"You have to do things the way you feel right, not what people expect you to do, cause otherwise you're nobody" What a legend this man
@tucsonmaui7 ай бұрын
Underrated reflection right there 💯
@jesusmax0077 ай бұрын
Wow such a deep thought. If you are doing what people expect you to do, you're really not doing you. Hence, you're nobody.
@CJGZW1993Ай бұрын
Exactly what someone named Max is doing at the moment.
@misterdog7 Жыл бұрын
Been a Senna fan for 31 years now, never seen this before. Thanks for the upload!
@techno302 Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@HerrStaale11 ай бұрын
Thank Mandela Eff
@pl-mn2ro11 ай бұрын
Senna was a good driver but also an unsafe driver . Alain Prost who’s nickname was “The Professor” was just better than Senna .
@klausschumacher712611 ай бұрын
@@pl-mn2roI would say he was a ruthless driver and dangerous for the others. It was only a question of time when he would have an accident. When it happened I lived in Brazil and I could see the brazilian way of driving in the city every day... All the hype about him you can only achieve when you're dead....
@devilxtreme10 ай бұрын
@@klausschumacher7126what the fuck. His accident was his steering wheel failure that had been welded . You can see the lap before his accident the steering was loose. Senna had reflex like a cat. His car control was beyond everyone. Well and Schumacher wasn't aggressive? 94 and 97 did you forget???
@Markinlondon10 ай бұрын
Senna rented a house in broom close Esher and I was lucky enough to meet the legend who was a very friendly happy generous man
@mkf62810 ай бұрын
RIP Ayrton🕯
@jonscan38519 ай бұрын
,,,,yes but you wouldn't want to have raced him or raced with him!!!
@Markinlondon9 ай бұрын
@@jonscan3851 I raced him to the pub one night
@carlin22359 ай бұрын
in 1985?
@bucsredsoxredwings7 ай бұрын
@@jonscan3851 Or worked for him. I know quite a few McLaren mechanics who hated him
@ashmillermotorsport11 ай бұрын
Every single one of his answers is considered, reflective, and reflects charm and humility. He really was a once in a lifetime talent. There'll be no one quite like Senna.
@tiax159210 ай бұрын
max is also once in a lifetime talent and he has matured beyond his age already. i wish senna had matured his style (less aggressive) he may still be living today.
@50gary9 ай бұрын
The williams car killed Senna not his driving style. I think Ayrton would eat Max alive. The cars of today lack one essential element for a racing car, that is the car won't kill you.@@tiax1592
@sixsicsix68129 ай бұрын
@@tiax1592what killed him has nothing to do with his style
@Snufflegrunt9 ай бұрын
@@tiax1592 Max is only ever calm when he's 1st. Any lower than that and he sees red. Until 2021 (possibly even 2022) he had only ever won from the front row once. His problem isn't necessarily aggression - that's merely a symptom of his masked low confidence.
@sleep123a9 ай бұрын
@@Snufflegrunt Verstappen is not content with being the first loser. No one will remember who finished 2nd. Winners win, and only want to win. I don't blame the guy for being pissed off when he places 2nd
@Marko37-7311 ай бұрын
Senna and Mclaren were a match made in heaven, we were lucky to have witnessed their greatness ❤
@jacobmanitowabie-cooke6141 Жыл бұрын
I see how at the time they didn't understand his motivation to be so natural and realistic but also philosophical and hypothetical. Hes a contradiction. And he always speaks his truth from the heart. Ive watched him for hours just talking and I've never thought he lied to the camera or me. Hes a genuine human and amazing competitor.
@mathewhosier973911 ай бұрын
Seems the same fans who praise Senna are also the same fans who critique drivers like Schumacher and Verstappen for the very same style of aggressive dirty driving, all I'm asking is don't be a hypocrite, if your going to praise a dirty driver like Senna at least be consistent with relation to other aggressive drivers
@jacobmanitowabie-cooke614111 ай бұрын
@@mathewhosier9739 I think Max Verstappen is on the same level as Senna if someone who raced against him says so. So yeah, its the same thing. Michael is able to race Senna too but he never actually got to beat him, that's why its heartbreaking.
@wolfdog726511 ай бұрын
@@mathewhosier9739Most of us all are just fans, onlookers without the slightest idea of how and what it is to drive in whatever serious competition. Being passenger in a slower two seater on an empty track would make the most of us crap our pants, let standing being in a race. To me the “old” drivers are all heroes.
@kjay505611 ай бұрын
So you must lean left...this is about Senna and you have to bad mouth Verstappen. Must really have hurt but that he smacked down Lewis the last couple of years.@@mathewhosier9739
@kjay505611 ай бұрын
Verstappen like Senna doesn't kiss a$$...people can't handle honesty.
@Romulus100111 ай бұрын
I've never watched any of Senna's interviews until this video. He reminded me of Fernando Alonso; they have very similar personalities - careful and precise in their words, intense, not a particularly jolly person but neither are they angry; just a straightforward serious person, and as a listener, there is a sense of satisfaction in hearing someone like him. I really liked his ability to disregard the pointlessly controversial questions; I think that's the mark of a very stoic and confident character. A great person taken from us too soon.
