The most naturally gifted racing driver Formula 1 produced in the generation between the legends who preceded him and those who followed — Gilles Villeneuve never won the Formula 1 World Championship but his talent, courage and commitment to racing at the absolute limit made him the sport's most beloved figure of his era. Six Grand Prix victories with Ferrari, including spectacular performances in the rain at Watkins Glen and in the streets of Monaco, demonstrated what was possible when pure talent was given its head. His death in qualifying at Zolder in 1982 ended one of the sport's most exciting careers before it reached its fullest expression.
Joseph Gilles Henri Villeneuve was born in Berthierville, Quebec in 1950 and became the most celebrated driver never to win the Formula 1 World Championship — his 6 race wins across 67 starts with Ferrari (1977–1982) wildly understating his impact on the sport. He made 1 McLaren appearance in 1977 before joining Ferrari where he remained until his death. He won 6 Grand Prix, took 2 pole positions and scored 13 podiums with 107 career points. His car control — his ability to lap consistently fast while in slides that would have led other drivers to crash — was considered unique in the sport's history. His 1979 battle with teammate Jody Scheckter — in which Villeneuve refused to overtake Scheckter after the team issued equal orders, despite being clearly faster — is cited as one of racing's most honourable moments. His 1982 season was ended by his refusal to race at the San Marino Grand Prix following what he perceived as a betrayal by teammate Didier Pironi, who had taken victory he believed was meant to be shared. He was killed during qualifying at the Belgian Grand Prix at Zolder on 8 May 1982 — a wheel-to-wheel collision at high speed sending him into the barriers. He was 32. His son Jacques won the 1997 F1 World Championship with Williams.
Spectacular driving style and fearless racing approach
How They Played
Aggressive, spectacular, never-give-up attitude with incredible car control
Lasting Impact
Considered one of the greatest pure racing drivers, legendary status in Formula 1
6 race wins, 13 podiums
His battle with Arnoux at Dijon 1979 — exchanging positions multiple times on the final lap — is universally considered the greatest racing moment in F1 history.
Did You Know?Career Honours
- 6 race wins, 13 podiums
- 1979 — never crashed in qualifying (mythologized)
- Canadian Grand Prix winner 1978 (home race)
- 1982 — died during qualifying at Zolder Belgium
- Considered by many the most exciting F1 driver of his era
- Father of Jacques Villeneuve (1997 champion)