My favourite fact is about the 1997 European Grand Prix. In qualifying, Jacques Villeneuve set a time of 1:21.072. Michael Schumacher was second with a time of 1:21.072. Heinz-Harald Frentzen was third with a time of, yes, 1:21.072. Top 3 drivers qualified with exactly the same time, down to thousands of a second.
Yeah but they already said back in the days, the counter was not that right like we have today, but still was fun to watch, and Im not saying that didnt happen its like commentators say, gonna be the misterys of f1 due the old tech if they actualy did the same exact timing or not.
Now that's an odd fact I remember very well, surprised it didn't made this list, who knows if we'll ever see that again but regardless of how it happened, it'll remain an oddity in F1's history
@@TrainWreck444 true, to me is amazing but F1 became so boring, Cars are so unbalanced between each others, and F1 now is all about Hamilton, tiktoks, and retards 10y old kids. Why Im saying this, cause we we're amazed for this kind of timelaps, and now I have nothing to be amazed xd
Yeah, thank you. We definitely need more guys for team motoGP. Is there a better grand prix series on the planet? IAN, please join our world! (46=GOAT)
Here's a fun fact... During Fernando Alonso's debut season in 2001, the team he drove for (Minardi) was so short-staffed and financially unstable, that he was actively helping the mechanics work on his car... Like we're talking literally helping to take the whole thing apart and put it back together, for pretty much every race!
@hurrdurr.. Minardi was even allowed to drive with a V10 while every other team had to drive with a V8 later on in that decade. Fernando who was a two time world champion back then joked about it when saying:” why don’t they use Ferrari’s V 12?”
@@alexardies3171 yep, that was Toro Rosso in 2006 (essentially Minardi)... The last F1 car to use a V10, even though they were basically outruled for the 2006 season.
@@Ennui. was that Toro Rosso? The first one than cuz Minardi was basically a Dallara chassis with a Ford Cosworth engine in the back. I don’t remember, all I know is that it was the last year of Michael Schumacher driving for Ferrari. Kimi took over and became world champion but I didn’t know that Minardi was called Toro Rosso. Thanks for the info. Greetings 🙋🏻♀️
@@alexardies3171 Yep, after RedBull bought Jaguar in late 2004, they then bought Minardi in late 2005 as they saw that as an opportunity to have 2 F1 teams on the grid. They renamed Minardi into Toro Rosso (which just means RedBull in Italian lol) Nowadays the team is called Alpha Tauri. So yeah, we technically still have Minardi on the grid...
@@Ennui. yea when I was 14 I even saw Eddie Irvine on the podium in Monza. The only time he finished third with his Jaguar behind Shumi and Barichello in 2004. I’m Belgian so yes I speak 7 languages, Italian being one of them. I even work for Modena but I didn’t know that RB bought Jag and Minardi. Which is crazy because in 2017 I drove a Minardi on Fiorano!!! It was a Minardi from’89-90 which had the V12 Ferrari engine and o man it was bloody fast! Minardi was always way back on the grid but once upon a time they scored points driving in the midfield with that engine. Crazy story right? But true. Seb Vettel got his first win with a Toro Rosso so no wonder that he ended up winning four titles for RB. A shame that he couldn’t win a title with the Scuderia but Ferrari is known for their merciless behaviour with their drivers. Prost, Mansell, Alezi, Alonso, Seb.. all victims of their ruthlessness. I’m pretty sure that by the end of this season Charles and Carlos are gonna be ready for the mental asylum with all those fuckups in the pits.
he’s one to comment. so called expert speaks like he raced yesterday….and he really didn’t. Jenson and Damon are so much better both a commentators and current knowledge.
You really need to watch the movie RUSH, it's about the rivalry between Niki Lauda and James Hunt, during the 1976 season. It's based on reality and shows the true characters of 2 of the most iconic F1 drivers of all time (In my opinion). Niki was almost incinerated in a crash at the Nürburgring and the fact he was racing again, weeks later, is sport's biggest comeback story of all time (Again, in my opinion)
I think it is really sad that F1 doesn't race in Germany anymore. It's literally the country the car was invented in and cars are really embedded into the culture. Plus, I live about twenty minutes from the Hockenheimring and I'd really love to see F1 race there again ;)
for real, Liberty is killing the sport. you only get into the calendar if you pay enough, and its become a bidding war. obviously Germany, France and Belgium dont want to (and probably CANT) pay as much as Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Russia, China and Las Vegas.
Actually in my opinion the thing that made most people not wanting that much races in the US is because you cant have unlimited races, so you have to cut off some others, and some of them are actually historical F1 racetracks (spa, mugello, monaco, monza, etc, etc) and the idea that some of them might be replaced one day, for business purposes is what makes people kinda hesitant about this.
You should look into Valentino Rossi’s career! He’s been the image of MotoGP for years and has now starter his car racing career, now competing in GT cars! He’s an Italian hero and quite the character!
13:05 Alonso would oversteer into corners to heat up the front tires which provided better grip through the middle and exit of corners. This was when teams could only use 1 set of tires during a race so the durability wasn't an issue.
@@counterfit5 He would oversteer by turning the wheel too far, causing the car to understeer. And drivers can't get away with this now due to the lack of tire durability.
The alonso technique blew my mind when someone pointed that out to me Back in the day the tires were extremely diffrent than today These had way less grip and it was hard to keep the temperatures up during a race This was due to regulations So alonso just entered corners extremely aggressive forcing the car to understeer on corner entry Something you usually dont want But this resulted in heating up the front tires in the corner wich generated grip that he used to get through the corner It made him faster than anyone
My favourite fact is that Hans Heyer is the only driver to get a DNQ, DNF AND DSQ in the same race. Which is the weirdest hat-trick in racing I've ever heard of.
Considering the US place in F1, I'm of course glad US get to enjoy Formula 1 but I also find it unfair that the number of races their is done at the expense of other Grand Prix. I'm of course biased because next year I'm losing my home Grand Prix in France and it will probably alternate with Spa going forward, I'm quite upset about that.
Yeah, like I guess one big reason is the sheer size of the US.However it is getting borderline ridiculous if one nation has three, as there only 23 races so it doesn't make that 13% percent of the calendar is one country, since there only 21 countries in the calender
Crybaby , it's like a 7 hour drive from France to belgium. I'm south of Miami , and just to leave my state of Florida is almost 12 hour drive, to make it to Texas for Austin gp it's almost 24 hours non stop drive. That's why the US needs more than 1 race because it's HUGE
@@jckdnls9292 i get the point that distances in usa is a bit further, but mostly this rich bozos are exploiting you guys, they know how much money you guys will spend on these races. its ridiculous the money they charge
@@jckdnls9292 You want a paton the back or somth? Just because you decided to make the journey doesn't mean everyone now has too nor do they have the means of doing so. Secondly if anything the US doesn't NEED anything, it was fine with Austin, there arguably more laces that have a stronger argument.
Kinda surprised he didn't mention Sir Jack Brabham being the only driver ever to win an F1 championship in his own car. As for the number of US GP's I don't really care unless it's at the expense of an existing GP like Spa as rumours were circulating recently.
i don't mind there being 3 races in america. I'm mostly bothered by miami and las vegas being street circuits. America has plenty of awesome race tracks, they should go there
John Surtees is the only person ever to be a World championship winner both on 2 and 4 wheels in their respective top tier series He won 1964 F1 championship and the 58-59-60 500cc championship in Gran Prix motorbike racing (wasn't called MotoGP at the time)
As a french fan born 1987 and remembering races since 1993, I do appreciate your point with too many races being held in the US. You may know there are fewer and fewer races in Europe, with races like France, Belgium, Italy or Monaco being questionned because they don't offer as much money as US or Barhain or Saudi Arabia to hold a race. And I truly think that's for shame. The sport was born in Europe and was always meant to be a worldwide show, but things are getting out of hand because of money, and forgetting the fans are not only where the cash is !
@iWrocker, Jochen Rindt is the first and only driver to win the drivers world championship posthumously. he sadly passed away during the later stages of the season but had scored enough points to still win the title despite his death. a true racing legend RIP
You MUST check out F1 Adelaide 1986 Johnny Dumfries OnBoard - the V6 engines back then sounded so awesome, and the shifts are so quick (with an old school h-pattern), and the track layout is really cool. My first ever F1 race I saw on TV was 1985 Adelaide, what fun that was!
4:32 The Hill's, Graham Hill (F1 champ 1962 and 1968) on the left is Damon's Father (champ 1996) on the right. Phil Hill in the middle is not related (champ in 1961) was born in the USA. Only other Father/Son winners are Keke (1982) and Nico Rosberg (2016) The current champ Max Verstappen 's (2021) father, Jos, also raced in F1 but never won a championship
Fun Stuff for someone new to F1: One of the early 2000s Ferrari Cars was actually that good that they raced the 3 first races of the next season with the old car and still got nearly 1 second faster per lap each race then the second best team. This was the only time i have seen that a team did this.
