I know Jos Verstappen had a couple more moments, and that now he's known mainly as Max's father, but whenever his name is mentioned, I immediately think of his pit stop fuel incident at Germany 1994.
I also think of him barrelling over Brundle on his début at Brazil 1994, and running top 3 in an Arrows at Malaysia 2001, so too many moments for him really
A few to mention: - Vitaly Petrov, Abu Dhabi 2010 (holding Alonso from world championship) - Cristian Klien, Monaco 2004 (loosing a front wing with a diamond on it) - Anthony Davidson, Canada 2007 (hitting an animal while 3rd) - Jolion Palmer, Italy 2016 (FIVE SECONDS IS A YOKE. WHERE IS PALMER?) - Luca Badoer, Europe 1999 (crying after his car broke down) - Alex Wurz, Monaco 1998 (fight and crash with Schumacher) - Taki Inoue, Hungary 1995 (hit by medical car after attempting to use fire distinguisher on his car)
Wurz had a barrel roll at Montreal the race after as well, probably more widely remembered than the reason why he crashed at Monaco (anybody remember a frustrated Schumacher almost costing Diniz points on the final lap?)
@@Lukim yes. And he also scored the podium one race earlier. His last race is underappreciated too because he let Caterham take a CC position just to be dropped the following year.
How is Jean-Louis Schlesser not here? He hit Senna while being lapped leading to the only race that McLaren did not win in 1988. Ferrari scored a 1-2 at Monza not long after Enzo died.
Ron Dennis met Schlesser a number of years later and referred to him as "the man who ruined my life and our perfect record". Schlesser replied, "No, I made you, because what happened that day at Monza kept you hungry." Pretty badass for a man whose only claim to fame is being lapped in a Williams and then crashing
@@F1Krazy His track record outside F1 is pretty good, but he never appeared to be a man with a lack of self confidence or to be a likeable character. See the Dakar Rallye 2001 for example.
He's not known because the crash was 100% Senna's fault. He didn't cause it or anything, he was just... there. People know about Senna's crash and Ferrari's 1-2, but Schlesser's involvement being far less known than the other aspects is why he doesn't make the list.
In Glock's defense, his gamble actually did pay off, as he was 7th when everybody went for wets, and ended the race in 6th, one position better. That is forgotten by the impact on the championship it had, but he did right for his cause.
I always said that. Even being a Brazilian and really supporting Massa that year, the only reason Hamilton was actually behind and Glock ahead up until the last turn was BECAUSE GLOCK DIDN'T pit. If Glock didn't had that strategy, Hamilton would be in 5th place way before.
He's incredible, sometimes he spots things that I can't even see once he says it. I remember Monza 2019, where he saw Verstappen going off at turn one at the very back of the grid
Number 5 here makes zero sense. I thought this was for "one moment" but you don't even refer to one moment, just that he crashed a lot. It's a trait, not a single moment. "It's easy to forget he won a grand prix" no it isn't! Sorry but people remember Pastor for quite a few moments. Bahrain with gutierrez for example.
Flavio takes most of the blame, but Piquet also had a choice. He was not like a poor young man rely on monthly wage to pay the rent, he was a rich boy and he didn't need this job. he could just walk away or he could expose Flavio on sight, other team might still take him. Instead he made the worst possible chioce and choose to be a pawn.
@TheWeeaboo Then he could just walk away and keep his dignity. He didn't need this job, or he didn't need any job because he is Piquet Jr, now he is a joke.
Tragically, David Purley is remembered for the footage of him stopping at Zandvoort to try and rescue Roger Williamson from a burning car. He won the George Medal for bravery as he tried to put the fire out.
Siniset was that Monza? I thought it was estoril. I watched that race live when I was a kid, and somehow I remembered that was a finish in 6th. It wasn’t, he missed the points, but finished on 3 wheels
Sloppy Toons if you watch carefully enough, he finished on two wheels; the one that was only barely still attached was bouncing, and was up in the air as he crossed the line! I've never forgotten that flip, it's one of the most memorable crashes in F1.
Exactly what I was thinking. Pastor is remembered for a lot more than just 1 moment. In fact, he is remembered more for all his crashes than his win in Spain.
Coulthard and Dennis really pissed me off at Monaco 2001, blaming Bernoldi for DC's passiveness. What was he supposed to do? Pull over and let him past?
Coulthard, as much as I like him, was a bottler. And it's ironic that he gets mentioned here for being held up, but not for being the only driver I can remember for crashing in the pit lane.
@@Rocky712_ Well, in quali at least, we all think of Ericsson as a poor driver when he's actually quite decent. Wehlein and Leclerc are both alright drivers.
Then at Imola, he arrived at the site of Senna's crash to help and was kept away as there was nothing he could do to save the man who saved his life. His last race in F1.
@@EmyrDerfel no he didn't, his team made a mistake sending him out and he was flooring it when he rounded the corner and saw all the vehicles tending to Senna and once he realised his heart sank because he couldn't save the man who saved his life.
some out of my head: Peter Gethin for winning the closest finish at the 1971 Italian GP Giancarlo Baghetti for winning his first race, the 1961 French GP Lella Lombardi for scoring the only (half) point by a female driver at the 1975 Spanish GP Dorino Serafini for having the highest percentage of podium finishes (100%), having achieved a shared second at the 1950 Italian GP Howden Ganley for almost winning the 1973 Canadian GP, only to have it stripped away from him based on a timing mistake caused by the first use of a safety car Alessandro Nannini (yes, I know he had some other great drives, but he is only remembered for this) for winning the 1989 Japanese GP after Ayrton Senna was disqualified for cutting the chickane Jimmy Stewart, Wilson Fittipaldi and Ian Scheckter for being the unsuccesful older brothers of world champions Jackie Stewart, Emerson Fittipaldi and Jody Scheckter(respectively, obviously) Christian Fittipaldi for his spectacular crash at the finish line at the 1993 Italian GP Jan Lammers for returning after not competing for more than 10 years (1982-1992) Claudio Langes for never prequalifying in all 14 races he entered Markus Winkelhock for leading on his only GP, the 2007 European GP Antonio Pizzonia for crashing out Juan Pablo Montoya from 2nd place while getting lapped at the 2005 Belgian GP Hans Heyer for being disqualified from the 1977 German GP, after he failed to qualify then started the race illegally and then his car broke down, after which the race officials noticed he even started, and that would turn out to be his only F1 outing Ricardo Londoño for only being able to try to start a GP (which he didn't, since officials refused to give him a superlicence after he crashed with Keke Rosberg in practice, at the 1981 Brazilian GP) because of his connections to drug lord Pablo Escobar Then there are those who are only remembered for their deaths: Chris Bristow and Alan Stacey(both at 1960 Belgian GP, different accidents), Carel Godin de Beaufort(1964 German GP), Jo Schlesser(1968 French GP), Gerhard Mitter(1969 German GP), Roger Williamson(1973 Dutch GP), Helmuth Koinigg(1974 USGP), Ricardo Paletti(1982 Canadian GP), Roland Ratzenberger(1994 San Marino GP), Jules Bianchi(2014 Japanese GP, he died later)
@@simonbutterfield4860 Johnny is remembered for more than just one thing though. There's his first win, the 1995 British Grand Prix, when Hill & Schumacher collided fighting for the lead. And even before his F1 career had started, he was touted the next Jim Clark before his Formula 3000 crash in 1988. And now he works as a pundit on Sky Sports F1.
