1. Hello! Hello!
Copy !req
2. What a surprise!
Copy !req
3. Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Copy !req
4. Thank you so much.
Copy !req
5. - Thank you.
- Thank you.
Copy !req
6. Thank you very much.
Copy !req
7. Welcome. And coming up
in this week's show:
Copy !req
8. Abbie is sideways on ice
in a 911 Turbo...
Copy !req
9. Richard drives Jim Clark's
beautiful Lotus 25...
Copy !req
10. and I nearly fall over.
Copy !req
11. That...
Copy !req
12. - Exciting looking show.
- Right.
Copy !req
13. That is all to come. Now...
Copy !req
14. Hang on a minute.
Does that mean Howard
and Adrian aren't coming on?
Copy !req
15. - No. Haven't got time.
Copy !req
16. We actually begin
with the French.
Copy !req
17. Er... now, they don't make
a sports car very often,
Copy !req
18. but when they do,
literally nobody buys it.
Copy !req
19. We've had
the Venturi Atlantique,
Copy !req
20. and then there was
the Matra Murena,
Copy !req
21. and then there was
the Simca Sport.
Copy !req
22. And all of them fell down the
back of the sofa of history.
Copy !req
23. Yeah, yeah, but you're
conveniently forgetting
to mention
Copy !req
24. the best of the French
sports car makers.
Copy !req
25. That's like saying the best
of the airborne plagues.
Copy !req
26. - No.
- The best of the...
Copy !req
27. No, it isn't.
There is one French maker
Copy !req
28. that's been consistently good
at making sports cars,
Copy !req
29. and they've made a new one,
and I've been testing it.
Copy !req
30. It's called the A110,
Copy !req
31. and it's made by Alpine,
Copy !req
32. a French sports car firm
Copy !req
33. who have a history
of hitting the spot.
Copy !req
34. The original A110,
for example,
Copy !req
35. won the World Rally
Championship in 1973.
Copy !req
36. And it's that car
that gives the new one
Copy !req
37. not only its name
but also its looks.
Copy !req
38. So, what we have here
Copy !req
39. is a small, pure,
no-nonsense sports car
Copy !req
40. aimed squarely at the Porsche
Cayman and the Audi TT.
Copy !req
41. And this, unfortunately, is
where the problems begin.
Copy !req
42. You see, this launch version
of the Alpine costs £51,000.
Copy !req
43. £51,000.
Copy !req
44. Now, for £1,000 more,
you can have the TT RS.
Copy !req
45. That's the one Clarkson was
driving in the last series.
Copy !req
46. And that's more powerful,
and it's faster.
Copy !req
47. And the Porsche Cayman
you buy for £51,000
Copy !req
48. is also more powerful than
this, and it's a Porsche.
Copy !req
49. Whereas this is an Alpine.
Copy !req
50. That's something you're going
to have to explain when
you're down the pub.
Copy !req
51. Even the engine
sounds a bit lame.
Copy !req
52. I don't mean
the noise it makes,
Copy !req
53. I mean when somebody asks
you, "What's that got, then,
mister?"
Copy !req
54. Because the answer is,
"A four-cylinder
1.8-litre turbo, sonny!"
Copy !req
55. For over £50,000.
I mean, is that it?
Copy !req
56. Also, I'm not sure
about the looks.
Copy !req
57. The original 1960s version
was a masterpiece.
Copy !req
58. But for me, this modern
reboot doesn't quite work.
Copy !req
59. The problem, I think,
is that on modern cars
Copy !req
60. there are rules about things
like how high the headlights
are above the ground,
Copy !req
61. how forgiving the bonnet is
if you run into a pedestrian.
Copy !req
62. And once you stretch
modern legislation
over 1960s design language,
Copy !req
63. you end up with a sort of
slightly lame tribute act.
Copy !req
64. So, is there anything good
to report?
Copy !req
65. Well, thankfully, yes.
Copy !req
66. For starters, although
Alpine is owned by Renault,
Copy !req
67. this car is not just a
hot Mégane dressed up
in some fancy suit.
Copy !req
68. The A110 is in fact
a mid-engined,
rear-drive sports car
Copy !req
69. designed from scratch,
on a clean sheet of paper.
Copy !req
70. The body and the chassis are
made entirely of aluminium.
Copy !req
71. And the reason for that
is simple - its lightness.
Copy !req
72. And from that starting point,
the Alpine engineers
Copy !req
73. nerded their way
through the rest of the car
Copy !req
74. and shaved off every
spare gram they could find.
Copy !req
75. The seats, for example,
are half the weight
Copy !req
76. of the ones you'll find
in any hot Renault.
Copy !req
77. The handbrake is built
into the main callipers,
Copy !req
78. rather than being separate,
saving another 2.5 kilos.
Copy !req
79. Even the stereo is a bespoke,
lightweight design.
Copy !req
80. And then there's
this boot at the front,
Copy !req
81. which is just deep enough
for a small suitcase like
this one.
Copy !req
82. But now I think about it,
putting the suitcase in there
would just add weight.
Copy !req
83. So what I would do is just
pack my overnight stuff
straight in there.
Copy !req
84. The only downside is
that in the morning,
Copy !req
85. I have to go outside if
I want a fresh pair of pants.
Copy !req
86. So, thanks to Alpine's
fanatical diet regime,
Copy !req
87. this car is 300 kilos lighter
than a Cayman or an Audi TT.
Copy !req
88. And that has
a profound effect.
Copy !req
89. Suddenly,
it doesn't really matter
Copy !req
90. that you've only got 1.8
litres and 248 horsepower.
Copy !req
91. This thing absolutely
zips along.
Copy !req
92. Nought to 60,
four and a half seconds.
Copy !req
93. Top speed limited
to 155 miles an hour.
Copy !req
94. And then,
when you get to a corner...
Copy !req
95. you find out just
how agile this thing is.
Copy !req
96. It's like driving a feather.
Copy !req
97. It is like a cartoon car.
It should come with those
little bubbles saying...
Copy !req
98. But even though the A110
is built to minimalist
principles,
Copy !req
99. you never feel like
you're in some miserable,
Copy !req
100. Spartan track-day car.
Copy !req
101. It has air-con, sat-nav,
Copy !req
102. phone connectivity -
Copy !req
103. all the modern things
you want.
Copy !req
104. This whole lightness
and smallness thing
Copy !req
105. cascades down in a sort
of waterfall of pure joy.
Copy !req
106. Lower weight means you
don't need such big tyres,
Copy !req
107. you don't need so much grip.
Copy !req
108. That gives the car more feel.
Copy !req
109. Low weight means you use
less fuel, you make
lower emissions.
Copy !req
110. It's just win-win-win-win
all the way.
Copy !req
111. This is actually
the most intelligent car
I've driven for years.
Copy !req
112. And I love it for that.
I love it.
Copy !req
113. Thank you.
Copy !req
114. Erm...
Copy !req
115. So... So despite
the ordinary engine,
Copy !req
116. the looks that
you're not sure about,
Copy !req
117. and the high price,
you liked it?
Copy !req
118. I did. I loved it, yeah.
Copy !req
119. - Yes, but would you buy one?
- I have.
Copy !req
120. - You've bought one of those?
- I have.
Copy !req
121. And actually,
so has Gordon Murray.