Adelaide....I think it was in 1988 when Mansell lost the championship due to an exploded tire to Prost while Prost got kicked out early in the race......or that unbelievable race during that rain the following year(?)....crazy. Nigel Mansell was the unbelieveable crazy guy with a unique technic to break into corners which is great to observe, especially during the Silverstone GP's he won in spectecular fashion.
My brother worked for lotus and MacLaine making carbon fibre parts . He went on to develop a carbon fibre wheel for a F1 car . Because he was working a smaller firm and was ahead of the development and the big crews were behind they vetoed its introduction . I still have one at home
I'm from Valencia and the situation of the street circuit is very bizarre you can go over some parts of the layout with your street car and there's still the paint of the circuit there and they actually made a bridge for the circuit that is closed almost all the time
There are worlds apart between Luis Hamilton and Michael Schumacher. Michael Schumacher, his car wasn't a rolling computer. Michael Schumacher had to do it all himself without all that electronic stuff
I love how your sense of time is as well of as mine is. Timestamp around 6:00 This video posted in 2022.. COTA started in 2012 - 10 years from now.. -> "until they raced at cota a *few years back* last US GP before COTA was Indianapolis from 2000-2007 -> "they didnt race here in the last 10 years or something until [...]" very enjoyable video! excited to see people new to the sport becoming interested and all that :)
The Hamilton hand placement thing is actually because of the Merc 'magic' button which shifts the brake bias to allow him to warm the brakes and tyres better under the formation lap
Its actually him blocking the shift pad with his hand to not accidentally downshift since the shifter goes both ways. Pull click = gear up, push = gear down.
To our defense a lot of the European races take place geographically very close to one another. UK to the tip of Italy for example is like half the distance than from the East to West coast. If you look at it that way, it sort of make sense.
About the number or races in a single country. Historically, in Italy there were different tracks over the decades, but 2 are the "classic" ones: Monza and Imola. For years, Monza was the Italian Grand Prix and Imola was the San Marino Grand Prix (San Marino is a little State inside Italy, like the Monaco Principate in France). Imola is an Italian city of Emilia-Romagna near San Marino, so its GP was held there. In Italy today we have 4 tracks able to host a F1 race: Monza, Imola, Mugello and Fiorano. The last is a little circuit of Ferrari, near its offices and production area in Emilia-Romagna, so it couldn't realistically held a GP even if it's omologated for F1 for obvious reasons of Ferrari. Mugello is a circuit classic for the MotoGP calendar and it's also a property of Ferrari in Tuscany. For years though the only Italian GP was Monza, because the San Marino GP doesn't exist anymore. Things changed in 2020, due to the F1 calendar changes for the covid pandemic. In that year, in Italy we had 3 F1 GP: Monza (Italian GP), Imola ("Emilia-Romagna and Made in Italy GP"), Mugello ("Tuscany GP"). Since 2021 in Italy we have 2 F1 GP, Monza (Italian GP) and Imola (Emilia-Romagna GP).
My facts: 1.The strongest natural aspirated engine is the ~2005 V10 engines. 900-1000HP and 19000rpm, this means the engine every single cylinders move up and down 316 times in one second. 2. In the 80s (mostly 1985-1986), turbo engines were timed at 5.5bar turbo pressure. This was achieved with a larger twin turbo kit and special super-soft tyres. Engines were 1.5L V6 or I4, the most powerful was the BMW engine, which had 1400 hp and was I4 only. These engines only lasted a few laps, after which either the cylinder or the turbo melted. 3. The qualify tyre was so soft that when the driver returned to the pits, the mechanics had to water the ground in the garage because the tyre was sticking to the ground. Qualify from the 80s Adelaide with BMW 1.5L I4...the strongest engine...and huge turbo lag ruclips.net/video/9t4yfHfTfDs/видео.html
1400 hp at max in 1986 is only the official statistic, in reality there were rare qualifications (brands hatch one of them i think) where the power was... well lets say much higher than this.. "funky" fuel, whatnot.. the turbo was probably 6 bars
With regards to there being multiple races in the US, the reason that at I'm not a fan of that is that I'm afraid that F1 will become to Americanized (also considering the fact that it is owned by Liberty Media, a US company). With that I mean that it will become more about the show than about the sport. That being said, Texas has been on the calendar since 2012. Before that, Indianapolis was on the calendar from 2000 till 2007. I also don't know what the current "rules" are when it comes to number of races in a country, there used to be a rule that there could only be 1 race in a country. However, they circumvented this by adding for instance the European Grand Prix allowing there to be two races in Germany and later Spain for many years. Also, the San Marino Grand Prix allowed for two Grand Prix in Italy. Looking at the oldest driver to win an F1 race, in the early years of F1 (talking about 50's and 60's, it was more common that drivers were older. Fangio was for instance 46 years old when he won his 5th championship. With regards to the Ferrari being so good, rumors have it that the 2014 Mercedes was so good Mercedes were afraid that the FIA would introduce rules to slow them down. They therefore didn't race the car at it's full potential. And they still absolutely dominated that season winning all but 3 of 19 races. The following will probably get me a lot of criticism, but with regards to Schumacher and Hamilton winning 7 championships each: They only reason they both managed to do this, is that they both had cars that were extremely dominating. That is to me the biggest downside to F1. From time to time a team manages to build a car that is so much better than the other cars that it almost doesn't matter who is driving it. Don't get me wrong though, both of these drivers are amongst the greatest ever. A good example is mentioned in this video. In 2009 Jenson Button won the championship because the Brawn GP team had build a car that was dominating during the first half of the season (winning 6 out of the first 7 races) due to the double diffuser, a trick that many teams missed. Once the other teams managed to upgrade their cars and add a double diffuser themselves, Brawn GP fell back (winning only 2 races out of the remaining 10) and only won the championship due to the lead they had managed to build up during the first half of the season. Don't get me wrong, I've always been a fan of Button, but he wasn't good enough to be a world champion. Also, did you know that Jochen Rindt is the only driver to win the world championship posthumously. He passed away during a practice session at the Italian Grand Prix. By that time he had build up enough of a lead in the championship that he was still first by the end of the season even though he didn't race in the last 4 races of the season consisting of 13 races.
I'm not a fan of the Miami race being advertised as it was, Austin seems more on par with the other countries races, however... Even with 3 races in the US, the closest race to me, as a US citizen, is still Canada, and that is still a 10.5 hour drive for me, if I want to attend again. There's places in Europe that would put you within that driving distance of 4 or more tracks in a single season, so I'm a fan of more races in the US, particularly Indianapolis again.
The Ferrari F2004 was the ultimate beast ... and it drove on grooved tyres back then, so it could go faster with slicks ... maybe even faster than modern F1, more topspeed for sure. Those V10 engines were brutal
Hi man, love your enthusiasm, I think all branches of motorsport have quite many interesting and exciting parts. Looking forward to learn more about NASCAR myself.
Hi Ian, another great video, has anyone told you that your face is orange on your videos at the moment, I still think you should do a reaction to Sir Jack Brabham. He built his own F1 car. He raced in the 60's and 70's I was very young, back then. Keep up the good work from Dave in Australia.
“Built his own” (with a kit purchased from lotus) Still props to him, dude was the first (and to my knowledge only) person to win a championship as the driver of a team named after himself
Dude! G'Day from Oz. Don't forget we've got Bathurst coming up in early October. Last time time for anything Aussie built, next year, is full on Yankee branded racers, World series, HaHa. You'd fit in here, no worries, probs get ya self quite a few free beers. I'll shout ya a family size umbrella to keep the Drop Bears off, Lmao. Great Channel, Keep up the good work, we luv it
2:40 another thing about Lewis is that he's very resiliant, he didn't win all of his championships in one string like most drivers, he has had spurts of wins Also for adelaide footage here's a 1990 ferrari onboard ruclips.net/video/O22E8lXfjVg/видео.html And here's a battle between senna and mansel in 92 ruclips.net/video/mAJIO-0p0iM/видео.html
I liked the way you said you like baseball. I was privileged to see several games in the Kingdome in Seattle about a year b4 it was demolished. Loved the fireworks in the ceiling area.
There are several videos with F1 and NASCAR drivers swapping cars for a few laps around a circuit. Jimmie Johnson and Fernando Alonso did it in 2018, as well as Tony Stewart and Lewis Hamilton in 2011
Regarding Lewis Hamilton, a lot of this year's performance is on the car. Mercedes was really struggling with the new regulations at the start of the year, but they seemed to have really turned the corner. Lewis should be back in title contention next year. And I'm saying this while not being a Hamilton fan.
