WISCONSIN: If anybody doubted that Jacques Villeneuve still had his trademark blend of skill and bravado behind the wheel, he proved them wrong at Road America.
Racing in the Nascar Nationwide series' debut at the scenic, fast and technically challenging four-mile (6.4km) road course in central Wisconsin, Villeneuve made a couple of "oh-my" moves to get his car to the front.
He was leading late, stayed on the track even though it looked like his tyre was about to shred, and still might have finished second if not for an electrical problem. Not bad for a 39-year-old driver who hasn't had a regular ride in a top-level racing series since 2006.
"It's an honour for us to get to race against a guy like that, it truly is," race winner Carl Edwards said. "He's a world champion, and I think it says a lot about him. I don't know when the last time he was in a race car was, but to come jump in this race car and come to a track like this and drive a stock car with us, that's cool. A lot of fans here came because of him."
Villeneuve, the 1997 Formula One champion and 1995 Indianapolis 500 winner, has struggled to find a place to race since leaving F1 in 2006.
He tried Nascar a couple of years ago, but he and the team couldn't find enough sponsorship money to make it work.
Then he thought he had an F1 ride lined up for this year, but the sport's governing body didn't approve the new team he wanted to race for. If the right opportunity to race fulltime in either series came along now, he'd likely jump at the chance.
"Both F1 and Nascar are exciting," Villeneuve said. "They're the two top levels of racing in the world right now. If a good F1 opportunity came about, it would be difficult to say no. But I think where I'm at now, I probably would enjoy Nascar more. That makes it a bit difficult."
For now, he's racing wherever and whenever he can. He plans to return to the Nationwide series for its race in Montreal, his hometown, in August.
Beyond that, he's chasing around his two young children, and racing go-karts and skiing to keep his reflexes sharp.
"It would be better to be in a car every week, obviously," Villeneuve said. "It just takes a few laps to get the rust out and you're fine."
The rest of the time, he's trying to put together a business deal that would get him back to the top levels of the sport - a difficult proposition in a lagging economy.
"It's mainly linked to sponsorship," Villeneuve said. "The way the economy is now, the teams don't really want to take the risk. They want the money first."
- AP
Motorsport: Villeneuve shows pedigree with nerve-shredding Nascar run
AdvertisementAdvertise with NZME.