve again, and the pair ran side-by-side through the first several corners of the lap, making contact several times. Arnoux took the position, but Villeneuve attempted an outside pass one corner later. The cars bumped hard, and Villenevue slid wide. Villeneuve then tried and inside pass at a hairpin turn and managed to make it stick. He then held off Arnoux for the last half of the lap to secure 2nd place.

Zandvoort 1979: Remembered for Villeneuve's determination, as he had gone off the track and his rear-left wheel had come off; instead of retiring on the spot, he continued racing on three wheels, and in some moments on two wheels. He retired later on during the race.

Watkins Glen 1979: During an extremely wet practice session for this race, Villeneuve set a time 11 seconds faster than any other driver. His team-mate Jody Scheckter, who was second fastest, recalled that "I scared myself rigid that day. I thought I had to be quickest. Then I saw Gilles's time and - I still don't really understand how it was possible. Eleven seconds!"

Jarama 1981: Perhaps Villeneuve's greatest achievements came in 1981 at Jarama, where he wrestled an unwieldy turbo Ferrari 126C1 to victory in a classic of defensive driving at the 1981 Spanish Grand Prix, keeping 5 quicker cars behind him using his tactical acumen and the superior straightline speed of his car. After an hour and 46 minutes of racing, Villeneuve led second-placed Jacques Laffite by only 0.22 seconds. Fifth-placed Elio de Angelis was only just over a second further back.

Montreal 1981: Another example of Villeneuve's battling spirit was this drive in torrential rain. After severely damaging the front wing of his Ferrari, Villeneuve drove for most of the race with the wing obscuring his view ahead. There was a risk of being black flagged, but eventually the wing became detached and Villeneuve drove on to finish third with the nose section of his car missing.

Argument with Pironi

Villeneuve went into 1982 a clear favourite for the crown. He was widely regarded as the best Formula One driver in the field, and Ferrari, with new designer Harvey Postlethwaite, produced an excellent design. After glimpses of promise in the opening races, Villeneuve was back at the front for the San Marino Grand Prix, (which was boycotted by some teams due to the FISA-FOCA war) and it was agreed that Villeneuve and his team-mate Didier Pironi would not contest for the lead past the final corner. However Pironi disobeyed this agreement and beat him to the line. It is Villeneuve's widely believed claim that he was merely coasting at that point, in the knowledge that victory was in the bag and trusted Pironi to do likewise under orders. Feeling betrayed and angry, Villeneuve vowed never to speak to Pironi again.

Death

On May 8, 1982, on his final qualifying lap for the Belgian Grand Prix at Zolder, the front left wheel of his car came into contact with the right rear wheel of Jochen Mass's car, who was on a slowing down lap. Villeneuve's car was launched into the air before nose-diving into the soft earthen embankment just outside the armco and somersaulting along the side of the track. The violence of the accident reduced the car to its cockpit, and ripped Villeneuve's seat from the back of the monocoque. Villeneuve, still strapped to his seat, was thrown across the track and into the catch fencing just outside the corner. When the medical team arrived, he was not breathing. Villeneuve was resuscitated at the scene, but his injuries were fatal. He died in a local hospital that evening, his fatal injuries were likely caused by the force of his car landing for the first time after the initial impact. If his death was not greeted with great shock and surprise (everyone knew his style), that was more than offset by the profound sadness it produced. Even René Arnoux, his adversary in the Dijon epic, confessed that he cried after discovering that Gilles had died.

Legacy

Villeneuve had already become an iconic figure before his death. His determination to win was obvious from outside the cockpit in the frequent oversteer and wheel-banging with his competitors. This endeared him to the crowd, and combined with his unusually open and honest approach, to many of the press as well. After the tragic death of Ronnie Peterson, Villeneuve was seen as his natural successor as the fastest natural driver on the grid.

