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Jas
4th November 2013, 19:48
Ecclestone's ultimate Formula 1 grid

4 November 2013


Bernie Ecclestone has been at the helm of Formula 1 since the 1970s, during which time hundreds of drivers have put their varying skills to ultimate test at circuits all over the globe. But what about his dream grid? The 83-year-old reveals all…

Pole / Nigel Mansell

"I admire daring drivers, real racers, chargers from go who give it their all to win. And thats why I would have Nigel Mansell on pole," says Ecclestone, speaking to Gulf News. "He had all those hits." Mansell remains one of Britain's greatest F1 talents; he claimed the 1992 title with the dominant Williams FW14B, and sits sixth in the all-time winner and pole-sitter lists.

Titles - 1, Wins - 31, Podiums - 59, Poles - 32

Second / Ayrton Senna

Discussing Ayrton Senna and Michael Schumacher together, Ecclestone explains: "Geniuses behind the wheel of a 200mph race car, and two of the most talented and gifted drivers of all time with nerve and ice cool daring under pressure, allied to a scary will to win however great the odds staked against them." Senna, who lost his life the Imola circuit in 1994, took three world titles during his time in Formula 1, and lies second in terms of pole positions and victories.

Titles - 3, Wins - 41, Podiums - 80, Poles - 65

Third / Michael Schumacher

Michael Schumacher, described above as a "genius" at the wheel of a racing car, is the most successful Formula 1 driver in terms of raw statistics. He retired for a second time last year after a three-season spell at Mercedes, where he was unable to build upon the phenomenal total of seven Drivers' crowns, and 91 race victories, he secured with Benetton and Ferrari.

Titles - 7, Wins - 91, Podiums - 155, Poles - 68

Fourth / Sebastian Vettel

"Next, Sebastian Vettel, a veritable wonder boy, who could finish as the greatest and, title-wise, the most successful driver of all time," comments Ecclestone. "He would put the cat right among the pigeons in any race wherever, on whatever tracking whatever weather." At just 26, Vettel has strung together four titles, putting him level with Alain Prost and behind only Michael Schumacher and Juan Manuel Fangio.

Titles - 4, Wins - 37, Podiums - 60, Poles - 43

Fifth / Jochen Rindt

"I'd travel back in time and opt for Jochen Rindt, the champion in 1970," states Ecclestone. The Austrian, who was highly successful in both single-seater and sportscar racing, tragically died during practice for the Italian Grand Prix, but ultimately became the sport's only posthumous title winner with the quintet of race victories he had achieved earlier in the campaign.

Titles - 1, Wins - 6, Podiums - 13, Poles - 10

Sixth / Ronnie Peterson

"Never the champion but a phenomenal competitor," Ecclestone says of Ronnie Peterson. In another heart-breaking tale, Peterson succumbed to injuries sustained during an opening lap crash at the 1978 Italian Grand Prix. Known as the 'Super Swede' by those involved in the sport, he was twice a runner-up in the championship, including the year of his death.

Titles - 0, Wins - 10, Podiums - 26, Poles - 14

Ecclestone, condensing the rest of his grid, says: "Alain Prost, four times champion, followed by Alan Jones, Jackie Stewart, three times champion Niki Lauda, James Hunt, Graham Hill, Fangio and Nelson Piquet. Each man a fantastic competitor."

ManFromMilan
4th November 2013, 20:47
I know this is Bernie's list, but surely Fernando still ranks above Vettel?

shamim179
4th November 2013, 20:53
I know this is Bernie's list, but surely Fernando still ranks above Vettel?

Bernie is good friends with Vettel and also regards him as his son!

Giallo 550
4th November 2013, 21:08
To hell with Ecclestone. Fernando is twice the driver Vettel is.

fratelliferrari
4th November 2013, 23:05
To hell with Ecclestone. Fernando is twice the driver Vettel is.

Don't care about Bernie, Giallo 550, he is an old crazy man :lol I mean, how can you like Bieber :-G

Alonsomaniac
4th November 2013, 23:23
No Fernando and no Gilles :-E
Bernie's getting holes in his memory.....must be the Viagra.:-ZZ

Aberracus
4th November 2013, 23:30
No Gilles no fernando, Bernie is an old wight

radosav
4th November 2013, 23:40
Don't care about Bernie, Giallo 550, he is an old crazy man :lol I mean, how can you like Bieber :-G

He is probably senile now and when he says Vettel , he actually thinks Alonso.

Tifoso
4th November 2013, 23:51
He is probably senile now and when he says Vettel , he actually thinks Alonso.