I think for those who had the Sky Sports commentary, Martin Brundle followed this up (during one of the replays) by saying something like "Sorry Romain. I don't think you can blame Ericsson for that." So they then have the voice spoken over Roman's heavy breathing, and Brundle saying that, leading them to put two and two together and remember it incorrectly.
Trouble is; there are so MANY things with Inoue.. Monaco (being crashed into by the safety car while being towed) Hungary (with the fire extinguisher) and the interview about his teeth..
4 года назад+30
Panis - victory in Monaco 96, Petrov - blocking Alonso Abu Dhabi 2010
Kubica - the devastator of a crash in 2007 at Canada that led to Vettel's first official race start Kovalainen - suddenly inheriting a race win Grosjean - "GROSJEAN GET YOUR BAGUETTE OUTTA THE -" -whoops, wait, that RUclipsr Championship Palmer - "Where is Palmer?" "Palmer has retired" "Karma"
4 года назад
@@dvorgur kinda both - he was faster on straights and slow in corners due to setup. But RB had Renault engines so there's obvious connection
David Purley, who may have inspired Senna to save Eric Comas, deserves a mention for his efforts trying to save Roger Williamsons life back at the 1973 Dutch GP. His F1 results were not legendary, but his bravery a cut above the rest who did not bother to help him turn over the burning wreck trapping Williamson.
I see where you’re coming from with that, but when I think of Villeneuve I think of winning the WC then doing chuff all after that thinking BAR was gonna be the next big thing. When I think of the 1997 F1 season, I think of Schumacher crashing into him at Jerez!
Grosjean's "I can't believe that ended up in my mouth" comment was quite clearly pointing out that he doesn't understand why people thought it was him who said it.
I can assure you Timo Glock is without a doubt universally hated in Brazil. So much so I've once I heard a story of a Police department refusing to adopt Austrian Glock service pistols and buying SIG Sauer models instead, not really sure if that's true, but the sheer concept is hilarious anyway.
I don't know why Bernoldi was criticised by Ron Dennis for how he drove at Monaco 2001. Bearing in mind Coulthard wasn't trying to lap him for those 40-50 laps, he was racing him for position. It's not Bernoldi's job to simply let him go because he was in contention for the title at the time, he's a racing driver
I'd include Daniil Kvyat, because everyone remembers him from that one time that Vettel cut him off and then blamed it on him saying he's a torpedo. Sebastian should be included too, because when he started spinning, everyone just forgot when he was a good driver in Red Bull. Joylon Palmer should be mentioned, everyone remembers him from that "5 seconds is a yoke" situation with Nando Edit: Vitaliy Petrov - He's remembered mostly from the time that his steering wheel fell off Edit 2: Nikita Mazepin - Remembered only from that situation when he touched a girl and put it on instagram Edit 3: Robert Kubica - Remembered mostly from his "EEEEEEEEEE" and "having one arm"
1) Gugelmin flying and showing the difussor of the March. 2) Irvine overtaking senna in Suzuka. (some may remember Brasil 94 episode as well) 3) Winkelhock on 2007 leading in the Spyker. 4) Elizeo Salazar hitting piquet in Hockenheimring. 5) Panis winning in Monaco 96. 6) Alguersuari arguing with helmut marko. 7) Verstappen on fire inside the Benetton. 8) Mazzacane overtaking Hakkinen in 2000 USGP. (que grande el Rayo!) 9) Kubica in canada 07. 10) Gachot being on the jail. 11) Gilles returning to the pits with one wheel. (he also have the front wing episode and Arnoux battle...but not as remembered as that one) 12) James Hunt winning in Spain with an illegal car and keeping the points...(i had to say it, Lauda won that championship to me) 13) Rosset in Monaco (pool scene) 14) Diniz on fire in Argentina 95 (some may remember his nurburgring near death scene as well) 15) Kvyat being fired from RB (its a joke, the torpedo one is worst) 16) Yuji Ide almoast killing Alberts 17) Burti hitting the barriers in Spa 18) Zonta flying over the barriers (cant remember where) 19) McCarthy on wet tires in a sunny day 20) Badoer crying next to the minardi. 21) Suzuki´s podium in Japan 22) Webber´s "multi 21 Seb" 23) Sosspiri in the Mastercard Lola 14 seconds of the pace 24) Donelli´s crash in spain 25) Ratzemberger´s crash (R.I.P.) 26) Taki inoue being run over by the medical car 27) Johnny Herbert being treated as the asshole he is in the interview (Gracias NANO!) 28) Kimmi´s overtake in Suzuka in the first corner 29) Kimmi´s Leave me alone radio 30) Kimmi Not having the drink 31) Kimmi askingFor WHAT he got the penalty? 32) Kimmi saying on the radio is to late to pit 33) Kimmi saying on the radio its never to late to pit 34) Kimmi having an icecream 35) Kimmi having a shit 36) Kimmi´s Gloves and steering wheel 37) Kimmi drunk on a FIA party
Agreed on that, but one thing he's totally forgotten for is an *amazing* move at Monaco that year - in the heavy rain near the start, going around the outside of Raikkonen's Ferrari, in a Haas, at Massenet into Casino Square. It's an incredible pass, the sort Senna would be lauded for, but bar a brief clip on one "highlights of the year" video, it's nowhere to be seen.