@donaldmoser21211 ай бұрын
Always loved him. Glad that I got to see him race live a few times (Detroit GPs).
@gilvansouza11 ай бұрын
I have been watching F1 for 35 years. I can say hand on heart I have not seen a driver like him since. That 1993 season was phenomenal, he had no business fighting at front much less winning races. He drove his heart out and it was incredible to see. These days sometimes Max reminds me of Senna , for example that qualifying lap at Jedah in 2021 before he crashed in the last corner. But watching Senna in 93 sometimes it felt like you were watching something special. It was great.
@jimsin10110 ай бұрын
1993 was my favourite season too - Senna was indeed a phenomenon. Definitely agree that there has been no one like him since, although can't agree that MV reminds me of him at all.
@blaynestaleypro9 ай бұрын
@@jimsin101MV is best ever.
@RedHotFormula1Ай бұрын
Gilvan, and what you have to say about Adriane Galisteu "novinha"? DAMN!!! 😅
@lethargic_cow8 ай бұрын
Beautiful interview for a beautiful man. RIP Senna...
@eoinmurphy21011 ай бұрын
Thanks for this,Im 71 years old,bean a motor racing fan since I was a child,Senna was the best I ever saw,Max just might be close,unlike a lot of champions(like Lewis) Senna drove some poor cars and did great things with them,cant compare drivers from diferent times,but in my life ,I dont think Ive sean better.PEACE AND LOVE,
@stuartbritton481111 ай бұрын
Peace and love to you too. Fangio and Clark were the only drivers who were virtually untouchable. The others, Senna, Schumacher, Prost, Stewart, Moss and one or two others, could all be beaten in similar cars and conditions.
@Uscavalcanti218811 ай бұрын
@@stuartbritton4811sorry but you need to watch more things about Senna… NO ONE in F1 history has the intuitive talent Senna possessed
@Dejan_23Unlimited11 ай бұрын
Yes
@Phantom09611 ай бұрын
When has Max been in a bad car??
@Dejan_23Unlimited11 ай бұрын
@@Phantom096 ... probably one of the stupidest comments you can read *from Lewis fan.
@HamsterSport11 ай бұрын
Never seen this before! The interviewer makes a point of proving Senna is human at the start of the video, but that’s why we love him. We know he bled the exact same blood as us. Will always be grateful to him for introducing me to this sport, albeit 18 years after his death.
@danieltb4011 ай бұрын
As a brazilian and a also a Senna Fan, thank you very much for this interview.
@myousickoflife9 ай бұрын
This feels like a hit piece but he wasn't taking the bait. Legend.
@kingj64778 ай бұрын
It had all the malicious intent. From the presentation to the questions asked.
@zqzj7 ай бұрын
Totally. They were out to defame Senna, but it backfired gloriously.
@elianioriofarrellАй бұрын
Well he punched him
@MeltingRubberZ2811 ай бұрын
Too young to have seen/enjoyed these rivalries, but man Senna vs. Prost, Senna vs. MSC...the glory days of F1
@MAte9258 ай бұрын
Better era!
@bmrm20047 ай бұрын
Glory days indeed. The rivalries, the sound of those motors, less hi-tech in tv transmissions, etc. Nowadays it has lost a lot. To me it seems I am looking at a game/simulation.
@jadesmith682311 ай бұрын
All die hard F1 fans from Australia 🇦🇺 Loved and miss this human ❤️ 🐐❤️
@MAte9258 ай бұрын
And Adelaide track
@FarooqM.KhanGermany3 ай бұрын
Now 30 years later watching the video with tears in eyes Ayrton Senna's death.We will never forget him. RIP
@billynamer Жыл бұрын
Aryton senna competitive nature and general outlook of his growth as a man, has been a great influence on me.
@297banu Жыл бұрын
As you know he was 34 when he passed.The punching incident happened when he was 33.It's impossible to know what Senna would have thought of the incident in his 50s. He was a work in progress like all of us, but I believe this wasn't his best moment.
@jameshogan6142 Жыл бұрын
Exactly. He wasn't best pleased when Mansell went medieval on him.@@297banu
@arride459011 ай бұрын
@@297banuIf Senna was alive, Schumacher would not be Ferrari driver. Senna would be the Ferrari driver and maybe retire in Ferrari.
@albeback523411 ай бұрын
no no no … then Jesus would have been the Ferrari driver
@RyanPerrella8 ай бұрын
Me too 🩵
@petemelick973711 ай бұрын
Great upload, thanks. I was at that GP, saw Senna win and after the race he came on stage with Tina Turner as she sang 'Simply the Best'. Ripper moment in time I'll never forget. Cheers
@crazyRCSC10 ай бұрын
It's wonderful to come across an interview with Senna that I haven't seen before. However, my impression is that the editing of this interview aimed to downplay his achievements and sensationalize the way he presented himself on camera. Particularly, Sr. Jack Stewart made unwarranted comments about how Senna should project a more cheerful demeanor. I am glad that Murray Walker, in the end, set the record straight by emphasizing that English was Senna's second language and expressing the challenges he faced in finding the right words for the questions asked.
