The Peter Attia Drive - Special episode with Dax Shepard: F1 and the 30th anniversary of Ayrton Senna’s death
Episode Date: April 29, 2024View the Show Notes Page for This Episode Become a Member to Receive Exclusive Content Sign Up to Receive Peter’s Weekly Newsletter This is a special episode of The Drive with Peter’s friend an...d fellow car enthusiast Dax Shepard. In this podcast, which commemorates the 30th anniversary of the death of Brazilian Formula One legend Ayrton Senna, Dax sits down with Peter to better understand what made Senna so special and why Peter remains an enormous fan. This conversation focuses on Senna’s life, the circumstances of his death, and his lasting impact and legacy on the sport of F1. We discuss: Peter’s interest in motorsports began as a child [2:30]; The drama and dangers of F1 [6:00]; What made Senna special [13:00]; What Senna meant to Brazilians [24:00]; The cause of the fatal crash [28:15]; Why Peter is obsessed with Senna [40:30]; Being the best versus having the best record [43:30]; Senna’s unique driving style and incredible intuition about automotive engineering [46:30]; Back to the day of the dreadful race [53:00]; What Peter believes caused the crash [1:02:45]; Views on dying young, in the prime of life [1:13:00]; Senna lives on in his foundation and in safety changes adopted by F1 [1:21:00]; Statistics aren’t enough for fandom, and why people like who they do [1:24:15]; The biggest difference between F1 today and F1 in the 80s [1:28:30]; Senna’s driving superpower [1:30:30]; The fastest drivers currently in F1 [1:38:30]; Current F1 obsessions [1:45:00]; How hard it is to do what the top F1 drivers do [1:50:15]; Dax’s love of motorcycles and his AMG E63 station wagon [1:52:15]; Awesome Senna mementos from Etsy [2:01:15]; What makes specialists interesting, and Max’s devotion to F1 [2:10:15]; What Senna might have done if he had not died that day [2:14:00]; Michael Schumacher and Max Verstappen are also top F1 drivers [2:17:30]; Interlagos in Sao Paulo Brazil is always an incredible experience [2:18:45]; and More. Connect With Peter on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube
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Welcome to a bonus episode of The Drive.
I'm joined today by my friend and fellow car enthusiast, Dax Shepard.
The purpose of our podcast today is to commemorate the 30th anniversary of Ayrton Senna's death,
May 1st, 1994.
The idea for this podcast came up a couple of months ago
when Dax and I were talking about this upcoming anniversary. Dax has had a fascination with my
obsession with Senna. Dax was not a fan of F1 at the time of Senna's death, but has more recently
in the last five or six years become a fan of F1.
He wanted to sit down with me and better understand why it is that I have such a fascination with
Senna's career and remain an enormous fan all these years after his death.
In many ways, that's what this episode really is.
It's a discussion between us that focuses on a lot of things that have to do with racing,
F1, some of it in the modern era, but really most of it focuses on Senna's life, his death,
the circumstances of his death, and his lasting impact and legacy on the sport.
So I hope you enjoy this very special episode of The Drive.
Oh, this is delightful.
Yeah, man.
I'm in your house.
Yeah.
You asked me to come do a Sena episode.
I was very forthcoming and said,
I'm a three out of 10 on Sena.
But the reason I wanted to do it is so that I could pry
and figure out what's really going on
with the Sena obsession.
Yes. Yeah. And I'm curious how much you're aware of it or not.
Probably not. It's probably at this point,
sort of like the David Foster Wallace fish in water thing.
Like it's the water I swim in. Yeah.
So I don't actually notice that I'm obsessed with Senna.
Do you remember what year it started? Did it start with the dock? No, no, no, no.
I mean, I remember growing up when you grow up in Canada,
for whatever reason, motorsports actually pretty popular in Canada.
And I don't know why it might be because of Jill Villeneuve. Right.
Although I don't have any real recollection of Villeneuve.
So Villeneuve died in 1982. I was nine years old, but for whatever reason,
like I don't even recall his death being on my radar.
IndyCar was incredibly popular and F1 was incredibly popular.
Because you always had the Montreal race.
You have Montreal for F1 and you always had Mostport, you always had the IndyCar and Toronto race.
Because my dad was in the restaurant business, meaning he was buying beer by the truckload
and Molson was the beer in Canada.
They would give you tickets and stuff.
They would give you tickets or something like that.
And did you go to races?
Yes, the 80s, right, which is sort of when I came of age.
I also think that there was just, I don't know,
I just think there were some boys that get really into cars.
Not to say that there aren't girls that do,
but I think it's a boy thing.
What did you have posters of on your wall?
It was cars and boxers.
Those were the two things I had posters of.
Yeah, I didn't have boxing posters,
but I loved those 80s boxers.
My dad was super obsessed.
You and I have even bonded over, like the Tommy Hearns,
the Hagler, the Sugar Ray.
That whole sweet era of boxing was huge in my house.
And I loved cars from the jump.
My dad was super into cars.
My mom and dad drag raced in high school.
My mom had a record at the drag track for the Powder Puff
series and a 68 Chevelle.
So they're crazy car people.
My dad sold cars.
My mom worked at General Motors.
My stepdad was ride and handling engineer in the Corvette
group for the 84 Vette, that series.
I don't know what that,
Gen 3, 3 or C4.
Yeah. Yeah.
So obsessed with cars,
but never overly obsessed with racing,
would go to Belle Isle to see any car.
Cause again, cause we,
my family worked in the automotive business.
We too would end up with tickets and you'd go
and it was just, there's no TVs anywhere, there's no coverage. And you virtually
just watch the profile of a car for one tenth of a second. And I'm like, I don't know, I can't buy in.
Even today, I would say F1 is one of the sports that is infinitely better from a total experience
in terms of understanding what's going on on television, especially given how good TV is now.
That said, I still go to probably three races a year, sometimes four, because the sound
is even though nowhere near as good as it was in the era we're about to discuss.
Once the hybrid era came in in 2014, it sort of, I think forever took a little bit of what purists love about the sport away.
Yeah. So I'm so late into the F1 obsession. The first racing I started actually loving was MotoGP,
probably 20 years ago. So very into MotoGP, would watch F1 occasionally. I'm like,
this is the stupidest sport. They don't ever pass.
Nothing happens.
And then I'm a drive to survive convert.
Now have you watched the last couple seasons?
Yes, I've watched every-
And do you think it's horrible?
No, I love it.
Oh my God.
I think it's- You hate it.
I can't stand how bad it is.
Oh my Lord, what's your issue?
It's boring as hell.
It's like a bunch of nonsense you don't care about.
What did the first seasons have that the latter ones don't have?
I mean, I think that the first three seasons
still kind of focused on the racing.
And I feel like they're trying a little too hard now
to make it about the off-track drama.
The reality show-ness of it?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah. I think some people,
there are clearly some people who, like Max,
I love Max's approach to it, which is, I don't give a shit.
Yeah, I'm not participating.
Get out of my way.
But then there's too many people
who are trying a little too hard.
I won't name names, but.
Sure, sure.
You were just close to one of them recently.
So the first season, initially,
I was like, hold on a second.
Mercedes' budget is four or $500 million a year.
That's the first thing that really got me,
where I was like, this is enormous on a scale
that I didn't even know was possible.
Relative to NASCAR, or Indy, or MotoGP, anything,
it's 20x the budget of any other racing.
So I was like, oh, that's really fascinating.
Then finding out about the aerodynamicists and how relevant they are in it and just
how high tech it is that all that interests me. I love the technical aspect
of that sport enormously.
What I think this show still does great is it really shows you the drama that's
existing between 14th and eighth place, which when I'm watching normal season,
I'm largely missing that.
It's like I'm vaguely aware that Pierre
and Ocon hate each other,
but not in the way that like a whole season can give me
or a whole episode.
And so I think the show's really good at letting you know
how much drama is still happening below eighth place,
how important it is that these teams finish in the points or to get one point. good at letting you know how much drama still happening below eighth place,
how important it is that these teams finish in the points or to get one point.
So it's almost like I rewatch the season now caring about all the folks that
aren't on the podium. Yeah. I don't know what changed for me.
I feel like 2021,
2020 and 2021 where I think it's best seasons, actually. With Max and Lewis.
The Max Lewis season of 21 was exceptional.
Yeah, perfect time for me to join the sport.
The last two episodes of that season
were two of the finest.
The season before, I think, honestly, Man on Fire,
which was the Grosjean episode, which I think was 2020,
I think one of the best single episodes ever.
Obviously, for those of us that were watching that live,
it was unbelievable.
It's something we'll talk about today,
which is when you're watching a sport like F1,
or MotoGP, or anything for that matter,
there is a real chance a person could die,
and it's really frightening
when you see some of these accidents.
Yeah, but for the most part, I don't know about you,
for the most part, that's not even on the table for me.
And then occasionally one of these things happen
and I go, oh, that's right, they are going 205 miles an hour.
It doesn't really matter how you build this thing.
There is some likelihood that something horrendous.
Well, maybe that's why, because I've been a fan for so long,
I still have the visceral reaction to big shunts
because there was a day
when those were almost all fatal. Yes. Yeah. I don't know what the chart is from the 70s till now,
but obviously it's just been in a nosedive, right? Yeah. So I can tell you, basically in the mid-1960s
until the early 1980s, so about a 16-year period of time, F1 was a killing field.
And that meant that on average,
probably two to four drivers died a year.
I want you to think about that in the context
of what you watch today.
You and I have been talking all week
about the many things that have changed so dramatically
that it's almost impossible to reconcile
that it used to be that way. We were both watching turning point. Yeah.
A great doc you recommended. And I'm watching it. And again,
I have awareness of this. I remember learning this, but to learn that
in one night of bombing of Tokyo, 87,000 people died.
That's more than all of Vietnam by a factor of 30,000 one night.
And you're like, oh, we don't have the appetite
for any of that stuff anymore.
I don't think if the sport, two people were dying,
that would be one in 12 races we would see someone die.
I just don't think it would exist now.
Right.
And again, I wasn't watching the sport
during that period of time, but not long after I was going back
and watching video of it.
Yeah, so when do you start watching it religiously?
In the eighties, late eighties.
You're a kid. Yeah.
Anyone your friends watching it with you or you're all alone?
No, not really. It's not my obsession. My obsession is much more boxing.
Did your dad watch it with you?
No. And then by the way,
it was very hard to watch live
because again, another thing you take for granted today.
Cable.
You can watch things whenever you want.
Like back then it was like always odd bizarre hours
and stuff like that.
You would have had to wake up at 2 a.m.
Yeah, you catch it on delay.
By the way, when I got to med school
and became friends with a guy named Paul Conti,
haven't you had Paul on your show?
I know that name.
Yeah, I feel like you might have.
I've gotten to that point, 800 people, I'm starting to forget some names.
Well, it's embarrassing.
Anyway, Paul, who's no stranger to this show,
when we met first day of med school,
immediately connected over both our shared obsession
for F1 and for Senna.
That was like talking to a guy who
was going through a similar experience of watching
things at odd hours and things of that nature.
But just as the 80s was kind of a golden period for boxing,
with the fact that you had Hearns, Hagler, Duran, Leonard,
Wilford Benitez, all of these guys that,
each of them are Hall of Famers,
and yet they were all fighting each other all the time
in an era where it meant something
to be the middleweight champion of the world
or the welterweight champion of the world.
Julio Cesar Chavez, he's up the end of that.
He was a little bit later. Yeah, yeah, lightweight.
But yeah, a guy who fought 90 fights or something.
Yeah. I mean, he was undefeated into his 90th fight.
In his eight.
But F1 was like that as well. So when you think about the 80s, you had Niki Lauda at the end of
his career still winning a championship in the mid 80s. And then the arrival of Alan Prost,
in the mid 80s and then the arrival of Alain Prost, Nigel Mansell of course, Nelson Piquet and Senna. And so you really have this golden era of F1 I think in the late 80s and early 90s where it is.
Insane depth of talent. Also for what it's worth, I just think the cars were aesthetically,
they're most beautiful during that period of time. It's not that I don't think the cars today are masterpieces.
They're so tiny.
If you're me and you came into the sport post-hybrid area
and now you go, like I walked through McLaren
through the Boulevard and I'm like, oh, they're go-karts.
They were V10 go-karts.
They were just so small.
Yeah, they were 500 kilo cars back then.
But still could, with boost in qualifying,
could make over 1,000 horsepower.
At 1,000 pounds.
Yeah.
Wow.
Which is actually a really funny story that
brings us to Senna, which is there are many things that
made Senna special.
But his qualifying is the most remarkable thing.
If you look at his record, so by today's standards,
Senna wasn't around very long. Most of the drivers on the F1 grid today
have already had more races than Senna did when he died.
He died in his 161st race.
So Max is only 26 years old.
He's long past that number of races, right?
Lewis is at more than 2x that number of races.
And yet Senna's qualifying percentage,
how many times was he on pole position in there?
Nobody's within a country mile.
He's 65 poles.
Yeah, in 161 races.
That kind of framed it for me, because again, I only
know that he won three titles.
Technically four.
I'm going to explain to you why.
He had one stolen from him.
But yeah, with the not turning around in the turn-off area.
Yeah, sure, four.
But obviously, Schumacher's record, Lewis's record, some of these records,
it begs the question, why is this the guy everyone's so obsessed with?
Cause he, what had 10 years in?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I have 10 years.
But when I saw that 65 polls stat, I was like, okay, that's very telling.
That says a lot.
But before you explain that to me, I wanna know, it would appear that,
and this is another thing I've come to love about F1 is,
P1 in qualifying to P20 is often three tenths of a second?
Usually a little bit more.
But yes, it's very, very tight.
And within the top five,
the first three are often in the hundredths of seconds,
and then maybe six is a tenth.
The margin is so unfathomable.
People really, just take a stopwatch,
if you've ever taken a stopwatch,
and just try to double click it as fast as you can,
and you'll start realizing how tiny hundredths of a second,
that you can't even get a hundredths of a second.
I used to play this game as a kid.
It was one of my favorite games.
Me too, on the Casio watch.
Absolutely, yeah.
I used to sit in class.
What was your minimum?
I think my minimum was like 11 or 14 100ths
I think I could get done.
I can't even remember.
I just remember all of us in a circle
like doing it over and over again.
Someone going, boy oh hey!
And that's all freaking out.
But the notion that you have 10 different teams
with 10 different approaches, 20 different drivers,
I mean the amount of variables on the table are incalculable,
yet you slam it all together and somehow
it's all within a second or it's all within
three-tenths of a second or hundreds of a second.
That part is, I think, almost incomprehensible.
I think in the 80s, a Delta was much bigger, yeah?
Not necessarily.
And by the way, the Delta between teammates
is the Delta that matters.
That's where you're seeing the Delta between drivers.
Yes.
Because let's use my favorite example, which is arguably
considered one of the most epic legendary stories of Senna,
which is qualifying for the 1988 Monaco race.
So at this point, Senna is the rookie on the team.
This is in the MP4.4, the car that to this day
is regarded as the greatest car ever in F1.
This is what you have a replica of.
This is this car here.
Yeah.
I'm shocked you don't have that tattoo,
but we'll talk about that later.
At some point.
We should discuss that.
Imagine that down my back.
Yeah, it'd be so sweet.
Your wife would be so excited.
So that car won 15 of 16 races.
Between he and pros.
Yep.
And the race that it didn't win, Senna got taken out by a back marker.
So it's like they would have won 16 of 16 races.