The regulation changes have caught Mercedes on the back foot. If the regulations had continued unchanged, I think Lewis could have very well gotten his 8th title in this year. Lewis definitely has not lost any of his speed. He has some good years left. PS. As long as the racing is good, any country should have a race. More populated countries can have more races. However, I think we should stick to a maximum of 20 races per year.
Usually I get annoyed when people pause reactions videos a lot but I didn't with this one. You had a lot of great points and things to say. Great video
I would argue that much of Hamilton's fame is related to the social media game. There have been other incredible drivers who were not active on social media and not such fancy characters and are much less known. In a comparison to Schumacher, Hamilton falls short. Several factors contribute to this, but the most obvious one is the performance of their respective cars and teams, as well as comparisons with their teammates. Schumacher often outperformed his teammates by a significant margin, while Hamilton frequently competed with his teammates for the front row and even lost one title to his teammate, Nico Rosberg. This never happened to Schumacher when he had a winning car, suggesting that Hamilton would lose in a direct competition if both were of comparable age and in similar cars. Overall, Schumacher pursued anything that could improve his performance while Hamilton does just as much as necessary. Hamilton's title streak actually began in a car previously built by Schumacher's old team and driven by Schumacher himself in his last year before retirement. It's also nearly impossible to compare the newer era with the early 2000s. Back then, cars were very demanding and had to be pushed hard, while the new era requires extensive management of tires and fuel. It has become more of a battle between car performances, and it's rare to see a tough battle for position over an extended period, as the tires simply don't allow for that anymore. That being said, I don't mean Hamilton is not a world class driver. In my eyes he is just not even close to be one of the GOAT's, even with 7 titles. He is much closer to Vettel as both had a very dominant car in their respective primes. But Vettel had bad timing changing to Ferrari, even though Vettel in the Ferari was often the only one to challenge the Mercedes with Hamilton and Rosberg.
3:31 Spa-Francorchamps used to be 9mi(14.45km)long from 1925to 1939, then they shortened it abit to 8.7mi(14.1km)from 1946 to1970, and 1979 it became the circuit as we know today of at 4.3mi(7km)long. In between Belgium had 3 other F1 circuits.
man, I'm from Italy and every year I go to the Italian Gran Prix, and I tell you that you MUST go to a Gran Prix, it's an experience that you will remember it for the rest of your life.
Even though I am European, I am totally fine with having up to 3 races in the US next year, after all it's a very big country with a lot of people getting interested in the sport right now and with a lot of economical and business potential for the future. Furthermore, there have been some pretty terrible entries in the F1 calendar, in the past recent years (Saudi Arabia, Paul Ricard... to mention just a couple), so I have no issues if those will be swapped for a few more American races! What I am NOT really happy about is the choice of these last two US entries... Maiami and Las Vegas: both street circuits, with narrow tracks and quite uninspiring layouts. Why, Formula 1? Why not choosing some of the other AWESOME race tracks available in the US soil??? Racing in places like Sebring, Laguna Seca, Road Atalanta, Sanoma... they all are sooo damn good!!! And yet, the F1 management has chosen glamour over proper racing. This, I cannot really understand, nor I can look forward into. -_- That said, I can only be happy that F1 is finally getting the attention it deserves among US motor race enthusiasts. It's an awesome sport, with a lot of history, and tons of nuances, technicalities and many other things to like about! So, to all the American fans, welcome onboard!! :D
A good Adelaide race for you to watch is the 1986 race. A final race-battle for the drivers championship between Nelson Piquet, Nigel Mansell, Alain Prost and future 3 time world champion Ayrton Senna, who was driving, at the time, the most powerful F1 car of the 80s Turbo Era: the mighty Lotus 98T. Powered by a turbocharged 1.5 liter Renault V6 engine that, in qualifying trim, produced over 1,240 horsepower! The race itself has its share of drama, as well. Definitely recommend that race for you to watch highlights of
I'm a Brit, and I have no problem with 3 USA races. Take the Euro leg for example, we have Silverstone (UK), Paul Ricard (France), Spa (Belguim), Zandvoort (Netherlands), Monaco etc. and all these circuits are within a day's drive of eachother. It's much easier on the logistics teams, compared to 'fly away' races. And it gives spectators options. Thousands of brits attend European races, Spa is particularly popular with uk f1 fans. So given the size of America, having flown the entire circus over the pond, it makes sense to have a few races. To give the teams a break from international flying (& jetlag), and to give more American fans access to races. If you live in Maine or Washington, it's a long way to COTA in Texas.
7:40 NASCAR does actually have a European series since 2009 (which currently only runs road courses, though has run 2 different ovals in the past), a Canadian series since 2007, and a Mexican series since 2004. They're all separate competitions, though.
17:50 There is a bit of history behind that circuit, which is a shame for us in Spain. It was built by the autonomous government of Valencia, which was corrupt at the time and they spent 300 million euros just to leave it a few years later.
About the fact of the Nascar, there's also the european championship of Nascar, named EuroNascar... They have the same rules of the american Nascar, but the cars have slightly smaller engine, still V8, and they're setup to make corners way better than the american Nascar's cars
If you like old tracks out of use, I suggest Solitude in Germany(currently an actual road) and Clermont-Ferrand in France. The latter also has some history from the 70s.
about the they didn't race in the us for a while until a few years back, they have been racing at cota since 2012, before that they raced at Indianapolis from 2000-2007. In the past they have also raced on the streets of phoenix for a few years and at watkins glen for about 20 years
The reason why the US has 3 races, is mostly because some of the tracks that were supposed to be set up and created for F1 simply did not happen due to Covid. So they had to fill up the schedule somehow. I am pretty sure in the next couple of years some of the US races may fall back off and be replaced by the long awaited Vietnam Grand Prix (I hope that there is still a chance for that to become a reality).
If you are interested in old tracks, then search for real live dashcam drives on them. Examples are Deutschlandring, Old Hockenheim 30's and 60's-2000's layout, Bremgarten, Feldbergring. The Targa Florio is still fully driveable. I don't know how much of the Battenbergring still exists. Or take a look at the old Spa they used till the 70's. There is so much out of there. I loved seeing this videos and then happily found downloads for Assetto Corsa and can drive them, closely to how it felt, to race on it.
Barrichello was 100% championship material and showed us glimpses of his potential constantly during his career. The only person who really stopped that from happening was Schumacher who was the golden boy at Ferrari. If he was signed to Ferrari a year earlier and Irvine was given the flick I reckon he could've won the '99 championship.
f1 had 3 races per season in the 1980s too. I don't think it's crazy since it's a huge country. Though I do not want historic circuits to be removed either. There is a clear happy medium to be found.
F1 raced at Indy up to 2007, and have been racing at COTA in TX since 2012. The 2022 season saw them add the Miami race, and for 2023 theyre adding Las Vegas. So its not quite going from 0 races to 3 here. But I see your POV
I have been following F-1 since the 60's. You really need to go back through the history of constructors and drivers to understand F-1. I may be trying to glorify the old days here, but I really don't remember in the 60's one constructor just completely dominating with speed. I am not sure, but I think there were F-1 races at Watkins Glenn and maybe one in California. Part of the reason for multiple races in the US is to simplify logistics.
Early in his racing career, Jean Alesi (i think) got stuck in his car because he had no clue how to undo his seat belt. After that, he INSISTED on buckling up his seat belt alone. If anyone tried to help him with the seat belt, he would IMMEDIATELY jump out of the car and start all over again!
The 2014 USGP was run at Cota on the same day Nascar was at Texas for the 2014 fall race. The race where the #2 car bulldozes through the #24. Jeff didn't leave a hole.
really good comment about the 3 races in the US, I think it's all about money but that is my opinion, what scares me the most is the fact that mythic racetracks are desapearing from the calendar and being replaced by new "money" tracks.
I think it's smart USA gets 3 races, since it's growing so much there(go where the money is)....but i think they should let Andretti form the 11th team, since there's all the extra US revenue coming in.
It's definitely NOT SMART. To have 3 races there. 13% of the races will be in the US and that's just way to much. The excuse of "but the US is such a big country and F1 is really growing there!" is stupid. A country deserves 1 GP per year. If the US really want more, they should race of decent race tracks and not street circuits (which we already have way too many) where the layout is defined by, where are the most visited and famous places in the city. If they have decent race tracks for F1, okay, go race there, but not on these street circuits. Also, with 3 races in the US, F1 is way too much reliant on the US. They should really just race on good tracks. Replace Miami with Kyalami and Vegas with Germany. And they should safe Spa.
