He
was born in Quebec on 18 January, 1950. He rose up through snowmobile
racing and Formula Atlantic. In fact he credits 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." In 1976 he dominated
the Formula Atlantic championship with an Ecurie Canada team so
impoverished that he was forced into the role of spectator at the
Mosport race because the team couldn't afford to field an entry.
This impressive performance against daunting odds earned him a great
deal of notice and a spot with McLaren.
His
first F1 race (also the debut event for the turbo Renault) was at
Silverstone in 1977 partnering James Hunt and Jochen Mass. Toward
the end of the '77 season Villeneuve had established a reputation
as a promising talent, Teddy Mayer, due partly to Marlboro sponsorship
considerations, declined to keep Gilles with McLaren, apparently
leaving the promising young driver high and dry for 1978. But in
August of 1977 Maranello called. Enzo Ferrari said that when he
first met the diminutive Canadian, he was immediately reminded of
the great Nuvolari. Ferrari's obvious interest in Villeneuve prompted
Niki Lauda to jump ship at Canada in October, and Gilles began his
short but storied Ferrari career in a less than auspicious fashion.
In the Mosport race he left the course on someone else's oil. The
next race, at Fuji, saw him off again, but this time at the cost
of some spectators' lives. 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
first of Villeneuve's six F1 wins came the next year, fittingly
enough at Canada. All told he won six Grands Prix. In 1979 he finished
second in the championship to teammate Jody Scheckter, the luster
of whose reputation is today considerably duller than that of Gilles.
The quality of the cars that Gilles had at his disposal was uneven,
and much of his racing was against the last of the world-conquering
Lotuses, the ground effects 79. But for these reasons he probably
would have won several more races. It can be argued that his method
was not as conserving of his machinery is it might have been, and
that this contributed to his relatively low win total.
Gilles
Villeneuve's all-or-nothing approach was well known. An example:
at Watkins Glen one year, qualifying on the first day on a soaked
track, he left his competitors scratching their heads after turning
a lap eleven seconds faster than anyone else. The author of this
piece clearly remembers the first photo he ever saw of Villeneuve.
Actually, it was a picture of the bottom his Ferrari as it flew
off of some track somewhere.
Gilles'
signature race was not a first, but a second. At the 1979 French
Grand Prix at Dijon, Renault and Jean-Pierre Jabouille posted the
first win for a modern turbo car. Rene Arnoux, running well, looked
to make it a Renault one-two. Villeneuve, however, asserted a definite
au contraire in a sliding, wheel-banging, tire-boiling duel with
Arnoux that no witness to it is likely to forget. Villeneuve's insane
insistence that his slower Ferrari could beat Arnoux's faster Renault
was rewarded, and he finished just ahead of the Frenchman. It is
probably safe to say that this was the most exciting race for second
place in the history of motor racing.
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. This combination
of traits made him exceptionally popular not only with fans but
with teammates and opponents as well. He still remains even today
a fan favorite in Canada, Italy and in the rest of the F1 world.
Gilles'
bon ami did disappear on one notable occasion, which may have contributed
to his tragic and untimely end. On the final lap at Imola in 1982
Pironi snuck past his unsuspecting teammate, who had slowed feeling
that the race was in hand, to snatch the win. Villeneuve was uncharacteristically
furious. Still feeling the sting and out to prove something two
weeks later at Zolder, while on his way to the pits during Saturday
qualifying, he came up behind the much slower March of Mass. Gilles'
in laps were often like other driver's hot ones, and Mass pulled
over to give him a free track, in the process obstructing the pit
entrance. The resulting collision sent the Ferrari off in cartwheeling
disintegration. Villeneuve was resuscitated at the scene, but his
injuries were mortal. He died in a local hospital that evening.
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 Arnoux, his adversary in the Dijon epic, confessed
that he cried the day Gilles died and the day after.
In
June, 1997 Canada issued a stamp in honor of its favorite racing
son. Villeneuve fils may now have more wins than Villeneuve pere,
but he has a ways to go to match his father's legend.
Starts:
67 - Wins: 6 - Poles: 2 |