Copy !req
122. I've brought
a picture of him along. Him.
Copy !req
123. He designed the McLaren F1,
so he knows.
Copy !req
124. Yeah, so it's the
sports car of choice for
old men with terrible shirts.
Copy !req
125. - So that's good to know.
Evidently.
Copy !req
126. But, now let's see how fast
it goes round the Eboladrome,
shall we?
Copy !req
127. And she's off.
Copy !req
128. Brisk start, and a parp from
the exhaust on the up-change.
Copy !req
129. Immediately onto
the Isn't Straight.
Copy !req
130. And actually,
that's not hanging around.
Copy !req
131. Perhaps James was right
about the benefits of...
Copy !req
132. whatever it was
he was saying.
Copy !req
133. Howling round
the final bend of the Isn't.
Copy !req
134. Dropping down now
into Your Name Here.
Copy !req
135. Scrubbing off speed
in a hurry.
Copy !req
136. Torturing those tyres, but
that does look pretty nimble.
Copy !req
137. Now, the canter back down
the Isn't, picking up speed.
Copy !req
138. Dab of brakes
at the mid-point.
Copy !req
139. Now much harder
on the brakes,
Copy !req
140. flicking down the seven-speed
box for Old Lady's House.
Copy !req
141. Any understeer?
Copy !req
142. No, not bad
for a mid-engined car
Copy !req
143. with no weight over the nose.
Copy !req
144. I actually rather
like the styling of this,
Copy !req
145. and I'm right.
Copy !req
146. Just Field of Sheep
to go now.
Copy !req
147. Here we are.
Copy !req
148. And oh, yes, that's an
exuberant drift to finish,
Copy !req
149. and across the line!
Copy !req
150. Very good.
Copy !req
151. Very good.
Good driving, on form.
Copy !req
152. Right.
Copy !req
153. Right, let's see where it
goes on our lap board.
Copy !req
154. Will it go in the top ten?
Copy !req
155. Oh, dear, no, it doesn't.
Copy !req
156. Sorry, May, that is dismal
Copy !req
157. for a mid-engined car.
It is.
Copy !req
158. It isn't about things like
lap times. I told you before.
Copy !req
159. He who is first
shall be last,
Copy !req
160. and the last
shall be first.
Copy !req
161. - Yes, but it's 15th.
- It is, yeah.
Copy !req
162. - It is, it is.
- So?
Copy !req
163. It's the Romain Grosjean
of cars, that is.
Copy !req
164. - Romain who?
- Grosjean.
Copy !req
165. - Who's he?
- He's a French racing driver.
Copy !req
166. The 15th best Formula One
driver in the world, in fact.
Copy !req
167. - You'd like him.
- I already do.
Copy !req
168. Good. Good,
so we've sorted that out.
Copy !req
169. It's time for us to move on,
because right now it is time
Copy !req
170. for us to scrump
an apple of chat
Copy !req
171. from the orchard
of intercourse,
Copy !req
172. which is on
Conversation Street.
Copy !req
173. - I like that one.
- I thought you would.
Copy !req
174. - I like that one a lot.
- That's so up your street.
Copy !req
175. Um... right now, lots of
people these days
Copy !req
176. are buying old cars,
Copy !req
177. and we think we can see why.
Copy !req
178. Yeah, because an old
Jaguar E-Type,
or Alfa Spider,
Copy !req
179. is far more interesting to
look at than any modern car,
Copy !req
180. and it won't depreciate.
Copy !req
181. In fact,
it'll make you money.
Copy !req
182. Yeah, the trouble is, though,
you get into your old car,
Copy !req
183. and it's crap.
Copy !req
184. He's absolutely right,
Copy !req
185. we forget how terrible
old cars were, really.
Copy !req
186. I mean, if you go more
than 40 miles an hour,
Copy !req
187. the windscreen wipers part
company with the windscreen.
Copy !req
188. - Yes.
- And the headlamps are
like candles in jam jars.
Copy !req
189. - And the demister doesn't.
- No, it doesn't.
Copy !req
190. - And the heater doesn't.
- No.
Copy !req
191. And everything else rattles,
and the brakes don't work.
Copy !req
192. - Exactly.
- That's old cars,
they were...
Copy !req
193. I speak from experience.
I've got a 40-year-old
Ferrari, a 308.
Copy !req
194. Apart from all those things,
it's catastrophically slow.
You wouldn't believe it.
Copy !req
195. I pull away from lights,
and people behind honk
because they think,
Copy !req
196. - "That's a Ferrari,
that'll... Oh."
- Yeah.
Copy !req
197. They honk? Doesn't that
happen in any car you drive?
Copy !req
198. - No, no, no—
- "Oh, get out of the way!"
Copy !req
199. Pretty much.
Copy !req
200. - But it is unbelievable
just how poor it is.
Copy !req
201. Very slow.
Copy !req
202. But that's the exact point
we're trying to make here.
Copy !req
203. There are now loads of
companies who will take
an old car
Copy !req
204. and then gently modernise it.
Copy !req
205. Got some examples here
of what we're on about.
Copy !req
206. There's this, which
is the Singer Porsche,
Copy !req
207. I'm obviously not
very interested in that.
Copy !req
208. These two are,
but I couldn't care less.
Copy !req
209. Then you've got the Eagle,
er... E-Type Speedster,
Copy !req
210. one of the best-looking cars
I've ever seen.
Copy !req
211. That's an actual E-Type,
and one of the most beautiful
to drive. Absolute honey.
Copy !req
212. Yeah, there's a company in
Germany now, and they are
modernising lightly.
Copy !req
213. Remember those old
Mercedes Pagoda SLs?
Copy !req
214. - Oh, yeah.
- They're putting
AMG engines in.
Copy !req
215. What, mo... That's got a
modern AMG engine in it?
Copy !req
216. Do you want to
have a look at the engine?
Another shot.
Copy !req
217. - Hang on.
There it is,
look at that!
Copy !req
218. That is a car.
I see you like that.
Copy !req
219. - Very, very much.
- I've got something
you'll like more.
Copy !req
220. - Have you?
- Mm-hm.
Copy !req
221. Oh, my God!
Copy !req
222. That is an old
'68 Dodge Charger.
Copy !req
223. - You used to have one.
- I did.
Copy !req
224. But someone has put
in that a 1,000-horsepower
modern-day Hellcat engine.
Copy !req
225. Aw!
Copy !req
226. - I mean...
- I...
Copy !req
227. I need some time alone...
Copy !req
228. - with that picture.
- It's just...
Copy !req
229. That is such
a good idea, this, I think.
Copy !req
230. It is actually, and
it's a very good point.
Copy !req
231. We all think we would like
a Jensen Interceptor,
don't we?
Copy !req
232. But the fact is it won't go,
Copy !req
233. it won't stop if it ever does
go, the brakes won't work,
Copy !req
234. all the rest of it -
terrible thing.
Copy !req
235. But here is
a Jensen Interceptor,
Copy !req
236. but that has modern brakes,
has a modern cooling system,
Copy !req
237. and it has the engine
from a Corvette.
Copy !req
238. No, it does. I've actually
driven that very car,
and it's epic.
Copy !req
239. Well, that one isn't anymore,
because somebody wrapped it
round a fence in Goodwood.
Copy !req
240. - Spoiled it.