So the closest we've seen to that is last year's Red Bull, which won all but one race.
But the reason most people would still argue
that that was the technically superior car
was the race that Red Bull did not win last year,
which was Singapore.
They didn't lose because of some fluke.
The car legitimately couldn't perform in Singapore
because of the bumps in the road and the ride height.
So sent as the rookie on the team,
Prost is the two-time world champion,
the reigning world champion.
They're at Monaco, which is generally regarded as the most difficult circuit.
The margin for error is nonexistent.
Another feather in his cap, right? He's got the most wins at Monaco.
He has won Monaco six times, officially seven times, if you include what happened in 1984,
which we can talk about.
Yeah. This is where he puts it into the wall, the 56.
No, that's in 88. In 1984, what where he puts it into the wall of the 56. No, that's in 88.
In 1984, what happened was he started
at the back of the field.
He was in a tollman, a piece of garbage car.
In rain.
But it was raining like cats and dogs.
And of course, the other thing that makes Senna very special,
we keep adding to why is he special,
no one could ever drive like he could in the rain.
That's the real marker.
Like a three standard deviation.
Yeah, so you've got a field of world champions in superior cars
in front of him as a rookie, not just a team rookie.
His F1 rookie year, 1984, he's in the Toleman.
He's driving a garbage truck back there.
But it starts raining cats and dogs.
And he is by 2 thirds of the way through the race.
He is closing in on Alain Prost.
And in the final lap of what would become the final lap,
he passes him.
But rate stewards decide to halt the race
at the preceding lap.
And he is still awarded second place,
which is unfathomable as his first podium.
The first major fucking he receives from the FIA, right?
Exactly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Exactly.
This would become a pattern. Well then we should add too,
Monaco is the hardest track to pass on in the whole calendar. Today it's
impossible to pass on. Back in the day you could pass because the cars were smaller.
I would not advocate for getting rid of Monaco, but one could make a case that
the cars have outgrown the circuit. Right. But Monaco to this day is still the one of the most exciting qualifying.
Oh, by far.
Yeah, because the stakes are so high. In 1988, Senna not only qualifies on pole,
something he would do repeatedly, he does so by a margin that is deemed impossible to comprehend.
Now, you have to remember who his teammate is. His teammate is arguably one of the greatest by a margin that is deemed impossible to comprehend.
Now you have to remember who his teammate is.
His teammate is arguably one of the greatest drivers
of all time, Alan Prost, driving the same car.
And he out qualifies him.
Do you know how much?
No.
1.47 seconds.
Wow.
1.47 seconds is a day and a half.
And consistently through the three qualies?
Back then at quali ran a little bit differently.
OK, 1.4.
And so Senna was already on pole when
he decided he wanted to go out and do one more lap.
It's the stuff of F1 lore, because the lap was not
captured on camera.
So this was back when cameras were on cars,
kind of in its infancy.
But because back then, you didn't have endless amounts
of streaming video, like the TV station had to decide who were we going to focus on
this lap. And because Senna was already on pole, they didn't record the lap.
Sure, sure.
So all you have is the time sheet. He went this fast and he was out of this
world. So then the next day in the race, he is leading by so much that the team
is telling him to slow down.
Yeah, they're begging him. They're begging him to slow down. They're begging him.
They're begging him to slow down.
There might have been eight laps to go
and he's ahead by 30 seconds.
Yeah, I just recently rewatched the thing
and at the point he crashed,
he was 56 seconds ahead of Prost.
Yeah, he could have pushed the car
to the finish line and still won.
And he lost concentration for a nanosecond,
a very rare event in his life, and crashed.
And then devastated.
So angry.
She mentioned the self-loathing.
He's so angry that he literally got out of the car,
threw his stuff, and went to his apartment.
His apartment.
Yeah.
For three hours.
Yeah, and nobody could find him.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So Joe Ramirez, I think, eventually went and found him.
And his housekeeper had to let him in because she was instructed to tell everyone that he
was not around.
Yeah, that's just an insane example.
And the other thing about Senna during qualifying is the reason he was so good at qualifying,
especially in that era, is the cars in that era ran a much higher horsepower during qualifying.
Okay, right. They dialed them way up.
They dialed them way up in a way that they don't do it today. Today, you're not playing
with that. Today, you're playing with tires, fuel load, and battery pack. Basically, today,
on a quality setup, you can discharge battery much more and you basically aim to finish on fumes and
no battery life. But back then, it was a totally different horsepower.
And you couldn't race at that horsepower
because you didn't have the reliability.
And truthfully, a lot of drivers, including Prost,
including Lauda, were like, it's too freaking dangerous, man.
That's way too much.
Yeah.
At some point, right, they're in the 1,200 and 1,400
horsepower range of different.
Certainly 1,200, yeah.
Yeah.
These are naturally aspirated V10 V 12s compression must've been
ear splitting.
I think at some point these things were red lining up to 18,000 RPM.
If you can believe that even the physics of that is possible in a car out of a V
eight or a V 10 probably the V tens were probably the 18th.
I mean that's more than a motorcycle motor reps to I don't know.
The motor GP guys told us they were up to 18,000, didn't they?
Well, if you recall, there wasn't really consensus when the person said that.
Yeah. One guy said 18, another guy said 16. I, but I don't know. I don't know.
I think it's more around 15, but whatever.
Either way, it's just incredible. It's terrifying.
Senna has, so there's the record,
there's the Dying Early, that's very James Dean.
There's a lot of elements that bolster
people's fascination with him.
For me, I like him because he seemed like an outsider.
The Brazilian-ness of it all makes me like him more.
But also, and I don't know how comfortable
you're gonna be with this word,
he is very sexy. He's a very Mick Jagger kind of rock star, sexy, aloof, always focused and not really a people pleaser. I think there's an added element why we love Senna, these intangibles that
aren't about the record. And I wonder what personality wise you think of him.
Well, it's really funny because I would bet that you have examples where you will relate to what
I'm about to say, which is I think growing up and through his life and death, it was mostly about
Senna the racer. It's after his death, I've learned much more about him because remember,
he died in 1994. I was in college when he died.
When he died, I didn't have an internet to read more about.
So much of what I know about him today is based on things I can read that I couldn't
read then.
Also, I've become close to people who knew him well.
And so, I can now learn about him as a person. I know things about him that aren't
publicly known. I've met his family. I know his niece quite well. I've met his brother,
who is obviously one of the few people that was there when he died in Italy that day.
Joseph Lebrer, who was his trainer, who was one of the closest people to him. In many ways,
my appreciation for him today is tenfold what it was when I just evaluated him
through that lens.
The other thing that you alluded to is I didn't really appreciate as I don't
think many people did at the time of his life, what he meant to Brazilians.
Oh yeah, it's outrageous.
And at a time where Brazil was struggling beyond belief.
Yeah. So just to give you an example of that,
as you know, my youngest son is named after him.
Anytime we encounter a person from Brazil
who discovers that fact, it's like everything changes.
Come into my house for food.
Yeah, yeah.
And for someone in Brazil, if you're over the age of 35
today, you take JFK 9-11 squared.
The challenger.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's what May 1st, 1994 was.
Because the entire country every Sunday would stop to watch this.
It's not like the NFL here where a lot of people watch it.
No, no, no, no, no.
This was the religion.
Yes.
The country stops.
Yeah.
Everybody watches.
There was a Brazilian god on planet Earth.
That's right.
Yeah.
Yeah, in fact, and because of the religious culture of Brazil,
it's a Catholic country, obviously,
there's so much religious symbolism.
And I think he is the closest thing to a deity
for the people there.
And by the way, a close second is Japan.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Why do you suppose?
Because of the relationship with Honda.
So all three of his titles were in Honda powered cars and the engineers at Honda loved him.
He was also other, as I imagine the Japanese felt entering F1.
There weren't a lot of Brazilians.
Well, he's one of three, maybe, Brazilian F1 drivers.
Well, it's really interesting.
So Nelson Pique, who is also Brazilian,
also a three-time champion,
one of my favorite things to do
whenever I meet someone from Brazil who's old enough
is to say, we've obviously got talking about Senna,
blah, blah, blah, what do you think of Pique?
And they're all like, piece of shit.
Oh, really?
Oh, can't stand him.
Because he deserted the place, or?
Yeah, he was like not proud of what he was.
He was also very unkind to Senna.
He referred to him as the homosexual from Sao Paulo.
Although he didn't use that word.
You can imagine what he said.
Sure, sure, sure.
Back when you could let those rip, no problem.
Still have all your sponsors.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
P.K. was very jealous of Senna because of how much Senna was
loved, but Senna was loved because of how much he loved
back.
He was so proud of Brazil.
So every time he wins a race, Brazilian flag is out.
And he loved Brazil.
And one thing people didn't know about him until after he died
was how much money he was pouring
into education in Brazil.
Yeah, so how did their salaries back then much money he was pouring into education in Brazil. Yeah.
So how did their salaries back then compare to current salaries?
When you adjust for inflation, probably reasonable if you were at the very, very top.
So Senna was making a million dollars a race.
A race?
Yeah.
And doing 16 races a year.
That's just base salary.
That's not that far off from what,
I mean, Max is the highest paid guy in F1 today.
I believe he's making 50 million euros.
Uh-huh.
And keeping 50 million euros living in Monaco.
Yeah.
And he said when you hear their salaries,
you're like, you really gotta double it
when you're trying to comp it to like baseball players
or football players.
Yeah, yeah.
Senna of course also had many sponsors, right?
So he was loaded.
But the family was already loaded.
He came from a wealthy family.
He was not without, but he probably made somewhere
on the order of a quarter of a billion dollars
in his lifetime.
Oh wow, in the 80s and 90s. Yeah.
Wow, that's impressive.
I have to imagine there's some archetype about him
that you like beyond the racing.
And I'm wondering, is it the outsider-ness?
Well, I think it's the fact that he was, look,
if we're going to get really deep and philosophical,
I think it's that he's flawed.
He's not a perfect person.
And nor did he try to represent himself
as that, right? He could be overly emotional. I think even though it's very sad, I'm sure we
will talk about his death in detail. I don't believe the most commonly held view of his death,
which was that it resulted from the steering column failure. I actually don't think that's what happened
Oh really now you have a different take I do have a different take although I used to for many years for probably
26 years I believed that he died because the steering column failed I
Thought I had heard that like is it an aileron? What is the piece that was on the suspension that that had come off?
Oh, I'm sorry. That's what actually killed him. That's not in dispute.
Okay. Okay. Yes, yes, yes.
This is why did he crash?
Why did he crash? Yes.
Okay.
Yes.
And people have said, I don't even know this, that the steering column failed?
Yes. So the conventional view, the widely held view of Senna's death. So maybe just to tell people
how the circumstances of the death. He was in a race
called Imola, which took place on a horrible, horrible weekend, April 29th, April 30th, and May
1st, 1994. Going back to something we talked about earlier, there had not been a death in F1
since Gil Villeneuve died in 1982. Now, 12 years later, on that that Friday During the first practice another Brazilian driver Rubens Barrichello has a
Brutal crash he's just laying in the fucking well right away
What's amazing is he was only concussed and split open but actually survived?
Senna was shaken up that was in practice. There's an. Senna was, this was like a kid that he was mentoring.
Okay. And he saw him in the
hospital and was very shaken up. The next day, a rookie, Roland Ratzpemberger,
who Senna also had taken under his wing and had actually introduced that weekend to Joseph Lebrer,
his physio,
who was also Austrian. Roland was Austrian and Joseph was Austrian. So Senna had introduced
them that weekend. Roland was killed in practice that weekend. This was the first death in F1
in 12 years. Wow. I'm going to tell you a weird sidebar to this. So do you know Craig T. Nelson? Yeah. He was racing that weekend there. He was at that race.
He raced prototypes for years. Oh, I didn't know that. Oh, he was so,
so he paved Willow Springs at one point when he was on coach. Uh,
he has a lap record and a prototype there. It was his life.
He spent every penny from coach on racing and he was there that weekend,
weirdly. Wow.
Yeah, racing. And he said it was quite an eerie weekend as well.
Yeah, there are so many things about that weekend that are really upsetting. One of them is that
the race should have been canceled after Roland's death. So if a driver dies on the track in Italy,
the law is the race is done. Oh, really?
Yes.
Roland died on the track, but the organizers of the race wanted the race to go on,
so they airlifted him out of there to pronounce him dead at a hospital.
Oh, wow.
But they were doing cardiac massage on him at the track. He was absolutely dead.
Senna, against the instructions of the marshals, got into a car, drove to where he died, and
was reprimanded terribly for doing so.
Joseph told me that night, he'd never seen Senna more angry in the entire time he knew
him than that evening because of how pissed he was at how the marshals had been so angry
at him for going to see Roland
at the site of the accident.
Which is a pattern of his, right?
He also had gone out on P1 and kind of stood
where that had happened.
And that's kind of a thing he did, right?
This is the thing about Senna that's also
kind of an interesting paradox, right?
Like on the one hand, he was the most competitive
and he did things at times, and we can talk about things,
where he's literally put other drivers
and his own lives in danger out of pure competitive drive,
and yet he would be the first person
to stop and rescue you and help you if you were hurt.
Joseph Assami, he was so angry.
He said, how dare they tell me I can't go on to track
to see a driver who is injured and ultimately dead when they don't care
that we're driving around here.
In other words, don't tell me who's taking the risk.
I take the risk.
You don't take the risk.
You can grant me this.
Yeah.
No problem.
And so Ratzenberger dies.
That should have been the end of Imela.
Senna should still be alive.
He shouldn't have died the next day,
because the race should have been canceled.
Is it also relevant he this is race number two of the three of the season three and he hates his car hates the car
He had gone to Williams thinking he was gonna get the electronically adjusted
Suspension that gets taken away right so Senna in 1988 arrives at McLaren
He's driving for what is the best team by the way? This is another interesting metric
I'll come back to this point.
But when people say, well, you've got to just look at the stats.
Lewis has the most wins and Schumacher and Lewis
have the most titles.
I'm like, put all that stuff aside.
There are other metrics, even if you just
look at the length of life.
Senna was only in the best car four out of the 10 years
he raced.
So you'll have to look at how many years was
a driver
in the best car.
All of these things factor into it.
So Senna's in the best car in 88, 89, 90, 91.
He wins three of the titles in those four years,
although he should have had four out of the four.
And then the tide changes.
This is always the case in F1.
There's a regulation change and the power shift happens.
And at this point, the power shifts from McLaren to Williams. In 92 and 93, Williams was so technically superior
to not just McLaren, but everyone else on the field and Senna wanted to go. Frank Williams,
the owner of the Williams team, had always loved Senna, always loved him. He was one of the first
people to see Senna race coming out of Formula
4, all of these other lower classes, but there just wasn't a seat on the team at the time.
And he got Prost, specifically I won't race with him.
So Mansell races for Williams in 92, wins the title, immediately retires. Prost comes out of
retirement, takes the seat for 93. Williams says, great, we'll bring out Senna and Prost comes out of retirement, takes the seat for 93. Williams says,
great, we'll bring out Senna. And Prost says, no way. My contract has a clause that says,
I'll never race with Senna as a teammate again. So Senna spends one more year at
McLaren. Funny story there, by the way, is he was having a contract holdup with McLaren.
And to sort of flex his muscles a little bit, he came to the US,
did a day of testing an Indy car.
Oh, really?
And actually was driving faster by the end of his first day of testing than any of the
Indy car drivers were driving.