0:55 " When he [Grosjean] was asked about it in a video for F1's RUclips channel, among the laughter and apologies to Ericsson, Grosjean said 'I can't believe that ended up in my mouth', even though it didn't" Ericcson didn't mean that even he thought he said it, he just means that he can't believe that other people think he said it, that he can't believe those words have been put into his mouth. Its just a "lost in translation" moment due to how non-native colloquialisms/idioms are stored/remembered. Having dated someone who wasn't a native English speaker I know that to remember colloquialisms/idioms non-native speakers will often translate them into their native tongue (because its easier to assimilate new information that way). However when an opportunity to re-use the colloquialism/idiom presents itself, what actually comes out is essentially a translation of a translation. If you've ever tried using Google translate to translate something from English into a different language then back into English you'll know the results may not be what you expected. Hence something like "I can't believe those words were put into my mouth" can become "I can't believe that ended up in my mouth".
Great list! Don't think it's quite fair on Ericsson: his crash at Monza that year was surely more him, and the whole 'ericsson hit us' incident is much more associated with Grosjean. I'd add: Buemi's wheels coming off Inoue being run over by a safety car Webber 'Multi-21 seb' in the back room
robert kubica's crash in canada with the brilliant post race interview "have you seen the footage of the crash?" "i don't need to i was there" (or something along those lines)
Why don't we just say that, had Glock had any will to decide the title fight in Lewis's favor, he would've changed his tyres like anybody else, and would've never been ahead of him, without giving Massa any chance to even think he could win it. He is the driver who almost let Felipe win the title, not the one who "robbed" him of that
Agreed - pulling off a P8, against a full grid, in the slowest car in the field at that point of the season (even behind Minardi), at Spa, in changeable weather conditions, was a much tougher achievement than essentially P3 by default at Indy, beating only his teammate and two then-slower cars.
Jos Verstappen - pitlane fire in 1994 at German GP Eric Comas - his crash at Spa 1992 when Senna jumped out of his car to save his life Martin Donnelly - being thrown from his Lotus onto the circuit at Jerez in 1990 Olivier Panis - totally unexpected victory at Monaco in 1996 I’m sure there’s loads more you could mention but those are ones that come to mind.
Seriously, Glock in first? He had a somewhat successful career getting multiple podiums, and people who have watched him during the late 2000s surely remember Glock from multiple moments.
I remember him too for his qualifying crash that gave Kobayashi his debut. Also could have won Malaysia 2009, and nobody seems to remember him as a Jordan driver..
Sutil had 2 memorable moments, neither of which are good Monaco 2008, running 4th in the worst car on the grid before the defending champion crashes into him And then Japan 2014 where he watched the Bianchi crash right in front of him…
I watched Malaysia 2002 the other day, Enrique Bernoldi was an excellent defensive driver - at Sepang he was able to keep Michael Schumacher’s Ferrari behind him for 3 laps.
Esteban Guiterrez: "Wow What was that?" Jean-Louis Schlesser taking out Senna Monza 1988 Sebastian Buemi's 200mph disassembly Adrian Sutil's less than flattering run at the 2008 Canadian GP Taki Inuoe getting hit by the medical car Hungary 1995 Some honourable mentions
Honestly Alonso will be remembered by me for crawling out of that completely demolished F1 car without a scratch... I thought he was a superhuman after that.
I remember Alonso's superb 2012 season. Nobody could pull that off than Alonso. To lead and almost win the championship with the 4th fastest car on the grid is legendary.
The moment when he proved he's exactly the same as all of us. "I saw a gap and I thought I will go out quick as my Mum will be watching and I want her to know that I am okay"
Singular F1 moments: Kimi @ Monaco, walking from burning F1 car to his yacht's hot tub Kimi saying, "Leave me alone. I know what to do." Schumacher's podium leaps and smiles (all of them) Massa's '08 Brazilian heartbreak Mansel's exhausting Monaco battle with Senna, with Mansel collapsing after race
It seems we have another equally juicy Top 10 on the same topic: #10: Vitaly Petrov, Abu Dhabi 2010 Holding up Alonso and costing him the WDC #9: Jean-Louis Schlesser, Monza 1988 Crashing with Senna and destroying McLaren's perfect record #8: Markus Winkelhock, Nurburgring 2007 Leading in a Spyker at his one and only GP appearance #7: Eliseo Salazar, Hockenheim 1982 That fistfight (as it were) with Nelson Piquet #6: Vittorio Brambilla, Osterreichring 1975 Celebrating his only win so hard he crashed right after the finish line #5: Taki Inoue, Hungaroring 1995 Being run over by the medical car #4: Christian Fittipaldi, Monza 1993 Finishing the race after a somersault And #3, #2, and #1... Guy Edwards, Harald Ertl, and Brett Lunger, Hockenheim 1975 Saved Niki Lauda's life. I'd add Arturo Merzario too, but he had other rememberable moments.
Romain Grosjean, King of the "First Lap Crash", at the Belgian Grand Prix taking out Fernando Alonso, Lewis Hamilton, Sergio Perez, and Kamui Kobayashi.
Because I was born in the late 80s, when someone says "Michael Schumacher" I think of him on two wheels at Adelaide '94 during "that" incident *grabs popcorn for comments*
You missed the biggest one, Markus Winkelhock. He drove only one race for Spyker in 2007. The grid was forming in variable conditions. The track was dry on the formation lap, but rain started pouring down when the first cars were lining up. Winkelhock, starting from basically the back of the grid, pitted on the formation lap for wet weather tyres. The races had a chaotic opening lap which saw drivers spin off from the damp track. Shortly after the first lap Winkelhock had taken the lead of the race which he kept until lap 7.
Thank you for bringing up Jarno's lap times compared to Timo's! I was a big Toyota fan and after that race, that's what I looked at as I knew they were both on the slicks those final few laps! They both struggled but Jarno had a much bigger gap to 9th place than Timo did to 6th.
Taki Inoue for his incident with a medical car in 1995. Jean Alesi for his only win at Canada in 1995 and Schumacher giving him a lift back to the pits at the end of the race. John Watson at Detroit 1982 where he won despite starting 17th.
Markus Winkelhock. It doesn't matter he raced only once. He's remembered for leading the race on the 2nd lap of his F1 career.
In the worst car on the grid, no less!😂
He's the only F1 driver who led every race he ever started :)
NO ONE CAN BREAK THE WINKELROCK
@@Xathon Except for his own car, apparantly, that's what got him taken out of his one race
Haha agree on this one
I know Jos Verstappen had a couple more moments, and that now he's known mainly as Max's father, but whenever his name is mentioned, I immediately think of his pit stop fuel incident at Germany 1994.
Yeah, that came to my mind too!
When i think of Jos Verstappen the first thing that comes to mind is how he took out Montoya from the lead of the 2001 brazilian GP
I also think of him barrelling over Brundle on his début at Brazil 1994, and running top 3 in an Arrows at Malaysia 2001, so too many moments for him really
But also, Max (Verstappen) who manage to take out 3 others cars in one incident, down that long straight in Brazil.