- But it was epic before that.
Copy !req
241. - It's a fantastic car,
it really, really is.
Copy !req
242. I'd like to explain, by the
way, that squeaking noise
Copy !req
243. is not James thinking,
it's...
Copy !req
244. it's the wind.
Copy !req
245. - It's quite a breezy day.
- It's a breezy day.
Copy !req
246. And we decided to base
ourselves in a tent because
we're mad.
Copy !req
247. - And on a hill.
- And on a hill.
Copy !req
248. But I think the problem
Copy !req
249. with all of these
reimagined cars
Copy !req
250. is that they're expensive,
they're too expensive.
Copy !req
251. That Mercedes Pagoda SL,
that's £300,000,
Copy !req
252. those Singer Porsches,
£400,000,
Copy !req
253. that E-Type Speedster,
650 grand - it's just crazy.
Copy !req
254. The problem is that
the companies who are
doing this kind of work,
Copy !req
255. they know they can charge
that kind of money,
Copy !req
256. cos the customers
that come to their workshops
Copy !req
257. invariably arrive
in a helicopter
Copy !req
258. with a Ukrainian girlfriend
and Lewis Hamilton's watch.
Copy !req
259. And the fact is, if you're
gonna dress up like that
Copy !req
260. and act like that,
if you're gonna show off,
Copy !req
261. you'll get ripped off,
that's the way it is.
Copy !req
262. - They charge accordingly,
don't they?
- That's asking for it.
Copy !req
263. What you should do is
ring them up and say,
Copy !req
264. "Could you collect me
from the station?"
That'd be better.
Copy !req
265. No, the bus stop.
"Pick me up from
the bus stop,
Copy !req
266. I've come to look at
these cars you're making."
Copy !req
267. I've just had a thought.
Right, picture this.
Copy !req
268. An original Opel Manta A.
Remember the one?
Copy !req
269. - The round taillights?
- Yeah... yeah, black bonnet.
Copy !req
270. But with the engine from a
modern Vauxhall VXR in it.
Copy !req
271. So I just find some blokes
that'll do that for me,
Copy !req
272. I do that on the phone, and
then I go and visit them on
the bus in a tracksuit.
Copy !req
273. And you'll get charged
50 quid.
Copy !req
274. Well, probably 40,
cos I need a tenner
to get home on the bus.
Copy !req
275. Ooh, now.
Copy !req
276. There's a new electric car
Copy !req
277. from, you're not
going to believe this...
Copy !req
278. - Kalashnikov.
- Really?
Copy !req
279. Yeah, the people who make
AK-47s are going to start
making electric cars.
Copy !req
280. I like the sound of that.
Copy !req
281. Do you want to see
a picture of it? Here it is.
Copy !req
282. Ah.
Oh.
Copy !req
283. No, don't laugh, because from
the back it's actually worse.
Copy !req
284. - There you go.
You're right, it is.
Copy !req
285. Now, I assumed that it would
have eight moving parts,
Copy !req
286. that you could bury it
in a bog for three months
Copy !req
287. and that it would only jam
if Richard Hammond used it.
Copy !req
288. Yes, all right.
Copy !req
289. But they say it has
revolutionary technology.
Copy !req
290. Does it? Does it have
central locking, and loading?
Copy !req
291. More importantly,
can you fire it in the air
at weddings?
Copy !req
292. You probably would.
Copy !req
293. "Exam results, children,"
they go out and do that.
Copy !req
294. No, but I think the idea of
driving a car called
a Kalashnikov...
Copy !req
295. - It sounds brilliant.
- Oh, yeah, pretty good.
Copy !req
296. Yeah. "What are you
driving these days, Rich?"
Copy !req
297. - "Well, it's a Kalashnikov."
- There you go.
Copy !req
298. - There you go.
- The problem is,
Copy !req
299. I reckon they're gonna
sell a lot of T-shirts
Copy !req
300. and mugs and hats
with the name on,
Copy !req
301. but not many actual cars.
Copy !req
302. - Like Ferrari?
- Basically Ferrari, yeah.
Copy !req
303. Oh, er, here's one.
Copy !req
304. There's a story I got
from the Dorset Echo,
Copy !req
305. which is a local newspaper
in Dorset.
Copy !req
306. And, um... I think it wins
the award for unnecessary
reporting,
Copy !req
307. because it's about
a crash that happened
Copy !req
308. between
a motorcyclist and a tank.
Copy !req
309. Happened... Yeah, happened
near that army base down
there. OK, and it says,
Copy !req
310. "The motorcyclist sustained
a suspected fracture to his
arm and leg."
Copy !req
311. And here's the line
they probably didn't need:
Copy !req
312. "The driver of the tank
was uninjured."
Copy !req
313. - Oh, was he?
- No?
Copy !req
314. Well, he was lucky to get
away with that, wasn't he?
Copy !req
315. - Was he really?
Copy !req
316. I suspect he got back to base
and went, "I hit a what?"
Copy !req
317. "Did I?"
Copy !req
318. Good conversation here,
I think.
Very good conversation.
Copy !req
319. Because they've announced
a new type of motor racing
championship for women.
Copy !req
320. It's called the W Series, OK?
Copy !req
321. And the idea is is that
potentially quite good,
you know,
Copy !req
322. women racing drivers
can take part in this
series.
Copy !req
323. Cars are all
exactly the same,
Copy !req
324. you're invited
to take part,
Copy !req
325. and the prize money
is £1.1 million.
Copy !req
326. So, it's, you know,
fairly incentivised.
Copy !req
327. There's actually been
a lot of discussion about it,
Copy !req
328. or actually debate,
I should say.
Copy !req
329. Cos some people are
saying it's sexist to have a
women-only championship.
Copy !req
330. But if you think about it,
you've got women-only
football, and rugby
Copy !req
331. and hockey - all Olympic
sports, pretty much,
Copy !req
332. are segregated
between men and women,
Copy !req
333. so I can't see why motor
racing should be different.
Copy !req
334. Not all sports, though.
Men and women compete
Copy !req
335. directly against each other
in dressage.
Copy !req
336. Yeah, but that's not a sport.
It isn't.
Copy !req
337. That's just sitting on
a horse while it tries
to look camp.
Copy !req
338. All right, then, they can...
Copy !req
339. He's right.
Copy !req
340. - It is, though.
Copy !req
341. You're right, actually.
Copy !req
342. There's no segregation, then,
between men and women
Copy !req
343. in sailing, they compete
against each other.
Copy !req
344. That's not a sport either,
is it? Sailing is a job.
Copy !req
345. You have to pull
pieces of rope—
Copy !req
346. - All right, then!
- It's manual labour.
Copy !req
347. It's manual labour.
It's not a sport.
Copy !req
348. There's a world of difference
between any of that
Copy !req
349. and single-seater car racing.
Copy !req
350. Why, though? Why is it?
Copy !req
351. Is it, "Oh, well, you need
manly strength to do it?"
Copy !req
352. Cos you don't, anyway,
cos even an F1 car
Copy !req
353. has power steering
these days.
Copy !req
354. But I was driving
a single-seater
race car the other day,
Copy !req
355. I can't remember what or
where but it had slick tyres.
Copy !req
356. After three laps,
my neck muscles had...
I was like this.