Wow.
Because that transference hasn't gone as well in the last 20 years when F1 drivers have
gone to Indy.
It's hard.
Yeah.
I mean, Indy car is really hard. Only Alonso has done well.
But he didn't.
And Indy didn't win.
He didn't do as well as you would have expected,
given that Alonso basically won the 24 Hours of Le Mans,
his first crack out there.
Yeah, yeah.
So Prost retires at the end of 93.
We should come back to the last race of 93 at Adelaide
with Senna and Prost on the podium together.
And then finally, Senna gets his wish, which is he finally gets to
go to Williams. He finally gets to go to the team that has won the last two titles and basically
will be the most dominant car for the next four years, although nobody knows it at the time.
Perhaps unbeknownst to Senna, because the F1 that year had taken a pretty hard rule change and
removed what's called active suspension, the car for
the beginning of the 94 season was an undrivable technical debacle.
Because they're scrambling to reinvent their entire suspension at that point, right?
Right.
Because they guys got to ditch everything.
Right.
So I've become really good friends with Damon Hill, who was his teammate that year.
And I actually had Damon on the podcast probably
five years ago and he's just such an incredible human being. I think Damon's one of the most
underrated world champions in F1. Damon won the world championship in 1995. He's the son of Graham
Hill, a two-time world champion making him one of only two father-son F1 champions. I've talked at
length with Damon about what that car was like at the beginning of the
94 season.
Damon drove it in 93, so he knew what that car was like when it was the best car ever.
Then he knew what it was like later.
Damon basically said, look, the car was goddamn undrivable.
It was so scary.
It was like being on a knife's edge every minute of every lap of every drive.
He said he just pulled way back.
So, again, maybe for people watching us who don't understand
what it's like to drive a race car.
The goal of driving a race car is to be at the limit of the car.
You're always at the limit of what the car can do.
And Damon was like, you couldn't drive that car near the limit.
It was so unpredictable.
If you got within 10 yards of the limit,
the car would flip you into another planet.
But Senna still managed to drive it close to limit.
So in the first race of that year, which was in Brazil,
Senna gets on pole.
It's hard to imagine how he could put that car on pole,
but it was like wrestling that car into pole position.
He's in pole.
He's leading that race.
And then with a few laps to go, he
actually spins out on a corner.
Just couldn't control this thing.
So next race, he again gets it on pole.
It's not clear how he could put that car on pole again.
And by the way, he's got Michael Schumacher, a young Michael
Schumacher, just biting at his heels.
And he's in the McLaren.
Oh, he's in the Benetton.
Yeah.
Oh, right.
Yeah.
And that was kind of the best car of that year.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That was the best car of that year.
A lot of controversy about whether that car
was cheating that year.
Right.
He had believed it had traction control, right?
That's right.
And it probably did.
Yeah.
It's weird that they would be able to hide that.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
I know.
Yeah.
In that race, he's on pole, but he gets hit from behind first
corner. He's out of that race. So now we go into Imola. Remember, this is a 16 race season. Two
races are down and he has zero points. Schumacher has won both of those races. He's got 20 points.
Yeah. So he's feeling the weight of the world on his shoulders.
He has to be perfect for the rest of the. He has to be perfect for the rest of the season.
And certainly, he has to win this race in Imola.
Non-negotiable.
Now, up until that point in time,
Senna already has the record for most wins at Imola.
This is a circuit he knows well.
It's a very hard circuit.
I actually just started driving it in the simulator
a few months ago, getting ready for my trip out there.
And it's tough. I remember, was it two years ago, getting ready for my trip out there. And it's tough.
I remember, was it two years ago, three, it was just an entire yard sale lap
one, then a complete restart, then another yard sale.
That one has spectacular crashes.
Everything goes wrong.
Right.
So you start out with what we talked about on Friday.
You've got Barrichello nearly dies.
On Saturday, Ratzenberger dies.
Senna is in no mood to drive on Sunday.
That Saturday night is Joseph's birthday, Joseph Leber.
His birthday is April 30th.
These guys always celebrate Joseph's birthday.
On that night, they're out at a pizza place. Obviously,
it's just the most somber mood and they're not celebrating anything.
Senna is incredibly angry about the scolding he took for going to see Ratzenberger. He is very
unhappy with the car, doesn't feel that the car is safe. That day he had spoken with Niki Lauda,
and Niki had encouraged him as now the most senior driver in F1, now that Prost is safe. That day he had spoken with Niki Lauda and Niki had encouraged him
as now the most senior driver in F1, now that Prost had retired, that he needed to bring back
the Drivers Association for safety. Okay. So that didn't exist at that.
It had sort of fallen by the wayside. This is something that Jackie Stewart had led in
the early 1970s when the drivers sort of said enough is enough. We can't just be dying at this
rate. We have to take safety. We have to make it a high priority. So Senna agreed that the next
race at Monaco, they would reinitiate the driver's safety sort of group. Senna said to Joseph that
night that it was kind of the first time ever he didn't want to race, didn't want to really race the next day. And Joseph said to him, he goes, look,
no one will fault you if you don't right now. And Senna said, there's no way I can't race.
The people of Brazil need this and they're hurting way more than I am.
So you ask me like, why am I obsessed with this guy? It's kind of like the death wish in a way,
but also realizing like it's bigger than him.
He really felt like I don't want to do this.
I don't feel safe doing this,
but there's a hundred million people who need me to do this
and they're in worse shape than I am.
Did you read the fountainhead ever?
Mm-mm.
Cause this would be a good parallel.
The people that I read the fountainhead ever. Cause this would be a good parallel. The people I read the fountainhead loved it.
The lead character is roughly based on the architect Frank Lloyd Wright,
but he is a man who always knew what he wanted,
always had a vision, never compromised,
pissed a lot of people off Howard Roark, but ultimately was always right.
And I think that archetype, when you're a young man, is incredibly appealing.
It was to me, like, yeah, maybe I just, I know what's right.
I don't have to listen to anyone else and then I'll be proven I'm right at the end of it.
And I just wonder how much of his high level of disagreeability.
What do you think?
Oh yeah.
Prost was great at playing the political game.
The head of the FIA was also French.
It clearly was helping him the whole with every dispute between he and Senna.
And Senna was just so disagreeable and outspoken and didn't give a shit if anyone liked him.
Is that part of his personality?
Yes, but also there was a,
it's I'm gonna win or it doesn't matter.
So Prost's nickname was the professor.
The reason for that was, among other things,
he was very smart and very strategic and very calculating.
And if he was in a race and he was in third place,
he would think to himself, logically,
I'm playing the long game here, which
is I'm better off coming in third
and getting my six or seven or eight points here
if I don't think I can win.
Senna only wanted to win.
He would crash out of a race to take a shot at winning.
He just didn't care for second, third, or fourth.
Well, the Monaco incident that we already talked about,
where he was 60 seconds out ahead and puts it into a wall,
in his own description of that race, which is kind of appealing,
is he was on a perfect drive, spiritually.
He was on a perfect drive.
Right.
He wasn't competing against anybody else.
He was competing against what perfection could be.
He was getting very close to having raced the perfect race and could feel it and
could not stop pushing because it was within his touch or grasp.
To see that someone is in pursuit of something that's even higher than first
place is appealing as a character type.
But there's some punk rockness to him
that I also think is in this stew for you, I'm guessing.
Yeah, look, I-
Cause if you're just a record junkie.
Yeah, yeah.
I think if you're a record junkie,
you would just have to have Lewis as your favorite driver.
If you're just looking at numbers or Schumacher.
Yeah, so here's an analogy.
I don't know how much you cared for football
when you were growing up, but Barry Sanders
doesn't have the records.
He's not the leading rusher.
He doesn't have the most yards.
He doesn't have the most touchdowns.
He has no Super Bowls.
By any statistic, Barry Sanders is not actually the best.
Right.
But he was.
But my son, who's obsessed with football, and we read football books every night, I've
already explained to him 10 Ways to Sunday, Barry Sanders was the greatest running back
of all time.
Yes.
Because there are intangible facts.
And he would bench himself as well, just shy of a record.
Yeah.
Didn't care about the records, actually.
Yes, he truly didn't.
Didn't want to be in the public eye.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's impressive.
He's the greatest running back of all time.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Even though statistically, there were many that were superior.
And I think with Senna, there's a characteristic
of his driving.
And I do think most drivers would agree
he's the greatest of all time.
I would bet that if you polled current and past F1 drivers.
You think Max would say so?
You know, it's interesting.
I don't know what Max would say.
Because I feel like Max would say Schumacher.
Well, I know Seb would say Schumacher.
I'm close with Seb.
And Schumacher, we must acknowledge,
is on another planet.
Yeah, look, I think you could make a case that the three
greatest of all time would be Senna,
Schumacher, and maybe Max. Yeah.
We might be getting to the point where we can start to say Max is in the top
three. I'm new to it. So of course I'm intoxicated with the flavor of the day,
but Max to me, even then,
when I watch different documentaries or learn the history of other drivers,
he definitely is ahead of everyone else.
There's a kid who came in a week after his 17th birthday,
won a race at 17.
I mean, that's inconceivable.
Yeah.
I struggled to figure this out myself,
because where does Fangio belong in all of this?
It's not just that he won five titles.
It's are you judging a driver against his peers?
Because if so, Fangio was really,
I mean, five titles in four cars.
It didn't matter what car you put him in.
He was gonna win the title.
Well, this becomes the same challenge as evaluating boxers.
Cause you really have to look at who they were fighting,
right? Yeah.
I think Ali gets such a huge bump when you think about
how formidable Foreman was at the time.
Or these battles he had with Frazier. Frazier was Mike Tyson. Like you put Mike Tyson and
Frazier in a ring. I don't know who wins that fight. They're the similar. So yeah,
the fact that this dude probably took on two of the out of the 10 best heavyweights of all time
repeatedly, I think is relevant. Whereas a lot of these guys didn't
really have a huge...
Right, but if you just evaluate them on physical prowess, the evolution of athletes is such
that they are clearly getting better as time goes on. Yeah, so it's always hard to sort
of have that discussion about like who's the greatest.
Now explain some of these kinks he has because I do end up coming across videos all the time
where people are pointing out that like Senna had this very unique habit of stabbing the gas, which to me seems completely counter-intuitive
to what you'd want to do.
And I'm curious like if you know what his rationale, what was that getting him and how
unique was that?
It was very unique and just so people understand what you're saying, Senna had a habit of when he was coming out of a
corner. The way the regular mortals like us drive is we come back onto throttle gradually.
Roll it on.
Roll it on. If you come on too much, you're going to lose the rear of the car,
and that's the way you go. You're coming off the brake, you're coming onto the throttle.
Smooth is fast is the mantra. Smooth is fast.
And if you look at the telemetry of Senna,
because of course in race cars, you're
measuring to the millimeter and to the PSI exactly what's
happening to each pedal, Senna did something very different,
which is when he came on throttle,
he was stab, stab, stab, stab, stab, stab, stab, and then
on full.
Yeah.
So it was hypothesized that this was
done because of the turbo lag.
Revving the turbo up.
So you would get rid of the turbo lag,
and he would get back to full power quicker than everybody else.
Right.
So he was just keeping it activated until he went full power.
Keeping the RPMs as high as possible, such that when he got back to full power,
there was no lag, and he was gone.
Yeah.
So people actually hypothesized that he
would struggle when they went back
to naturally aspirated cars.
And here's the weird thing.
He kept doing it, and he didn't struggle.
That's one of the things I don't think
I have a great explanation for why he was doing it,
other than he had clearly always been doing it.
This is how he drove carts.
Yeah, if his results were different,
it would be so obvious it's just not a good strategy.
But somehow, it worked.
His car control really was remarkable.
And that's one of the beautiful things about that era of F1
is the cars were so much harder to drive.
Yeah.
Less downforce.
Less downforce, no power steering, manual shift,
like a manual gearbox.
In fact, if anybody's just doubting
what we're talking about here, you just need to pull up,
and we'll probably include it in the show notes,
a couple of onboard Senna drives in places like Monaco,
where you have to be able to drive the car.
Most people would take it within a foot of a wall.
He would take it within three inches of the wall
to maximize the size of the track for him.
And he's doing this one-handed, no power steering while shifting.
Yeah.
Totally different animal.
Were those sequential, at least?
And did they have to use a clutch?
They did.
Oh, yeah.
He's clipping.
So he's clutch.
He's clutch, blip, shift.
Yeah, there's also, I just recently saw a great video
of him driving in an NSX.
Oh, yeah.
The loafers?
Yes.
With the loafers on, and he's just sideways on the pedals,
and he's so fucking busy.
Incredible.
What seems obvious is it might be his first time ever driving
the car.
He's just driving at 100.1%.
Yeah.
Well, he helped them develop that car.
That's another reason why there's such a love relationship
between the Japanese and Senna is the Honda engineers loved
him.
I've actually sat in his NSX.
Oh, really?
He actually had an NSX, and it still
sits at his brother's home in Sao Paulo.
Oh, really?
And when I met his brother, he said,
you want to come down and sit in the car and start it up.
And I was like, is this a trick question?
Yeah.
So where does he rank?
Because to my knowledge, Schumacher
had an incredible engineering mind.
He was very, very mechanical.
And they say he could help them develop the car in a way
that most drivers couldn't do.
Where was Senna's technical aptitude for actually developing the car?
Yeah, very similar.
There is footage of him actually building an engine on his go-kart and stuff.
Yeah, very, very similar.
And he was very, very committed to giving feedback.
So where I think the engineers, and I'm hearing this secondhand, not firsthand, but where people would talk about this was the feedback he could give to the engineers was remarkable.
There's a great story about him getting injured and not being able to drive the next day during
testing and one of the other drivers having to come in and sort of cover for him. And Seno came in just to listen to how the other driver gave feedback to the engineers
to make sure that it could even be trusted. So they didn't mess up the car.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. He was just that particular about everything you have to be able to say.
And as someone who drives a car myself, it's hard to in words like how dumb I am. I'll go out in a car and I'll know that it's not right.
Yeah.
But I can't tell you why.
I know.
So I raced for a season in the Super Trofeo series
in Lamborghini's.
And by the way, I have rebuilt engines and cars.
I am really mechanical.
But actually articulating what I think needs to happen,
I find to be like an entirely different knowledge
that I don't have currently.
I can tell you if it's understeering or oversteering,
I can tell you some basic stuff,
but to come in and go like it needs two clicks
on the suspension on the right rear for turn seven,
I'm like, I can't do that. I'm furious that I don't have that knowledge.
That's exactly how I feel.
I can tell you about the balance of the car.
I can tell you if I have too much or too little front grip
or rear grip, that's the extent.
I know.
And it's like 10 years I've been driving,
and that's the best I can do.
And by the way, I think it still exists dramatically
in current F1 crop of drivers.
I think there's very few that can give them super specific feedback the way that like Schumacher,
I guess Senna would. I don't think there's a lot right now that can do it.
I know some personally that have admitted that they know very little about what's going on with
the car. But again, I feel like Max, when even when I hear him communicate on the
radio, I'm like, well, he's definitely a grade above everyone else.
As far as his understanding of what's going on with the car.
And then Alonzo also seems to have like a really deep knowledge that he
can articulate to them.
Yeah.
But I feel like that's this big chunk that no one really talks about all that
much that I think is really important.
Though like, longtime champs seem to really have that.
Yeah.
I don't know what Lewis's aptitude is.
I haven't been able to really assess that.
