I live in Indianapolis. I knew of Sospiri because he was some no-name Euro driver that just showed up outta nowhere and qualified on the front row for the 500. Which not very many rookies do. Wasn’t until YEARS later I learned about him and the Lola Mastercard stuff 👍
One piece of unsolicited advice: at this stage, just focus on watch time, not views. One of first story videos I did was 39 minutes long and had less than 10,000 views for a year. But ppl watched more than 20 minutes at a time. It was disheartening bc I focused on the wrong thing. Now it’s got a few million. You’ve got an incredible base of evergreen content which is virtually impossible to make. I wish someone told me not to fret, long content wins 10/10 even when views are “lower”. Keep going man. I know it’s a grind. But I love seeing channels like this. It’s so rare. And ppl want it. Eventually I promise you, they’ll find you. Just be around when they do.
Thank you for the kind words, and the great advice - as you say, it can be a grind sometimes, but hearing about your experiences is a great reassurance to me. Rest assured, this historical, long format content is what I love making, and that's what I'm going to keep on doing.
I watched your wonderful video to the end. This is the kind of in-depth, honest, human-point-of-view analysis true lovers of F1 crave. Excellent! More!! I have followed F1 since the 1971 season. Focus on quality, not a quick buck. You have made a genuine contribution to F1. CYMotorsport gets lots of views and makes tons of money. I have watched them many times. I can't remember even one of their posts. I will remember your video for the rest of my life.
If Michael Schumacher says one of his biggest influence was a name many have not heard, don't question it. You don't need to know a guy to know he's a legend.
You can name a lot of drivers that were great in the junior categories but they either struggled in F1 or couldn't drive in F1. Sospiri is an unusual case since he had the talent but he was unlucky to not get the chance he deserved which is a shame. At least his career after Lola was a lot more positive. This story also reminded me of Giorgio Pantano who was so dominate in karting that Fernando Alonso called him invincible but when he got to F1 with Jordan in 2004 he struggled and couldn't even see out the whole season if I am remembering correctly. Also he was Italian too and I will say that there are so many interesting F1 careers for Italian drivers. In other news, I got a F1 book for my birthday that was like a preview for the 2022 season kind of like your video but your video is way better. Perez won in Monaco after Ferrari throw away an easy win and Marcus Ericsson won the Indy 500 with Grosjean crashing in the race as well which is a funny coincedence.
I wonder why some, like Pantano, are so good in junior categories, then struggle higher up. Money, the wrong car, pressure. Possibly a lack of intensity for the highest level. Maybe there's something I'm overlooking. Technical skills might come into it. I suppose if Ricciardo's first two years in F1 were in a McLaren like handling car of today, he would have sunk without a trace, too.
@@JT-ko2ib I feel like it depends on a person to person basis since you can name lots of drivers that were fast outside of F1 but suffered in F1. I guess a common thing is the machinery since a lot of these drivers start with machinery lower down the grid but don't do enough to warrant a seat higher up the grid. Riccardo isn't doing enough this season which is a shame since we saw how fast he can be. I do think the car is part of the problem since it can be a handful on some tracks since even Norris can have problems putting it into the points but there maybe other problems we aren't aware of.
@@JT-ko2ib I think each case has a multitude of different reasons (who knows; maybe I’ll tackle some of them some day!). But one thing that is worth considering is a difference in racing styles and abilities - the way you race an F3 car with be different to an F2, likewise an F1 car. And sometimes people just can’t adapt to those higher power series, for whatever reason.
Björn Wirdheim is now an expert on Swedish F1 broadcasts and while he may never have raced in F1 he did tons of tests and practice sessions! It's always interesting to think "what if this person did a Schumacher style one race sub and took off"...
In F1 you need a sponsor or a daddy with money like Mazepin, who raced a whole year without having the talent. If Vicenzo (, who had the talent ) had that, he would have been a known F1 racer. Well researched and another great video. Thank you so much.
Definetly my favorite f1-related chanel. I can’t be the only one Who loves These Long-format videos. You make the stories so interesting with your insight and calm voice. Hope you go full-time in the future, more content is very welcome, But quality comes first, and this is top tier.
Thanks as always! Huge ripples in the motorsport timeline for sure. Would Benetton have been world champions? Would Ferrari have enjoyed their period of domination, or any small part of championship success?
I today discovered and basically binged pretty much your entire channel, amazing work keep it up, looks like the youtube recommended algorithm is smiling on you
Bravo - This is another highly informative, meticulously researched, beautifully put together, finely scripted and narrated video. A very classy and rewarding watch!
Many talented young drivers who would had the ability to win the F1 title if there were someone to back them. We will never know what he could've achieved at the highest level.
Great video! I do have to point out though as a nerd for the FIA Sportscar Championship, Vincenzo did do a few races in 2002 in the R&M Judd (carbon-tubbed Riley & Scott) alongside Mauro Baldi.
great video mate! really thought you were gonna mention senna saying about terry fullerton being his inspiration for very similar reasons (karting purity).