@sapolio62099 ай бұрын
Well put. I've seen Jack Stewart putting Senna down several times, but now he's asking him to change his personality? To be happy outside racing?
@anthonypesec485811 ай бұрын
I've watched this three times now. This is such a gem, especially for an Australian Ayrton Senna fan like myself. Thank you for posting this!
@SuperDavidGnomo11 ай бұрын
Senna was a gift from heaven. What a champion, what a MAN. Legend.
@klausschumacher712611 ай бұрын
So he went back to heaven at a very young age.... Better not to be a gift from heaven and be alive .....
@SuperDavidGnomo11 ай бұрын
@@klausschumacher7126 meglio un giorno da leone che cento da pecora.
@klausschumacher712611 ай бұрын
@@SuperDavidGnomo ich kann sie leider nicht verstehen da ich ihre Sprache nicht spreche.....
@klausschumacher712611 ай бұрын
@@SuperDavidGnomo in English.... I just watched the podcast of Niko Rosberg with Alain Prost..... You can learn from Alain Prost how Senna was as a team mate. He was a selfish and ruthless driver and he would be fined today in every F 1 race..... I am fed up with the hype because I watched all races of him and I am not very impressed about his fairness.....
@kingj64778 ай бұрын
@@klausschumacher7126even in this video Senna does not speak about Prost out of respect. That is a great gap in human caliber… so you do you and listen to the kinda people you familiarize with, never change.
@mikulitsi181910 ай бұрын
This was some great footage. Always interesting to listen to Senna's interviews. It's such a shame he's not here with us
@ifeeIcoke11 ай бұрын
Damn hearing Sir Jackie Stewart say “modern era” in 1993 is something
@fernandocesar23887 ай бұрын
They are calling modern era nowadays. In 50, 100 years from now people will have the same reaction as you do today: "oh, they were saying 'moderna era' in 2024!" 😂
@josephd.27257 ай бұрын
When the 90s rolled around, they were considered modern times. And I'd say 1993 was pretty modern compared to the 1960s when Jackie was driving... there was barely any safety back then! Jackie went off the track and couldn't even be found in the vegetation! Jackie then took it upon himself to strap a spanner to his steering wheel as a safety measure in case he was ever trapped again! That's f**ked! 🤣
@ryansta7 ай бұрын
@@josephd.2725 Sir Jackie Stewart did more arguably for Drivers safety than any other person involved in the sport. The guy is Legend.
@josephd.27256 ай бұрын
@@ryansta He did indeed... at a time when F1 safety was f**ked, and barely existed. Ayrton Senna is the next best contributor, posthumously.
@josephd.27256 ай бұрын
@@ryansta You know also what makes you sick about F1 these days, is the celebrities who barely know a thing about F1 and think they are "it" when walking through pit lane. In the past year, a F1 legend like Jackie Stewart was snubbed and treated like a second class citizen during a pit lane walk. What an absolute joke it has become!
@joseavs11 ай бұрын
Senna was a genius. What he achieved in his first ever test with Williams with the previous year’s car beating by a second in Donington Park the best time that the team did in just 26 laps was astonishing. Then Silverstone test with McLaren. The rest is history.
@fiarandompenaltygeneratorm504411 ай бұрын
Frank should have signed him...Maybe champion as early as '85? Easy wins in 1986 and 1987. Honda most likely stick with Williams past 1988...Who knows how many championships they would have won. He'd also most likely still be alive.
@joseavs11 ай бұрын
@@fiarandompenaltygeneratorm5044 Agreed
@learoast11 ай бұрын
Jackie NEVER like Senna. Stewart is an arrogant ass
@ceirwan11 ай бұрын
@@learoast This all happened most likely before you were born. I think you need to let it go.
@klausschumacher712611 ай бұрын
I don't think that he was a genius because as a genius you should not always blame the others. In my opinion a genius should be good in his job and good with others...
@lotusesprit3811 ай бұрын
Senna, Clark were in another league, absolute perfection. Rest in peace champions
@dzonibravo786711 ай бұрын
Prost was absolutely in the same league.
@gringostarr6911 ай бұрын
@@dzonibravo7867 Totally agreed.
@JIA132711 ай бұрын
PERFECTION ?? Give me a break !! A perfect racing GOD like Senna could'nt hear , feel , or sense that something was wrong with his car and just kept driving the hell out of it until he crashed and died ?? He was'nt as "talented" as everyone says. He crashed into countless other drivers , putting them out of the race. He was irresponsible not only with his life , but with his competitors lives as well. Reckless people like Senna , always die young.
@lotusesprit3811 ай бұрын
@@JIA1327 it's your opinion,get more infomation before writting garbage like this!