So let's go back to the day of the dreadful race.
So Senna manages to somehow wrangle
pole for the third consecutive race of that season.
In a terrible car.
With the undrivable car that is on a knife's edge that he somehow manages to put on pole
yet again.
He has to win this race.
On the first lap, he gets away clean and seven cars behind him, one of the cars stalls on
the grid, gets plowed by another car, immediate safety car.
This was back in a day when the safety cars were insanely slow.
They were like little Pintos.
Today, most people would notice that they
have the fastest street cars available as the safety cars.
Yeah, they have the GTR, AMG.
Yeah, and the reason for that is these cars
have to be kept moving quickly to keep the tire
temperature high.
Again, this is something
that I understand that if you've never driven a race car, you've never thought of because
when you're driving on the street, it doesn't matter. But the temperature of the tires is
everything. If the tires are cool, they are bricks. It's like driving ice bricks under
the car. People are watching F1, they may be noticed during a formation lap or during a safety
car, the cars will weave side to side. That's to put friction in the tire. You have to keep the tire
warm. And so you want a safety car to be able to go as fast as possible.
Can we add one thing, it's one of my favorite things to try to get people to wrap their heads
around when they're learning about F1, which is you have this team that in some cases may
have $400 million at its disposal.
They have literally the best aerodynamicists on planet earth. They're better than the Adrian new is better than anyone at NASA.
Right.
The little tiny bits of carbon fiber wing.
If you sit up next to close to a car, it's boggling how advanced
and technological this thing is.
And then the engine itself, this 1.6 liter motor that's making a thousand
all of it is it is so next level tech.
But then you have to remember, all of it has to transfer through four rubber tires.
This is this great neutralizing fact about Formula One. It doesn't really matter what you do to that car
because at the end of the day you will have the built-in limits of a piece of rubber touching asphalt.
And they all have the same tires.
Yes.
I think it's one of the most fascinating aspects of it
is just how much tech leads up to, at the end of the day,
four pieces of rubber on asphalt.
And you'll never transcend that aspect of it.
Yes.
And today, it's such a differentiating factor, not because they use different rubber,
they don't, they all have the same compound. But the difference between say Max Verstappen
and Charles Leclerc is not necessarily who's faster over one lap where Leclerc may be actually faster
over a lap. It's that Max is way better in terms of getting more pace out of a tire for longer.
And that's why head to head there's no comparison between Max and Charles,
as one guy always knows how to maximize the life of his tire.
Yeah, they generally give credit to the car design in that situation.
You'll hear them go like, oh, Ferrari's rough on their tires.
They heat them up really quick, which is why Charles is able to get pole position a lot.
But in a race, their tires go out three laps before everyone else.
Yeah, so it's hard to parse out what his driver.
But then you watch their teammates, I guess,
is the only way to really figure that out.
And yeah, Max is almost never in tire trouble.
Right.
And this is actually, I think, during Lewis's prime,
because he's obviously on the down slope of his career now.
But when Lewis was at his prime, because he's obviously on the down slope of his career now, but when Lewis was at his prime,
it was probably one of the things he did better than anybody else on the grid.
It's not a sexy thing. So you don't get a lot of credit for it.
But when you can really quote unquote, manage your tires,
it's a remarkable advantage. And you're right. At the end of the day,
it's like all the engineering in the world still
has to be transmitted through those four contact points.
It's kind of comical.
Safety car comes out, and this is again back in the era when safety cars were slow.
Senna was a very big critic of this.
He was a very vocal critic of how slow these safety cars were, and he would be on his radio
yelling saying, that thing has to go faster, it has to go faster,
it has to go faster.
They spend through the fifth lap cleaning out these cars.
As the safety car pulls in, it is the end of the fifth lap.
This sixth lap is the first flying lap of the race.
On cold tires.
On cold tires.
Yeah.
Now, there's another important concept
that needs to be explained, which
is the fastest lap of the race.
It's always documented.
Today, a point is actually given for it.
For qualifying.
No, no, no.
In the race.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Of the race, yes.
In the race, the person who does the single fastest lap
gets an extra point, provided they were in the top 10.
Back in the 80s and 90s, they weren't giving points for it,
but it was still noted.
You can still go back and look up any race
and say, who had the fastest lap?
It shouldn't be surprising to people
that the fastest lap is almost always
in one of the two or three last laps of the race.
Why?
Because the cars have the lowest amount of fuel.
Also, they're not conserving anymore.
Yeah.
They're all out.
So a car today might weigh 700 kilos.
So they're much bigger than they were back in the day.
But they start the race with 100 kilos of fuel.
So just to give you a sense of how much of the weight
is fuel at the beginning of a race.
So at the end of the race, they're
down to 2 kilos of fuel or 1 kilo of fuel.
So think about the relative change in weight.
And obviously, that's why, if you
look at any race over the last 20 years,
the fastest lap is going to occur in the last couple of laps.
Yeah, it's like 15% reduction in weight.
So here we do flying lap number six,
first flying lap of the race.
And Senna is off like a dart.
To put that lap in context,
a couple things stand out to me.
So Damon Hill explained this to me in great detail.
The curve where ultimately Senna would die
on the seventh lap is called Tamburello.
It's a curve that no longer exists at Imola.
It's deemed too dangerous.
There were too many bad accidents there,
Senna's being the final and most deadly.
It's a high speed.
It's a very high speed left-hander and it's an all out corner to death.
It's today a chicane, which means they have slowed it way the hell down.
Every corner has a driving line, meaning there is a line you take to get the best angle and
there are a few times when drivers do not take the driving line.
As Damon explained to me, nobody took the driving line at Tamburello because it was
too bumpy.
Oh, okay.
And to be on a bumpy line when you're going a hundred and probably 205 miles per hour,
you would just choose to go a little slower and drive on a smoother part of the track,
even though it's a longer distance. So Tamburello is near the beginning of the lap. So it's Tamburello is like the first big curve
of the lap. So as they come past the start finish line to lap six, Damon notices that even though
they're on really cold tires, Senna takes the racing line through Tamburello. And he's thinking
to himself, what in the hell is he doing? Why would you take this risk?
And his car is bottoming out.
So it is sparking like crazy.
Now we will never know if indeed Senna had a slow puncture in his tires, meaning that
he run over some debris during the four laps when they were going over where the crash
was that was leading to a slow loss of pressure
in his tires.
Or was it just that his car, the tires didn't have enough temperature in them.
That's why the pressure was so low.
But either way, he is sparking like crazy, taking the racing line through Tamburello.
Right behind him is Schumacher and right behind him is Hill.
Of course, they're not going to take the racing line.
They're offline taking the smoother part of the curve.
Well, at the end of the sixth lap,
Senna has driven what will be the second or third fastest
lap of that race.
Really?
On a full tank of fuel and ice cold tires.
Wow.
That just gives you a sense of how hard he was pushing.
Yeah.
Do you almost think it's in response
to having been rattled going into the race?
Because I certainly have experiences where you're scared
and then the inner monologue starts going,
fuck you, you fucking pussy, you're going double hard.
Like as a response to the fear,
do you think there was an all in-ness to it?
I think, I don't know that it was in response to the fear.
I think it was, he had to win that race. And there's something that people didn't know until after the race.
Or the season would be gone.
There was that, but also when he died, you know what they found in his car? An Austrian flag
to honor Ratzenberger who died the day before. So he always carried a Brazilian flag in his car
every race and he would wave the Brazilian flag.
And he wanted to win that day, not just because he needed
to for his season, but he wanted people
to wave an Austrian flag for Roland.
Oh, fuck.
So I don't think there was any way
he was going to lose that race.
He was going to win that race at any expense.
And this is a guy who's normally possessed to win every race. You just take that
up a notch. Yeah, yeah. As they finish lap six, he's now pulling out from everybody. They enter
lap seven and this is the footage that people have seen a thousand times before. It doesn't
matter how many times I see it. I keep waiting for a different outcome and it never happens.
As they're entering Tamburillo, he drives straight off the track.
Really?
Straight off.
Do you see him attempt to turn?
So now I've watched this a hundred thousand times and I will tell you what I believe is
happening.
Okay.
And I will also tell you what Damon believes is happening.
And I think that in many ways, even though Damon's view, which is now my view, and by
the way, it's also Adrian Newey's view.
Adrian's written an amazing book for people
who are interested called How to Build a Car,
which is the definitive book on car design.
He goes through every one of his cars that he's built.
So it's a chapter per car.
We should add for fun, you can debate all day
about who was the best driver,
whether you think it's Schumacher or Santa.
Right, you can't debate who the best designer is.
He has 14 titles or something.
That's the most winningest human being to ever do this.
Yeah, it's sort of like I was telling my son,
we can debate who the best quarterback and running back
and things are.
You can't debate who the best wide receiver is.
It's the only position in football for which there
actually is no debate.
And that is?
Jerry Rice.
Jerry Rice is so in a league of his own in football
that it's really a question of who's second or third.
But you're right.
Adrian is in a league of his own.
So when you read the chapter on the FW16, which was the car
that Senna died in.
Was that an Adrian car?
Yes.
Oh, it was.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, wow.
Oh, wow.
I mean, Adrian has talked at length
about how difficult it was to, how do you, what
does it mean when you lose a driver in your car?
And by the way, Patrick had Adrian Nui to this day, if not for the statute of limitations
in Italy, would be in jail.
Really?
Because the Italian courts found them liable for that.
Really?
Yeah.
But by the time they got to that decision, the statute of limitations had expired
for whatever it was deemed manslaughter.
So draconian rule, but really short statulars.
Yeah.
Counteracted by.
But the view of the Italian courts
was that this was a design failure of the car.
So let's maybe back up for a moment.
When Senna got to Williams, he hated the car,
not just because of how it handled,
but he didn't like how he fit in the cockpit.
Okay.
So again, it's like all these things
that he kind of took for granted at McLaren,
which was having a car that was built around him.
He gets to Williams and he doesn't fit in the cockpit.
Right.
And he doesn't like where the wheel fits.
He's taller than most?
No, no, it's just his style.
He wants the wheel in a certain place, and it's not.
So they actually have to extend the steering column
by some six inches to put it where he wants it.
OK.
Well, in doing so, they had to make the steering shaft narrower
than what the spec was called for.
Really?
To keep weight down?
Because they're adding length?
No, to keep it at an angle that got it out of the cockpit,
got it where he wanted it.
So what both Adrian writes, and I have spent so many hours
discussing this with Damon, and I have gone back and watched
onboard footage so many times.
And the best onboard is from the car behind him,
which is Schumacher's car.
This is what I truly believe happened.
As he entered Tamburello, which is a left-hander, he lost
rear grip of the car when it bounced. The way these cars work, they have a huge Venturi
effect. There's a perfect amount of air that must be between the floorboard and the ground.
When you bottom out, you momentarily lose all of that aerodynamics.
The downforce.
That's right. What happened is he's going into Tamburello.
And because the car is bottoming out, either just
because of how bumpy on the line that he is, or, and or,
because his tires are cold, and or because he
has a small, slow leak of air due to running over debris,
the bottom of the car slides out.
It's possible I am convincing myself
I can see this on the Schumacher on board
because I now am believing this,
but I really believe there's a split second
where you can see the rear move.
Now, it's worth explaining to people what that's called.
That is called oversteer.
Oversteer is when the rear wheels of a car
are moving or turning faster than the front wheels of the car.
Oversteer is a phenomenon that a driver will feel
long before you see it.
So you will see oversteer because you're spinning this way,
but you feel it in your butt before that,
and you can almost hear it in the tires.
You hear the loss of traction.
So it's not surprising to me that you don't have to see much oversteer for Senna to have felt it.
Right.
So what do you do when you oversteer? So when a car is oversteering this way,
you course correct by counter steering into it. So if the car is oversteering to the left, you countersteer right, and that snaps the back of the car
in direction.
And then you're backing a little bit off throttle,
and you're coming back to throttle, and you're going.
You don't have to be doing the throttle correction
if you catch it quick enough.
So you could stay full throttle and countersteer back.
What I believe happened is the car
oversteered due to a loss of rear traction,
Senna countersteered,
and it immediately regained grip and shot him straight
off the track.
What the telemetry shows is that he went on max brake
and hit the wall.
OK.
Now, the steering column was broken
when the car was recovered.
And so the question is, did the steering column break from the collision or did it break beforehand?
It's very hard to know, but if you look at the lights, and I have the steering wheel
that he used the day before in qualifying.
So I actually have the steering wheel so I can see what the lights were.
If you look at the video of the lights, you can see that he was counter steering before
he left the road.
Now I have heard very confusing reports.
Some say that the wheel had no torque in it when he left the track.
And that would certainly suggest that the steering column was broken.
But what you don't see is you don't see him
turning the wheel.
Also just the odds, even though it was smaller diameter
than it was supposed to be,
the notion of torque breaking through steering a steel rod
seems really unique and weird.
There would have had to have been some metallurgical issue with the piece of metal to begin with.
I don't think in a million years he could turn it hard enough to snap.
Well, and he wouldn't be at that point.
It's a delicate move when you're counter steering.
It's not hugely abrupt.
But again, if it were the wheel breaking,
you would see his hands doing this as he's going straight off and you do not.
Yeah. Also perhaps some unintended,
the front wheels could go in any direction that they wanted.
So he hits the wall. Oh gosh,
I'm blanking on the exact speed that he hits.
It's in the ballpark of 150 miles an hour by the time,
he's in full brake, he's fully braking
on the way to the wall.
I didn't see Tamburello for the first time in person
till five years ago, it was my first time going to Imola.
And to see the wall that he hit
after watching that crash 87,342 times,
I was blown away how much closer it was than I would have expected.
Really?
On the TV, it looks really far. That's when you lull yourself into a sense of,
oh, God, I just can't believe he wasn't able to slow himself down enough that it didn't matter.
But it turns out there's a ravine right behind Tamburello. Senna had many times petitioned for
the wall of Tamburello to be moved out.
One of his best friends, Gerhard Berger, had crashed there nearly fatally a couple of years
earlier in 91 in the Ferrari. They were like, we're going to abort this race if you guys don't move
the wall out further. They said, we can't move the wall. There was a ravine there. The dryers
were like, all right, well, I guess we have to keep this wall here.
And what was the surface of the wall back then?
Was there anything to absorb any energy?
Nothing.
Concrete wall.
Just a concrete wall.
Nothing by today's standards is K-Rail.
Just literally a concrete wall.
Yeah, oof.
And so he hits the concrete wall.
The right front wheel comes off, and it's actually the suspension rod of that wheel that punctures
his helmet. It's clear that he actually died at the track. I mean, died a brain death at the track.
His heart was beating. They were doing CPR on him and they airlifted him to the hospital and
he was not pronounced dead until that night with a beating heart, but brain dead. I've talked with Joseph about that as well as when Joseph got to the hospital, Sid Watkins, who at the time was the medical physician of F1.
How good were those guys? I'm always trying to figure that out.
Yeah, no, Sid was the real deal and he was a part of F1 in the 70s. He was certainly a part of making
F1 safer. I think Bernie Ecclestone brought Sid Watkins in to F1 in the late 70s and he had done a lot to improve driver safety. The drivers had enormous
respect for him. Legend has it, although again, Sid is no longer alive, so I don't know if this
is true, but there's an interview where Sid talks about how the night before the race,
he and Senna were talking and he told Senna, you should just retire.
