Sport
  • Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • Culture
  • More
    • Music
Sunday, December 21, 2025
No Result
View All Result

SPORT

7 °c
London
8 ° Thu
11 ° Fri
13 ° Sat
14 ° Sun
  • Home
  • Football
  • Formula1
  • Cricket
  • Rugby U
  • Tennis
  • Video
  • Golf
  • Boxing
  • Basketball
  • Cycling
  • World Sport
    • All
    • African Football
    • European Football
    • Sport Africa

    Turkish betting scandal: ‘Big decisions’ and ‘very strict’ sanctions needed, says Galatasaray assistant boss

    Africa Cup of Nations to be held every four years from 2028

    Kylian Mbappe: Paris St-Germain ordered to pay France star 60m euros

    Afcon 2025: Can Morocco seal African dominance on home soil?

    Ousmane Dembele named Fifa Best men’s player of the year

    PDC World Darts Championship 2026: Michael van Gerwen beats Mitsuhiko Tatsunami in first round

    Maccabi Tel Aviv given suspended one-match away fan ban by Uefa for racist chant

    India v South Africa T20 abandoned because of ‘excessive fog’

    Robert Lewandowski: MLS side Chicago Fire in pole position to sign Barcelona striker

All Sport
  • Home
  • Football
  • Formula1
  • Cricket
  • Rugby U
  • Tennis
  • Video
  • Golf
  • Boxing
  • Basketball
  • Cycling
  • World Sport
    • All
    • African Football
    • European Football
    • Sport Africa

    Turkish betting scandal: ‘Big decisions’ and ‘very strict’ sanctions needed, says Galatasaray assistant boss

    Africa Cup of Nations to be held every four years from 2028

    Kylian Mbappe: Paris St-Germain ordered to pay France star 60m euros

    Afcon 2025: Can Morocco seal African dominance on home soil?

    Ousmane Dembele named Fifa Best men’s player of the year

    PDC World Darts Championship 2026: Michael van Gerwen beats Mitsuhiko Tatsunami in first round

    Maccabi Tel Aviv given suspended one-match away fan ban by Uefa for racist chant

    India v South Africa T20 abandoned because of ‘excessive fog’

    Robert Lewandowski: MLS side Chicago Fire in pole position to sign Barcelona striker

No Result
View All Result

SPORT

No Result
View All Result
Home Formula1

Gil de Ferran: Obituary of respected motorsport figure

December 30, 2023
in Formula1
4 min read
222 2
0
477
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Gil de Ferran was a fantastic racing driver: winner of the Indianapolis 500, two-time Indycar champion and holder of the world closed-course speed record.

But he was respected throughout motorsport just as much for being a wonderful person.

De Ferran – as his great friend and mentor, the US motorsport titan Roger Penske said on hearing of his death from a heart attack at the age of 56 – was “class personified”.

Highly intelligent, eloquent in the extreme, the Brazilian’s insights and expertise were valued across the sport. None more so than by this writer. I have been fortunate to call De Ferran a friend since we first met more than 30 years ago, and time and again I have turned to him for understanding and knowledge.

Of infinitely more importance, so did the sport’s luminaries.

When McLaren needed someone to help guide Fernando Alonso through the intricacies of Indianapolis when the two-time world champion was embarking on his rookie experience there in 2017, it was De Ferran to whom they turned.

De Ferran was there as a sounding board throughout Alonso’s month of May. The Brazilian was wowed by Alonso’s talent; Alonso was just as impressed by De Ferran’s calm, thoughtful guidance. They became firm friends.

From there, De Ferran became McLaren sporting director and was one of the key insiders instrumental in guiding the team back towards the front.

That relationship came to its natural end in 2021. But after McLaren again slipped from competitiveness through 2022, leading to the appointment of Andrea Stella as team principal in December last year, they again turned to De Ferran.

It was at the Miami Grand Prix in May this year that this came to light. I hadn’t actually seen that De Ferran was there initially – he was a discreet presence in his civvies – but I bumped into his daughter Anna, who told me he was back working with the team. She immediately realised she probably shouldn’t have said anything, but we laughed about it, figured he wouldn’t mind too much, and conspired not to tell Gil about her slip-up.

“We call him the Team Doctor,” she said, the joke not hiding the inherent truth of his new role as a consultant employed to help fix McLaren’s problems.