@skull116110 ай бұрын
@@JIA1327 Senna and Prost while both in Mclaren were driving the most dominate cars in F1 and even still Senna frequently got pole position in front of Prost by more than a second, that is an unbelievable gap when you realize Prost is also one of the best drivers at that time It doesn't matter if he crashed into people he was still the fastest man put in an F1 car in that era and many consider him the best driver ever, Schumacher said it himself You are either an imbecile or someone with too much time on their hands trying to get reactions out of people because no way a level headed person will look at Senna's career and say he is not the best F1 driver ever
@TPWM10 ай бұрын
I would have floored Irvine too just based off of his hair and his wardrobe choice
@billgoodwin874211 ай бұрын
I was able to watch all of the F1 races he did live on TV. He was a very rare talent.
@anais63710 ай бұрын
Thank for this interview…. My nephew is 12y and his name is Ayrton named after senna I make sure to show him this interview I know he’ll love it
@drwilsondell10 ай бұрын
This interview is a priceless gem. Ayrton is nowadays a legend by his natural super gifted talent , ferocious flawless driver to defend a victory and a enigmatic peacefully human personality out of sport. Like the Beatles , time made his fame increased year after year. He has gone about 30 years ago. His legendary driver skills will remain forever in all F1 fan memories. . GOAT.
@tomsmalley889911 ай бұрын
Where have the last 30 years gone...
@truntteri4 ай бұрын
yeah, time has gone too fast
@FarooqM.KhanGermany3 ай бұрын
Now 30 years later watching the video with tears in eyes Ayrton Senna's death.We will never forget him. RIP
@cesarovermars643111 ай бұрын
what is interesting about the Senna-Irvine confrontation is that leading up to it Gerhard Berger fed Senna some "Schnapps" (shots) and really riled him up to go confront Irvine.
@JENNY-kh3to11 ай бұрын
He looked so humble and gentle..Big charity work for orphans...What a talent ! Divine driver ❤
@jameshogan61429 ай бұрын
He was anything but, more like arrogant and vindictive. Refusing Derek Warwick a place at Lotus and deliberately smashing into Prost at Japan 1990.
@drsack5677 ай бұрын
@jameshogan6142 it's funny how you'd say that, but in an interview between Murray Walker and James Hunt, Hunt said that Prost gave absolutely no space to Senna at the 1990 Japanese GP, where Senna was very clearly on the kerbs while on the inside line. As much as I did believe it was Senna's fault till that day, I have a different outlook on what happened after I saw that interview.
@jameshogan61427 ай бұрын
@@drsack567 Yes Prost should have given Senna a wide berth that day and taken his chances later in the race. Most drivers would have given way but Senna made no bones about it afterwards openly telling people he had driven into Prost deliberately. It would have been great if Hunt had given a more detailed explanation of driver etiquette in those situations, e.g. in a normal car in a town setting it is customary to give way to traffic on the right hand side at least in my country and to keep left pass right etc.
@spidermunky42837 ай бұрын
AHHHH!!! I remember watching this interview back in the day. I never thought I'd ever see it again. Thank you for uploading this! It's awesome to see footage of Senna plodding around in my hometown of Adelaide!!
@thalesmontarini41192 ай бұрын
Senna is not dead, he is just one lap ahead of us. The best in History!
@marclaloue103611 ай бұрын
SENNA. SIMPLY THE BEST .
@keithbox168411 ай бұрын
Senna was right about that corner in the picture being at Monaco.
@Praise_God36911 ай бұрын
neah ,it was adelaide...
@P1nkR10 ай бұрын
Adelaide has never had red and white kerbstones. They have been either blue and white or yellow, red and blue. In the year of that painting/picture, it was blue and white.
@wazreacts9 ай бұрын
@@P1nkR inconsequential to your point, but I thought I'd add anyway - in 1985 the kerbing was green and white
@tkyosmith9 ай бұрын
He said Monte Carlo. Let's remember : Senna was the King in Monaco. He knew it as the back of his hand.
@paularnold19306 ай бұрын
Of course 👍!!*
@C_and_C...11 ай бұрын
I would love to hear Ayrton's thoughts on the old Falcon hire car.
@florencemodina6293 Жыл бұрын
Irvine is so lucky he experienced the punch of a legend😂😂😂😂
@rafabjj Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂
@JoseRoberto-ce2ym11 ай бұрын
Apenas será lembrado por este motivo. Simples assim.
@abdelkadernoam415311 ай бұрын
Yes 🤭👍👍👍
@flazone448610 ай бұрын
@@JoseRoberto-ce2yme por el 99 tambem
@flazone448610 ай бұрын
@@JoseRoberto-ce2yme por el 99 tambem
@nickspriggs269911 ай бұрын
I remember watching this as a kid. I love the classical music playing with the slo-mos near the end
@neilreid90059 ай бұрын
For me, Senna will always be my favorite F1 driver. He epitomized the sport in every way. The watered down version of F1 we have today fails to inspire like these greats and their fantastic machines in the 90's. F1 was never better than that.
@1970PMD11 ай бұрын
Putting aside the loss to F1 racing and the fans missing out on Senna winning more championships, the greater loss is to the people of Brazil and the world. This man could have run for president and would have won. Senna's contributions still make a difference today to many poor and minorities in his country. Great man, his death is a stain on F1 forever. RIP Mr. Senna.
@jmilne575111 ай бұрын
I doubt he would of won more championships.. There was a bloke called Schumacher who was already proving to be better than Senna...