I've stumbled to your channel and I must say I'm so glad I did I've seen two videos so far and they have been awesome! I love watching content like this definitely your getting my sub! Keep up the amazing work can't wait to see more!
phenomenal video, man. love the passion and research put into it. you have great presentation, and your narration style is unique, calming and professional. keep at it and the algorithm will find you. the views might not be there now, but they will be.
Keep up the good work! Hope we will see more of 90's themes like Panis winning in Monaco, why will Minardi always be the best backmarker of all time and the best coffee in paddock (that's where i started to love Luca Badoer and found your channel), the story of awful Ferrari in 92', or how Sauber became a ground for making many good drivers, Larousse and Pacific... Great job!
The irony behind Mastercard attempting to not get left out in sponsorship. The way they rushed Lola into '97 (considering '98 was all new regulations as well, so the car was effictively useless after the season) and then pulled the plug after the inevitble happened means I will never get a MasterCard credit card. If they scam them, what's to say they won't scam ME?
Yes I remember Sospiri in karting and in Formula Ford. World kart championship is a wonderful title to win. Terry Fullerton beat Senna to win and was always mentioned as one of the best Senna ever drove against. Sospiri was lucky in many ways not to race a Nick Wirth design F1 car, yet you can understand why he would of driven anything. The Mastercard debacle was extremely sad, I so wanted Lola to succeed. Ah well Good to see Sospiri running his own team and doing well. Great little insight in the troubles you can have trying to advance your career. Thanks for posting.
Maybe you could take a look at Roberto moreno, he is one of my favorite drivers who had such bad luck, and was stuck at back marker teams for most of his career, he’s like sospiri in many ways
Definitely could be an interesting one - like you say, stuck at some many backmarkers for the longest time, and even his breakthrough role at Benetton was tainted through no fault of his own.
Was the frontrunner for a seat at Williams in 2000 but just lost out in the end. I believe he did some testing for Arrows too if my memory serves me correctly. Glad you enjoyed it!
I never once noticed the similarities in their helmets till now. 1:29 I always thought it saw a Schuey original. I distinctly remember him having a good sportscar run in ISRS Co driving with Emmanuel Collard in the 333SP. Won a couple titles,maybe a few. I knew who he was through his junior formulae,and he was the last F3000 champ before it went "Spec." So he obviously had some kind of chops. I just never knew he was that inspirational to MS.
Thank you for this video! This guy was screwed by f1 and just couldn’t get a break. Mastercard bloody Lola! And his useless team mate got another two stabs whilst he was never seen again!
From a quick glance at the list of all the Formula 3000 drivers, there weren't very many more experienced than him - looks like the clear winner is Tomas Enge, who spent 6 years there, and briefly drove for Prost in F1 in 2001.
@@TheMobileChicane yeah, going to F1 is difficult and no guarantee you can race there, or if can, you can't stay 2-3 years in an F1 team without earn point(s) or even a win.
Sospiri’s plight as a driver that legends love is very similar to Giorgio Pantano. He was reportedly unreal at karting level, and a lot of 30-mid 30’s guys now mention him as a legend
Great video but just one small point; if I recall correctly Berger was out for 3 races on compassionate grounds as he was grieving the death of his father, not due to illness.
At least he raced 🏎 , if he stayed at indycars he would have won more but perhaps he knew how dangerous oval racing 🏁 is. Perhaps there was a different reason 🤔. Still he has won races in his life and that a wonderful reward:)
I actually didn't know about the whole Simtek thing. I'm moved to wonder whether or not one could argue, rather crudely of course, that Sospiri owes his life to whoever supplied Ratzenberger with more money as he would've been sat in that very car at Imola 1994.
Ah Alex Wurz....now there was a driver that was far too good looking for F1....or at least that's my feeling anyway. I've only really got to know of the Mastercard Lola (and by turn Sospiri's) saga later as even though I was watching F1 at the time, I hadn't really taken it all in as to what was going on (I was a kid and the inner politics of every team eluded me for a while. It was a great shame but nothing out of the ordinary although I do feel sorry that a man like him got just one race while Tosser...ahem, sorry, Rosset got another chance the next year. The fact that he still managed to keep his enthusiasm alive for motorsport truly is an inspiration because I sure as hell couldn't cope with that amount of rejection. Here's to his continued success in motorsport.
Good video with obvious good research, although you used Schumacher name as a pure bate 😀 Where you could improve is making your commentary a bit lively. It sounds too clinical. And the occasional joke attempts come out of place. But content is good, keep up.