You got nothing left to prove. This is after Ratzenberger had died. He could tell Senna
was distraught. He said to Senna, you should just retire. Let's you and I both retire and go
fishing. Senna said, I can't. When Joseph got to the hospital, Sid was walking out of the ICU and
didn't say a word, just looked at Joseph but didn't say a word. That's when Joseph got to the hospital, Sid was walking out of the ICU and didn't say a word,
just looked at Joseph, but didn't say a word. And that's when Joseph knew he was dead.
He went in to see him and he said there was not a scratch on his body.
Really?
Not a scratch on his body. Other than obviously the head trauma.
Where'd it go through his helmet?
It's not clear. Fortunately, there are no images of it.
This is one of the nice things about it is nobody's ever taken a photo of his
body. God knows what happened to that helmet or anything like that.
So I don't know what part of the helmet was punctured, but I know this.
Sid said that when he arrived at the body and they pulled him out of the car,
he knew he was dead. He knew that this was an unsurvivable head trauma.
And I can tell it's heartbreaking to you that that happened.
What is your overall assessment of athletes dying?
What is your relationship with that?
Because I have a very specific compartmentalized view of all that and it may
seem sociopathic on some level. Well, I can imagine what you're about to say and I don't know that I would push back on it.
Look, let's take a step back and think about things, right? You alluded to this earlier.
There's something about James Dean and Marilyn Monroe and JFK that
creates a legend status
in them.
And part of it is like they died in their prime and they were at the peak.
We never saw them get old.
We never saw them decline.
They didn't have to adjust to a non-exciting life.
That's right.
They didn't have to fight.
And Senna was truly at his best.
He died at the third race into the 94 season, most
observers, myself included, would say Senna peaked in 93.
His best season, even though he didn't win the championship in 93, he was in a very inferior
car, still managed to win five races and give us some of the most heroic performances we've
ever seen, including Donington. And so when you have a person who dies at their prime
doing the thing they love, there's a part of you that says,
there are worse ways to go.
The context is such that it is sadder
than I think it would normally be in that
one guy already died, another guy almost died,
and he had those reservations about driving.
That complicates my verdict on the whole thing.
But in general, I find that I sometimes am talking to people
and the singular measure of life for a lot of people
is just longevity.
Right, it's just duration.
Duration.
And I look at some of these people,
I remember when Paul Walker died and this is, did you know Paul?
I never met Paul shockingly because we were like,
it's amazing intersecting car culture. He stuff.
It seems like I would have,
but I have friends that were friends with him and adored him. But when he died,
obviously it's super sad,
but there was some part of my brain that was like,
if you were to have measured
somehow the amount of experience he had had on planet earth in that period,
I would argue very, very few people had lived a bigger life or more of a life,
or had traveled more and met more people and had more experiences and had more
heightened everything. So what I would not want is a very
boring, subtle existence with no mountains and valleys for 130 years. That just doesn't appeal
to me at all. And then I also am not overly saccharine about death in general in that I always
remember, I remind myself, it's sad for the people left behind.
I mean, if I believed in a higher power and stuff,
maybe I would have a different view.
But for me, it's like, you're alive and then you're not,
and you don't know you're not.
So there's no period of being sad
that you're no longer alive.
So when I just put all these things into evaluating,
I don't know that I'm as sad as other people are
because I think a lot of these people ended up living 10x
the life of someone that lives to be 110.
If you presented me with the options,
if I live like Senna to 34,
or I live like some of my neighbors growing up to 105,
I would pick Senna.
I think I would.
And I even, I engage in a lot of behaviors that are dangerous
and people scratch their head at. I just feel like this is the only version I want of it.
Whatever the consequences, I am knowledgeable of it. I accept it. Obviously, a family complicates
that. I was just about to ask you that question.
The legend has it that Enzo Ferrari used to keep tabs on his drivers based on different
milestones in life and he would discount their lap times based on that. Once a driver had a
girlfriend, two tenths slower. Once he got married, five tenths slower. Once he had a girlfriend, two tenths slower. Once he got married, five tenths slower.
Once he had a kid, one second slower.
And it's just, as the stakes get higher,
you naturally just can't be all out anymore.
It's interesting.
So there's things I do where that crosses my mind,
and there are other things that simply don't.
I think maybe from years of being an addict,
my compartmentalization is very strong,
psychopathically strong.
So I can be doing one thing as like I can rule out the whole rest of the world
if I choose to.
So when I'm driving on the four Oh five in Los Angeles,
I'm my multi strata and I'm lane splitting and I'm fucking flying like I did
when I was a motorcycle messenger. Those times I go slow down.
I want your little girls to have a dad for as long as they can.
But when I'm on the track, just Monday at Coda,
that's why I like the activity is not only did no one in my life enter my mind,
none of my problems entered my mind. none of my anxieties entered my mind,
none of my goals in life were on the table. It's turn to turn, turn to turn,
present, present, present, present. And in the present,
it's just me and the motorcycle on the track. And for me,
that buys me so much in the rest of my life. It is like,
I imagine what people who do three month retreats in India get
from meditating. It's just this very specific elevated moment of clarity and presence that I
don't know how I would get otherwise. In that situation on the track, I don't ever think about
it. I had a single moment where I had a race in Fontana and it was when our oldest
daughter Lincoln was probably only about 11 months old.
She had never had a big cold yet or a sickness.
And so she was really sick, which made her, if you have kids, you know,
extra snuggly, extra docile.
And I remember like picking her up out of the crib and I was holding her and she
was so snuggly. And I did think, I gotta get on the road to get to Fontana.
But I thought I really should stay here the rest of the day and snuggle this
little girl and the whole ride to Fontana,
which is pretty far from where I live in LA. The conversation was, okay,
you've gotten five trophies this year.
What are we after? What is the number of trophies before the ego feels like you did it?
You're a big boy.
You're a man.
What's the number we should at least know?
Are we after 20 trophies?
Are we after three is four enough.
And I do think that line of thinking does enter my mind on many topics.
Like how many movies did you want to direct?
You should kind of know.
You shouldn't just kind of aimlessly be doing it.
So it's interesting.
I bounced back and forth, but I did decide after Fontana, I'm like, I'm giving this a rest.
Also a dude in the same series died in Europe.
It runs the super fails series.
I think ran in three continents and a guy burned to death that same weekend. And so I was like, all right, we're not doing this. We did it.
We're proud of ourselves. We're a man. We're all grown up and we're going to stop this.
And about two years ago, I was like, I think I'm ready to race again. So it just changed.
What's your analysis? I completely hear that argument.
And yes, Senna lived 10 lives in his 34 years.
And not only that, I mean, he's one of the few people who
still matters in his death.
He truly matters.
I mean, you almost don't go through a single telecast
of a race currently, where you don't hear his name once.
Yeah.
And even beyond just that, in terms of what he stood for
still matters.
If you look at the SENA Foundation, before he died,
he had spoken to his older sister and said,
I really want to get more formal in my giving.
Up until that point, he had just been very quietly giving,
mostly to education.
Mostly because, as you can understand,
the poverty in Brazil was so significant at that time. But he
said to his sister, Viviane, I want to make this more structured. I want to create a foundation
where we do this right. Of course, he would go on to die very soon after that, but his sister
honored that wish. Now, the SENA Foundation, which has probably given over half a billion dollars
really to education in Brazil,
is one of the most important foundations.
In that sense, he does live on.
He lives on in the sense that anybody who thinks about this sport knows what greatness
was.
Even if you don't like him, believe me, I have a friend who doesn't even really like
him that much. It's hard to be friends with him sometimes. No, I'm just kidding. But he's adamant that Lewis
is better than Senna and he sort of has a negative view of everything Senna. He thinks of, oh,
Senna was horrible when he crashed into Prost in Suzuka in 91 or not, it was 90 actually.
But that said, his impact on the sport is different. The other thing that's worth mentioning,
and I don't think anybody would dispute this, his death did change the sport forever.
It did.
In the sense that it changed safety instantaneously. It's not that he was the first driver to die.
You could even argue that there was a comparable death in the 1960s when Jim Clark died. Jim Clark
was the reigning world champion when he died in 1960, God 1967,
I believe. But the death, first of all, he died in a Formula 2 race. Back then drivers would drive
all series. Even if you were an F1 driver, you still drove F2 to pay the bills.
Oh, really?
The sport was so much smaller back then. Jim Clark actually died in an F2 race,
but it wasn't seen by the world. By the time Senna died, the sport was much bigger,
and it completely changed everything, meaning the sport got so serious.
It was like Earnhardt dying in NASCAR.
That's right.
You get a Hans device immediately.
Yeah. Although wasn't the Hans available before Earnhardt died?
It was available, but it wasn't mandatory.
Owned mandatory, yeah. And Earnhardt refused to wear it, right?
They all did. They're like goalies that wouldn't wear a facemask. It's available, but it wasn't mandatory. It wasn't mandatory, yeah. And Earnhardt refused to wear it, right? They all did.
They're like, god, goalies that wouldn't wear a face mask.
There's, again, this male pride monchoness.
Yeah.
Hans would have saved him.
He had a basilar skull fracture.
Yeah.
So upsetting.
It's interesting.
There's a really eerie interview of Dale Earnhardt
the day Senna died.
So it's May 1st, 94, and Earnhardt's
being interviewed having won a race and they're like,
hey, even though it's NASCAR totally different series, like, hey, we just want to acknowledge
Senna's death and Earnhardt said a lot of nice things. He loved him too.
Yeah. He seems to be very unifying in people's love.
Yeah. It would be incomplete to say it's
all statistics based because it's not. Dare we say in public why
we both aren't drawn to Lewis? I wonder if in exploring that it would reveal why we like
the ones we do. Well, I mean, it's all different for me. Obviously, I have a very close personal
connection to Sebastian Vettel. And also, I had stopped paying attention to F1 after 1997.
Okay. In 1997, Jacques Villeneuve, also Canadian, and the son of Gilles Villeneuve. I grew up paying
a lot of attention to Jacques Villeneuve because he was racing IndyCar before he went to F1.
When Villeneuve won the title in 97, I was in medical school and that was a period of my life when
I just decided I'm going to start paying more attention to school than sports. I stopped
watching football. I didn't pay any attention to F1 at all beyond a little bit.
Here we entered, so Håkonen won 98 and 99 and then Schumacher had that run of five victories.
I will say this, deep down there was a tiny, tiny part of me that didn't then Schumacher had that run of five victories. I will say this deep down,
there was a tiny tiny part of me that didn't like Schumacher and held him.
And this is going to sound ridiculous,
held him partially responsible for Senna's death because he was the one applying
the pressure and he was driving a car with that I felt was illegal and Senna
believed was illegal. Senna also believed he was outrunning a car that had
traction control when his car was undrivable. Yeah. Well, we must also admit Senna had gone to Williams torunning a car that had traction control when his car was undrivable.
Yeah.
Well, we must also admit Senna had gone to Williams to drive a car that was going to
have a huge technological advantage over everyone else.
So it was like anyone would have used whatever.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But the difference is active suspension was fully legal.
Williams just had a better...
Sure, yeah.
Although, it's really interesting.
If you go back and look, the active suspension of Senna's car in 93 was probably just as
good as the Williams.
The reason the Williams car was so dominant was it had the Renault engine that was incredible.
The Honda engine in 93, the Ford Cosworth engine was nowhere near as good that year.
Senna, again, because he still managed to win five races in a season where
his car was clearly outclassed.
But the point is everybody could have active.
It's just McLaren and Williams had a better active than everybody else.
Williams also happened to have the best engine by far, so it was hands down the best car.
But the detuning of the active was hardest on them to recover.
But I didn't come back to paying attention to F1 until Vettel's years. Okay.
So Vettel won his first title in 2010. He won four in a row, also Adrian Newey's cars.
So 10, 11, 12, 13. And then what happened is you had that huge rule change into 2014
and that created the new... So every time there's a rule change, right? That's typically
when you create a new dominance
and that's when the dominance shifted from Red Bull
to Mercedes before it's now coming back to Red Bull.
Cause they nailed the engine, right?
They nailed the engine.
Absolutely nailed the engine.
And Red Bull spent the next six seasons
with a lawnmower engine.
And then it was only in 2020 that they got the Honda back.
And then by 2021 Max wins,
even though Lewis actually has a better car in 21.
He does. I would argue a much better car. Yep. Yeah.
If I had to say, first of all,
what I'd like about Lewis is something I also like about Senna,
which is this is an outsider.
He brings like a rock star quality to it. He's like fashionable.
He transcends the sport.
I think all those things are cool.
It's awesome that there's a black formula one.
Like I can't help, but love that.
But by the time I started watching it,
the Mercedes was just so dominant
and Alonso was someone who came out last year
and said this publicly, which is like,
you have to kind of evaluate these people by did they win first against their
teammate or did they win first against another team for Alonzo?
It's more significant if you win against another team.
And if you just look at where Mercedes was finishing all those years,
it's one, two, it's one, two, it's one, two.
And the fact that Lewis was complaining last year that Red Bull was so dominant when in
fact there's just reams of data of him qualifying 1.4 seconds ahead at certain times of second
place, you know, Max was the underdog.
Like when I entered, it was just very easy.
This dude's won seven years in a row.
I don't want to see that again.
And the car is so significantly better.
It's not even remotely fair.
I would come to learn it's never remotely fair, but at that time I was shocked.
Well, this is an interesting point though that people ask me a lot about, which is what's
the difference between F1 today and F1 in the 80s?
One of the biggest differences is F1 has always been a sport about the limit of mechanical
potential and the limit of human potential and how do you merge those.
The difference is in the 80s and frankly into the late 90s or at least the mid 90s,
the balance between driver and car was about 50-50 just to put a stake in the ground,
meaning it was 50% the car
and 50% the driver.
That's unimaginable right now.
Correct.
Today, it's probably 75-25, maybe 80-20.
Yeah, I mean, with certain drivers,
you could put it up to 25.
But in general?
Right.
In other words, the difference is,
if you put Max into the Alpines car today, he wouldn't win a race.
He can't win.
He can't win a single race.
No.
Unless it's raining.
Right.
But here's the point.
You go back into the 80s.
Senna's in a Toleman that first year,
and he basically wins Monaco.
Schumacher is originally in the Benetton car,
which is not competitive, and he's podium.
Yeah, but he eventually did win in that.
But again, if you just go back and look at how much Senna
was able to do before he got into the McLaren.
Perfect car, yeah.
Before he got into the perfect car,
he was still clobbering it.
Yeah.
Not every race.
But there's also, there's another set of variables,
which I think made the racing back then more fun too,
is that reliability was an enormous factor too.
So like you could have the best car,
but every car is going to DNF two races a season
because the reliability just wasn't there.
So that threw things into a much more unpredictable.
Now, when you see Max retire
because of a mechanical failure,
you're like, how did this happen?
Someone's getting fired. This doesn't happen. But back then it was like every three races,
you lost a handful of cars, grenade their motor and did all kinds of stuff.
Yeah.
So that made it more interesting.
I think it's, you look at the Donningtons, you look at these races where Senna's ability to drive in the rain was so magical.
There's a few dudes in MotoGP currently that are that way.
It starts raining and you're like, okay, Jack Miller, you're up.
You're going to destroy today on a way less competitive bike.
Angela Perillo, who just passed away exactly a year ago, but Angelo who I never knew in person,
but I got to know him through video. I FaceTime with him a few times and had the chance to speak
with him several times over the last five years prior to his death. Angelo was the team principal
for DAP, which was the premier carting team of the 70s and 80s. Senna and another guy Fullerton were the two biggest
names in European karting in the late 70s and early 80s. I remember him saying that as good
as you think Senna was in an F1 car, he was even better in a cart.