Copy !req
357. I hadn't got the strength
to lift my head up,
Copy !req
358. I had to wait for
the next corner
to roll over the other way.
Copy !req
359. Now, I know, you know,
Navratilova and the Williams
girl,
Copy !req
360. you wouldn't want to
arm-wrestle either of them,
Copy !req
361. so women can build up their
muscles to compensate for that.
Copy !req
362. So, wait, are you saying that
there should be segregation
Copy !req
363. with women and men
in motor sport?
Copy !req
364. Well, it doesn't really
matter what I think.
Copy !req
365. The fact is, it's 43 years
since there was a...
Copy !req
366. a girl in
a Formula One motor race.
Copy !req
367. 43 years. Something's going
wrong, they're not making it.
Copy !req
368. I think it's grass roots.
It happens early on.
Copy !req
369. I think too many mothers
put their little daughters
on ponies
Copy !req
370. and not into go-karts.
Copy !req
371. No, not entirely.
Copy !req
372. Some girls do go karting,
cos Abbie, our driver,
Copy !req
373. she was karting since
she was a little nipper.
Copy !req
374. Well... I think what
this series is all about,
Copy !req
375. it's not about segregation,
it's about encouraging women
Copy !req
376. to go car racing, which
I think is a good idea.
Copy !req
377. Yeah, I think it is,
but I think it has to
start early on. So,
Copy !req
378. little girls, it's time
to get off your ponies,
Copy !req
379. and get into a go-kart.
Copy !req
380. And I can tell you actually,
from some experience
of horses,
Copy !req
381. the good thing is, when you
walk out in the morning,
Copy !req
382. you'll find that your go-kart
Copy !req
383. hasn't crapped itself
and died in the night.
Copy !req
384. So it's better
than your horse.
Copy !req
385. You'll also find out that
go-karts are more fun
Copy !req
386. than going on "an horse",
they just are.
Copy !req
387. Yes, yes.
And you'll find also
Copy !req
388. that a go-kart won't pop
its long, stupid head up
Copy !req
389. over the stable door
and look at you,
Copy !req
390. and you know it's thinking,
it's trying to say to you,
Copy !req
391. "Yeah, your wife, she's back
here with me, in here."
Copy !req
392. Er... she's given me
breakfast in bed,
Copy !req
393. crapped myself last night,
but she's clearing that up
with a garden fork."
Copy !req
394. And then it says,
"And my penis is a bit dirty.
Copy !req
395. She'll be sorting that out
for me later on."
Copy !req
396. Then your wife's head will
pop up over the stable door
Copy !req
397. and she'll say, "Don't look
at him like that, he'll
think you don't like him,"
Copy !req
398. and you'll say, "I know!"
Copy !req
399. If I could speak horse, I
would tell him, "I hate you.
Copy !req
400. I hate the way you steal
my wife and my money
Copy !req
401. and my status around here."
Copy !req
402. And then one day, you'll
have a conversation with
your wife, and she'll say,
Copy !req
403. "Darling, I need a trailer to
move my special horse around
to wonderful places
Copy !req
404. because these fields
are too small for him
Copy !req
405. to exercise his magnificent,
muscled legs."
Copy !req
406. And you'll say,
"OK, I'll get you a trailer."
Copy !req
407. Then she'll say,
"I need a special car
Copy !req
408. to tow the special trailer
to carry the special horse."
Copy !req
409. So you'll get one.
And then one day, she'll say,
Copy !req
410. "I need a lorry,
a great big lorry,
Copy !req
411. to carry my great,
big magnificent horse
around the country,
Copy !req
412. and the lorry must have
a kitchen and a bed in it
Copy !req
413. so I can sleep
close to my horse,
Copy !req
414. closer to my horse
than I am to you."
Copy !req
415. And at that moment,
your head will bow
and your heart will break,
Copy !req
416. because you know you have
lost, and the horse has won.
Copy !req
417. That's very good.
Copy !req
418. That is, um...
Copy !req
419. - Slightly off.
- We trod on the H-bomb.
Copy !req
420. Every time you mention the
horse word to him, he's off.
Copy !req
421. Oh, did it again!
Copy !req
422. I think we probably end...
Well, it's not
Conversation Street,
Copy !req
423. that was Rant Street
from Hammond.
Copy !req
424. - Sorry about that.
- Let's move it on, shall we?
Copy !req
425. There's a new off-road
four-wheel drive Lamborghini.
Copy !req
426. It's called the Urus, and
to find out if it's any good,
Copy !req
427. I took The Grand Tour
to Sweden,
Copy !req
428. armed with some questions.
Copy !req
429. Here's my first big question:
Copy !req
430. If you build a car
to tackle terrain like this,
Copy !req
431. can it still be
a proper Lambo?
Copy !req
432. Well, the Urus
certainly looks
Copy !req
433. like a jacked-up supercar.
Copy !req
434. With its swivel-eyed styling,
Copy !req
435. it appears to be every
inch a Lamborghini.
Copy !req
436. But is it?
Copy !req
437. To make this car,
Lambo's engineers
Copy !req
438. had a good rummage around
in Volkswagen's parts bin.
Copy !req
439. So the engine,
a four-litre V8,
is from a Porsche Panamera.
Copy !req
440. The rear axle
and air suspension
Copy !req
441. is from
a Bentley Bentayga.
Copy !req
442. The platform
on which it sits,
Copy !req
443. and a lot of the dashboard,
is from an Audi SQ7.
Copy !req
444. So, does that mean this isn't
really a Lamborghini at all?
Copy !req
445. Well, it does 0-60
in 3.6 seconds.
Copy !req
446. And it has a top speed
of 189.
Copy !req
447. So, it has the performance
you'd expect.
Copy !req
448. But there's other stuff
you wouldn't expect.
Copy !req
449. This is the first Lamborghini
to use turbocharging,
Copy !req
450. and the first
to have an automatic gearbox.
Copy !req
451. What that combination means
is there's a very slight
Copy !req
452. and rather
un-Lamborghini-ish gap
Copy !req
453. between putting your foot
down and it getting going.
Copy !req
454. And when it does get going,
Copy !req
455. there are
no screaming histrionics.
Copy !req
456. Sure, there's a bit of
popping and banging
from the back.
Copy !req
457. But you can't hear
that inside,
Copy !req
458. where everything is
muted and refined.
Copy !req
459. Perhaps that's why
all the writing
Copy !req
460. down here is in Latin.
Copy !req
461. This is a Lamborghini for
emeritus professors.
Copy !req
462. I can see the Pope
in one of these.
Copy !req
463. So, it's quiet
and a bit hesitant.
Copy !req
464. And it has snazzy diffs
Copy !req
465. and a clever
traction-control system.
Copy !req
466. And the biggest carbon brakes
ever fitted to a road car.
Copy !req
467. So it's safe as well.
Copy !req
468. However, there's no
getting around the fact
Copy !req
469. that I'm currently driving
on snow and ice
Copy !req
470. in a car that has
641 horsepowers
Copy !req
471. rampaging around
underneath its bonnet.
Copy !req
472. Which means that, actually,
it's not that safe at all.
Copy !req
473. Ooh, God above.
Copy !req
474. Concentrating.
Copy !req
475. Twitchy and it's scary!
Copy !req
476. It's like I've been
put in charge
Copy !req
477. of all of the world's
physics,
Copy !req
478. while I'm in a phone box
full of wasps.