@@hannesgroesslinger Same
Markus Winkelhock when he led the 2007 European GP at the Nurburgring in the Spyker.
Well that was his only race
Yes i also thought him...
He was first in my mind.
NO ONE CAN BREAK THE WINKELROCK
MASTER OF STRATEGY AND JUST ALL AROUND A CLEVER FELLA
A few to mention:
- Vitaly Petrov, Abu Dhabi 2010 (holding Alonso from world championship)
- Cristian Klien, Monaco 2004 (loosing a front wing with a diamond on it)
- Anthony Davidson, Canada 2007 (hitting an animal while 3rd)
- Jolion Palmer, Italy 2016 (FIVE SECONDS IS A YOKE. WHERE IS PALMER?)
- Luca Badoer, Europe 1999 (crying after his car broke down)
- Alex Wurz, Monaco 1998 (fight and crash with Schumacher)
- Taki Inoue, Hungary 1995 (hit by medical car after attempting to use fire distinguisher on his car)
Palmer was 2017
Wurz had a barrel roll at Montreal the race after as well, probably more widely remembered than the reason why he crashed at Monaco (anybody remember a frustrated Schumacher almost costing Diniz points on the final lap?)
Didn't Petrov fly his Lotus at Malaysia(?) in 2011 too?
@@Lukim yes. And he also scored the podium one race earlier. His last race is underappreciated too because he let Caterham take a CC position just to be dropped the following year.
Alex "do a barrel roll" Wurz
What about sebastien buemi and the wheels ripping off his car
@@wehtam61eoj That's not part of his F1 career though. China 2010 is far and away what he's remembered for in that regard.
Oh yeah, as if he didnt lead a lap in the Canadian GP the same year
Such clueless idiots
He's trying to use DAS
Robert Raduts ahh yes cause everyone remembers that like when Sébastien Bourdais led 3 laps in 2008
How is Jean-Louis Schlesser not here? He hit Senna while being lapped leading to the only race that McLaren did not win in 1988. Ferrari scored a 1-2 at Monza not long after Enzo died.
Ron Dennis met Schlesser a number of years later and referred to him as "the man who ruined my life and our perfect record". Schlesser replied, "No, I made you, because what happened that day at Monza kept you hungry."
Pretty badass for a man whose only claim to fame is being lapped in a Williams and then crashing
@@F1Krazy His track record outside F1 is pretty good, but he never appeared to be a man with a lack of self confidence or to be a likeable character. See the Dakar Rallye 2001 for example.
@@F1Krazy Jesus, 'ruined my life' is a bit strong
And because of that, I love him
He's not known because the crash was 100% Senna's fault. He didn't cause it or anything, he was just... there. People know about Senna's crash and Ferrari's 1-2, but Schlesser's involvement being far less known than the other aspects is why he doesn't make the list.
In Glock's defense, his gamble actually did pay off, as he was 7th when everybody went for wets, and ended the race in 6th, one position better.
That is forgotten by the impact on the championship it had, but he did right for his cause.
I always said that. Even being a Brazilian and really supporting Massa that year, the only reason Hamilton was actually behind and Glock ahead up until the last turn was BECAUSE GLOCK DIDN'T pit. If Glock didn't had that strategy, Hamilton would be in 5th place way before.
Martin Brundle deserves more credit on his commentating. He's had a lot of memorable calls over the years, and "Is That Glock" is just one of em
Angelo Gonzalez IS THAT GLOSK IS THAT GLOCK!?
...Maybe Brundle deserves to be on the list himself
Also his comment at Jerez 97 about Fontana which had Murray laughing, 'What engine's in the back of that Sauber, Murray?'
He's incredible, sometimes he spots things that I can't even see once he says it. I remember Monza 2019, where he saw Verstappen going off at turn one at the very back of the grid
@@TheGravyMonster "Martin You're a cynical chap"
-Murray Walker
Number 5 here makes zero sense. I thought this was for "one moment" but you don't even refer to one moment, just that he crashed a lot. It's a trait, not a single moment. "It's easy to forget he won a grand prix" no it isn't! Sorry but people remember Pastor for quite a few moments. Bahrain with gutierrez for example.
Jiddybit I didn’t understand that either. His win was most memorable and definitely more memorable than Tiago’s Podium.
@@Ben_Mayall It was a fluke and maybe the car was even illegal
Apart from being crashtor maldonado his win in 2012 is the moment people remember most
@@ivaneurope okay but what about it being a fluke means its not memorable?
ivaneurope do you have any proof of the car being illegal? I’ve never heard of that myself?..
Elisio Salazar for getting into a fight with Piquet at Hockenheim in 82.
And Murray said oh my goodness
Good one!
THIS
And Elíseo has been the only Chilean driver on F1
@@144elede Murray Walker, wrongly, refers to him being Colombian. The official 1982 Grand Prix video commentary from Clive James is very funny
Blaming Piquet for Crash-Gate never really seemed fair. He was a pawn.
Yeah, he was forced into it to even have a shot at staying in F1. I might not like him, but I will always blame Flavio for that, not Piquet.
Flavio takes most of the blame, but Piquet also had a choice. He was not like a poor young man rely on monthly wage to pay the rent, he was a rich boy and he didn't need this job. he could just walk away or he could expose Flavio on sight, other team might still take him. Instead he made the worst possible chioce and choose to be a pawn.
@TheWeeaboo Then he could just walk away and keep his dignity. He didn't need this job, or he didn't need any job because he is Piquet Jr, now he is a joke.
@@oscarshen6855 Calling him a Joke is kind of harsh... However he certainly made the wrong choice, and I'm sure many people wish it hadn't happened.
@@oscarshen6855 He didn't need it, but he wanted it. You forget most F1 drivers don't race for the money
Tragically, David Purley is remembered for the footage of him stopping at Zandvoort to try and rescue Roger Williamson from a burning car. He won the George Medal for bravery as he tried to put the fire out.
+1
A heartbreaking incident, but at the same time, a great thing to be remembered for.
Christian Fittipaldi due to his finish in Monza 1993.
Siniset was that Monza? I thought it was estoril. I watched that race live when I was a kid, and somehow I remembered that was a finish in 6th. It wasn’t, he missed the points, but finished on 3 wheels
As an American I remember Cristian Fittipaldi for being hot garbage in NASCAR in the early 2000's
Sloppy Toons if you watch carefully enough, he finished on two wheels; the one that was only barely still attached was bouncing, and was up in the air as he crossed the line! I've never forgotten that flip, it's one of the most memorable crashes in F1.