Really?
He said he was so good in a cart and so good in the rain that when it was raining, he would usually
try to petition the marshals to cancel the race
and just give Senna the trophy.
He's like, why bother ruining the carts today?
We know who's going to win.
Just give Senna the trophy.
And then, of course, they would say no.
They race.
Senna would win.
I mean, double lap everybody.
And there's a cool aspect.
Yeah.
I'll say this. As a really, really lousy driver,
it's hard to put in words how much more difficult
it gets in the rain.
Yeah.
I immediately go straight to the motorcycles,
watching MotoGP and watching them in the rain
and admitting to myself,
they're turning faster lap times at that track than I can on drys is so humbling.
And yes, Senna on any track in the world, full downpour,
would destroy you on the perfect day, which is so humbling.
And again, it's like watching what he's doing.
And you can see there's some amazing video
when he's in the John Player special in 85.
His first win.
Curl is livery every, by the way.
Yeah, it is.
When he wins his first race in Portugal that year,
it is pissing rain.
He is driving down the straights,
and the car is doing this.
Hydroplaning.
Literally dancing as he's going down the straight.
And other drivers are spinning everywhere and anywhere.
Yeah.
That's a very special feel.
And by the way, you look at Max in the rain.
He's head and shoulders above the others.
He don't care.
Back to Lewis.
So I can acknowledge that he is absolutely brilliant.
I mean, the guy is absolutely brilliant. He's so smooth. He's so savvy.
If I'm critical, he doesn't fight.
And so who I've ended up loving in Moto GP is like Valentino Rossi is the god
of all gods. I think he's the god of all motor sports. What he did,
I don't think any car drivers ever done. And his willingness to fight,
literally kick his opponent while they're in a turn,
is that X factor that I'm so drawn to.
So I love-
And how many people don't like him for the same reason?
Cause again, there are people who would say,
look, nobody fought harder than Senna,
but then there's a subset of people that would say,
well, they don't like that.
You don't like that, yeah.
Yeah. Now he has those two incidents where a, he was crashed into to take him out
of winning a championship. And then he also crashed into somebody to secure his championship.
For me, I get it. That's what he's there to do. I like, I have defended Max. Now listen,
when Max would not let Checo, he wouldn't help Checo at all, which was such a bummer.
If any driver in the history of F1 deserved the help,
it was Checo, because Checo fell on his sword in 2021
over and over again to help him beat Lewis.
The last race of the year,
he sacrificed his quali lap to tow him.
And then he held up Lewis.
I mean, this guy did everything.
Did Max do that because he believed
Checo had purposely crashed in Monaco that year in Qualley?
No.
Well, personally, I've not asked Max this,
but for me, it's so crystal clear.
He's even been on the radio saying it out loud,
so we've heard him say it.
He's like, no, no, I told you you I'm never doing that. And it's true.
Max gets in a car and he's going to finish as high up as he can.
Period. Nothing else in the world matters. No other humans.
There's no paying back a favor.
He can't not try to drive as fast as he can at all times. Period.
I love it. If you hate Max, of course you would hate that.
It's deplorable, but I love him.
So I'm like, he is a cyborg.
He gets in the car and he's got to get the very best outcome
that's possible, period.
Yeah, it's like the scorpion who asks the turtle for,
you know, the story of the scorpion.
So scorpion and a turtle are on one side of the river
and the scorpion says,
hey, can you help me get to the other side of the river? And the turtle's like,
are you kidding me? You're a scorpion, you're going to kill me.
Yeah.
And he's like, why would I do that? You're going to help me to the other side of the
river. And this turtle thinks to himself, well, it's true, he can't kill me because
we'll both drown. And sure enough, the scorpion hops on the turtle's back,
they're going across the river and halfway across the turtle's like, ow, what the hell is that?
And he turns and he says, you stung me. And the scorpion says, I'm sorry, it's my nature.
Like, you know, he just can't, you know, it's like this. And yes, I think there's something to
your. I guess I overlook it because I don't think he has the capacity to be generous. I think he has
a single focus and that's what I love about him. That's why I love watching him drive and he'll die.
It's so obvious
He'll fucking die in any given turn that 2021 season is the greatest thing ever
What a time to like I had only watched maybe two years up until that point and to land at that moment
And of course, I love max people love Lewis. I fought with many people over that last race, which is so ridiculous
I find it so do we have the same explanation?
Which is like, we always unlapped cars.
What is everyone talking about?
The weird thing that happened was that they didn't unlapped the cars quicker.
Yeah, and that the purists would argue, yes, you should have always unlapped the cars,
but they should have unlapped all the cars.
Great.
Yeah.
So let's say they would have unlapped all of them.
We're in the same situation.
They didn't do them all.
Great. But what is absolutely standard is they should have been
unlapped and probably earlier than they were.
And so the other issue that everyone likes to neglect is that-
And by the way, when people refer to that
as the greatest injustice in F1,
it only tells me how shallow their history is of F1.
Well, also it's very reminiscent in my opinion
of the Prost-Senna battles they always went to
Prost. He got the call every time and sorry but from my point of view Lewis
had gotten every call that year. Absolutely. Every time they went into the
turn at the same time would have been ruled a racing incident any other time.
Max had to give up his spot to Lewis ten times that year. And certainly, if the roles were reversed,
he would have been going in with more points to begin with.
Also, he would have not given up a lap earlier in the race.
There's a lot of things I think, actually, what you saw
is him succeed in spite of the fact that every call went
to Lewis that whole season.
Yeah, to me, that's the most interesting season
because the better driver beat the better car.
That's the first time you really saw that in a decade.
Yes, totally.
The evidence is clear through what's his name?
Our favorite Finnish man, his teammate.
Oh, Valtteri.
Yeah, Boatoss.
Boatoss is winning races.
He's getting pole.
I love Boatoss, but I think his post-Mercedes career
gives us a sense of where he's at in the pack.
And so the fact that he was regularly winning races
and getting pole position,
it's hard not to want to see them on the same team,
but I don't even think it would be that fun to watch.
Yeah.
If you had to order who you think
the fastest drivers are
right now, what would you dare say out loud in public? I think Max is the
fastest by quite a bit. I think Fernando is the second fastest. Again, you're
asking me who the best drivers are not taking into consideration their cars.
Correct. Yeah. Yeah. I think Max is... Like they're all in the exact same spec model.
That's even a difficult question for the following reason,
which is different cars have different styles.
The Red Bull is really built around Max's style.
Yeah, he likes oversteer.
There's certain things he loves.
And the way Max drives, again, this
is another reason why I think Max is so good,
is he drives a car that has a couple of features. It's a car that can be driven very
fast, but has a very narrow operating window to be driven fast. Very hard to drive. It's very hard
to drive it fast. I think in many ways it's a testament to how far Checo has come that he
is now at least three races into this season.
He's doing well this year.
He's doing quite well.
And I think he deserves credit for that.
Because a lot of other drivers got spit out.
Gasly and Alban got absolutely aggriculated.
I couldn't love him more.
I think he is the most stand-up guy out there.
I love Alonso for so many obvious reasons.
So I think Alonso is the second best driver on the grid.
My question marks are, I think it's possible Lando
is insanely talented.
Yeah, I mean, I tell you this.
I would love to see Max and Lando in the same car
to see what would go down.
I think that Lando is overachieved in that McLaren
every single year and does things that are impossible.
I also love Charles. It's interesting science is dominating him this year, but in general, I think,
and again, we look at the pole position, why we would say Senna is so great.
Charles' one laps are some of the best I've ever seen, where you're like,
oh, how did he just pull that out?
I think he's so special.
So for me, I'm confused whether I think Charles
or Lando's faster.
Well, I mean, the problem is Charles, I think,
he makes too many mistakes in the races.
If you asked me three years ago,
look at all the guys on the grid,
how many of these guys will win a championship
in their career, I would have said Charles,
I would have said Lando, I would have said Charles. I would have said Lando.
I would have said George.
I'm not positive it will be any of them.
I mean, it should be.
It's hard to imagine at least one of them not winning a title.
I don't think it's a guarantee anymore.
I don't either.
It just really drives me mad to see them in such different cars,
especially Lando and the McLaren.
It's just like it was a dog.
It was garbage.
It was good for a few races last year.
You're like, are they back?
And then this year, there's no consistency,
so I don't know what it is.
But I was shocked to see how much faster he drove the car
than Danny, who I love.
What do you make of Danny's stint at McLaren?
I've never asked him, and we're friends.
And I think that's why we're friends.
I don't ask him any questions about F1.
But my armchair expert analysis would be, A,
the car was built for Lando in the same way
that the car is built for Max.
I think that's very obvious that the car is solely
designed for Lando's strengths.
I think that's very obvious that the car is solely designed for Lando's strengths. I think that's a big issue.
I also think that third team in two years
is unsettling and disruptive.
And I just don't know that he ever found his rhythm there.
I think some of it was mental.
But I was shocked.
I was quite shocked.
I mean, he did win a race in Lando Denna, which I love. And that gets into this other weird thing.
The magic of people who can win and not win.
It's like there have been basketball players that are as good as some of the
guys that won and there's some people are winners and some people aren't.
I don't know what that magic thing is, but like Lando, as good as he is,
he just can't finish above second. It's so interesting.
And that Danny, who has won disproportionately
for how consistent he's driven, of course he got in there and won.
It's just interesting.
And it was a great race to win at Monza.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, it was exciting.
Carlos, I think, is having a great year.
I want him because Carlos having a great year. I want him,
because Carlos has been so inconsistent. If there's something we can be critical
of Carlos, it's like, he drives like a striped estate, three races in a row,
and then he crashes three races in a row. And you're like,
what is going on with him?
But somehow the consistency seems to be there.
And I think the cosmic joke of all jokes, which is happening right now,
it's the only thing I think's interesting about this season,
as that Ferrari is getting rid of their fastest driver
to overpay for the second fastest driver on this season.
So Ferrari, it should be a t-shirt.
What are they thinking watching this season?
Yeah, who knows?
I'm also surprised that Lewis is going to Ferrari
because I believe Mercedes will be a better team
in 26 than Ferrari.
In other words, I have more confidence
In Toto. In Toto
Yeah.
than anybody else to turn that team around.
And I just think the Ferrari of the Schumacher era is a totally different team.
It has nothing to do with the team today.
You know, I think Fred is more competent than his predecessor, but I still
think that culturally that team struggles.
Well, someone was saying, which I thought was kind of an astute observation I didn't realize,
is they said, you have to realize
Ferrari operates as a national team.
It's not like any of the other teams.
That is the nation's team.
It's in the newspapers what they should do.
There is some sense there that is much,
you know, it's very unique to Ferrari.
Well, that's why Ferrari was so successful in the Schumacher era, which is it was not
an Italian run team.
It was a French run team.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
All the leadership was German, French.
Like it wasn't being run by Italians.
A lot of people say that, yeah, it's more of a committee than any other team because
of it being the national symbol of Italy.
My WhatsApp group, my F1 WhatsApp group,
the thing that gives that group the most joy
is watching how bad Alpine is doing right now.
That's the source of the most amusement.
And why did they previously hate Alpine?
Look, that's been the biggest drop in performance
I've seen since I've been watching it.
Alpine last year to this year.
Yeah, but even last year they finished.
I think they really underperformed last year
for what was expected.
Right, but those two were getting
into the points every other race.
Now they're like 19 and 20 every race.
Yeah.
They're worse than Williams or Hawks.
Yeah, I don't know.
I think there's just, it's very confusing why
Alpine would do so poorly.
Because they do well in other series.
There are supercars and hypercars and prototypes.
These other cars, they do a pretty good job.
So that's interesting.
I just love how much those two hate each other.
That's amusing as well.
It is.
I think they're the most hated teammates.
My wife is obsessed with Pierre.
She loves him.
Loves Pierre.
He's got a following.
Girls love Pierre.
He's having fun.
My wife loves her some Pierre.
Is that number one for her?
Yeah, it is.
Really?
Yep, and she's got a Pierre signed hat.
It's to Jill from Pierre.
Oh, the tripod.
Did he sign it the tripod?
No.
You know that famously last year.
He was in an interview and they said,
what's your nickname?
And you said tripod.
Stop it.
Yes, stop it.
In an interview on TV said, what's your nickname? And he said, tripod. Stop it. Yes. Stop it.
In an interview on TV.
And my daughter loves Danny
and she's got a Danny autographed hat
and it's to Olivia and it's like.
Privy possession.
Oh, she's obsessed with Danny.
And I'll tell you something really funny.
I don't know Danny, but I've met him a few times.
And the last time I bumped into him,
which was last year, well, he knew who I was.
So he said, hey, Peter, we got you chatting blah, blah, blah.
And then he said, how's Olivia doing?
And I was like, what?
No way.
How do you know?
And a year earlier, he had met my daughter,
taken a picture with her, and signed a hat for her.
That's impossible.
And I was like, how do you remember that?
I couldn't believe. And I even asked my friend Luke,
did you tell him?
And Luke was like, no, Danny's like that.
He remembers details.
That's freakish.
I will say this.
So I interviewed Danny and we got along really well.
And then we set up a hang, then he loves motocross.
So every time he's in LA, I take him to ride motocross.
And we definitely developed this friendship
and it's been lovely.
But then he came over to the house for dinner
and he shows up with like three presents.
He brought my wife a candle.
I show up and I've barely remembered to be fully dressed
when I go to parties.
You bring gum.
Yeah, I bring all my nicotine products and that's it.
But the thoughtfulness, the manners, I think he has a persona on drive to
survive, which is awesome.
It's very entertaining.
It's cocky.
It's arrogant at times, but real life.
Danny is like insanely sincere, incredible manners, clearly raised
perfectly, like the fact that he remembers your daughter's name.
I see year later. He's impossible but also not shocking for him.
He's a really fucking good dude.
Impossibly good dude.
And by the way, I think on average,
that's probably true of more F1 drivers than it's not.
Well, you know what I've learned from him
that I really enjoyed finding out
is that I think Max also has a
persona which is very different from who he actually is.
And I've learned this from Daniel and a couple other drivers and then mostly the girlfriends
of these drivers.
I'm always mining for Max details whenever I'm talking to someone.
And across the board, they're all like, he's just the shyest, sweetest guy.
He's like an introvert and he's shy.
And him being on camera or having to be anything public,
it's just not for him.
So I think it brings out this protective side of himself,
but in general, unanimously agreed
that he's a sweet, shy boy, which is so counter to Yos, it's hard to imagine.
I know.
You think about the trauma of growing up under that guy.
Oh my God.
You know, we did a whole on the F1 podcast,
we did a whole episode on Yos.
Did you do a whole episode on Yos?
We're obsessed with Yos.
The amount of criminal activity
he's been a part of is impossible.
Like convicted for fracturing a guy's skull at the go-kart track with his own father.
So dad and grandpa beat a guy to the point where they fractured his skull.
He was momentarily arrested for attempted murder, t-boning an ex-girlfriend in an intersection
at full speed and claiming that it was just an accident.
The hostility that's just purpling out, it
makes me really compassionate to Max. I'm like, God, this kid really survived this.
He adores him clearly. They have this incredible relationship. My name was really nice and
I could barely get along with him because I had so many issues.
I've never met Max, but a good friend of mine knows him very well and has said like, because
you could sort of think like, what is Max's superpower? Because he's so good in a car.