I never told Gil his daughter was the source who enabled me to break the story of his return to F1 to the world. I was waiting for the right time. I knew he’d laugh about it. He laughed about so much. Now I wish I had.

McLaren were one of the stories of last season as they jumped from lower-midfield to the front mid-season. De Ferran’s presence was low key – he preferred it that way. But for Stella, his role was invaluable.

“Gil, most people know him as a champion in Indycar and so on,” Stella said, “but personally I know him for being somebody incredibly competent in motorsport, Formula 1, strategic approach, people coaching.

“When somebody in the team has a conversation with Gil, they always come out quite inspired and like: ‘Ah, I think I understand now better what I have to do.’ Or with ideas: ‘I think I have a concept to work on now.'”

De Ferran was a warm and friendly presence. We first met in the back of the Paul Stewart Racing transporter at the British Grand Prix Formula 3 race in 1992. De Ferran was romping to the title that year, but he’d had a bad afternoon in the rain. Still he was charming and welcoming. We hit it off immediately.

A while later, he invited me and another journalist to dinner at his house in Cobham in Surrey, with his then-girlfriend Angela, soon to become his wife, and David Coulthard, a friend and rival.

I covered his Formula 3000 seasons in 1993 and 1994, in the second of which he came so close to winning the title. When the big F1 opportunity didn’t come, he turned to America, and I was in Miami for his first IndyCar race. He was immediately quick.

Driving for the unheralded Hall and then Walker teams for the next five years, he was a regular contender, but it was in 2000 that his big breakthrough came, when he was signed by the Penske team – the equivalent in Indycars to Mercedes or Red Bull now in F1.



Source link

Previous Post

PDC World Championship 2024: Luke Littler beats Raymond van Barneveld to reach quarter-finals

Next Post

BBC News (with Annita McVeigh) – 1 June 2022

Next Post

BBC News (with Annita McVeigh) - 1 June 2022

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Great Britain 81-84 South Sudan: Hosts defeated at Copper Box Arena

    477 shares
    Share 191 Tweet 119
  • Guernsey beat Denmark to win 2026 ICC T20 World Cup qualifier

    477 shares
    Share 191 Tweet 119
  • Wales rugby launch new dual kit after squad feedback on period anxiety

    477 shares
    Share 191 Tweet 119
  • LIV Golf Greenbrier: Brooks Koepka beats Jon Rahm in a play-off to win fifth LIV Golf title

    477 shares
    Share 191 Tweet 119
  • French Open 2025 results: Aryna Sabalenka beats Zheng Qinwen to set up semi-final against Iga Swiatek or Elina Svitolina

    477 shares
    Share 191 Tweet 119
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Champions League: Nearly 2,000 Liverpool fans set to sue Uefa

September 25, 2022

Eddie Hearn: Chantelle Cameron deserved headline billing; Dillian Whyte v Tyson Fury ‘perfect fight’

October 29, 2021

Teams summoned after Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen British GP collision

July 28, 2021

The Hundred: Adam Milne, Colin Ingram, Danni Wyatt, Sarah Taylor – watch the best catches so far

July 29, 2021

NFL: Seattle Seahawks book play-off spot with overtime win over Los Angeles Rams

December 21, 2025

More Than The Score – Asafa Powell on Hurricane Melissa’s aftermath in Jamaica

December 21, 2025

Turkish betting scandal: ‘Big decisions’ and ‘very strict’ sanctions needed, says Galatasaray assistant boss

December 21, 2025

Africa Cup of Nations to be held every four years from 2028

December 21, 2025

Categories

  • African Football
  • American Football
  • Athletics
  • Basketball
  • Boxing
  • Cricket
  • Cycling
  • European Football
  • Football
  • Formula1
  • Golf
  • Rugby U
  • Sport Africa
  • Swimming
  • Tennis
  • Top News
  • Video
  • World Sport
Sport

© 2020 JBC - JOOJ Clone ScriptsJOOJ.us.

Explore the JBC

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • Culture
  • More

Follow Us

  • American Football
  • Athletics
  • Basketball
  • Boxing
  • Cricket
  • Cycling
  • Football
  • Formula1
  • Golf
  • Rugby U
  • Tennis
  • Top News
  • Video
  • World Sport
  • Swimming
  • Login

© 2020 JBC - JOOJ Clone ScriptsJOOJ.us.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Sport
More Sites

    MORE

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • Culture
  • More
    • Music
  • Sport

    JBC Sport