One of the few F1 cars that made a looping, and landed on its wheels again ..
@@sloppynyuszi
Erm... something like that happened actually, Patrese crashed into a pitting Berger in 1992.
We have several Maldernado moments to remember (win in 2012, spa jump start, crashing Lewis out, and flipping Guttierez) can't have him in this list.
Gutiérrez will always be remembered for that flip. He should have been on this list as well.
Exactly what I was thinking. Pastor is remembered for a lot more than just 1 moment. In fact, he is remembered more for all his crashes than his win in Spain.
His car caught fire in Abu Dhabi 2014
Its not : Maldernado. It is :Maldonado
Basically breaking the wall at Monaco in 2013
Ericsson hit us isn't romain's quote whaaaaat? My whole life has been a lie
It was the team who said it, I think that they meant "that was Leclerc who hit us", but that would not have been funny.
How about:
Narain Karthikeyan: Vettel calling him a cucumber.
Daniil Kvyat: Vettel calling him a torpedo.
karthikeyan can also be remembered for finishing 24th out of 24th
Coulthard and Dennis really pissed me off at Monaco 2001, blaming Bernoldi for DC's passiveness. What was he supposed to do? Pull over and let him past?
I’ve always felt like Ron Dennis seemed like an asshole. He’s just always had that persona to me, and hearing about that incident doesn’t help.
@@PeRRXX You should read what Adrian Newey has written about him. Definitely not painted in a flattering light
@@ahogg5960 where can i read it?
@@d1want34 the book is called "how to build a car" (Newey's autobiography)
Coulthard, as much as I like him, was a bottler. And it's ironic that he gets mentioned here for being held up, but not for being the only driver I can remember for crashing in the pit lane.
Hard disagree on Ericcson, can think of a few other moments from his career - eg his monumental crash at Turn 1 Monza
Also his big crash at Silverstone and his great qualifying performance beating Leclerc at Brazil.
He only crashed because je got hit by Ericsson
What about his podium finish on his debut?
His Brazil GP 2018 is the moment I remember him for the most because he did well and better than a driver we call Charles Leclerc.
@@Rocky712_ Well, in quali at least, we all think of Ericsson as a poor driver when he's actually quite decent. Wehlein and Leclerc are both alright drivers.
Ricardo zonta, for being the backmarker for Hakinnen’s epic move on Schumacher in Spa.
I know it’s in there, but it’s the one that sticks in my mind
I remember him for his crash at the Raidillon.
he's THE backmarker
Zonta also remembered for writing off his car at Eau Rouge about 10 minutes after his team mate did the same thing in qualifying
If I remember correctly, Zonta was also crashing into the Wall of Champions in the 1999 Canadian Grand Prix
Pascal Wehrlein : for giving seb a ride back to the pits after a certain genius crashed into him during the cooldown lap in Malaysia.
The most expensive taxi ride
Also Pascal being an Aussie for a little bit in Monaco.
@@MickZarco This is an underrated comment
And not being turned sideways in Monaco?
Actually Vettel was the one who went into the genius you're referring to, so don't get that twisted!!
The best thing about Maldonados win is the fire in his Pit after he finished. Even when he wins there will be chaos tied to his name. The irony :)
I remember Eric Comas for his crash at the 1992 Belgian grand prix where Senna left his car to help the unconscious driver.
Then at Imola, he arrived at the site of Senna's crash to help and was kept away as there was nothing he could do to save the man who saved his life. His last race in F1.
@@EmyrDerfel one of the saddest stories I've ever heard...
@@EmyrDerfel no he didn't, his team made a mistake sending him out and he was flooring it when he rounded the corner and saw all the vehicles tending to Senna and once he realised his heart sank because he couldn't save the man who saved his life.
@@EmyrDerfel Speaking of that race, Roland Ratzenberger could make the list as a sad, but honorable mention.
Salazar should be on here too, only known for the Piquet incident in the F1 world.
So he was involved in crash gate as well?
@@mrdraw2087 No, thats for crashing out Nelson Piquet Senior and taking a few punches to the helmet for it.
@@mrdraw2087 It was more of a tyre-gate
Sebastien Buemi's wheels saying goodbye in China.
That reminded me how RedBull had 3 Sebastians in their 4 cars. Vettel, Buemi and Bourdais. :D
some out of my head:
Peter Gethin for winning the closest finish at the 1971 Italian GP
Giancarlo Baghetti for winning his first race, the 1961 French GP
Lella Lombardi for scoring the only (half) point by a female driver at the 1975 Spanish GP
Dorino Serafini for having the highest percentage of podium finishes (100%), having achieved a shared second at the 1950 Italian GP
Howden Ganley for almost winning the 1973 Canadian GP, only to have it stripped away from him based on a timing mistake caused by the first use of a safety car
Alessandro Nannini (yes, I know he had some other great drives, but he is only remembered for this) for winning the 1989 Japanese GP after Ayrton Senna was disqualified for cutting the chickane
Jimmy Stewart, Wilson Fittipaldi and Ian Scheckter for being the unsuccesful older brothers of world champions Jackie Stewart, Emerson Fittipaldi and Jody Scheckter(respectively, obviously)
Christian Fittipaldi for his spectacular crash at the finish line at the 1993 Italian GP
Jan Lammers for returning after not competing for more than 10 years (1982-1992)
Claudio Langes for never prequalifying in all 14 races he entered
Markus Winkelhock for leading on his only GP, the 2007 European GP
Antonio Pizzonia for crashing out Juan Pablo Montoya from 2nd place while getting lapped at the 2005 Belgian GP
Hans Heyer for being disqualified from the 1977 German GP, after he failed to qualify then started the race illegally and then his car broke down, after which the race officials noticed he even started, and that would turn out to be his only F1 outing
Ricardo Londoño for only being able to try to start a GP (which he didn't, since officials refused to give him a superlicence after he crashed with Keke Rosberg in practice, at the 1981 Brazilian GP) because of his connections to drug lord Pablo Escobar
Then there are those who are only remembered for their deaths: Chris Bristow and Alan Stacey(both at 1960 Belgian GP, different accidents), Carel Godin de Beaufort(1964 German GP), Jo Schlesser(1968 French GP), Gerhard Mitter(1969 German GP), Roger Williamson(1973 Dutch GP), Helmuth Koinigg(1974 USGP), Ricardo Paletti(1982 Canadian GP), Roland Ratzenberger(1994 San Marino GP), Jules Bianchi(2014 Japanese GP, he died later)
At least Bianchi will be remembered as the guy who scored points for Marussia, the first guy to score points for the 2010 teams
With Roger Williamson in mind, one man you forgot to mention was the man who stopped to try and save his life, David Purley.