@callumcc889711 ай бұрын
@@jmilne5751I’m sorry but you are completely delusional if you think he wouldn’t have won at least 1 Championship with Williams and potentially another with Ferrari or McLaren! The timeline would have changed and Schumacher would never of had an easy time 1995 and you can forget 1996 and him joining Ferrari! The Williams Senna was driving would have been winning from Monaco onwards!
@1970PMD11 ай бұрын
Not sure why you would say I am delusional, obviously you know nothing about that era. Only regulations kept Senna from winning with Williams, and as history has now showed the world, Benetton was cheating with traction control. As far as Schumacher it took him years to consistently win with Ferrari. Try having an argument and not ad hominem attacks next time. @@callumcc8897
@1970PMD11 ай бұрын
That bloke Schumacher could not place pole in Italy even with traction control and Senna's Williams regulated by F1's B.S. rules. I am pretty confident he would have won more titles.@@jmilne5751
@jmilne575111 ай бұрын
@@callumcc8897 You can ONLY make assumptions... Schumacher was proving/proved to be better... Senna would NEVER had joined Ferrari becuase he ONLY wanted to drive competitive cars at that stage... He offered to drive for free when Mansell made his demands... So Schumacher still would of ended up at Ferrari & winning those titles as he did
@maximilliancunningham609111 ай бұрын
I had the honor of working with Murray in Montreal, what you see is EXACTLY what you got. Great to work with.
@JuanBarberis10 ай бұрын
This man was an honorable human being & great competitor.
@FarooqM.KhanGermany3 ай бұрын
Now 30 years later watching the video with tears in eyes Ayrton Senna's death.We will never forget him. RIP
@1greenMitsi11 ай бұрын
3:27 when senna came into F1, he made a name for himself by getting a backmarker up to the podium and scoring points, challenging drivers of the ilk of Lauda Prost Piquet in inferior machinery Then youve got eddie irvine who who wants to make a name for himself by unlapping himself in his first race. Big difference, Damon
@duneideannaer599011 ай бұрын
Yeah well said, as they were trying to state they're case they showed senna tussling with FRONT markers like ah dunno, 1st 2n 3rd....... I was actually laughing as I experience the very same thing within the prism of west of Scotland football. And the dubious intentions and i biased nterests in one team only. We call these writers, presenters, Succulent Lamb......
@ic3man11 ай бұрын
Tbf Toleman weren’t really backmarkers in 1984, Toleman were just reeeeeeeeally unreliable in 1984.
@1greenMitsi11 ай бұрын
@@ic3man tbf if you take qualifying into consideration, they definitely werent a front running team........specially if you average out the starting position of both drivers. Regularly starting outside P15 is backmarker by definition, regardless or unreliability
@ic3man11 ай бұрын
@@1greenMitsi I see your point now. Thanks for the explanation
@mitchcolburn1216Ай бұрын
Not a goddamn thing with what Eddie did. Your job as a RACER is to RACE, not lie down and die.
@derrickallen205411 ай бұрын
He said he would pay attention to which way the flags were blowing before entering a corner, if the flags were blowing into him, he knew he could enter the corner at a slightly higher speed due to slightly extra downforce. Legend of legends
@Jason.cbr1000rr11 ай бұрын
Dude that trick has been done since the 1920s..
@derrickallen205411 ай бұрын
@@Jason.cbr1000rr dude I've watched numerous other racing docs and not once has anyone else mentioned that. Source
@googlreviews781311 ай бұрын
I've been watching and attending F1 races since 1980s, Senna to me is still best there ever was. Regardless of numbers and stats, today's F1 is structured in such way that driver can win multiple championships quite easily if he is in the car that has advantage over the rest of the field and others can't develop their car to compete due to caps and restrictions. As a person and driver, Senna was simply the best, the only other driver that I'd keep in same discussion, and that's hard for me because I hated the guy, is Schumacher.
@lth107211 ай бұрын
There are so many awesome drivers in that era. Senna, Prost, Piquet, Schumacher, Hakkinen, Hill and countless more.
@edsonormmota11 ай бұрын
Senna show to all layers how to be unique or real...real winner.
@john2ndname11 ай бұрын
I'm from Adelaide and remember the broadcasts "Wide world of Sports" it was so good every time the Grand Prix came to Adelaide.so many history making races and track side in the pits commentry in Adelaide. Great memories that will never be forgotten.
@bjorge189611 ай бұрын
There should be grand prix at Adelaide, along with the one in Melbourne. That said, I preferred Adelaide to Melbourne.
@DrewBlankMusic9 ай бұрын
Thanks for posting, this was awesome!
@yep348910 ай бұрын
I love how they describe him as ‘less than charming” yet 30 years later Senna remains our beloved charming F-1 driving Legend. 💚💛
@lyndoncmp575112 күн бұрын
No that was James Hunt. Senna wasn't very charming or charismatic. Let's be honest. RIP to both, but Senna didn't have much of a charismatic personality.
@cwshtygriff1310 ай бұрын
Remember him well testing at Pembrey circuit during the 80’s . He settled into our town like any other local ‘ a genuine normal man that had time for anyone.