Copy !req
479. Ee! Stop, leave me alone!
Copy !req
480. I'm doing tides
and gravity... Agh, stop!
Copy !req
481. This car, then,
it sits right at the moment
Copy !req
482. where excitement stops
and terror begins.
Copy !req
483. That is Lambo land, that is.
Copy !req
484. Shit!
Copy !req
485. So, the Urus looks and feels
like a Lamborghini.
Copy !req
486. It's also practical.
The boot is massive.
Copy !req
487. And inside, there's space
for five six-footers.
Copy !req
488. It's a nice place to be
as well.
Copy !req
489. And all that's great.
Copy !req
490. But does it work off-road?
Copy !req
491. To find out,
I'm going to try and drive it
Copy !req
492. to the top
of this ski resort.
Copy !req
493. Now, it's wearing
these tyres,
Copy !req
494. which have no studs
in them, or spikes.
Copy !req
495. And I'm wearing these,
Copy !req
496. which are not delicate
Italian driving shoes.
Copy !req
497. Not sure
this is gonna go well.
Copy !req
498. Problems actually get
worse when you're in here
Copy !req
499. because there's no manual
locking differentials,
Copy !req
500. there's no low-range gearbox.
Copy !req
501. All you can do
is fire it up...
Copy !req
502. and then put the drive
system into snow mode.
Copy !req
503. Is... Is that snow?
Copy !req
504. Is "Neve" Latin for snow?
Copy !req
505. Think it might be.
So, let's see if that works.
Copy !req
506. Here we go.
Copy !req
507. Mustn't hit a skier, mustn't
hit a skier. Oh, it's moving.
Copy !req
508. The 165,000-pound Lamborghini
Copy !req
509. is driving up a ski slope.
Copy !req
510. Those turbo chargers
may be a little bit annoying
Copy !req
511. on the road,
but here they're giving me
Copy !req
512. the low-down torque that
I need to get up this hill.
Copy !req
513. And I've got an inclinometer,
Copy !req
514. like you used to get in
an old Mitsubishi Shogun.
Copy !req
515. This is actually quite
impressive, it's just
dropped down into first.
Copy !req
516. Oh-ho-ho-ho-ho!
Copy !req
517. Hello,
bewildered-looking skiers.
Copy !req
518. I cannot believe
that this is a 2.4-ton car...
Copy !req
519. on normal road tyres,
and it's doing this.
Copy !req
520. Come on, come on, come on,
you can do it. Come on.
Copy !req
521. Come on, come on. Come on.
Copy !req
522. Oh, hang on a minute.
Copy !req
523. - Yeah.
Copy !req
524. Yeah, I now can believe it's
a 2.4-ton car on normal road
tyres cos it's stuck.
Copy !req
525. - No.
Copy !req
526. - Oh.
Copy !req
527. Right.
Copy !req
528. So, what we've established
so far is that,
Copy !req
529. yes, it is a Lamborghini.
Copy !req
530. Feels exciting like
a Lamborghini... should.
Copy !req
531. And, um... I meant this.
Copy !req
532. And, er... it's good
off-road as well,
Copy !req
533. but just not quite
as good as a Range Rover.
Copy !req
534. Which leaves us with
one more thing to answer:
Copy !req
535. Is it a good laugh?
Copy !req
536. What we've done
is use a snow plough
Copy !req
537. to create a racetrack
on this frozen lake.
Copy !req
538. And this is
what we have planned.
Copy !req
539. I'm going to try
and overtake this,
Copy !req
540. a four-wheel drive
Porsche 911 Turbo,
Copy !req
541. which is being driven by
The Grand Tour's
racing driver Abbie Eaton.
Copy !req
542. - Have you seen this crack?
- I hadn't noticed
that before.
Copy !req
543. Look at the state of this!
Copy !req
544. You're the heavier
car, aren't you?
Copy !req
545. Hm, that's 2.4 tons,
and I weigh half a ton.
Copy !req
546. Are you not worried
about that?
Copy !req
547. I haven't got my seatbelt on,
so if it goes under, I can
get out straightaway.
Copy !req
548. - Seriously?
- Yeah.
Copy !req
549. Before the duel began,
Copy !req
550. I had a few practice laps
on my own.
Copy !req
551. Oh, heavens.
Copy !req
552. Come on, turn!
Copy !req
553. Whoops, I'm going off a bit.
Copy !req
554. Ooh!
Copy !req
555. Ah, my Urus is a bit twitchy.
Copy !req
556. Sort of thing
you'd say to your doctor.
Copy !req
557. Right, flick it in there.
Copy !req
558. Now go the other way,
and power.
Copy !req
559. Oh, yeah.
Copy !req
560. Mouse in, lion out.
Copy !req
561. That's what
they say in Sweden.
Copy !req
562. I'm making my own fog now!
Copy !req
563. It may not be able to get
as far up a ski slope
as a Range Rover,
Copy !req
564. but for doing this,
Copy !req
565. it's better.
Copy !req
566. But, would it be good enough
Copy !req
567. to get past Abbie
in that Porsche?
Copy !req
568. There she is.
Copy !req
569. There she is!
Copy !req
570. The bell has sounded,
the race is on.
Copy !req
571. Now we'd find out what's what
Copy !req
572. on our specially
designed track.
Copy !req
573. Right, round the Bell End.
Copy !req
574. Now down the Shaft...
Copy !req
575. to what we're calling
the Parabollocka.
Copy !req
576. I've raced against
a few dicks in my time
but never on one.
Copy !req
577. I should be able to get her,
for heaven's sake, come on!
Copy !req
578. She, of course, has four-
wheel-steering, same as I do.
Copy !req
579. Oh, she has got better
braking than I have.
Copy !req
580. Now, give me 641 horsepower!
Copy !req
581. Oh, yeah.
Copy !req
582. You know I said it was
a bit hesitant sometimes?
Copy !req
583. Well, in Corsa mode,
it isn't.
Copy !req
584. It's bob-on, this. Bob-on!
Copy !req
585. Ooh, she's gone wide,
is there a chance here?
Copy !req
586. Come on!
Copy !req
587. Now, now!
Copy !req
588. Bollocks.
Copy !req
589. Come on now, Jeremy.
Copy !req
590. Come on!
Copy !req
591. Come on, you can have her!
Copy !req
592. Come on!
Copy !req
593. For lap after lap,
the big heavy Urus
Copy !req
594. clawed at the rear end
of the 911 Turbo.
Copy !req
595. Oh, God. Nearly!
Copy !req
596. Now.
Copy !req
597. But eventually,
I had to admit defeat.
Copy !req
598. I can't get past that 911,
and that's just an end of it,
Copy !req
599. but I can keep up.
Copy !req
600. And in an off-road car...
Copy !req
601. that is fairly
astonishing.
Copy !req
602. It really is.
Copy !req
603. Certainly, I can believe
Lamborghini's claim
Copy !req
604. that this is the fastest
off-road car...
Copy !req
605. in the world.
Copy !req
606. - That was quite good fun.
- Looked like fun, yeah.
A nice day out.
Copy !req
607. - I got paid for that.
- That was your job.
Copy !req
608. That is work.
Doing that is my work.