You could add Johnny Herbert scoring the only Ford V10 powered victory at Nürburgring '99.
@@simonbutterfield4860 Johnny is remembered for more than just one thing though. There's his first win, the 1995 British Grand Prix, when Hill & Schumacher collided fighting for the lead.
And even before his F1 career had started, he was touted the next Jim Clark before his Formula 3000 crash in 1988.
And now he works as a pundit on Sky Sports F1.
@@alexcameron8724 indeed but it's the Stewart win I remember more as that race was a chaotic day of racing.
I will add Winkelhock instead of Ericsson tbh.
Nobody breaks the Winkelrock
Winkelrock did nothing wrong
It's F2, but Manfred Winklehock is known more for his flip at the Nurburgring...maybe this runs in the family.
It’s funny how people still think it was grosjean who said it.
It's almost like a minor version of the "Mandella effect" (or false memory). It does have the promise to be one at least.
then im remembering it wrong who said it then?
It was the team who said it, I think that they meant "that was Leclerc who hit us", but that would not have been funny.
I think for those who had the Sky Sports commentary, Martin Brundle followed this up (during one of the replays) by saying something like "Sorry Romain. I don't think you can blame Ericsson for that." So they then have the voice spoken over Roman's heavy breathing, and Brundle saying that, leading them to put two and two together and remember it incorrectly.
Der kohle boi 08 grosjeans engineer said it.
You missed Taki Inoue.
haha yes that was comical
Yep, that was the one I was expecting at number 1
I was wondering the same
Hungary 1995 was a WTF 😂
Trouble is; there are so MANY things with Inoue.. Monaco (being crashed into by the safety car while being towed) Hungary (with the fire extinguisher) and the interview about his teeth..
Panis - victory in Monaco 96,
Petrov - blocking Alonso Abu Dhabi 2010
Panis was great in 97. He had several awesome races to be remembered for.
I would refrase that to Petrov - Defending against Alonso Abu Dhabi 2010. As i recall he did never block Alonso in any way.
@@victora.3565
Actually Panis had kind of been having good races ever since he started with Ligier in 1995.
Kubica - the devastator of a crash in 2007 at Canada that led to Vettel's first official race start
Kovalainen - suddenly inheriting a race win
Grosjean - "GROSJEAN GET YOUR BAGUETTE OUTTA THE -" -whoops, wait, that RUclipsr Championship
Palmer - "Where is Palmer?" "Palmer has retired" "Karma"
@@dvorgur kinda both - he was faster on straights and slow in corners due to setup. But RB had Renault engines so there's obvious connection
David Purley, who may have inspired Senna to save Eric Comas, deserves a mention for his efforts trying to save Roger Williamsons life back at the 1973 Dutch GP.
His F1 results were not legendary, but his bravery a cut above the rest who did not bother to help him turn over the burning wreck trapping Williamson.
If I recall Purley was awarded the George cross for that incident too.
Taki Inoue getting ran over by the medical car.
When you think about it. Jacques Villnueve 1997 Jerez.
I see where you’re coming from with that, but when I think of Villeneuve I think of winning the WC then doing chuff all after that thinking BAR was gonna be the next big thing. When I think of the 1997 F1 season, I think of Schumacher crashing into him at Jerez!
Grosjean's "I can't believe that ended up in my mouth" comment was quite clearly pointing out that he doesn't understand why people thought it was him who said it.
Ide for the absolutely massive shunt he caused, and Salazar for rear-ending Piquet and getting into a fist-fight with him trackside.
I can assure you Timo Glock is without a doubt universally hated in Brazil. So much so I've once I heard a story of a Police department refusing to adopt Austrian Glock service pistols and buying SIG Sauer models instead, not really sure if that's true, but the sheer concept is hilarious anyway.
For the longest time, I thought Kimi Raikkonen eating ice cream at Sepang in 2009 is what gave him the nickname "Iceman".
Will admit i scream out "is that Glock!"
Rubans Barachello for a few things
1. His crash at Imola in 94
2. Crying on the podium
3 moving a side for Michael Schumacher
'F1 drivers who are remember for ONE moment' *Lists 3* Well done.
Christian Fittipaldi's backwards flip when he hit his teammate at Monza
I will forever remember Nikita Mazepin for his spin retirement in Bahrain 2021.
Where’s Yuji Ide taking out Albers? That moment was legendary 😢
I don't know why Bernoldi was criticised by Ron Dennis for how he drove at Monaco 2001. Bearing in mind Coulthard wasn't trying to lap him for those 40-50 laps, he was racing him for position. It's not Bernoldi's job to simply let him go because he was in contention for the title at the time, he's a racing driver
This list really makes no sense- half the people on it shouldn’t be there and there are so many people missed
Taki Inoue. The guy was indestructible, even the marshals in the course car tried to mow him down at the Hungarian go in ‘95!
I'd include Daniil Kvyat, because everyone remembers him from that one time that Vettel cut him off and then blamed it on him saying he's a torpedo. Sebastian should be included too, because when he started spinning, everyone just forgot when he was a good driver in Red Bull. Joylon Palmer should be mentioned, everyone remembers him from that "5 seconds is a yoke" situation with Nando
Edit: Vitaliy Petrov - He's remembered mostly from the time that his steering wheel fell off
Edit 2: Nikita Mazepin - Remembered only from that situation when he touched a girl and put it on instagram
Edit 3: Robert Kubica - Remembered mostly from his "EEEEEEEEEE" and "having one arm"
Sadly, Roland Ratzenberger for being so often forgotten when Imola 1994 is mentioned.
Giancarlo Baghetti! I can hardly believe he's not no 1!
Exactly 60 years later, noone got any close to become a debut F1 GP winner again (perhaps, except Villemeuve).
1) Gugelmin flying and showing the difussor of the March.
2) Irvine overtaking senna in Suzuka. (some may remember Brasil 94 episode as well)
3) Winkelhock on 2007 leading in the Spyker.
4) Elizeo Salazar hitting piquet in Hockenheimring.
5) Panis winning in Monaco 96.
6) Alguersuari arguing with helmut marko.
7) Verstappen on fire inside the Benetton.
8) Mazzacane overtaking Hakkinen in 2000 USGP. (que grande el Rayo!)
9) Kubica in canada 07.
10) Gachot being on the jail.