@fletchytfc11 ай бұрын
And those 30 seconds of Murray Walker show why he was the greatest F1 pundit.
@unique1112410 ай бұрын
Well said. He is missed.
@smooches35811 ай бұрын
Only these media dogs presented Senna in a derogative way, everyone else who knew him well know what a great man and human being he was. This video was more about wanting to make him look like a disturbed guy than anything else. No footage of any of his brilliance on the track, just a showing of racing accidents. The necessity to bring down a South American professional with stupid questions, clown-like affirmations and controversy, making him appear a savage, just shows how the British and Europeans were not comfortable with him being a champion. Shame on you, jealous vultures who never will get to the heels of Senna
@LauroRM10 ай бұрын
People like Jack Stewart are part of the system in F1, they don't accept a non-European driver being a winner, that's why they said all this shit
@MitosNãoKagghamNaSuaCabeça7 ай бұрын
That explais a lot, why the F1 owners try to get rid of brazilians drivers, cos they know what these pilots are capable of.
@lastmanstanding93897 ай бұрын
He was an entitled prick.
@Richtschwert6 ай бұрын
The first thing that came to my mind was how much Ayrton seems to has aged between this interview 2min50s which is at the end of 1993 and then look at interviews before imola 1994. A gap from just about 6 months and he seems aged 5 years in my opinion !? Maybe a proof how much pressure and stress he had in 1994.
@wazreacts9 ай бұрын
These Adelaide grand prix were my childhood. So nostalgic! A pity such a driven man who was technically ahead of all of his peers as a driver was not able to retire, and enjoy the life he deserved.
@megawutt10 ай бұрын
What a tragedy! Senna was at the peak of his abilities when he died. Imagine the battle he would have fought with Schumacher or Hakkinen.
@jameshogan61429 ай бұрын
I honestly believe that Senna was past his peak in 1994 and had he survived Imola he would have been outpaced by Schumacher. It would have been a great season had he remained at McLaren with Prost having a year of his contract remaining at Williams vs Schumacher at Benneton.
@dugoncalves8 ай бұрын
@@jameshogan6142 I doubt, Schumacher finished just one point ahead of Hill, in Brazil before Imola, Senna was lapping Hill, not to mention the three poles. Should have Senna driven the FW16b later that year he would hardly lose the championship.
@jameshogan61428 ай бұрын
@@dugoncalves It was a pity that Senna did not complete the full season of 1994. It is true Williams did make tremendous gains in the second half of the year but Schumacher was already so far ahead I believe six wins to Hill's one at the mid way point that he would have being playing catch up and also with a very strong team mate such as Hill competing against him he would not have had things all his own way. Also he was now the veteran with a younger aggressive driver such as Schumacher who was far more ruthless than Prost and was even more determined to use any tactic against Senna to ensure he won. He was not in the least bit deferential to the older Brazilian and was confident that he had surpassed the rest of the field in terms of prowess. Senna displaced Prost from Williams believing that car would give him an edge in technology but when Schumacher beat him in the first two races he started complaining that Benneton had superior equipment which he had always accused Prost as using as an excuse when Senna won. There was also a rule of thumb in those days that if a driver had not scored any points in the first two races he was not going to win the championship.
@dugoncalves8 ай бұрын
@@jameshogan6142 In no galaxy Hill was a stronger competitor to Senna, he was being lapped by Senna in Brazil. Surely Senna would score more points than Hill, which finished just one point behind Schumacher.
@jameshogan61428 ай бұрын
@@dugoncalves Yes but by the same argument Schumacher beat Senna decisively in the first two races demonstrating that he was a much better driver than Senna.
@soralaraison11 ай бұрын
The last period of old f1,senna fly with passengers pick up luggages and go to rent a car around anyone !!!! Could you imagine that today ???
@akarilotube7 ай бұрын
Murray set them straight at the end and that's the way I've always remembered Senna.
@craighigh89711 ай бұрын
"I tend to agree with Jackie" not on this occasion, well said Murray.
@mariadefatimademenezes830411 ай бұрын
Love, Love, Ayrton Senna for ever ❤ THE BEST 👏👏🏆✨✨✨
@GabrielFreitas304 ай бұрын
I'm from Brazil I was a big Senna fan and that very last segment where the jornalist talk about his thinking process in a foreign language he is on point. Even though Senna express very well in English it isn't close to how he talk in his native language. He is so dearly missed. Such a legend.
@intothemultiverse103313 күн бұрын
4:10 that was absolutely a “you ain’t finishing this race”
@Tamburello_199411 ай бұрын
The difference between the Irvine incident, and all the replays that showed the Senna style was Irvine was a backmarker, not fighting for position like Senna was in each and every one of the replays.
@nigelkelley300411 ай бұрын
Some of those replays were misleading too e.g. the one where he went up the back of Mansell in Adelaide. Mansell braked way too early for the corner and senna had nowhere to go.
@ceirwan11 ай бұрын
@@nigelkelley3004 What is it with some Senna fans that think he can't be wrong or make a mistake. Irvine was a backmarker and out of order, so its OK to punch him. Mansell braked too early, still not Sennas fault. If he shot someone you'd probably say that he had no way of knowing the gun was loaded. He was one of if not the most talented drivers to enter the sport, but that doesn't make him infallible. Not even close.