Copy !req
609. Um... it probably won't be
Copy !req
610. the fastest off-road car
in the world
for very long, though,
Copy !req
611. because both Aston Martin
and Ferrari have got, er...
Copy !req
612. - big SUVs
coming out this year.
- Yeah. Yeah.
Copy !req
613. Whatever. Thing is,
could you really tell people
Copy !req
614. that you have a Urus?
Copy !req
615. Cos it... it sounds like a
minor alien out of Star Trek.
Copy !req
616. - Yeah.
- But it does work
as a Lamborghini.
Copy !req
617. Yeah. But no.
Copy !req
618. Well, this is excellent
consumer advice.
Copy !req
619. - I'm glad we...
- Yeah, it's very clear,
very clear.
Copy !req
620. The thing is,
after I made that film,
Copy !req
621. which was quite good fun,
Copy !req
622. I came home and I thought,
the trouble is
Copy !req
623. it could do with being
a bit more Aventador-ish.
Copy !req
624. It could do with being
a bit more mad.
Copy !req
625. Are you saying
you changed your mind?
Copy !req
626. - Yes.
- Oh, great.
Copy !req
627. So, Prime Minister Clarkson
returns from the summit:
Copy !req
628. "I've declared war,
but on the plane home
Copy !req
629. I had another think about it
and I'm not so sure now.
Copy !req
630. - I've changed my mind."
- Exactly,
that's what I've done.
Copy !req
631. Good, well,
since we're in such
a sensible frame of mind,
Copy !req
632. I'd like to move
things on now,
Copy !req
633. um, with a brief
history lesson.
Copy !req
634. On April the 7th, 1968,
Copy !req
635. a racing driver was killed
in a Formula Two race
Copy !req
636. in Hockenheim, Germany.
Copy !req
637. Sadly, the driver's death was
not a surprising occurrence,
Copy !req
638. because such was the danger
of the sport back then,
Copy !req
639. he was one of
127 racing drivers
Copy !req
640. who would die at the wheel
that year alone.
Copy !req
641. This time, though,
the death sent shockwaves
Copy !req
642. through the motorsport world,
Copy !req
643. because it had just lost the
man who was unquestionably
Copy !req
644. the greatest
racing driver of his day,
Copy !req
645. and who many argue is still
the greatest of all time.
Copy !req
646. Jim Clark
has died in an accident
Copy !req
647. during a Formula Two
race in West Germany.
Copy !req
648. It was a
terrible shock to everybody.
Copy !req
649. It really
knocked us all back.
Copy !req
650. If there was anybody
who was not gonna have
Copy !req
651. a fatal accident
it was Jim Clark.
Copy !req
652. Because he drove
in such a way
Copy !req
653. that he just
didn't do the mistakes
Copy !req
654. that other drivers did.
Copy !req
655. In California, a
radio station broadcaster
Copy !req
656. announcing the news
of Clark's death
Copy !req
657. asked his listeners
to turn on their headlights
as a mark of respect...
Copy !req
658. and the freeways lit up.
Copy !req
659. Such a huge global fuss
Copy !req
660. would not have sat
easily with Clark,
Copy !req
661. because this shy, modest man,
Copy !req
662. the son of
a Scottish sheep farmer,
Copy !req
663. was never one
to trumpet his own skills.
Copy !req
664. I started as an amateur
Copy !req
665. with no idea or no intention
of becoming World Champion,
Copy !req
666. But, er... it was,
I was curious to find out,
Copy !req
667. um... what it was like
to drive a car fast,
Copy !req
668. to drive on
a certain circuit,
Copy !req
669. to drive
a certain type of car.
Copy !req
670. Having cut his teeth
in sports car racing
Copy !req
671. in the late '50s,
Copy !req
672. Clark's speed and talent
Copy !req
673. was spotted by Lotus boss
Colin Chapman,
Copy !req
674. who signed him for his
Formula One team in 1960.
Copy !req
675. Clark soon set
the motorsport world alight.
Copy !req
676. Especially in this car...
Copy !req
677. The Lotus 25.
Copy !req
678. In which, in 1963...
Copy !req
679. he won his first
F1 World Championship.
Copy !req
680. Oh, my God!
Copy !req
681. I am sitting
where Jim Clark sat.
Copy !req
682. This is electrifying!
Copy !req
683. These were not powerful cars.
Copy !req
684. They only made
210 brake horsepower
Copy !req
685. from one and a half litres,
Copy !req
686. but they were still good
for 180 miles an hour.
Copy !req
687. Oh, ho!
Copy !req
688. Thanks to its revolutionary
monocoque chassis,
Copy !req
689. the 25
was stiffer and lighter
Copy !req
690. than any other F1 car.
Copy !req
691. Which meant it wasn't
just fast on the straights,
Copy !req
692. but quicker
through the corners too.
Copy !req
693. And in the 1963 season,
Copy !req
694. Clark used it
to win a record seven
Copy !req
695. out of the ten Grands Prix.
Copy !req
696. Winner is Jim Clark.
Copy !req
697. Nobody could
possibly catch him now.
Copy !req
698. But 1963 was just a warm-up
for what was to come.
Copy !req
699. To get a true picture
of Clark's genius,
Copy !req
700. we must look at another year.
Copy !req
701. 1965.
Copy !req
702. When he hit heights
no driver had reached before,
Copy !req
703. or has done since.
Copy !req
704. A modern Formula One
driver does 21 races a year
Copy !req
705. and often complains
that's too many.
Copy !req
706. In 1965,
Jim Clark raced in 63 races.
Copy !req
707. Some of these cars
look similar,
Copy !req
708. but they are all
completely different.
Copy !req
709. In a car like this, he'd do
Formula One Championship.
Copy !req
710. He raced in the British
Formula Two Championship,
Copy !req
711. and the French Formula Two
Championship in this car.
Copy !req
712. He raced in
the Tasman Series,
Copy !req
713. a sort of Australian
Grand Prix for Down Under,
in this car.
Copy !req
714. And then
there's this Lotus Cortina,
Copy !req
715. in which he decided
to race in touring cars.
Copy !req
716. And then if all that
wasn't enough,
Copy !req
717. he decided to go for
the Indy 500.
Copy !req
718. First up was the Tasman
Series in Australasia.
Copy !req
719. Out of the 15 races,
Copy !req
720. Clark won 11
and took the crown.
Copy !req
721. Then it was back to Europe
for the British and French
Formula Two Championships,
Copy !req
722. both of which he won.
Copy !req
723. Jim Clark led from the start.
Copy !req
724. Winner is Jim Clark.
Copy !req
725. And in between the F2 races,
Copy !req
726. he was jumping into
his Lotus Cortina
Copy !req
727. and racking up
touring car victories.
Copy !req
728. And, on top of all that,
Copy !req
729. there was America.
Copy !req
730. The Indianapolis 500
Copy !req
731. has been called
the greatest
Copy !req
732. spectacle in racing.
Copy !req
733. America's
most prestigious race
Copy !req
734. would be a tough challenge.
Copy !req
735. Oval racing at higher average
speeds than he was used to
Copy !req
736. against seasoned
Indy veterans.
Copy !req
737. For the Indy 500,
Copy !req
738. Clark raced a specially
developed Lotus
Copy !req
739. producing just shy
of 500 horsepower.