11) Gilles returning to the pits with one wheel. (he also have the front wing episode and Arnoux battle...but not as remembered as that one)
12) James Hunt winning in Spain with an illegal car and keeping the points...(i had to say it, Lauda won that championship to me)
13) Rosset in Monaco (pool scene)
14) Diniz on fire in Argentina 95 (some may remember his nurburgring near death scene as well)
15) Kvyat being fired from RB (its a joke, the torpedo one is worst)
16) Yuji Ide almoast killing Alberts
17) Burti hitting the barriers in Spa
18) Zonta flying over the barriers (cant remember where)
19) McCarthy on wet tires in a sunny day
20) Badoer crying next to the minardi.
21) Suzuki´s podium in Japan
22) Webber´s "multi 21 Seb"
23) Sosspiri in the Mastercard Lola 14 seconds of the pace
24) Donelli´s crash in spain
25) Ratzemberger´s crash (R.I.P.)
26) Taki inoue being run over by the medical car
27) Johnny Herbert being treated as the asshole he is in the interview (Gracias NANO!)
28) Kimmi´s overtake in Suzuka in the first corner
29) Kimmi´s Leave me alone radio
30) Kimmi Not having the drink
31) Kimmi askingFor WHAT he got the penalty?
32) Kimmi saying on the radio is to late to pit
33) Kimmi saying on the radio its never to late to pit
34) Kimmi having an icecream
35) Kimmi having a shit
36) Kimmi´s Gloves and steering wheel
37) Kimmi drunk on a FIA party
What about Kvyat? When Seb said "you came in like a torpedo", to this day, everyone calls him torpedo and hes know by that
Siegfried Stohr for what happened at the start of the Belgium GP 1981.
Martin Donnelly Spain Qualy GP 1990.
Esteban Gutierrez and his “What was that??” Moment when he was flipped by Maldonado.
Agreed on that, but one thing he's totally forgotten for is an *amazing* move at Monaco that year - in the heavy rain near the start, going around the outside of Raikkonen's Ferrari, in a Haas, at Massenet into Casino Square. It's an incredible pass, the sort Senna would be lauded for, but bar a brief clip on one "highlights of the year" video, it's nowhere to be seen.
Alonso wishes that's all Gutierrez was famous for.
Nop, he watching his car got lifting while Bianchi... you known
@@gerardsotxoa its was Sutil
0:55 " When he [Grosjean] was asked about it in a video for F1's RUclips channel, among the laughter and apologies to Ericsson, Grosjean said 'I can't believe that ended up in my mouth', even though it didn't"
Ericcson didn't mean that even he thought he said it, he just means that he can't believe that other people think he said it, that he can't believe those words have been put into his mouth. Its just a "lost in translation" moment due to how non-native colloquialisms/idioms are stored/remembered.
Having dated someone who wasn't a native English speaker I know that to remember colloquialisms/idioms non-native speakers will often translate them into their native tongue (because its easier to assimilate new information that way). However when an opportunity to re-use the colloquialism/idiom presents itself, what actually comes out is essentially a translation of a translation. If you've ever tried using Google translate to translate something from English into a different language then back into English you'll know the results may not be what you expected. Hence something like "I can't believe those words were put into my mouth" can become "I can't believe that ended up in my mouth".
That's how I always understood Grosjean's comment. I am not a native English speaker, too, so I felt a bit foolish after watching the video...
Great list! Don't think it's quite fair on Ericsson: his crash at Monza that year was surely more him, and the whole 'ericsson hit us' incident is much more associated with Grosjean.
I'd add:
Buemi's wheels coming off
Inoue being run over by a safety car
Webber 'Multi-21 seb' in the back room
But Webber is remembered by Multi 21 Only.
Buemi I totally agree on
Webber's very well remembered for his P5 début in a Minardi, plus vomiting into his helmet at Fuji and his somersault at Valencia.
robert kubica's crash in canada with the brilliant post race interview
"have you seen the footage of the crash?"
"i don't need to i was there" (or something along those lines)
Andrea De Cesaris believe it or not can also be remembered for one thing,
hundreds of crashes and DNF's
He did almost overtake Senna to take the lead at Spa in 1991 in the Jordan.
I'll give him credit for that.
R.I.P. Andrea de Cesaris
de crasheris
So Grosjean and Maldonado are his spiritual successors?
Longest grand prix career without a win, 208 races
Why don't we just say that, had Glock had any will to decide the title fight in Lewis's favor, he would've changed his tyres like anybody else, and would've never been ahead of him, without giving Massa any chance to even think he could win it. He is the driver who almost let Felipe win the title, not the one who "robbed" him of that
Someone said it at las!!
It's a shame everyone remembers Monteiro for his podium in Indianapolis. His performance in Spa 2005 deserves much more recognition
Agreed - pulling off a P8, against a full grid, in the slowest car in the field at that point of the season (even behind Minardi), at Spa, in changeable weather conditions, was a much tougher achievement than essentially P3 by default at Indy, beating only his teammate and two then-slower cars.
Speaking of moments at Indy, what about de la Rosa and that body of water on the other side of that wall he was told to jump over in 2002?
I remember him for his finishing record too - never retiring from a race, for a whole season.
Only Portuguese podium
Remember that one time Mazepin would spin out while racing
Hulkenberg for never getting a podium.
Jos Verstappen - pitlane fire in 1994 at German GP
Eric Comas - his crash at Spa 1992 when Senna jumped out of his car to save his life
Martin Donnelly - being thrown from his Lotus onto the circuit at Jerez in 1990
Olivier Panis - totally unexpected victory at Monaco in 1996
I’m sure there’s loads more you could mention but those are ones that come to mind.
The thought that Maldonado is technically more successful than Hulk is....
and Nick Hiedfeld
Ah, but you see, success is relative. Hulkenberg is one of the most respected drivers in F1 at the moment. Maldonado is not.
That aero copy for the Mp4-6 from Mike Gascoigne after the Leyton House flip in France is an amazing F1 fact! Keep em coming!
Pedro Diniz' fiery spin at Argentina in the Prost, leading to the sports headline "Diniz in the oven!"
There's also his scary crash at Nürburgring '99 though, where the rollover hoop failed.
Adam L oh yeah, that one’s messed up. It’s amazing he didn’t get seriously hurt from that
Murray Walker quote originally I think, though possibly picked up by the papers afterwards.
Kimi:
Just leave me alone, I know what I am doing.
Buemi:
Wheels flying off in China.
>> ELISEO SALAZAR
Seriously, Glock in first? He had a somewhat successful career getting multiple podiums, and people who have watched him during the late 2000s surely remember Glock from multiple moments.