Yeah, outrageous.
Like he's so, he's so head and shoulders above everybody else.
I couldn't agree more.
That you don't realize it. But he said part of his superpower is just that nothing phases him.
That's hard to put in words how big a deal that is in driving. Before we were recording,
I was showing you some video from my driving this week.
I was telling you, it was like worst day I've ever had on a track, right? Like spinning nonstop.
And the problem is I've never done anything in my life where the psychology of performance
compounds more geometrically. When you start making mistakes-
They pile up in a way that is unique.
Yeah.
Intellectually, you understand, I have to be a goldfish in this moment.
I have to forget what just happened.
At least for me, on this particular day, I couldn't.
It started in my first session.
First session out, I had a lockup.
For people who don't understand what that means, it means the tires were a little too
cold.
I hit the brakes a little too hard. They locked. We don't have ABS in these cars.
Now you can't turn.
I can't turn. I can't stop. I can't do anything. This circuit I'm on has no runoff. It's like
when you lock up, I had three nanoseconds to realize it. By the time I realized it, I
was actually off the track.
Right.
I just never got out of that funk.
Because you were beating yourself up for that?
Partly beating myself up for it, but then partly not
wanting to lock up again, because now you
have a flat spot on the tire.
So now you're more susceptible to a lock up.
So now I had to pull my braking further back.
So now every session, I'm comparing my telemetry
of this day to my telemetry the last time I was on the track.
And my coach is like,
look dude, you are breaking 50 feet too early. Yeah.
And it's costing you literally eight tenths of a second on this lap. And I'm like, okay,
I'll go out there and I'll break 50 feet later, which is where I used to break. I get there and
I'm like, nope, you're going to break a little earlier and a little lighter because you don't
want to lock up again. And it's like, that's just one example of how the psychology of it just destroyed me.
And then what happened was like, now I'm second guessing myself
here, second guessing myself there, spin the car here,
spin the car there.
It gives me an enormous appreciation
for how awful this sport is.
It's a very lonely sport.
It's kind of similar to golf.
It's like tennis, yeah, or golf or boxing.
It's very mental. Yeah. I do want you to start riding motorcycles because the interesting thing about the motorcycle
is it really can only go through one way.
You can't go slower through because now you can't hang off the bike as much.
There's all these things that are kind of built into, they have to happen the same way.
So even if you had a moment on a previous lap, you can't enter slower because then you can't
lean as much because you don't have enough centrifugal force pulling you out. So it's
almost like you don't really have the option, if that makes any sense. Like in a car you could
turn, but on the bike, the way it works right is it has to be going through at a certain speed.
So you can be off it as much as you need to be and all these things.
Otherwise you're just kind of driving it straight up and down.
Yeah. I thought about that a lot after we got back from Koda.
I talked to my wife about it.
I even sent her a picture of the bike that you want me to get.
It's really funny. She didn't even entertain it. Her only response was shut it.
Like no way.
You're like, this is so dumb
We're not even gonna talk about it because you're so stupid that you would even think to add another dumb hobby
Okay, that's fair. Yeah. Yeah, I don't even think she was opposing it from the standpoint of danger
It's just you got too much shit. You got a you don't eat something
Yeah, like you have too many things that you do and waste time and money on. Why would you add another one?
Cause it exists. I have to do everything.
No, but then I thought about it. I was like, well, in five years,
I will have a lot more free time in 10 years. The kids will all be gone.
But then I was like, Oh, but you know, will I be too old to do it?
And there are some old dudes out there. I'm kind of encouraged. I'll see some,
yeah, but they probably started younger, right?
That's for sure.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
It is quite special.
The best example I have of it is I was at Laguna,
and I was there for three days.
And the third day they were mixing cars and bikes,
we were sharing the track with some driving club.
Literally at the same time?
No.
Trading off sessions.
Trading sessions.
And I had driven my AMG E63 station wagon up there for the track days. I was
on the track for two full days on motorcycles and then half the day, the third day, and I talked to
the club guy. I was like, can I go out in a session in my car? He's like, yeah, of course.
I go out and I'm in the E63. That's a great fucking car.
That's not a boring car to drive on the track.
It's 600 horsepower and dual clutch trans.
It's awesome.
And I did three laps and I was like, this is so boring.
I can't even believe it.
And the acceleration is so weak up the hill
and the breaking down the hill
is so laborious because the car weighs so much. And I was like, never again will I mix
those two days. I can go do a track day in the car if I start there and it's fun. But
the comparison between the two is shocking. Are you going to come drifting again before
Koda this year? Oh, I would love that. Yeah, we had a lot of fun. You should bring Danny.
Oh yeah.
I brought Seb two years ago.
Yeah.
And it was incredible.
So you recall.
Did he do almost as good as me?
You did great.
But even Josh Robinson, who leads the Drift Academy.
Does it professionally.
Yeah, he's a professional formula drifter,
and he runs this awesome school
that people should all sign up for,
called the Texas Drift Academy.
By the way, it's the main reason
I still have YouTube ads on my YouTube.
Why I haven't subscribed to YouTube to eliminate ads
is I'm holding out hope that I will see another ad
as transformative in my life as that one.
Oh, because that was just a...
Four years ago, I'm watching car videos on YouTube, and an ad as transformative in my life as that one. Oh, because that was just a-
Four years ago, I'm watching car videos on YouTube and an ad comes up for the Texas Drift
Academy.
I watch the ad, I go to the site, I sign up for a class, I meet Josh, the rest is history.
So now I'm a driftaholic.
And sure enough, I go out with Seb.
So the holy grail of drifting is doing tandems.
One guy's drifting in front, and the other guy behind him
is doing everything.
Matching.
You know, they're two feet off each other.
And it might take a year to get to the point
where you can do a lead follow tandem.
Yeah.
Seb was doing it within three hours.
And they let him.
Lead and follow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it was really funny.
At one point, I wasn't doing my lead follows.
I was out there doing my thing, which is pretty cool.
Like I'm doing the full circuit doing all my thing.
That's so fun.
And then Seb comes out with me and he's like,
let me sit in passenger while you go and haul ass.
So I'm out there doing this.
And then the funniest thing he said, he goes,
is it okay if I give you a pointer?
Yeah.
And I'm like, dude, are you kidding me? Yeah, Yeah. Yeah. It's okay. If you give me a point,
my ego can handle receiving advice from a four time F1 world champion.
I can handle three times. I don't know, but four. Yeah. Right. Right. Right.
And he's like, lay off the throttle a little bit more here and just do this.
And then counter steer a little bit more this way.
And I'm like the fact that he could figure this out in three hours, and it's taken me three years,
and I'm still not that good.
You also realize there are people
that are just so much better.
It's actually part of why I enjoy my hobbies,
is I actually really enjoy being so lousy at these things.
You do, I mean the spire to that.
It's frustrating, it's frustrating.
But you're constantly in a state of the learning curve
is still so steep for me.
I suffer greatly.
On the bike, I recognize it.
The bike is one thing.
And I'm good.
And then I am in no way ever approaching the AMA guys
or the super bike guys.
It's just staggering.
And I have no illusion I could do it.
My ego in the car is I could do whatever they can do if I had the time and had
been encouraged to do it.
The car thing I have in my mind that I could have been capable of anything.
I don't and I don't know, maybe it's possible when I was younger, it's different,
but I have too much built in self preservation to ever be a good driver.
I am destined to be mediocre for the rest of my life.
I think that's the healthiest version. Yeah, perhaps.
When I'm with Daniel, it literally goes through my mind.
I was like, I can almost not accept that. Of course,
he would be much faster if we got in the an F1 car. I go, but why?
We have hands and feet and I understand it. What could it be? The motorcycle, I am fear
limited. I am not going to go through some of these turns at 135 with my elbow dragging.
I don't have the gumption to do that. But in the car, I have that erroneous sense of
safety. I don't ever consider I can get hurt in the car.
So it's like, I don't have a fear thing.
So then what would it be?
Yeah, but don't you have some concern of just shunting
and trashing the car?
Yes.
Even if you're going to be OK?
Yeah, I'm real big on Hit and Run, this movie I directed.
I did all the driving and that.
And yeah, the stunt guys threw away four four cars and the pride I had was like,
yeah, I didn't throw any cars away and I never threw away the Lamborghini.
Yeah, I have a big thing that I, my story about myself is I don't crash.
And the notion of having to pay for a race car I was in is a real bummer,
but I don't even consider it's a possibility.
I have some delusion in that department. I have a hard time wrapping. I even had the
arrogant fantasy, I'm going to try to do a TV show with Danny and I, where we go drive everything,
snowmobiles, motorcycles, dirt bikes, everything that you put gas in, he and I are going to race.
And in my delusional mind, I'm like, I'm going to get close.
I'm going to get six of these tonight.
I think there's no way you can ride a snowmobile as good as I do.
You've written bikes with him, though.
Dirt bikes. Yeah.
Yeah. He's slightly better on a dirt bike than I am, but I'm not good under.
I recognize that.
So where my fear kicks in is like being 30 feet in the air, already having several shoulder surgeries. I'm not good on a dirt bike. I recognize that. So where my fear kicks in is like being 30 feet in the air,
already having several shoulder surgeries, I'm out.
I like to trail ride.
I like to ride little tracks.
But I don't have that.
I know my limits.
But snowmobile, razors, let's go, Ricardo.
I feel like I'm just going to stick with cars.
Have you ever ridden a snowmobile?
Never, even though I grew up in Canada.
Oh, so fun. So fun.
Really good one for husband and wife. The learning curve is very quick. Yeah.
My wife has no interest in speed period.
She won't get in a car with me.
We were laughing a lot when we were at the track this weekend. Yeah.
But the bummer of your wife not appreciating how valiant and skilled you are behind
the wheel. Then when she watches a drifting video, she's not like, Oh my God,
Peter, how are you doing this?
I know I bring all these videos home of me driving and drifting and all she says
is why would you wreck all those tires? That seems wasteful.
Yeah. And she's right.
Well, what else can I tell you about Senna?
Well, let me just tell you something really quick.
Hold on.
If you know me, you know who my wife is.
I think that's standard.
This is what happened.
My wife was perusing Etsy.
Does Jill go on Etsy?
Oh yeah, as does this one over here.
She loves Etsy.
I've never gone and looked around myself. Oh, I could spend hours on Etsy. Does Jill go on Etsy? Oh yeah. As does this one. She loves Etsy. I've never gone and looked around myself. Oh,
I could spend hours on Etsy. Okay. So she found these for me and I felt
like I didn't deserve them.
And I insisted that she get them so that I could give them to you.
Is that an MP4 for? Yeah.
These are Senna cups.
Wow. It's beautiful. Pretty cool, right?
And then I bought this for myself, but my arms are too ape like and long.
So I've decided to pass it on to you.
Whoa. This glorious item. Look at that.
Someone met made this.
This was on, you got this on Etsy as well.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
How great is that?
That is so.
I put it on, I was very bummed
that the arms only came up to midway down my wrists.
I mean, are you sure you don't just wanna do sleeve roll up?
I'm positive, I want you to have that.
Thank you so much. And the glasses.
And that was a third of my suitcase I brought,
and now I have room to amass something else.
It's cool though.
Well, you know what's really interesting? Cause I'm a real stickler for detail.
Sure.
This is the season that he died. Really? That's the helmet.
That's the helmet. He died.
He always ran the Brazil colors, right?
There's always ran this color going back to his karting days.
Okay.
But this is the Renault engine, the Rothman sponsor.
So he only would have had this helmet for three races.
Three races.
Yeah.
Wow.
It's a beautiful.
Well, there you go.
You got a couple more bits of Senna.
How does Jill respond to the amount of stuff that's in this house?
I would want anyone who's listening to walk through your house at some point,
you can't go six feet without something significant from the Senate collection.
Yeah, I think I've won the wife lottery, obviously,
in terms of just you've met my wife and you understand like incredibly
supportive and understanding. Yeah. Look, I thought it was going to be a bridge too far when I wanted to name our son
after him. Yeah, that's a big swing.
That is, that was a swing. Yeah.
Did you like set the perfect evening? Did you try to like wine her and dine her before you broached
it or did you throw it out randomly? Believe it or not, I had a harder time
with our previous son whose middle name is Feynman.
Okay.
That was a harder sell.
I understand.
But for that one, I had a subtle ploy, which was I started with a name that I knew she would never
go for, but that was plausible that I would like it.
Okay, which was?
Secretariat, because I love Secretariat as well.
Okay. Which was? Secretariat. Because I love Secretariat as well.
And so I was like, look, the greatest horse of all time.
Even if another horse wins the Triple Crown, at that point,
American Pharoah hadn't yet won the Triple Crown again.
I was like, no horse will ever win by that margin again.
To be able to negative split 5 quarter miles in the Kentucky Derby,
to win the Belmont by 30 lengths.
We could do a whole podcast on Secretary.
Okay, great.
I hope we do.
It's a really fitting name.
She was like, let me see how clear I can make this for you.
There is no fucking way we are naming our kid after a horse.
So then when I pivoted to Feynman, she was like, okay.
Okay, I can live with that.
As a middle name.
As a middle name.
Yeah.
And also my brother had just named one of his sons
after Pat Tillman.
Oh, okay.
Which I thought was awesome too.
Great book, right?
Did you read the Krakauer book?
Yeah, of course.
So I think she was just probably a little beat down between the Atiyah brothers. Yeah, yeah, too. Great book, right? Did you read the Krakauer book? Yeah, of course. So I think she was just probably a little beat down
between the Atiyah brothers by the time our youngest was born.
And also, by that point, she had become
aware of all the stuff we talked about, right?
Yeah.
Like, she, at that point, not only
had she seen the documentary, but there
are a whole bunch of other really cool things.
My wife loved the documentary and doesn't care about racing.
Yeah.
It's a very good documentary.
It's not a doc.
I mean, I would encourage anybody who's gotten,
who's still listening.
It's possible there's nobody listening to us anymore.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, these things happen.
But if anybody is still listening
and they haven't seen the documentary,
it's a no-brainer that you would go and see it now.
Yeah, you'll fall very head over heels in love with Senna.
And you don't have to be a racing fan.
It's not a racing story.
It was nominated for best documentary, I think,
for the Academy Award.
So yeah, it turned out to not be that hard to sell.
Her biggest concern was, will people know
how to pronounce his name?
Well, that would be a concern of mine,
because every time I say Ayrton,
I'm nervous as I'm saying it,
that I'm not gonna get it right.
I struggle with it.
How do you say it?
Well, it's funny.
We mostly call him Airy, because that's just easier. Well, it's funny. We mostly call him Airy.
Right.
Because that's helpful.
Because that's easier.
But it is Ayrton.
Ayrton.
Ayrton.
Yeah, forget it.
I can't do that.
She has a very legitimate concern.
And we're very, very lucky that we
have had two Brazilian nannies in the entire time
that he's been alive.
Oh, so they have a particular shine.
Like they just had an immediate affection for this little kid named after the
deity. Yes. Yeah. Well, we named, I pitched Lincoln for our first daughter
after my Lincoln Continental, which is like my most... Oh, so it's not an Abe Lincoln?
No, it's not. Although very worthy of naming someone or Lincoln, Nebraska or whatever. There's some options, but I have a
relationship with this 67 Lincoln Continental. It's just the most profound
of any vehicle I have. I've had it forever. I've done everything to it. I
made a movie about it. It's just very important in this car. And we thought for no real reason that she was pregnant with a boy.