Copy !req
740. However,
although he already had
Copy !req
741. a Formula One
world title to his name,
Copy !req
742. the Scotsman's CV
cut no ice with the sniffy
Indy officials
Copy !req
743. who made the upstart
from across the pond
Copy !req
744. take a rookie driving test
before he could compete.
Copy !req
745. Come Indy weekend,
Copy !req
746. the upstart
from across the pond
Copy !req
747. qualified on the front row.
Copy !req
748. And then...
Copy !req
749. in the race itself...
Copy !req
750. Clark, up against
America's finest oval racers,
Copy !req
751. won by just over two minutes.
Copy !req
752. Jim Clark,
first European to win
at Indianapolis since 1916,
Copy !req
753. set a new record
of 150.686 miles per hour.
Copy !req
754. So, what was it
that made Clark so good?
Copy !req
755. What was it that made him
capable of winning
in any type of car?
Copy !req
756. Jimmy was an absolute
natural driver,
Copy !req
757. and he did it
without thinking.
Copy !req
758. He didn't know
why he was driving
Copy !req
759. in this style the way he did.
Copy !req
760. In the period
that we're talking about,
Copy !req
761. we had one and a half-litre
cars, 200 horsepower.
Copy !req
762. If you drove the car too hard
you would scrub the speed off
Copy !req
763. and if you lose
a bit of speed,
Copy !req
764. it's very difficult to
actually make it up again.
Copy !req
765. And that's what Jimmy had,
Copy !req
766. the knack of keeping the
momentum of the car going.
Copy !req
767. I don't think that any
of the modern drivers
Copy !req
768. could have driven the car
anywhere near as quickly
as Jimmy did,
Copy !req
769. because he was
just so precise.
Copy !req
770. Besides
a supernatural ability
to coax speed out of the car,
Copy !req
771. Clark also possessed
another vital skill.
Copy !req
772. A lot of
very good racing drivers
Copy !req
773. died in Lotuses,
Copy !req
774. because the Lotus
was a very fragile car.
Copy !req
775. But Jim Clark was so smooth
Copy !req
776. that he never put
too much stress
Copy !req
777. on the areas of a car
that would give up.
Copy !req
778. In Barcelona, in practice...
Copy !req
779. he came in after ten laps.
Copy !req
780. We'd done ten. He said,
Copy !req
781. "There's something
on the left rear.
Copy !req
782. Something, something.
Copy !req
783. I can feel something
on the left rear.
It's... it's not right."
Copy !req
784. We looked over,
we checked everything.
Copy !req
785. Everything felt good.
Copy !req
786. He said, "No, there's
something wrong."
Copy !req
787. So, that night
I took the left rear
suspension to pieces,
Copy !req
788. and lo and behold
one of the wheel bearings
Copy !req
789. has just started to wear.
Copy !req
790. I don't know how anybody
could ever feel that.
But he did.
Copy !req
791. After the race, when you
stripped his car down,
Copy !req
792. and you stripped
his co-driver's car down,
Copy !req
793. you could always tell
which parts
Copy !req
794. came off Jimmy's car
Copy !req
795. and which parts came off
Copy !req
796. the other driver's car.
Copy !req
797. Because the parts
off Jimmy's car
Copy !req
798. were more or less pristine.
Copy !req
799. But don't think for a minute
Copy !req
800. that Clark
was one of those drivers
Copy !req
801. that could only win
in a perfect car.
Copy !req
802. One year at Spa, for example,
Copy !req
803. he was leading the race
when his gearbox
started to let go.
Copy !req
804. Did he give up? Nope.
Copy !req
805. Instead, he drove
the rest of the race,
Copy !req
806. and we're talking 160 miles
an hour in the wet...
Copy !req
807. with one hand
on the steering wheel
Copy !req
808. and the other holding
the gear lever in place.
Copy !req
809. And he still won.
Copy !req
810. By nearly five minutes.
Copy !req
811. As the 1965 season rolled on,
Copy !req
812. Clark, having won both
Formula Two championships,
Copy !req
813. the Tasman Series,
Copy !req
814. and the Indy 500,
Copy !req
815. now faced
one remaining challenge.
Copy !req
816. The biggest challenge,
the Formula One world title.
Copy !req
817. For the F1 races,
Clark would be driving
Copy !req
818. a modified version
of the Lotus 25 -
Copy !req
819. the car that had taken him
Copy !req
820. to the World Championship
two years earlier.
Copy !req
821. But as amazing as the 25 was,
Copy !req
822. there was no
getting round the fact
Copy !req
823. that by 1965 it was
a three-year-old design,
Copy !req
824. and the updated version
only had minor changes.
Copy !req
825. So how would Jim cope?
Copy !req
826. At the season's
opening race in South Africa,
Copy !req
827. up against such legends
Copy !req
828. as Jack Brabham, Graham Hill,
Copy !req
829. and reigning World Champion
John Surtees...
Copy !req
830. Clark won
by half a minute,
Copy !req
831. and did so while suffering
from a slipped disc.
Copy !req
832. Next up was Spa,
Copy !req
833. and then
the French Grand Prix:
Copy !req
834. both of which he also won.
Copy !req
835. His Lotus may be
a car with an old engine,
Copy !req
836. but as far as the
opposition are concerned,
Copy !req
837. it is just
out-distancing all.
Copy !req
838. Behind
the wheel, Clark was
becoming untouchable.
Copy !req
839. Jimmy would go out
beginning of
the practice session
Copy !req
840. and do
a very, very quick lap.
Copy !req
841. And come back,
sit on the wall.
Copy !req
842. You know, there's no point
in wearing the car out.
Copy !req
843. And then wait and see
what everybody else has done,
Copy !req
844. and go out and blitz it.
Copy !req
845. If he wasn't
on pole position,
Copy !req
846. there was a problem
with the car.
Copy !req
847. Next up was Silverstone.
Copy !req
848. And here, it looked like
business as usual
Copy !req
849. with Clark
leading the pack.
Copy !req
850. However,
in the closing stages,
Copy !req
851. his engine was starting
to lose oil pressure
Copy !req
852. and was in danger
of detonating
under cornering G-forces.
Copy !req
853. While
Clark is driving with no
oil pressure on his gauge,
Copy !req
854. Hill, storming up behind,
breaks the lap record
Copy !req
855. in his efforts to pass.
Copy !req
856. So instead of driving the car
through the corner
Copy !req
857. he just switched it off,
coasted through the corner.
Copy !req
858. When he was through
the corner, switched it
back on again,
Copy !req
859. did the rest of the lap -
and he won the race.
Copy !req
860. Eventually, the F1 circus
Copy !req
861. arrived at the Nurburgring,
Copy !req
862. a circuit where Clark
had never won.
Copy !req
863. For the
Flying Scot, tense moments
before the start.
Copy !req
864. Victory in
the German Grand Prix
Copy !req
865. and he'd be World Champion.
Copy !req
866. Leading from pole,
Copy !req
867. Clark finally broke
his Nurburgring jinx,
Copy !req
868. winning the race,
and with it
Copy !req
869. the Formula One
world title.
Copy !req
870. So, let's just sum up
Clark's season of 1965.
Copy !req
871. Of the 63 races he contested,
Copy !req
872. he won
a staggering 31 of them,
Copy !req
873. and was on the podium
a further eight times.