@nigelkelley300411 ай бұрын
@@ceirwanof course. There was no excuse for punching Irvine no matter how much of a dickhead he had been. He also shouldn’t have run into Prost on the first corner at Suzuka, although I understand why he did. The point about that montage is that it was trying to convey a point that wasn’t true. There were some in the media including Jackie Stewart who were running a campaign that he was reckless. He was not involved in more incidents than others and many of the ones he was involved in were not his fault. Including that one with Mansell.
@ceirwan11 ай бұрын
@@nigelkelley3004 I think Jackie Stewart never really forgave him for the Prost incident. Because even Senna knew that his comment about the gap being there was not true. Its one of those quotes that has its own life now, but was originally used to justify going for a gap that never really existed. And I see Jackies perspective as well, he came from a background of spending much of his life trying to make F1 safer, often incurring the wrath of the press and F1 itself in doing so. And drivers like Senna did tend to have a a bit of a me me me attitude. (which is arguably part of being one of the best ever) So I can see why he rubbed Jackie the wrong way.
@nigelkelley300411 ай бұрын
@@ceirwan I think Jackie was being a provocative ass (yes Senna was caught off guard and fibbed). But a favourable assessment of Jackie’s position would be that Jackie drove in an era when contact often meant death and Senna was driving in a different era.
@peterjohnson893511 ай бұрын
Controversy in any sport is inevitable but makes things more interesting. We can all lose control to a certain extent in the heat of the moment.
@myousickoflife9 ай бұрын
The segment at the end is amazing, its the definition of nostalgic. Also the music they used is from the movie Koyaanisqatsi which is well worth watching. Especially when you're high.
@Unknown_106-t8kАй бұрын
He was so handsome🤧
@andrewlutes20489 ай бұрын
That’s a lovely ending there with Jackie and Murray.
@crystalracing479411 ай бұрын
Damon Hill ended up being Senna's team-mate shortly after that comment 😂
@tmspooner14 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing,senna is the goat,how good was the Adelaide street circuit 1000 times better than Melbourne
@Praise_God36911 ай бұрын
I love this stuff...my first race as a child was belgium 92 so i dont have to say i was a huuuuge schumacher fan after that ! But senna was senna i had a huuuuge respect for him ❤
@P.P71811 ай бұрын
Senna best driver ever .
@zarbon70011 ай бұрын
Jim Clark is the G.O.A.T.
@rumster44011 ай бұрын
Senna... motivated by his early nemesis Fullerton👊
@rookiec422 күн бұрын
I was watching the last race on TV.. a huge fan.. and quit watching F1 after his death.. just highlights now.. I remember that I was crying all day. I'm not a Brazilian or something.. but it effected me so deep. Now watching documentaries, movies or series of him and still tears coming.. R.I.P. Beco..
@theroadahead603311 ай бұрын
Great to see film of Ayrton I've never seen before. Pity the interviewer was totally biased against him!
@kjay505611 ай бұрын
Same with the press today and Verstappen
@turbo_brian11 ай бұрын
"Would anyone pick that race other than senna?" Yeah, most f1 fans I'd say....
@ScottElliott8889 ай бұрын
The greatest driver ever, past or future. Never a favourite of the biased English media. Unlike many champions he could win in anything. I was disappointed when he went to drive for the enemy, Williams.😣 Admit I shed a tear yesterday when I realized what day it was.
@Rodrigo-bv7uv11 ай бұрын
17:37 that face you make when you remember you forgot to lock your house front door before going to the airport.
@boing61511 ай бұрын
I love how Jackie states Senna may be the greatest driver of "oh the last 20 years or so" hmmm, that would take you back to.........the end of Jackie Stewart's career 😉
@fiarandompenaltygeneratorm504411 ай бұрын
Hahaha...I love Jackie Stewart, but no one ever said he didn't have quite the ego.
@micsunday1411 ай бұрын
I thought the same 😂
@jameshogan61429 ай бұрын
27 wins from 99 starts beats Senna's average of wins to Grand Prix starts so he might well be justified in stating that. @@fiarandompenaltygeneratorm5044
@luannabittencourt691916 күн бұрын
“You have to do things the way you feel it’s right and not the way people want you to do. If you do the way people want you to do, you are nobody” Senna❤
@S6vayToad9 ай бұрын
Still hurts all these later, I remember it like it was yesterday. Oh what he could have gone on to achieve sadly the world was robbed of such a genius.
@kingjulien31120 күн бұрын
He wasn’t just aggressive, he knew what he was doing, he was one with the track, everything was extremely calculated. Other new drivers being visibly more aggressive is nowhere near what Senna was actually doing, legend forever!!
@petenojd11 ай бұрын
The first part of the interview is basically a hit piece on Senna. It got better as it went on but it goes to show just how many people (Europeans) didn't understand Senna and equated any incident that included Senna to be a result of his aggressiveness and recklessness, which is not true. He's still F1's greatest driver to the present day.