Maybe if the tracks were good. It's just flashy American bs. By all means, if they were going to use real race tracks or build a decent circuit but we're losing amazing tracks for boring racing
the US GP has been on the calendar since 2012 I believe when COTA had been built but before that, the US Grand Prix had been held at the Indy Motor Speedway and before that, it was held in Watkins Glen, Phoenix, Detroit, and Las Vegas that come to mind although the ones mentioned afterwards were classic raced from the 70s, 80s, and 90s.
In the olden days Circuits used to be much much longer.. like Pescara at 25km or le mans at 14km. now spa is the longest remaining circuit.. long circuits are not good for grandstand spectating or the number of TV cameras required.. in the 80's and 90's they used to have to rely on helicopters to get TV coverage of the "forest sections" of Hockenheim and spa..
This year, Lewis didn't have the car and the Red Bulls were too far ahead pace wise, so I would say he actually has done a really great job this year, getting many many podiums, and he just didn't have the machinery to win a title. If he drove at this caliber in the Mercedes from last year, he would be just fine. I hope the Mercs are back next year!
The number of races in the US vs other countries is an interesting topic. I think it is fine to have three races currently, especially when you consider the massive size of the country and to give kind of the east coast, middle of the country, west coast fans a chance to possibly attend. Now after a few years it should evolve and maybe only two sometimes with races alternating at the three tracks.
It's a good argument but still, they could race at Sebring or Watkins Glen for the east coast (of course they'd have to make adjustments to safety measures at the tracks to make them suitable to F1), they can keep Austin for central USA and go to Laguna Seca for the west coast, instead of making "plastic" tracks around cities Edit: an F1 race at Road America would be awesome
Driver ability absolutely factors into it. Doesn't matter how fast a car is if the driver can't get everything out of it. That being said, I kinda feel weird about Hamilton having that tying record. That merc has just been MILES ahead of everyone else for the entirety of the hybrid era. It really wasn't until last year that someone finally caught up to them. Vettel you could argue something similar, but that car was actually slower then it's competition. Adrian Newey is just a genius and what it lost in power and top speed etc, it made up for with the aero package and allowed Vettel to just monster that thing around corners
On the topic of the US having 3 races, it's worth pointing out that those races are geographically further apart than a lot of the races in europe. Its a 3 1/2 hour drive from Spa to Zandvoort, less than 200 miles; the drive from the Las Vegas Strip to the Miami Autodrome is 37 hours and over 2500 miles, for the purposes of being a world sport they might as well be different countries. Even if you go by population, the US has 328M people and 3 races, the EU has 447M people and 7 races. If that were to be proportional the US should have 5 races. In which case I'd love to see Watkins Glen come back for a northeast race, and Long Beach for the West Coast
7:22 when they start in Vegas they will cut one race out in the US. I personally think 2 races in the US are ok. There where times when there where 2 races in Germany (Hockenheim, Nürnburgring) but one of these was was then the Grand Price of Luxembourg.
My issue with the US getting 3 Grand Prix yearly, with a roster that is already packed to capacity, which other race will lose? Australia is the furthest and one of the most expensive for teams to participate in, largely because of the airmales. Might F1 drop Australia’s GP and go for the money at our cost? r any other nation’s only GP?
Doubt on Australia because Piastri is coming next season. France and Belgium will likely rotate after this year, we already lost Russia for obvious reasons.
some time ago, germany had more than one race, and when it became limited to one race, some tricks (gp of europe, etc) enabled still having a second race. as a german, i didn't like to have fewer races, but i accepted it to achieve having one race each in more different countries. then came covid and to replace a lot of travel and reduce traveling overseas they "reactivated" that tricky tradition of different names for the gp and had second races in some countries again. but when they now return to the regular system with the old rules of having only one race per country (which is ok) and even cause other classic tracks to no longer be used and traditional f1 countries having to take turns every other year, *i am completely annoyed by some relatively new f1 country having a second or getting even a third race :-( :-( :-(* _ps: "fun" idea: give every driver a race in his own country, and one race for each team's country if those don't have a driver's country yet. but that would be 20-30 races per year with quite some problems concerning number of races, distribution of countries, countries without tracks, frequent changes in case of alternate/test drivers, etc. and some rich sponsors might buy drivers to then have 10-20 races in one country :-(_
if im not wrong the F1 USGP has been running since 1958 in Riverside... then 1959 it was held in Sebring, 60 in Riverside again, from 1961 all the way to 1980 it was held in Watkins Glen, then in Phoenix 89 to 91, then, following many unpaid debts... it was NOT held for 9 years until 2000 when it started being held in Indianapolis all the way to 2007 ((if you haven't reacted to it yet.. you SHOULD check Indianapolis 2005)), then it wasn't until 2012 that another US race was held, since in 2008 the IMS and F1 couldn't agree on the terms. And.. it has been held ever since in Austin, in COTA.. except for.. 2020 because of the pandemic..
Actually the US has been apart of F1 sense 1908, but it wasn’t just in circuit of the Americas because you also had for example in 2007 with the US Grand Prix being held on the famous indi500 track using the infield portion of the circuit.
I dont think any country should have anymore than 2 GP's a season, America could have Austin and then another at any other venue every year. I think the Euopean GP should come back and be hosted in a rotation for example England, Germany, Italy, Belgium etc etc at a different track to what they usually race on every year.
In the last 10 years they absolutely DID race in the US, you all were just not paying attention. The US GP has been held at COTA since 2012, which is one of the best F1 tracks overall, and by far the best (and only one needed) US has to offer to F1. Indianapolis, as iconic as it his, never was a great F1 track, Miami is, in all honesty, very crappy and I bet Vegas will be too (even if the scenery will be amazing, but that's secondary for me). There's more than enough street circuits in F1 already.
Love your videos!!! You should check for - "Lewis Hamilton summing his Qualy up, his eyes got wide open when F1 V10 sound blasted past behind" - it's so funny to see his reaction to an older F1 V10 car instead of the V6 hybrids today. keep it up and enjoy :)
My favourite fact is about the 1997 European Grand Prix. In qualifying, Jacques Villeneuve set a time of 1:21.072. Michael Schumacher was second with a time of 1:21.072. Heinz-Harald Frentzen was third with a time of, yes, 1:21.072. Top 3 drivers qualified with exactly the same time, down to thousands of a second.
Yeah but they already said back in the days, the counter was not that right like we have today, but still was fun to watch, and Im not saying that didnt happen its like commentators say, gonna be the misterys of f1 due the old tech if they actualy did the same exact timing or not.
Now that's an odd fact I remember very well, surprised it didn't made this list, who knows if we'll ever see that again but regardless of how it happened, it'll remain an oddity in F1's history
@@godbernaz kinda makes it even more impressive, if inconsistent tech produced 3 of the exact same time.
@@TrainWreck444 true, to me is amazing but F1 became so boring, Cars are so unbalanced between each others, and F1 now is all about Hamilton, tiktoks, and retards 10y old kids. Why Im saying this, cause we we're amazed for this kind of timelaps, and now I have nothing to be amazed xd
@@godbernaz They use the same timing mechanisms today than they did back then.
Yes, Moto GP is the "F1 of bikes", and Rossi isn't just a guy from Moto GP, he basically holds every record, like 9 titles, 110+ wins
I like your comment, but I refuse to tap the like button because it has 46 😁🤪
@@wepsTRX same :D
Yeah, thank you. We definitely need more guys for team motoGP. Is there a better grand prix series on the planet? IAN, please join our world! (46=GOAT)
IWrocker didn’t say Rossi is just some guy he was polite about it so give over you bum
Rossi is simply the GOAT of motogp.
Here's a fun fact...
During Fernando Alonso's debut season in 2001, the team he drove for (Minardi) was so short-staffed and financially unstable, that he was actively helping the mechanics work on his car...
Like we're talking literally helping to take the whole thing apart and put it back together, for pretty much every race!
@hurrdurr.. Minardi was even allowed to drive with a V10 while every other team had to drive with a V8 later on in that decade. Fernando who was a two time world champion back then joked about it when saying:” why don’t they use Ferrari’s V 12?”
@@alexardies3171 yep, that was Toro Rosso in 2006 (essentially Minardi)...
The last F1 car to use a V10, even though they were basically outruled for the 2006 season.
@@Ennui. was that Toro Rosso? The first one than cuz Minardi was basically a Dallara chassis with a Ford Cosworth engine in the back. I don’t remember, all I know is that it was the last year of Michael Schumacher driving for Ferrari. Kimi took over and became world champion but I didn’t know that Minardi was called Toro Rosso. Thanks for the info. Greetings 🙋🏻♀️
@@alexardies3171 Yep, after RedBull bought Jaguar in late 2004, they then bought Minardi in late 2005 as they saw that as an opportunity to have 2 F1 teams on the grid.
They renamed Minardi into Toro Rosso (which just means RedBull in Italian lol)
Nowadays the team is called Alpha Tauri.