Yeah, so senile that he makes a fortune every year. :roll ;-)

Umbria
5th November 2013, 02:36
Bernie is off his rocker! I have been following F1 since 1976, have watched every race on TV since 1985 seen several races live in Montreal & Indy. No one drive was better at qualifying than Senna! Prost was the smoothest driver with great race craft. Those two really stood out. Villeneuve, Petterson, Rindt, Bellof left us way too early. Then you have the likes of Nuvolari, Fangio, Ascari. Shumi was also truly great but, I could never understand why he made so many mistakes ? The most complete driver in my mind was Alain Prost. He had it all with the exception of not being dominate in the wet.

Kiwi Nick
5th November 2013, 03:03
For Sir Bernard, and those of you who are late to the party, I have two words...JIM CLARK! To put Graham Hill on the list when Hill was second fiddle to Clark when they were competitors and teammates is ridiculous. Perhaps he dislikes Scots.

Cozza
5th November 2013, 03:08
Alan Jones on the list?

WHYYY!!!!

Poltergeistes
5th November 2013, 03:35
still, gilles and senna for me, just because to me it felt like they had been blindfolded to the car, and therefor didn't know if it was a williams/ferrari/mclaren or if it was an arrows/minardi/any-low-end-you-can-think-of, and they would drive it not for the sake of finishing the race, or for points, they would simply go for the win, never hold back.

besides you gotta love someone going sideways on F1 cars, or aquaplanning without any hesitation.

PS i mentioned 2 i saw race, i'm sure the older you are the more great drivers you had the plesure of watching race.

F2008
5th November 2013, 08:17
It's not a secret that Gilles was never fond of Ecclestone. Just one example:


"The sport is more important than anything. More important than any of the people in it. Of course I say what I think. I always have, even if it upsets people like Ecclestone and Balestre. Why should I be afraid of them? The fans aren't here to see politicians and manipulators. They're here to see Alain and Mario and Carlos and me. I am very secure in my feelings about racing. I make a lot of money from it, but one thing I can tell you for sure: if the money disappeared overnight, I would still be in racing, because I love it. The entrepreneurs would be gone."

coolrunnings_99
5th November 2013, 08:31
it seems that racing left and we got stuck with entrepreneurs alone;-)

BigGar32
5th November 2013, 12:48
Forget Alonso and Villeneuve..... Where is Jim Clark?!?!?!? How is he not there?!?!

radosav
5th November 2013, 13:10
Yeah, so senile that he makes a fortune every year. :roll ;-)

It is like a joke when they find old man crying in the park and they ask him what's the problem , and he. says : I have lot of money, big house and beautiful young wife that makes love to me every night!
So what is wrong with that? --- they ask!
And old man says : I forgot where i live!
-- Same thing with Bernie, has lot of money but doesn't know where he put it!

Kiwi Nick
5th November 2013, 14:55
Forget Alonso and Villeneuve..... Where is Jim Clark?!?!?!? How is he not there?!?!

Clark started 72 GP, finished 50 (cars were far more fragile in the 60s), had 33 poles, 28 fastest laps, 32 podiums and 25 wins. In 1963 there were 10 GP, Clark was on the podium 9 times and won 7 races. He won the Indy 500 in 1965, and was second in 1963 and 1966. He won the Tasman Series 3 times, raced salon cars, rallied, drove at Le Mans and even wheeled a 7 liter Holman and Moody Ford in NASCAR. If it had four wheels Clark could race it.

He won his last Formula 1 race, the first race of the 1968 season, but died in a Formula 2 race in April of 1968.

DIEK
5th November 2013, 15:56
Nothing new, Ecclestone hates Fernando, many already knew it. The gangster just love what gives him money, is his only pleasure.

stefa
5th November 2013, 16:22
To many great drivers are not on this list.... :crazy

wisepie
5th November 2013, 17:32
The man has a poor memory....what about Moss, Surtees, Ickx, Alesi, and so many others he's ignored, not to mention Gilles, Fernando and of course Felipe for staying so long at Ferrari, a long service award is definitely called for even if he doesn't make Ecclestone's ultimate grid!

DIEK
6th November 2013, 16:30
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/formula1/24831606

:crazy

fratelliferrari
6th November 2013, 17:04
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/formula1/24831606

:crazy

:lol

Katu
7th November 2013, 08:29
good one, Diek

FFFerrari
7th November 2013, 08:44
Forget Alonso and Villeneuve..... Where is Jim Clark?!?!?!? How is he not there?!?!

Yeah, I read the list and the first thing I noticed was Clark and Gilles missing. And while Ronnie was a fantastic driver I rate both of those guys way ahead of him. I don't wonder a bit seeing Vettel there, 4 times champion is 4 times champion, no matter the circumstances.