@eEmm110 ай бұрын
Europeans? This hit piece was made in Australia
@ErickSoares37 ай бұрын
@@eEmm1 Part of the United Kingdom.
@elizabethsilva669117 күн бұрын
Ayrtonnnn Senna do Brasil!!!!! I grew up with him on the TV every Sunday.❤
@FarooqM.KhanGermany3 ай бұрын
Now 30 years later watching the video with tears in eyes Ayrton ❤ Senna's death.We will never forget him.Ayrton was very special. RIP 😭
@Zoe-u1r7 ай бұрын
Ayrton was never afraid to show the world who he truly was, both the good and the bad and we should respect him for that, not mock it. This man was a true gentleman and genuinely cared about others and Eddie Irvine and Damon Hill's comments are pathetic, and Jean Marie Balestre's attitude towards Ayrton was shameful, he made no secret of the fact that he didn't like him in front of numerous people around the world. Nobody's perfect but I hate careless remarks like the ones people made and you Jackie Stewart, you might be a world champion but you are not a good judge of character, its clear Ayrton was misunderstood by too many people but he has given me a good impression of himself and I will always think of him as the best and most influential legend of formula one. Rip Ayrton ❤
@HDVideoPixel11 ай бұрын
Fantastic footage!
@alexandrosathanasopoulos965411 ай бұрын
Many thanks from Greece!!
@Fabtp7611 ай бұрын
A lot of guys from Europe attacked him all the time because they couldn’t deal with the fact that a Brazilian was the greatest driver of all time (and wore at the time). The attacks on his “driving style” are so biased and unjustified that it is hilarious if not childish. Senna is the goat and some (not all) don’t know how to deal with it. Get a therapy, drink a lot it’s not Ayrton problem and not any of us Brazilians 😉😉
@ColonelJohnmatrix10007 ай бұрын
What a great interview. I have never seen this
@FerroRosso7 ай бұрын
Muy buen video, donde se podra conseguir el libro?
@jeffreypostma683211 ай бұрын
I never could make my mind up about Senna. I was born too late to see him in his prime, but his death was a shock. But it also caused an awful deification of Senna which makes him superhuman, without flaws, the perfect racing driver. I do believe he is one of the best, with an incredible feel that only the best drivers have. But he also had some obvious flaws, and his ego has gotten the better of him on various occasions. You could say he had more natural speed than Prost, but the frenchman had other qualities, like a keen feel for strategy, pushing only as much as neccesary. There are some drivers that I believe are a notch above, of which Senna is one. Others are Fangio, Clark, Stewart, Lauda, Prost, Schumacher, Hamilton and Verstappen.
@Anonymous-gl6ot11 ай бұрын
Senna fan myself because he's such a fascinating character. But your assessment is probably the best put together I've read of the whole thing.
@tonycox562511 ай бұрын
I'd agree with all of the above apart from Hamilton.
@jeffreypostma683211 ай бұрын
@@tonycox5625 I don't want to be the Max fan that excludes him. If you look at his career, it has been stellar from the start. He has the most race wins ever and most championships (with MSC) and he has been up against some very good drivers (Button, Alonso, Rosberg, Vettel). He is not without mistakes, but he belongs in this list for me. For he debut year alone, I think he deserves to be up there.
@hristoitchov11 ай бұрын
I would add Alonso to that list.
@jeffreypostma683211 ай бұрын
I agree that he probably should be, even if he has not maximised the potential he has/had through some bad career choices and bad luck. @@hristoitchov
@wgs11110 ай бұрын
Saudades Eterna do nosso campeão 🇧🇷 Esteja no Paraíso, acelerando ao lado de Deus... 🇧🇷🏎️🏁
@dr.levanpertenava6051 Жыл бұрын
Who said great Ayrton Senna dyed in Williams Renault F1 w16 car ? He still lives on Digitally lives and will forever
@tonycox562511 ай бұрын
I think you'll find that he DIED, he didn't change colour.
@barrycuda376911 ай бұрын
That Aussie interviewer was Ken from Mudgee ,I used to love that late night TV show he did with Graham Kennedy, half the time he was drying his eyes from laughing at Grahams jokes. 😂
@atedejong562011 ай бұрын
Down to earth F1 drivers back then. No star arrogance!
@davidmelville567511 ай бұрын
You're joking right?
@marguskiis771111 ай бұрын
@@davidmelville5675 no
@Barlos313111 ай бұрын
"But to become the most loved he will need a personality transplant.“ Does this muppet know anythong about F1? Senna waa and revered by millions. A legend in hsi lifetime.....
@jameshogan61429 ай бұрын
I don't know what his level of knowledge of F1 is but he is right that Senna was arrogant, vindictive, selfish and ruthless.
@IngeniusFool7 ай бұрын
I feel much more english than german when I listen to those magnificent gents. Maybe a little brazilian too. Sensational media coverage has done a lot…
@chipcity301611 ай бұрын
Ch9's coverage and artistic F1 pieces were first class.
@michaeljamieson358210 ай бұрын
God I'd forgotten what the old Adelaide Airport entrance looked like.