Copy !req
874. He was now seen as
the greatest racing driver
of all time,
Copy !req
875. in demand the world over.
Copy !req
876. Yet this shy Scotsman
Copy !req
877. chose to mark
the year's achievements
Copy !req
878. with a modest celebration
at his hometown
Copy !req
879. back in Scotland.
Copy !req
880. The next two years by
contrast were a disaster,
Copy !req
881. with multiple
mechanical failures
Copy !req
882. denying him
another championship.
Copy !req
883. However, in 1968,
Copy !req
884. driving the Lotus 49,
Copy !req
885. another game-changer
from Colin Chapman,
Copy !req
886. Clark took the first win of
the year in South Africa
Copy !req
887. and looked set for
another dominant season.
Copy !req
888. Congratulations, Jim,
this was an absolutely
splendid effort.
Copy !req
889. OK, thank you very much.
Copy !req
890. And then, on the weekend
of April the 7th,
Copy !req
891. Clark had a choice of two
races he could compete in,
Copy !req
892. one at Brands Hatch,
Copy !req
893. the other a Formula Two race
at Hockenheim.
Copy !req
894. Fatefully, he entered
the German race.
Copy !req
895. April the 7th is a...
is a bad day for me.
Copy !req
896. He wasn't happy.
Copy !req
897. It was freezing cold
and damp... misty.
Copy !req
898. We could not get any heat
into the tyres.
Copy !req
899. Couldn't get
any temperature in them
no matter what we did.
Copy !req
900. Jimmy said to me
before the race:
Copy !req
901. "Do not expect
anything from me today.
Copy !req
902. Just keep me informed with
the pit board where I am,
how many laps to go."
Copy !req
903. That's the last thing
he said.
Copy !req
904. On lap five,
Clark's car suddenly
speared off the track
Copy !req
905. at 170 miles an hour.
Copy !req
906. I got to the scene,
and they took me through
the undergrowth to this...
Copy !req
907. There's no Armco.
There's Tarmac, trees.
Copy !req
908. Literally.
Copy !req
909. And the sheer path.
Copy !req
910. And I just saw
what was left of a car... Oh.
Copy !req
911. There was nothing to see.
Copy !req
912. I said, "Where's the engine
gearbox? What's going on?
Copy !req
913. What's happened?"
They said, "That's..."
Copy !req
914. It was about 35 yards away
through the saplings.
Copy !req
915. It just cut
the saplings down.
Copy !req
916. And I said, "Where's, where's
the driver? Where's Jimmy?"
They said, "No."
Copy !req
917. When you've just... lost...
Copy !req
918. the best driver
in the world,
Copy !req
919. what the hell do you do?
Copy !req
920. Jim Clark, he's a god.
Copy !req
921. And the first time I saw him,
my God, it's...
Copy !req
922. I can't believe it.
And you're actually
talking to him.
Copy !req
923. It was awe-inspiring.
Copy !req
924. Life is worth living.
Copy !req
925. It's...
Copy !req
926. for me, it's tearful.
Copy !req
927. I'm sorry.
Copy !req
928. According
to the medical report,
Copy !req
929. Clark died instantly
of a broken neck
Copy !req
930. and the crash was later
put down to a deflating tyre.
Copy !req
931. When he died, he was just 32.
Copy !req
932. But in his short career
he had racked up some truly
incredible achievements.
Copy !req
933. In Formula One,
he won 25 of his 73 races,
Copy !req
934. which in percentage terms
puts him way ahead of
Hamilton, Vettel,
Copy !req
935. and even Schumacher.
Copy !req
936. In pole positions, he had 33.
Copy !req
937. Which again,
in percentage terms,
Copy !req
938. makes him
second best of all time,
Copy !req
939. just behind Fangio.
Copy !req
940. Then there are
the Grand Slams:
Copy !req
941. that's where a driver gets
pole position, fastest lap,
Copy !req
942. the win and leads
every lap of the race.
Copy !req
943. Schumacher has five
Grand Slams to his name.
Copy !req
944. Senna, four.
Copy !req
945. Jim Clark, eight.
Copy !req
946. That's more than
any other driver in history.
Copy !req
947. You might imagine
that a man with such skills
Copy !req
948. would be rated highly
by other drivers.
Copy !req
949. And you'd be right.
Copy !req
950. I was invited to
a cocktail party for Fangio,
Copy !req
951. and he said to me,
"In my opinion,
Copy !req
952. Jimmy Clark was the
greatest racing driver ever."
Copy !req
953. And coming from Fangio,
Copy !req
954. there's no better
compliment than that.
Copy !req
955. And the five-time
World Champion
Copy !req
956. was not the only
South American
Copy !req
957. who idolised the Scotsman.
Copy !req
958. At Clark's old school
in Edinburgh,
Copy !req
959. there's a plaque
commemorating
his achievements.
Copy !req
960. And in 1991,
the reigning World Champion
Copy !req
961. made a special pilgrimage
to the school
Copy !req
962. to pay his respects.
Copy !req
963. Of Clark, Senna said simply,
"He was my boyhood hero.
Copy !req
964. He was the best of the best."
Copy !req
965. And like Senna, Clark died
when he was driving
Copy !req
966. at his absolute peak.
Copy !req
967. Like Senna, who knows
how many more races
Copy !req
968. and championships
he could have racked up?
Copy !req
969. He was the benchmark.
That was it.
Copy !req
970. Most of what I was able to do
in motor racing was done...
Copy !req
971. by the manner in
which Jim Clark drove,
Copy !req
972. and... I just followed him.
Copy !req
973. He was a gentleman.
Copy !req
974. He was a gentleman,
and a gentle man.
Copy !req
975. It's a pity he's not
around now, because...
Copy !req
976. it'd be nice to have him.
Copy !req
977. He was
an amazing man.
Copy !req
978. - Just incredible.
- All of that's amazing.
Copy !req
979. Yeah.
Copy !req
980. What I find truly amazing
Copy !req
981. is how many championships
he took part in.
Copy !req
982. I mean, can you imagine
Lewis Hamilton
Copy !req
983. getting out of his
Formula One car and saying,
Copy !req
984. "I haven't got time
for any interviews,
Copy !req
985. cos I've got to go and
do a touring car race."
Copy !req
986. - Just wouldn't.
- And he did.
Copy !req
987. The other thing worth
remembering is back
in the early '60s,
Copy !req
988. if you went to Australia,
if you flew to Australia
that meant eight stops.
Copy !req
989. And there were no flat beds.
There weren't even
any movies.
Copy !req
990. And let's not forget
he'd get off that aeroplane,
Copy !req
991. do a race, win it -
obviously,
Copy !req
992. then get on another aeroplane
straight away to France
Copy !req
993. - to win a race there.
- No, it is astonishing.
Copy !req
994. I mean, everybody has
a favourite racing driver.
Copy !req
995. I'm sure everybody here
does as well.
Copy !req
996. It's, you know, it's the
Senna, Schumacher,
Copy !req
997. Villeneuve,
Romain Grosjean...
Copy !req
998. - ... Fangio.
Copy !req
999. But if you use maths to
measure a driver's greatness,
Copy !req
1000. you have to conclude
it was Jim Clark.
Copy !req
1001. - Good night.
Copy !req