So yeah, we technically still have Minardi on the grid...
@@Ennui. yea when I was 14 I even saw Eddie Irvine on the podium in Monza. The only time he finished third with his Jaguar behind Shumi and Barichello in 2004. I’m Belgian so yes I speak 7 languages, Italian being one of them. I even work for Modena but I didn’t know that RB bought Jag and Minardi. Which is crazy because in 2017 I drove a Minardi on Fiorano!!! It was a Minardi from’89-90 which had the V12 Ferrari engine and o man it was bloody fast! Minardi was always way back on the grid but once upon a time they scored points driving in the midfield with that engine. Crazy story right? But true. Seb Vettel got his first win with a Toro Rosso so no wonder that he ended up winning four titles for RB. A shame that he couldn’t win a title with the Scuderia but Ferrari is known for their merciless behaviour with their drivers. Prost, Mansell, Alezi, Alonso, Seb.. all victims of their ruthlessness.
I’m pretty sure that by the end of this season Charles and Carlos are gonna be ready for the mental asylum with all those fuckups in the pits.
Martin Brundle is going to love that, 3 races to deal with arrogant American celebrities on the grid.
Agent- “She isn’t doing any TV spots”
Martin- “why even come to the grid then” (or something similar)
isn’t he the first one to be an entitled arrogant celebrity tho? Maybe he doesn’t like competition
@@heroiam4067 why is he?
But a laugh for us!
he’s one to comment. so called expert speaks like he raced yesterday….and he really didn’t. Jenson and Damon are so much better both a commentators and current knowledge.
You really need to watch the movie RUSH, it's about the rivalry between Niki Lauda and James Hunt, during the 1976 season. It's based on reality and shows the true characters of 2 of the most iconic F1 drivers of all time (In my opinion). Niki was almost incinerated in a crash at the Nürburgring and the fact he was racing again, weeks later, is sport's biggest comeback story of all time (Again, in my opinion)
Lauda missed only a single race which is incredible considering the severity of the incident
@@szandorthe13th he missed Austria and Netherlands, so 2 races, but impressive nontheless.
@@MufflerShop double the length, but no less impressiveness
I think it is really sad that F1 doesn't race in Germany anymore. It's literally the country the car was invented in and cars are really embedded into the culture.
Plus, I live about twenty minutes from the Hockenheimring and I'd really love to see F1 race there again ;)
for real, Liberty is killing the sport. you only get into the calendar if you pay enough, and its become a bidding war. obviously Germany, France and Belgium dont want to (and probably CANT) pay as much as Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Russia, China and Las Vegas.
My dream has always been to watch a German GP live, really hope they bring it back eventually...
Actually in my opinion the thing that made most people not wanting that much races in the US is because you cant have unlimited races, so you have to cut off some others, and some of them are actually historical F1 racetracks (spa, mugello, monaco, monza, etc, etc) and the idea that some of them might be replaced one day, for business purposes is what makes people kinda hesitant about this.
You should look into Valentino Rossi’s career! He’s been the image of MotoGP for years and has now starter his car racing career, now competing in GT cars! He’s an Italian hero and quite the character!
I second that 👍
13:05 Alonso would oversteer into corners to heat up the front tires which provided better grip through the middle and exit of corners. This was when teams could only use 1 set of tires during a race so the durability wasn't an issue.
Understeer. He just prefers that as the overall balance of the car even now.
@@counterfit5 He would oversteer by turning the wheel too far, causing the car to understeer. And drivers can't get away with this now due to the lack of tire durability.
There is a F1 movie you need to see. It's called rush, and it's about two hard-core rivals, James hunt and Nicci lauda. It's amazing.
The alonso technique blew my mind when someone pointed that out to me
Back in the day the tires were extremely diffrent than today
These had way less grip and it was hard to keep the temperatures up during a race
This was due to regulations
So alonso just entered corners extremely aggressive forcing the car to understeer on corner entry
Something you usually dont want
But this resulted in heating up the front tires in the corner wich generated grip that he used to get through the corner
It made him faster than anyone
That’s so smart wtf
My favourite fact is that Hans Heyer is the only driver to get a DNQ, DNF AND DSQ in the same race.
Which is the weirdest hat-trick in racing I've ever heard of.
Considering the US place in F1, I'm of course glad US get to enjoy Formula 1 but I also find it unfair that the number of races their is done at the expense of other Grand Prix. I'm of course biased because next year I'm losing my home Grand Prix in France and it will probably alternate with Spa going forward, I'm quite upset about that.
Yeah, like I guess one big reason is the sheer size of the US.However it is getting borderline ridiculous if one nation has three, as there only 23 races so it doesn't make that 13% percent of the calendar is one country, since there only 21 countries in the calender
Crybaby , it's like a 7 hour drive from France to belgium. I'm south of Miami , and just to leave my state of Florida is almost 12 hour drive, to make it to Texas for Austin gp it's almost 24 hours non stop drive. That's why the US needs more than 1 race because it's HUGE
@@jckdnls9292 i get the point that distances in usa is a bit further, but mostly this rich bozos are exploiting you guys, they know how much money you guys will spend on these races. its ridiculous the money they charge
@@jckdnls9292 You want a paton the back or somth? Just because you decided to make the journey doesn't mean everyone now has too nor do they have the means of doing so.
Secondly if anything the US doesn't NEED anything, it was fine with Austin, there arguably more laces that have a stronger argument.
@@jckdnls9292 Would 2+ tracks be beneficial for F1? Debatable, it really only benefits American fans who are a minority
Kinda surprised he didn't mention Sir Jack Brabham being the only driver ever to win an F1 championship in his own car.
As for the number of US GP's I don't really care unless it's at the expense of an existing GP like Spa as rumours were circulating recently.
Same, it makes sense too, Europe has 500 million or so and like 10 or so races, America having 3 races isn’t too awful
i don't mind there being 3 races in america. I'm mostly bothered by miami and las vegas being street circuits. America has plenty of awesome race tracks, they should go there
Imagine having Laguna Seca in an F1 Calendar? Would be awesome as hell.
i think Monaco is being removed and it should be sure its historical but its such a boring race
John Surtees is the only person ever to be a World championship winner both on 2 and 4 wheels in their respective top tier series
He won 1964 F1 championship and the 58-59-60 500cc championship in Gran Prix motorbike racing (wasn't called MotoGP at the time)
I was looking for this comment :)
Adelaide 1994 is pretty much known for the collision between Schumacher and Hill which spawned some controversy.
Michael sits with the crowd in this one yeah?
We forget that Mansell put the WIlliams on Pole and MSC crashed the car vastly trying to get it back. Thanks Nige.
Rossi is worth checking out! MGP is fantastic. he is also someone who developed some odd techniques
As a french fan born 1987 and remembering races since 1993, I do appreciate your point with too many races being held in the US.
You may know there are fewer and fewer races in Europe, with races like France, Belgium, Italy or Monaco being questionned because they don't offer as much money as US or Barhain or Saudi Arabia to hold a race. And I truly think that's for shame.
The sport was born in Europe and was always meant to be a worldwide show, but things are getting out of hand because of money, and forgetting the fans are not only where the cash is !
@iWrocker, Jochen Rindt is the first and only driver to win the drivers world championship posthumously. he sadly passed away during the later stages of the season but had scored enough points to still win the title despite his death. a true racing legend RIP
It was at monza strangely enough.
I got hooked on F1 in 1981, the technology, the drama, the politics, the glamour, the intense announcers...so crazy
You MUST check out F1 Adelaide 1986 Johnny Dumfries OnBoard - the V6 engines back then sounded so awesome, and the shifts are so quick (with an old school h-pattern), and the track layout is really cool. My first ever F1 race I saw on TV was 1985 Adelaide, what fun that was!
4:32 The Hill's, Graham Hill (F1 champ 1962 and 1968) on the left is Damon's Father (champ 1996) on the right.
Phil Hill in the middle is not related (champ in 1961) was born in the USA.
Only other Father/Son winners are Keke (1982) and Nico Rosberg (2016)
The current champ Max Verstappen 's (2021) father, Jos, also raced in F1 but never won a championship
Another "not quite" father/son pair is Gilles/Jacques VIlleneuve. GIlles won races, but never the championship, Jacques did.
Jos never even won a race!
Fun Stuff for someone new to F1: One of the early 2000s Ferrari Cars was actually that good that they raced the 3 first races of the next season with the old car and still got nearly 1 second faster per lap each race then the second best team. This was the only time i have seen that a team did this.
Adelaide....I think it was in 1988 when Mansell lost the championship due to an exploded tire to Prost while Prost got kicked out early in the race......or that unbelievable race during that rain the following year(?)....crazy. Nigel Mansell was the unbelieveable crazy guy with a unique technic to break into corners which is great to observe, especially during the Silverstone GP's he won in spectecular fashion.