I remember him too for his qualifying crash that gave Kobayashi his debut. Also could have won Malaysia 2009, and nobody seems to remember him as a Jordan driver..
Adrian sutil: crash and fight with jarno trulli
Karun chandok: hitted by jarno trulli in unusual way at 2010 monaco gp
sadly i feel Adrian Sutil is more remembered for his Japan 2014 crash...
Wait.... They actually fight?
Sutil had 2 memorable moments, neither of which are good
Monaco 2008, running 4th in the worst car on the grid before the defending champion crashes into him
And then Japan 2014 where he watched the Bianchi crash right in front of him…
McLaren when they said they were racing Fernando, when he was driving for them in 2007.
You must be kidding when you said that you remember Maurício for a wreck than for his podium on home grand prix earlier that year with a March
I watched Malaysia 2002 the other day, Enrique Bernoldi was an excellent defensive driver - at Sepang he was able to keep Michael Schumacher’s Ferrari behind him for 3 laps.
Esteban Guiterrez: "Wow What was that?"
Jean-Louis Schlesser taking out Senna Monza 1988
Sebastian Buemi's 200mph disassembly
Adrian Sutil's less than flattering run at the 2008 Canadian GP
Taki Inuoe getting hit by the medical car Hungary 1995
Some honourable mentions
I would not Remember Sutil only for his run, i would Remember him because he was a Monaco master
@@rick.05
That sadly got run over by Kimi? :(
Lance Stroll - He just came back on the circuit like an idiot
Derek Daly 1980 Candy Tyrrell first corner crash at Monaco.
Valtteri Bottas - "Valtteri, it's James."
Yes I remember Glock taking a dive. Somebody has already referenced Jos and his fuel stop in 1994.
Honestly Alonso will be remembered by me for crawling out of that completely demolished F1 car without a scratch... I thought he was a superhuman after that.
I remember Alonso's superb 2012 season. Nobody could pull that off than Alonso. To lead and almost win the championship with the 4th fastest car on the grid is legendary.
The moment when he proved he's exactly the same as all of us. "I saw a gap and I thought I will go out quick as my Mum will be watching and I want her to know that I am okay"
Andrea de Cesaris, his barrel roll makes me remember of his carrer every day
You forget Lance Stroll in Monza 2019 when he said "he just came back on the circuit like an idiot"
He had his moments in Baku 2017. About being overtaken by Bottas from P2.
Now he will remembered with also pole in Turkey
Singular F1 moments:
Kimi @ Monaco, walking from burning F1 car to his yacht's hot tub
Kimi saying, "Leave me alone. I know what to do."
Schumacher's podium leaps and smiles (all of them)
Massa's '08 Brazilian heartbreak
Mansel's exhausting Monaco battle with Senna, with Mansel collapsing after race
Sebastian Vettel: Mission Spinnow
It seems we have another equally juicy Top 10 on the same topic:
#10: Vitaly Petrov, Abu Dhabi 2010
Holding up Alonso and costing him the WDC
#9: Jean-Louis Schlesser, Monza 1988
Crashing with Senna and destroying McLaren's perfect record
#8: Markus Winkelhock, Nurburgring 2007
Leading in a Spyker at his one and only GP appearance
#7: Eliseo Salazar, Hockenheim 1982
That fistfight (as it were) with Nelson Piquet
#6: Vittorio Brambilla, Osterreichring 1975
Celebrating his only win so hard he crashed right after the finish line
#5: Taki Inoue, Hungaroring 1995
Being run over by the medical car
#4: Christian Fittipaldi, Monza 1993
Finishing the race after a somersault
And #3, #2, and #1...
Guy Edwards, Harald Ertl, and Brett Lunger, Hockenheim 1975
Saved Niki Lauda's life. I'd add Arturo Merzario too, but he had other rememberable moments.
Petrov for crashing because of his steering wheel coming off.
Nah, he's more remembered as that guy who ruined Alonso's 2010 title chances (come to think of it the same goes for Grosjean in 2012)
ivaneurope Hold on, Petrov was racing and defending his position fairly. Grosjean was the “first lap nutcase”.
Romain Grosjean, King of the "First Lap Crash", at the Belgian Grand Prix taking out Fernando Alonso, Lewis Hamilton, Sergio Perez, and Kamui Kobayashi.
Because I was born in the late 80s, when someone says "Michael Schumacher" I think of him on two wheels at Adelaide '94 during "that" incident
*grabs popcorn for comments*
Has it gone stale yet
Eliseo Salazar for Hockenheim, 1982.
Leclerc: “I am stupid”
Ricciardo: Drinking from a shoe
Grosjean: General crashing
Grosjean, seemingly being hired to cause crashes left, right and center. We should all thank him !
Xabc Yabc he really elevated the entertainment level. To be fair last year’s Haas was unruly
You should definitely do another Top 10, there are still a lot of drivers that deserve to be mentioned (or not)
Yuji ide for pilping albers in inmola 06
Ricardo Rosset. That moment at Monaco where Brundle and Murray were debating whether he was f1 worthy.
"That would be a very short debate Murray"
Marcus Winckelhock leading a GP
Hans Heyer for taking part in the german grand prix 1977, although not having qualified for the race.
8:16 look at the smile on hakkinens face
You missed the biggest one, Markus Winkelhock. He drove only one race for Spyker in 2007.
The grid was forming in variable conditions. The track was dry on the formation lap, but rain started pouring down when the first cars were lining up. Winkelhock, starting from basically the back of the grid, pitted on the formation lap for wet weather tyres.
The races had a chaotic opening lap which saw drivers spin off from the damp track. Shortly after the first lap Winkelhock had taken the lead of the race which he kept until lap 7.
When you remake it 5-10 years, Kvyat Torpedo will definitely be a part of it
Vitali Petrov holding up Alonso 2010
Dont forget that Glock got death threats for that
Why do we need to remember that the tho?
He did?
With a glock?
Being a fan of NASCAR, IndyCar, and Formula E, and not watching F1 on a regular basis, I always forget that Ericsson and Piquet used in F1.
When the video started I swear I thought it was Gasly talking
Thank you for bringing up Jarno's lap times compared to Timo's! I was a big Toyota fan and after that race, that's what I looked at as I knew they were both on the slicks those final few laps! They both struggled but Jarno had a much bigger gap to 9th place than Timo did to 6th.
Vettel for the S🅱️inalla
Taki Inoue for his incident with a medical car in 1995.
Jean Alesi for his only win at Canada in 1995 and Schumacher giving him a lift back to the pits at the end of the race.
John Watson at Detroit 1982 where he won despite starting 17th.