At the funeral in Berthierville, former team-mate, Jody Scheckter, delivered a simple eulogy: “I will miss Gilles for two reasons. First, he was the fastest driver in the history of motor racing. Second, he was the most genuine man I have ever known. But he has not gone. The memory of what he has done, what he achieved, will always be there.”

Villeneuve's spectacular driving is still considered an art form among Formula One fans. He is still remembered at Grand Prix races, especially those in Italy. There is a bronze bust of him at the entrance to the Ferrari test track; a challenging corner at the Imola Track, site of the San Marino Grand Prix, is named Curva Gilles Villeneuve; a Canadian flag is painted on the spot where he started his last race.

The racetrack on Île Notre-Dame, Montreal, used for the Formula One Canadian Grand Prix and Champ Car Grand Prix of Montreal, was renamed in his honour at the Canadian Grand Prix of 1982 after his death. His homeland has continued to honor him. In Berthierville, a museum was opened in 1992 and a lifelike statue stands in a nearby park named in his honour. Villeneuve was inducted into the Canadian Motorsport Hall of Fame at their inaugaural induction ceremony at the Four Seasons Hotel, Toronto, Ontario, August 19, 1993. In June 1997, Canada issued a postage stamp in honor of its favorite racing son.

There is still a huge demand for Villeneuve memorabilia at the race-track shops, and several books have been written about him. The number 27, the number of his Ferrari for several years, is still closely associated with him by fans. A film based on the biography by Gerald Donaldson was announced in 2005, intended for release in 2007.

Helmet

Villeneuve's helmet carried a stylised 'V' in red on either side - an effect he devised with his wife Joann. The base colour was black. His son, Jacques, uses the same basic design, but like his contemporary, Christian Fittipaldi, has changed the colours.

Complete Formula One results

(Races in bold indicate pole position)

Year Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Team WDC Points
1977 McLaren ARG
BRA
RSA
USAW
ESP
MON
BEL
SWE
FRA
GBR
11
DEU
AUT
HOL
ITA
USA
CAN
12
JPN
Ret
Ferrari - 0
1978 Ferrari ARG
8
BRA
Ret
RSA
Ret
USAW
Ret
MON
Ret
BEL
4
ESP
10
SWE
9
FRA
12
GBR
Ret
DEU
8
AUT
3
HOL
6
ITA
7
USA
Ret
CAN
1
Ferrari 10th 17
1979 Ferrari ARG
Ret
BRA
5
RSA
1
USAW
1
ESP
7
BEL
7
MON
Ret
FRA
2
GBR
14
DEU
8
AUT
2
HOL
Ret
ITA
2
CAN
2
USA
1
Ferrari 2nd 53
1980 Ferrari ARG
Ret
BRA
16
RSA
Ret
USAW
Ret
BEL
6
MON
5
FRA
8
GBR
Ret
DEU
6
AUT
8
HOL
7
ITA
Ret
CAN
5
USA
Ret
Ferrari 12th 6
1981 Ferrari USAW
Ret
BRA
Ret
ARG
Ret
RSM
7
BEL
4
MON
1
ESP
1
FRA
Ret
GBR
Ret
DEU
10
AUT
Ret
HOL
Ret
ITA
Ret
CAN
3
LAS
DSQ
Ferrari 7th 25
1982 Ferrari RSA
Ret
BRA
Ret
USAW
DSQ
RSM
2
BEL
DNS
MON USAE CAN DUT GBR FRA GER AUT SWI ITA LAS Ferrari 16th 10

References

All Formula One race and championship results are taken from:

  • Official Formula 1 Website. Archive: Results for 1977 – 1982 seasons www.formula1.com Retrieved 18 July 2006

All Pre-Formula One race and championship results are taken from:

  • Donaldson, Gerald (1989, 2003) Gilles Villeneuve Virgin Books ISBN 0-7535-0747-1, Gilles Villeneuve race results p.310 - 315

External links


Title: List of Formula One Drivers
Before: Ronnie Peterson
After: Riccardo Paletti
Years: May 8, 1982