That was 86
The rain was 1991
I love how you are so open about learning something new :)
Welcome to F1 man !!!!!!!
My brother worked for lotus and MacLaine making carbon fibre parts . He went on to develop a carbon fibre wheel for a F1 car . Because he was working a smaller firm and was ahead of the development and the big crews were behind they vetoed its introduction . I still have one at home
I'm from Valencia and the situation of the street circuit is very bizarre you can go over some parts of the layout with your street car and there's still the paint of the circuit there and they actually made a bridge for the circuit that is closed almost all the time
The Brawn GP story is incredible. Theres great videos on the whole story on RUclips that you could react to.
There are worlds apart between Luis Hamilton and Michael Schumacher. Michael Schumacher, his car wasn't a rolling computer. Michael Schumacher had to do it all himself without all that electronic stuff
I love how your sense of time is as well of as mine is.
Timestamp around 6:00
This video posted in 2022.. COTA started in 2012 - 10 years from now..
-> "until they raced at cota a *few years back*
last US GP before COTA was Indianapolis from 2000-2007
-> "they didnt race here in the last 10 years or something until [...]"
very enjoyable video! excited to see people new to the sport becoming interested and all that :)
The Hamilton hand placement thing is actually because of the Merc 'magic' button which shifts the brake bias to allow him to warm the brakes and tyres better under the formation lap
Its actually him blocking the shift pad with his hand to not accidentally downshift since the shifter goes both ways. Pull click = gear up, push = gear down.
He was using that technique when he hit that button in Baku, Like @LKWD sais, he is blocking the downshift paddle
Alesi hand position was another thing... like a paint. Beautiful to watch.
To our defense a lot of the European races take place geographically very close to one another. UK to the tip of Italy for example is like half the distance than from the East to West coast. If you look at it that way, it sort of make sense.
About the number or races in a single country.
Historically, in Italy there were different tracks over the decades, but 2 are the "classic" ones: Monza and Imola.
For years, Monza was the Italian Grand Prix and Imola was the San Marino Grand Prix (San Marino is a little State inside Italy, like the Monaco Principate in France). Imola is an Italian city of Emilia-Romagna near San Marino, so its GP was held there.
In Italy today we have 4 tracks able to host a F1 race: Monza, Imola, Mugello and Fiorano.
The last is a little circuit of Ferrari, near its offices and production area in Emilia-Romagna, so it couldn't realistically held a GP even if it's omologated for F1 for obvious reasons of Ferrari.
Mugello is a circuit classic for the MotoGP calendar and it's also a property of Ferrari in Tuscany.
For years though the only Italian GP was Monza, because the San Marino GP doesn't exist anymore.
Things changed in 2020, due to the F1 calendar changes for the covid pandemic.
In that year, in Italy we had 3 F1 GP: Monza (Italian GP), Imola ("Emilia-Romagna and Made in Italy GP"), Mugello ("Tuscany GP").
Since 2021 in Italy we have 2 F1 GP, Monza (Italian GP) and Imola (Emilia-Romagna GP).
My facts:
1.The strongest natural aspirated engine is the ~2005 V10 engines. 900-1000HP and 19000rpm, this means the engine every single cylinders move up and down 316 times in one second.
2. In the 80s (mostly 1985-1986), turbo engines were timed at 5.5bar turbo pressure. This was achieved with a larger twin turbo kit and special super-soft tyres. Engines were 1.5L V6 or I4, the most powerful was the BMW engine, which had 1400 hp and was I4 only. These engines only lasted a few laps, after which either the cylinder or the turbo melted.
3. The qualify tyre was so soft that when the driver returned to the pits, the mechanics had to water the ground in the garage because the tyre was sticking to the ground.
Qualify from the 80s Adelaide with BMW 1.5L I4...the strongest engine...and huge turbo lag
ruclips.net/video/9t4yfHfTfDs/видео.html
Thanks for these facts!
1400 hp at max in 1986 is only the official statistic, in reality there were rare qualifications (brands hatch one of them i think) where the power was... well lets say much higher than this.. "funky" fuel, whatnot.. the turbo was probably 6 bars
@@БорисМарков-ы8ф Oh yes
Definitely gonna check out original video. Bro, the more watch the more you'll enjoy 😉 🏎🏁
With regards to there being multiple races in the US, the reason that at I'm not a fan of that is that I'm afraid that F1 will become to Americanized (also considering the fact that it is owned by Liberty Media, a US company). With that I mean that it will become more about the show than about the sport. That being said, Texas has been on the calendar since 2012. Before that, Indianapolis was on the calendar from 2000 till 2007. I also don't know what the current "rules" are when it comes to number of races in a country, there used to be a rule that there could only be 1 race in a country. However, they circumvented this by adding for instance the European Grand Prix allowing there to be two races in Germany and later Spain for many years. Also, the San Marino Grand Prix allowed for two Grand Prix in Italy.
Looking at the oldest driver to win an F1 race, in the early years of F1 (talking about 50's and 60's, it was more common that drivers were older. Fangio was for instance 46 years old when he won his 5th championship.
With regards to the Ferrari being so good, rumors have it that the 2014 Mercedes was so good Mercedes were afraid that the FIA would introduce rules to slow them down. They therefore didn't race the car at it's full potential. And they still absolutely dominated that season winning all but 3 of 19 races.
The following will probably get me a lot of criticism, but with regards to Schumacher and Hamilton winning 7 championships each: They only reason they both managed to do this, is that they both had cars that were extremely dominating. That is to me the biggest downside to F1. From time to time a team manages to build a car that is so much better than the other cars that it almost doesn't matter who is driving it. Don't get me wrong though, both of these drivers are amongst the greatest ever. A good example is mentioned in this video. In 2009 Jenson Button won the championship because the Brawn GP team had build a car that was dominating during the first half of the season (winning 6 out of the first 7 races) due to the double diffuser, a trick that many teams missed. Once the other teams managed to upgrade their cars and add a double diffuser themselves, Brawn GP fell back (winning only 2 races out of the remaining 10) and only won the championship due to the lead they had managed to build up during the first half of the season. Don't get me wrong, I've always been a fan of Button, but he wasn't good enough to be a world champion.
Also, did you know that Jochen Rindt is the only driver to win the world championship posthumously. He passed away during a practice session at the Italian Grand Prix. By that time he had build up enough of a lead in the championship that he was still first by the end of the season even though he didn't race in the last 4 races of the season consisting of 13 races.
1 Race per country was never a rule, there used to be 3 Grands Prix in the US in the 80s, at Long Beach, Detroit, Vegas, Dallas, mixed in and out.
I'm not a fan of the Miami race being advertised as it was, Austin seems more on par with the other countries races, however... Even with 3 races in the US, the closest race to me, as a US citizen, is still Canada, and that is still a 10.5 hour drive for me, if I want to attend again. There's places in Europe that would put you within that driving distance of 4 or more tracks in a single season, so I'm a fan of more races in the US, particularly Indianapolis again.
The Ferrari F2004 was the ultimate beast ... and it drove on grooved tyres back then, so it could go faster with slicks ... maybe even faster than modern F1, more topspeed for sure. Those V10 engines were brutal
Hi man, love your enthusiasm, I think all branches of motorsport have quite many interesting and exciting parts. Looking forward to learn more about NASCAR myself.
Hi Ian, another great video, has anyone told you that your face is orange on your videos at the moment, I still think you should do a reaction to Sir Jack Brabham. He built his own F1 car. He raced in the 60's and 70's I was very young, back then. Keep up the good work from Dave in Australia.
“Built his own” (with a kit purchased from lotus)
Still props to him, dude was the first (and to my knowledge only) person to win a championship as the driver of a team named after himself
@@dylanzrim3635 yes, I grew up watching him.
Senna's qualifying laps in Adelaide are must-watch F1 material. People say Senna's car is "dancing" when he drives and his Adelaide laps prove it!
Dude! G'Day from Oz. Don't forget we've got Bathurst coming up in early October. Last time time for anything Aussie built, next year, is full on Yankee branded racers, World series, HaHa. You'd fit in here, no worries, probs get ya self quite a few free beers. I'll shout ya a family size umbrella to keep the Drop Bears off, Lmao. Great Channel, Keep up the good work, we luv it
2:40
another thing about Lewis is that he's very resiliant, he didn't win all of his championships in one string like most drivers, he has had spurts of wins
Also for adelaide footage here's a 1990 ferrari onboard
ruclips.net/video/O22E8lXfjVg/видео.html
And here's a battle between senna and mansel in 92
ruclips.net/video/mAJIO-0p0iM/видео.html
He did win most of his championships in a string though. Excluding 2008, his only break was 2016 where his teammate did and he came second…
Fun fact: the longest F1 track in history was the italian track of Pescara with 27km, the F1 races there in 1957.