We were both certain of it.
I don't know if you guys have ever proclaimed this without any reason,
but we were like, yeah, it's a boy.
Lincoln, no problem.
It's going to be Lincoln.
And I pitched, let's do Lincoln, Bell, Shepard.
They might lose Shepard, but they'll always have Bell.
That was my kind of horse trading.
And we were at an ultrasound appointment and the technician said,
well, it's a girl. And we were both like, no,
that's not possible.
And a very long time went by without either of us saying anything.
And the technician said, is that okay?
And we're like, no, fine. We'll be happy to have whatever.
And then after that, it was like dealing with the adjustment of, okay,
it's going to be a girl. And then I said, oh, and then the name,
I don't know about the name. And then I will say to Kristen's credit,
she's like, Lincoln's an even cooler name for a girl.
And I was like, Oh, you're right.
So then once we named Lincoln, Lincoln, my friend who you just met on Sunday, Steve Bacastro,
who's a stunt coordinator and a stunt man.
When Kristen got pregnant a second time, he jokingly sent a text.
You named the first girl Lincoln.
What are you going to name the second girl?
Navy seal, Delta force airborne, you know, making all these jokes.
And I'm reading this to Kristen and then I go, Hmm, Delta's a pretty
bad ass name for a girl as well.
And she was like, I hate to say it, but he's right.
So then Delta came out of a joke, but also bell.
I was smart enough to give her last name in the middle for a
little added, you know,
I have a friend who's got a Lincoln, a Kennedy,
a Reagan and one other president is the first name,
the political divide too. Yeah. Just going for great presidents.
Have you read the grant biography by chance? No. Sure. Now on amazing.
Couldn't recommend it more.
My sort of US presidential obsession
kind of mostly is like, LBJ is a huge fascination.
If you read those Carol books.
Yeah, those are great.
Especially living here.
Yeah, exactly.
Having LBJ library and all that stuff.
Yeah, and even what he did to the Hill country
and all the stuff, fascinating. But it ends there at LBJ. No,
it's a lot of LBJ and forward like LBJ, Nixon,
the last 150 years, I suppose. Yeah. Yeah.
Grant's super fascinating because he's an abject failure at everything
in life except for war and his presidency.
Terrible with money, insolvent, duped many times,
but he had a genius and it was just so specific and it was unrivaled.
Like it's such a good book. I think you and I are similar in like,
I want to be kind of good at everything.
I have my appetite to want to do stuff.
It's just so enormous that I'd rather be
like pretty good at, or even moderate at a bunch of things.
The notions of specialists really interest me cause I'm just so not that way at
all.
I want to be able to like talk to anyone I meet and hopefully have a hobby in
common or something.
I'm not trying to get super esoteric with like your brain surgeon friend that's
over.
And I think there's some drawback to that, but I am fascinated by people who just do Max.
I doubt Max can balance a checkbook or go grocery shopping.
He's probably not a great boyfriend, but boy, he can do that thing.
Yeah. Speaking of Max,
I think a lot of drivers don't like to spend that much time in simulators.
Like when they're away from the car, they're away from the car. Yes.
And that's not Max. Literally after he wins a race in the highest division of the highest sport,
when anybody else would be out partying, he's on a sim race competing against the sim racers
around the world. Yes.
Within hours.
Yeah, and they'll spend three hours sitting there doing it.
And that's just another aspect to it.
It's like, I don't think anyone on that grid
spends as much time thinking about racing.
You know, it's funny that we've talked about it.
I really would love to know what Max thinks of Senna
and how much he is historically aware now that Max's own legend grows. By the
end of this year, he's going to be a four-time world champion. Even though he's only 26 years old,
and he could easily race another 10 years and eclipse every record ever if he chooses to,
I wonder where he sees his place.
And I wonder if he has an appreciation
for the legends of the sport.
Yeah, that's an interesting question
because he regularly threatens to quit all the time.
What's the other really contradictory thing about him
is he's really haphazard about threatening to quit.
He doesn't like sprint races.
He hates those.
Well, I think Max quitting doesn't mean he wouldn't drive, it just means he wouldn't drive F1. Max and Alonso
are probably the two people who I think will drive forever. Just a question of where. Yeah, Alonso
for sure. It makes me think one more time of Valentino Rossi. In his last season racing,
he was like Alonso. He was maybe 44 still racing against these 19 year old kids.
And he was going through a turn and a guy had crashed just before the turn and
came off the bike and the bike was just flying unmanned.
And then another guy crashed. And so two bikes,
he's in the turn already committed. There's nothing he can really do.
One bike goes right in front of him and one goes behind him at the same time.
It's like the most impossible moment in all of racing motorcycles. He's a foot
away from the one in front of him and a foot in front of the one behind him. Both
of them flying with a T-bone and would have killed him. And everyone in the real
world, normal people, are like what's he doing out there? He's already 44.
Nine championships. Yes. Nine championships. He's done everything.
Why would he be in that situation? And his response was, yeah,
that was close, but uh, you know, if I'm not there,
I'm doing something else equally dangerous. I'm somewhere going to be,
it won't stop to him, it's like, yeah,
it would have been in a rally car or it would have been there. It doesn't matter.
That's what he does. Everyone else was like, Oh my God,
he just barely avoided death. And for him, it was nothing. He's like, yeah,
this is what I'll be doing until I'm dead.
I'll be in some situation that scares the shit out of me.
I can't help but wonder.
And I know that I'm far from alone in this, been wondering what would have been had Senna not died that day.
I think most observers believe he would have driven another four years until the next regulation
change and at the end of Williams dominance.
Williams ended up being the most dominant car of the year he died.
Despite the fact that it was an impossible to drive vehicle for those first three
races, the brilliance of that team did figure it out. His teammate, Damon Hill, almost won the
championship that year. In fact, he was one point behind Schumacher going into the final race of the
year. Schumacher crashed him out of the race, crashed himself out of the race.
In doing so, Damon actually looked like he was going to win the race, but it broke his
suspension rod.
Damon ended up finishing that year one point behind Schumacher.
He would have definitely won.
He would have absolutely won.
Yeah.
Schumacher won the next year.
It was close.
Damon Hill won the next year in the Williams and Jacques Villeneuve won the next
year in the Williams. I don't think it's an enormous stretch to say, look, Senna probably
would have won four consecutive championships in 94, 95, 96 and 97.
Putting them at seven.
Putting him at seven or eight, if you include the one that was stolen. There's talk that he
always had a soft spot for Ferrari like every driver and would have maybe gone to Ferrari
But he also would have been 37 which not that old but I could have seen him retiring
But what a lot of people question is given his absolute love for Brazil would he have gone into politics?
right and would it have made a difference in the presence of
Brazil this is a guy that was so loved.
There's no example we can point to of someone
who turns to politics with that much
of the support of a nation.
Now, you know-
Pacquiao.
I don't know if Pacquiao was even as loved
by the Philippines as Senna was by Brazil.
Really?
Well, because again,
I don't think people took Pacquiao as seriously.
I don't think people took him-
I loved him as a fighter.
Yes, I know, an incredible fighter. Yeah, what a warrior. But I don't know that took Pacquiao as seriously. I don't think people took him. I loved him. Yes.
As a fighter.
Incredible fighter.
Yeah, what a warrior.
But I don't know that the people of the Philippines took him as seriously as people would have taken Senna.
And who knows? Like there's no reason to believe Senna would have been a good leader in that regard.
Like we have no idea.
It's just kind of an interesting game of like what if. How involved would he have still been in Formula One after?
Would he have been an ambassador of the sport?
I've seen these AI-generated images
of what Senna would look like today.
To me, going back to your original thought of like,
to have somebody who dies in their prime
doing what they love,
okay, it's not a tragedy in some ways, it is in some ways,
but I always wonder what the counterfactual is.
What other spell would have been cast by this genius?
Yeah, as I said, I think kind of prepping for this I always wonder what the counterfactual is. What other spell would have been cast by this genius? Yeah.
As I said, I think kind of prepping for this
and stumbling upon the poll record,
I think it did elevate my assessment of him.
I always thought he was definitely one of the greats,
but again, you get into all this hypothetical.
It's like, yeah, I don't know what the next four years is.
You play the car lottery. The point you're making is valid, which is the team was great and he was
on the team. But I do think that pole thing for me really pushed it in a direction of like,
I can concede that he was likely whatever that tie is. Yeah. For you, he's clearly above.
Yeah. I will concede that I think it's very difficult to compare
drivers across eras.
You know, if you asked Senna who was the greatest,
he would have said it was Fullerton.
He was the greatest guy he ever raced against in karting.
And if you asked him in F1, he would have said Fangio.
That was his hero.
We have to give Schumacher a lot of credit.
The fact that he goes to Ferrari, which is a shitty team,
and just sticks it out and develops that car and then We have to give Schumacher a lot of credit. The fact that he goes to Ferrari, which is a shitty team,
and just sticks it out and develops that car and then
wins, I mean, it's hard to undercount him.
Yeah.
I would say, look, if you put a gun to my head
and said, who's second best, I'd put Schumacher.
Yeah.
But that could be Max.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like, give Max another five years,
and maybe it's going to be Max number two.
And you never know.
Maybe one day I will even say Max is the greatest of all time.
Yeah.
The fun thing ahead, and I don't want it for him
because I want him to just be the most winningest champion
of all time, but Red Bull will have an evolution
with the rule changes.
And I'm actually most excited about seeing Max
driving the second fast car once
again.
Cause I think that was the most exciting thing ever that he just had to out
drive Lewis and did consistently. Yeah. Yeah.
Well, my friend, thanks for having me to learn more about Senna. Yeah.
It's bigger than a driver. He's got a, some kind of a rhythm to him.
That's really intriguing.
There's an artistry to him that Schumacher doesn't have. There's some kind of artistry for sure to Senna that captivates the emotions a
lot more. Yeah, absolutely. Have you ever been to Sao Paulo? No,
I have not been to anywhere in South America.
That's where they keep the cocaine, so I've stayed away.
They have farmed a table of cocaine there.
Guys are stomping on it in the background,
and then it comes right in the door.
I want to go.
I want to go desperately.
You've got to come to Interlagos with us one year.
Every single year, it is the most incredible experience.
And we also usually go to the cemetery every year as well.
OK.
He's buried there. He is buried in Sao Paulo.
I'm in a beautiful cemetery in the middle of the city. Sao Paulo is so big, it's hard
to believe. We don't have a reference for that. It's not like LA, Chicago, New York
big. Geographically or just popular?
Yes. Okay. Both.
Was there like 25 million people there or something?
Yeah, probably close to 30 million people. We always stay at a hotel in the middle of
the city. And when you're in that hotel and you're in the top floor, which is where the gym is,
and you're looking out, for 360 degrees, you cannot see the end of a city.
Oh, wow.
It's so big.
Wow.
And yet, you see the highways named after him. You see the murals of him on the wall.
And then here's the most amazing thing is when you go to where he's buried,
it's the most unassuming thing. It's just a plaque in the ground.
And are there always people there?
Usually not.
Oh, really?
Every time I've gone... Now, there's always hats there, flowers, pictures. It's clearly a place
where fans go, but it's very quiet. Every time I've gone, I've been alone just with the people I've gone with.
Yeah. I've taken my daughter a couple of times and it's really, I mean,
I know that sounds so weird. It sounds like I'm too obsessed,
but it is the closest thing I would have to religious experience.
Or do you place all his religious stuff? I mean,
you can't find audio of him not talking about God at some point.
Yep. I think he drew strength from it, right?
Like he really believed in his God given right to win every race.
Yeah. But there's a duality to it. On one hand, it presents his humility,
which is he's like regularly thanking God for this gift. So that's humble.
But then for me as the cynical atheist, I'm like,
but you're also saying God cares more about you
than anyone else.
So there is also like a deep arrogance to it
that like God has picked me to win a race.
It's a push for me.
Yeah, that's interesting.
I have a hard time figuring out what I feel about that.
If you believe in God and you feel chosen by God,
is that super humble?
I don't know.
I don't know, I can't relate.
I definitely don't feel chosen.
But speaking of listening to things that he talked about,
it's amazing how often you hear interviews of him
and you hear him talk about mortality.
He did not have a view of immortality.
He always knew that he was on the limit
and his time could come.
And he spoke very modestly about that.
Yeah, well, and the mom was super vocal as well.
Almost all the interviews she's in,
she's saying she hopes he quits after he wins,
or he said he's gonna quit if he becomes a world champion,
but I don't believe him. That's a bit of a bummer too. It seems like she was very fearful of that and that
was the outcome.
Yeah. At his gravestone, one of the things it says there is quotes a verse from the Bible
that he had called his mom the morning he died. He hadn't had a good night's sleep.
He was not in a good head space to race that day, but he called his mom and shared with her
something he was reading in the Bible
about God looking after him and protecting him.
That sort of verse is there on his stone.
So it would be hard to make a movie
that would live up to his life.
I know that Netflix is actually working on a docudrama.
He wasn't married when he died, was he?
No, he had a girlfriend.
He loved women, right?
In the doc, he's with another, he liked blonde.
And he liked meeting people on talk shows.
He seemed to date many of the people
that interviewed him on a talk show.
Yeah, at the time he died,
he was dating a very, very famous Brazilian model.
He had a Kennedy thing too.
Like him out on the boats and everything,
the family's kind of rich. There was also some kind of Camelotti vibes to the family. Yeah. Yeah. 40 years, 30 years. 30
years ago. Which is another thing by the way, I guess you don't remember the day he died because
you were a fan. No, I didn't know. The very first Formula One driver I became aware of by name was
Schumacher.
And mostly cause Valentino Rossi wrote in the two seater with him and said, it was mind blowing. I was like, Oh wow.
So I think another example of feeling old is I still remember the day he died
very clearly. I remember every detail of the room.
Like I remember hearing it on the radio. I mean, I remember what my radio looked like. I remember every detail of the room. I remember hearing it on the radio.
I remember what my radio looked like.
I remember everything.
That's a little odd.
I'm sure anybody can relate to an experience like that,
where you think, how did 30 years go by so fast?
Oh, yeah.
And then I think, well, in 20 years,
when it's the 50th anniversary, that's not that far from now.
No, two seconds. Yeah, unfortunately.
We'll be sitting right back here.
We'll look a little different.
Well, hopefully not with your help.
We'll still look jacked and ready to race.
But this has been a blast.
I think it's funny for people, like now that you and I are buddies,
and people are like, what's the thing?
Is he your doctor?
I'm like, oh, no, no.
I interviewed him. Cars didn't come up once. We step outside and all this. And people go like, what's the thing? Is he your doctor? I'm like, oh, no, no. I interviewed him.
Cars didn't come up once we step outside and all of a sudden he's like,
what cars you got?
Okay.
I got this.
And I'm like, oh yeah, it's all motor sports.
It's like the greatest connector.
Isn't it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's been fun.
Well, thanks for making time to ask.
Yeah.
Such a pleasure.
And thank you for these awesome gifts.
I mean, Jill can complain, but there's room for a little more.
She has yet to complain.
To answer your question, I still have leash.
What a woman.
I know.
She's also gorgeous.
You really knocked it out of the park.
Yeah, we both got lucky.
You're fortunate when you have a wife that
can tolerate your obsessions.
Yeah.
Anytime I watch videos of you talking about the questions
you ask her, I'm like, OK, we got a very similar thing happen at home. Thanks
for having me. Thank you. Thank you for listening to this week's episode of The
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