Wait a minute.... You are looking just like Valtteri! Long lost brother maybe?
I liked the way you said you like baseball. I was privileged to see several games in the Kingdome in Seattle about a year b4 it was demolished. Loved the fireworks in the ceiling area.
There are several videos with F1 and NASCAR drivers swapping cars for a few laps around a circuit. Jimmie Johnson and Fernando Alonso did it in 2018, as well as Tony Stewart and Lewis Hamilton in 2011
Regarding Lewis Hamilton, a lot of this year's performance is on the car. Mercedes was really struggling with the new regulations at the start of the year, but they seemed to have really turned the corner. Lewis should be back in title contention next year. And I'm saying this while not being a Hamilton fan.
The regulation changes have caught Mercedes on the back foot. If the regulations had continued unchanged, I think Lewis could have very well gotten his 8th title in this year. Lewis definitely has not lost any of his speed. He has some good years left.
PS. As long as the racing is good, any country should have a race. More populated countries can have more races. However, I think we should stick to a maximum of 20 races per year.
Last years car was still very much derived from michael Schumacher’s final Mercedes, and even that original chassis took a few years to get up front
Their "zero" sidepods was a damn failure.
he did last year ;) he is leading the chart with 8 for a year now
Lewis could already have had 8 if it wasn’t for Nico
@@reedhero6862 I'd personally blame Massi for him not having the 8th
TBH I don't think Vegas will work. And the rivalry between Lauda and Hunt I heard was awesome
Günther Steiner also worked as technical director for RB Nascar team.
He even moved to North Carolina
Usually I get annoyed when people pause reactions videos a lot but I didn't with this one. You had a lot of great points and things to say. Great video
3:20 actually Lewis was younger than Max when he claims his first world title. So deos the Sebastian Vettel and Fernando Alonso.
True but Verstappen was the youngest driver to win a race "Spain 2016". They never said a championship tittle.
I would argue that much of Hamilton's fame is related to the social media game. There have been other incredible drivers who were not active on social media and not such fancy characters and are much less known.
In a comparison to Schumacher, Hamilton falls short. Several factors contribute to this, but the most obvious one is the performance of their respective cars and teams, as well as comparisons with their teammates. Schumacher often outperformed his teammates by a significant margin, while Hamilton frequently competed with his teammates for the front row and even lost one title to his teammate, Nico Rosberg. This never happened to Schumacher when he had a winning car, suggesting that Hamilton would lose in a direct competition if both were of comparable age and in similar cars.
Overall, Schumacher pursued anything that could improve his performance while Hamilton does just as much as necessary. Hamilton's title streak actually began in a car previously built by Schumacher's old team and driven by Schumacher himself in his last year before retirement. It's also nearly impossible to compare the newer era with the early 2000s. Back then, cars were very demanding and had to be pushed hard, while the new era requires extensive management of tires and fuel. It has become more of a battle between car performances, and it's rare to see a tough battle for position over an extended period, as the tires simply don't allow for that anymore.
That being said, I don't mean Hamilton is not a world class driver. In my eyes he is just not even close to be one of the GOAT's, even with 7 titles. He is much closer to Vettel as both had a very dominant car in their respective primes. But Vettel had bad timing changing to Ferrari, even though Vettel in the Ferari was often the only one to challenge the Mercedes with Hamilton and Rosberg.
3:31 Spa-Francorchamps used to be 9mi(14.45km)long from 1925to 1939, then they shortened it abit to 8.7mi(14.1km)from 1946 to1970, and 1979 it became the circuit as we know today of at 4.3mi(7km)long. In between Belgium had 3 other F1 circuits.
man, I'm from Italy and every year I go to the Italian Gran Prix, and I tell you that you MUST go to a Gran Prix, it's an experience that you will remember it for the rest of your life.
I used to follow f1 intensely when younger, however with age things change, yes I'm still watching highlights.
Even though I am European, I am totally fine with having up to 3 races in the US next year, after all it's a very big country with a lot of people getting interested in the sport right now and with a lot of economical and business potential for the future. Furthermore, there have been some pretty terrible entries in the F1 calendar, in the past recent years (Saudi Arabia, Paul Ricard... to mention just a couple), so I have no issues if those will be swapped for a few more American races!
What I am NOT really happy about is the choice of these last two US entries... Maiami and Las Vegas: both street circuits, with narrow tracks and quite uninspiring layouts.
Why, Formula 1? Why not choosing some of the other AWESOME race tracks available in the US soil??? Racing in places like Sebring, Laguna Seca, Road Atalanta, Sanoma... they all are sooo damn good!!! And yet, the F1 management has chosen glamour over proper racing. This, I cannot really understand, nor I can look forward into. -_-
That said, I can only be happy that F1 is finally getting the attention it deserves among US motor race enthusiasts. It's an awesome sport, with a lot of history, and tons of nuances, technicalities and many other things to like about! So, to all the American fans, welcome onboard!! :D
A good Adelaide race for you to watch is the 1986 race. A final race-battle for the drivers championship between Nelson Piquet, Nigel Mansell, Alain Prost and future 3 time world champion Ayrton Senna, who was driving, at the time, the most powerful F1 car of the 80s Turbo Era: the mighty Lotus 98T. Powered by a turbocharged 1.5 liter Renault V6 engine that, in qualifying trim, produced over 1,240 horsepower! The race itself has its share of drama, as well. Definitely recommend that race for you to watch highlights of
I'm a Brit, and I have no problem with 3 USA races.
Take the Euro leg for example, we have Silverstone (UK), Paul Ricard (France), Spa (Belguim), Zandvoort (Netherlands), Monaco etc. and all these circuits are within a day's drive of eachother. It's much easier on the logistics teams, compared to 'fly away' races. And it gives spectators options. Thousands of brits attend European races, Spa is particularly popular with uk f1 fans.
So given the size of America, having flown the entire circus over the pond, it makes sense to have a few races. To give the teams a break from international flying (& jetlag), and to give more American fans access to races. If you live in Maine or Washington, it's a long way to COTA in Texas.
7:40 NASCAR does actually have a European series since 2009 (which currently only runs road courses, though has run 2 different ovals in the past), a Canadian series since 2007, and a Mexican series since 2004. They're all separate competitions, though.
17:50 There is a bit of history behind that circuit, which is a shame for us in Spain. It was built by the autonomous government of Valencia, which was corrupt at the time and they spent 300 million euros just to leave it a few years later.
About the fact of the Nascar, there's also the european championship of Nascar, named EuroNascar... They have the same rules of the american Nascar, but the cars have slightly smaller engine, still V8, and they're setup to make corners way better than the american Nascar's cars
their
@@dorlaretz5901 ?
It's "they are", not "their"
If you like old tracks out of use, I suggest Solitude in Germany(currently an actual road) and Clermont-Ferrand in France. The latter also has some history from the 70s.
about the they didn't race in the us for a while until a few years back, they have been racing at cota since 2012, before that they raced at Indianapolis from 2000-2007. In the past they have also raced on the streets of phoenix for a few years and at watkins glen for about 20 years
The indy 500 used to be an f1 race between 1950 to 1960
The reason why the US has 3 races, is mostly because some of the tracks that were supposed to be set up and created for F1 simply did not happen due to Covid. So they had to fill up the schedule somehow. I am pretty sure in the next couple of years some of the US races may fall back off and be replaced by the long awaited Vietnam Grand Prix (I hope that there is still a chance for that to become a reality).
Vietnam wont happen. Libert'ys marketing plan is focused on the US atm.
If you are interested in old tracks, then search for real live dashcam drives on them. Examples are Deutschlandring, Old Hockenheim 30's and 60's-2000's layout, Bremgarten, Feldbergring. The Targa Florio is still fully driveable. I don't know how much of the Battenbergring still exists. Or take a look at the old Spa they used till the 70's. There is so much out of there. I loved seeing this videos and then happily found downloads for Assetto Corsa and can drive them, closely to how it felt, to race on it.
Hamilton's left hand on the top left of the steering wheel during starts is to block the gear shifter so that it cannot shift down accidentally.
Exactly
Barrichello was 100% championship material and showed us glimpses of his potential constantly during his career. The only person who really stopped that from happening was Schumacher who was the golden boy at Ferrari. If he was signed to Ferrari a year earlier and Irvine was given the flick I reckon he could've won the '99 championship.
He was not.
f1 had 3 races per season in the 1980s too. I don't think it's crazy since it's a huge country. Though I do not want historic circuits to be removed either. There is a clear happy medium to be found.
F1 raced at Indy up to 2007, and have been racing at COTA in TX since 2012. The 2022 season saw them add the Miami race, and for 2023 theyre adding Las Vegas. So its not quite going from 0 races to 3 here. But I see your POV
I have been following F-1 since the 60's. You really need to go back through the history of constructors and drivers to understand F-1. I may be trying to glorify the old days here, but I really don't remember in the 60's one constructor just completely dominating with speed. I am not sure, but I think there were F-1 races at Watkins Glenn and maybe one in California. Part of the reason for multiple races in the US is to simplify logistics.
Early in his racing career, Jean Alesi (i think) got stuck in his car because he had no clue how to undo his seat belt. After that, he INSISTED on buckling up his seat belt alone. If anyone tried to help him with the seat belt, he would IMMEDIATELY jump out of the car and start all over again!
The 2014 USGP was run at Cota on the same day Nascar was at Texas for the 2014 fall race. The race where the #2 car bulldozes through the #24. Jeff didn't leave a hole.
really good comment about the 3 races in the US, I think it's all about money but that is my opinion, what scares me the most is the fact that mythic racetracks are desapearing from the calendar and being replaced by new "money" tracks.
I think it's smart USA gets 3 races, since it's growing so much there(go where the money is)....but i think they should let Andretti form the 11th team, since there's all the extra US revenue coming in.
It's definitely NOT SMART. To have 3 races there. 13% of the races will be in the US and that's just way to much. The excuse of "but the US is such a big country and F1 is really growing there!" is stupid. A country deserves 1 GP per year. If the US really want more, they should race of decent race tracks and not street circuits (which we already have way too many) where the layout is defined by, where are the most visited and famous places in the city.
If they have decent race tracks for F1, okay, go race there, but not on these street circuits.
Also, with 3 races in the US, F1 is way too much reliant on the US. They should really just race on good tracks.
Replace Miami with Kyalami and Vegas with Germany. And they should safe Spa.
Maybe if the tracks were good. It's just flashy American bs. By all means, if they were going to use real race tracks or build a decent circuit but we're losing amazing tracks for boring racing
6:12. COTA (The usa Grand pix) have been hold since 2012 in Austin Texas
the US GP has been on the calendar since 2012 I believe when COTA had been built but before that, the US Grand Prix had been held at the Indy Motor Speedway and before that, it was held in Watkins Glen, Phoenix, Detroit, and Las Vegas that come to mind although the ones mentioned afterwards were classic raced from the 70s, 80s, and 90s.
In the olden days Circuits used to be much much longer.. like Pescara at 25km or le mans at 14km. now spa is the longest remaining circuit.. long circuits are not good for grandstand spectating or the number of TV cameras required.. in the 80's and 90's they used to have to rely on helicopters to get TV coverage of the "forest sections" of Hockenheim and spa..
In 2004 Schumacher won 13 of the 18 races that year, it was also his last world drivers title.
You should see more of Fangio's history !
The Valencia Street Circuit (the one in ruins) was made in order to launder some money. It caused quite a controversy once that was revealed.
This year, Lewis didn't have the car and the Red Bulls were too far ahead pace wise, so I would say he actually has done a really great job this year, getting many many podiums, and he just didn't have the machinery to win a title. If he drove at this caliber in the Mercedes from last year, he would be just fine. I hope the Mercs are back next year!
you're definitely right in saying MotoGP is the F1 of motorcycle racing. The Isle of Mann TT race is the pinnacle of motorcycle racing though.
@iwrocker the way they managed to have 3 grand prixs is that F1 is owned by liberty group which is an American company, hope that helps.
The number of races in the US vs other countries is an interesting topic. I think it is fine to have three races currently, especially when you consider the massive size of the country and to give kind of the east coast, middle of the country, west coast fans a chance to possibly attend. Now after a few years it should evolve and maybe only two sometimes with races alternating at the three tracks.
It's a good argument but still, they could race at Sebring or Watkins Glen for the east coast (of course they'd have to make adjustments to safety measures at the tracks to make them suitable to F1), they can keep Austin for central USA and go to Laguna Seca for the west coast, instead of making "plastic" tracks around cities
Edit: an F1 race at Road America would be awesome
Perspective is a great channel! Well worth following if you love F1
11:46
Ross Brawn is not talked about enough these days! A genius, a legend!
Driver ability absolutely factors into it. Doesn't matter how fast a car is if the driver can't get everything out of it. That being said, I kinda feel weird about Hamilton having that tying record. That merc has just been MILES ahead of everyone else for the entirety of the hybrid era. It really wasn't until last year that someone finally caught up to them. Vettel you could argue something similar, but that car was actually slower then it's competition. Adrian Newey is just a genius and what it lost in power and top speed etc, it made up for with the aero package and allowed Vettel to just monster that thing around corners
On the topic of the US having 3 races, it's worth pointing out that those races are geographically further apart than a lot of the races in europe. Its a 3 1/2 hour drive from Spa to Zandvoort, less than 200 miles; the drive from the Las Vegas Strip to the Miami Autodrome is 37 hours and over 2500 miles, for the purposes of being a world sport they might as well be different countries.
Even if you go by population, the US has 328M people and 3 races, the EU has 447M people and 7 races. If that were to be proportional the US should have 5 races. In which case I'd love to see Watkins Glen come back for a northeast race, and Long Beach for the West Coast
17:15 the trackside start sequence you watched was from valencia there
7:22 when they start in Vegas they will cut one race out in the US. I personally think 2 races in the US are ok. There where times when there where 2 races in Germany (Hockenheim, Nürnburgring) but one of these was was then the Grand Price of Luxembourg.
My issue with the US getting 3 Grand Prix yearly, with a roster that is already packed to capacity, which other race will lose? Australia is the furthest and one of the most expensive for teams to participate in, largely because of the airmales. Might F1 drop Australia’s GP and go for the money at our cost? r any other nation’s only GP?
Doubt on Australia because Piastri is coming next season.
France and Belgium will likely rotate after this year, we already lost Russia for obvious reasons.
Big expense, lots of logistics, but, street circuits have been a favourite for decades, especially waterside ones
some time ago, germany had more than one race, and when it became limited to one race, some tricks (gp of europe, etc) enabled still having a second race. as a german, i didn't like to have fewer races, but i accepted it to achieve having one race each in more different countries.
then came covid and to replace a lot of travel and reduce traveling overseas they "reactivated" that tricky tradition of different names for the gp and had second races in some countries again.
but when they now return to the regular system with the old rules of having only one race per country (which is ok) and even cause other classic tracks to no longer be used and traditional f1 countries having to take turns every other year, *i am completely annoyed by some relatively new f1 country having a second or getting even a third race :-( :-( :-(*
_ps: "fun" idea: give every driver a race in his own country, and one race for each team's country if those don't have a driver's country yet. but that would be 20-30 races per year with quite some problems concerning number of races, distribution of countries, countries without tracks, frequent changes in case of alternate/test drivers, etc. and some rich sponsors might buy drivers to then have 10-20 races in one country :-(_
Australia is signed till 2035 so we won't have any issues there for a while
if im not wrong the F1 USGP has been running since 1958 in Riverside... then 1959 it was held in Sebring, 60 in Riverside again, from 1961 all the way to 1980 it was held in Watkins Glen, then in Phoenix 89 to 91, then, following many unpaid debts... it was NOT held for 9 years until 2000 when it started being held in Indianapolis all the way to 2007 ((if you haven't reacted to it yet.. you SHOULD check Indianapolis 2005)), then it wasn't until 2012 that another US race was held, since in 2008 the IMS and F1 couldn't agree on the terms. And.. it has been held ever since in Austin, in COTA.. except for.. 2020 because of the pandemic..
Actually the US has been apart of F1 sense 1908, but it wasn’t just in circuit of the Americas because you also had for example in 2007 with the US Grand Prix being held on the famous indi500 track using the infield portion of the circuit.
I dont think any country should have anymore than 2 GP's a season, America could have Austin and then another at any other venue every year. I think the Euopean GP should come back and be hosted in a rotation for example England, Germany, Italy, Belgium etc etc at a different track to what they usually race on every year.
In the last 10 years they absolutely DID race in the US, you all were just not paying attention.
The US GP has been held at COTA since 2012, which is one of the best F1 tracks overall, and by far the best (and only one needed) US has to offer to F1.
Indianapolis, as iconic as it his, never was a great F1 track, Miami is, in all honesty, very crappy and I bet Vegas will be too (even if the scenery will be amazing, but that's secondary for me). There's more than enough street circuits in F1 already.
I loved the Valencia GP track, and was quite successful there....on the computer.
Love your videos!!! You should check for - "Lewis Hamilton summing his Qualy up, his eyes got wide open when F1 V10 sound blasted past behind" - it's so funny to see his reaction to an older F1 V10 car instead of the V6 hybrids today. keep it up and enjoy :)