I live in Indianapolis. I knew of Sospiri because he was some no-name Euro driver that just showed up outta nowhere and qualified on the front row for the 500. Which not very many rookies do. Wasn’t until YEARS later I learned about him and the Lola Mastercard stuff 👍
very sacha baron cohen in talladega nights
glad Sospiri finally gets the credit he deserves with this video
One piece of unsolicited advice: at this stage, just focus on watch time, not views. One of first story videos I did was 39 minutes long and had less than 10,000 views for a year. But ppl watched more than 20 minutes at a time. It was disheartening bc I focused on the wrong thing. Now it’s got a few million.
You’ve got an incredible base of evergreen content which is virtually impossible to make. I wish someone told me not to fret, long content wins 10/10 even when views are “lower”. Keep going man. I know it’s a grind. But I love seeing channels like this. It’s so rare. And ppl want it. Eventually I promise you, they’ll find you. Just be around when they do.
Thank you for the kind words, and the great advice - as you say, it can be a grind sometimes, but hearing about your experiences is a great reassurance to me. Rest assured, this historical, long format content is what I love making, and that's what I'm going to keep on doing.
I watched your wonderful video to the end. This is the kind of in-depth, honest, human-point-of-view analysis true lovers of F1 crave. Excellent! More!! I have followed F1 since the 1971 season. Focus on quality, not a quick buck. You have made a genuine contribution to F1. CYMotorsport gets lots of views and makes tons of money. I have watched them many times. I can't remember even one of their posts. I will remember your video for the rest of my life.
@@stonetrouble5053 Thank you very much for your very kind words!
really brilliant and generous advice. keep at it, TMC!
@@livingthroughtv Will do!
If Michael Schumacher says one of his biggest influence was a name many have not heard, don't question it. You don't need to know a guy to know he's a legend.
it's the same reason we don't ask you to dance for real, brother.
@@livingthroughtv lol
You can name a lot of drivers that were great in the junior categories but they either struggled in F1 or couldn't drive in F1. Sospiri is an unusual case since he had the talent but he was unlucky to not get the chance he deserved which is a shame. At least his career after Lola was a lot more positive.
This story also reminded me of Giorgio Pantano who was so dominate in karting that Fernando Alonso called him invincible but when he got to F1 with Jordan in 2004 he struggled and couldn't even see out the whole season if I am remembering correctly. Also he was Italian too and I will say that there are so many interesting F1 careers for Italian drivers.
In other news, I got a F1 book for my birthday that was like a preview for the 2022 season kind of like your video but your video is way better. Perez won in Monaco after Ferrari throw away an easy win and Marcus Ericsson won the Indy 500 with Grosjean crashing in the race as well which is a funny coincedence.
Giorgio Pantano, Vitantonio Liuzzi, Davide Valsecchi - it seems like Italian junior series champions might be cursed!
@@TheMobileChicane It is crazy. Speaking of which, I did feel bad that Gio was dropped from Alfa.
I wonder why some, like Pantano, are so good in junior categories, then struggle higher up. Money, the wrong car, pressure. Possibly a lack of intensity for the highest level. Maybe there's something I'm overlooking. Technical skills might come into it.
I suppose if Ricciardo's first two years in F1 were in a McLaren like handling car of today, he would have sunk without a trace, too.
@@JT-ko2ib I feel like it depends on a person to person basis since you can name lots of drivers that were fast outside of F1 but suffered in F1. I guess a common thing is the machinery since a lot of these drivers start with machinery lower down the grid but don't do enough to warrant a seat higher up the grid.
Riccardo isn't doing enough this season which is a shame since we saw how fast he can be. I do think the car is part of the problem since it can be a handful on some tracks since even Norris can have problems putting it into the points but there maybe other problems we aren't aware of.
@@JT-ko2ib I think each case has a multitude of different reasons (who knows; maybe I’ll tackle some of them some day!). But one thing that is worth considering is a difference in racing styles and abilities - the way you race an F3 car with be different to an F2, likewise an F1 car. And sometimes people just can’t adapt to those higher power series, for whatever reason.
Björn Wirdheim is now an expert on Swedish F1 broadcasts and while he may never have raced in F1 he did tons of tests and practice sessions! It's always interesting to think "what if this person did a Schumacher style one race sub and took off"...
This kind of reminds me of the way Nyck de Vries is talked about by drivers who made it before him to f1
Karting and junior prodigy too
These videos are so good, you do so much research and it shows how with much effort you put in the videos, hoping you do well in the near future
Thank you, glad you're enjoying them!
Respect for digging up those old karting footage held in a park in Hong Kong.
In F1 you need a sponsor or a daddy with money like Mazepin, who raced a whole year without having the talent. If Vicenzo (, who had the talent ) had that, he would have been a known F1 racer. Well researched and another great video. Thank you so much.
Thank you Patrick!
The legend has returned ‼️
Perhaps the story of many talented drivers that did not have the chance to succeed in F1, great presentation! Top notch quality content
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks!
The most recent example is Stoffel Vandoorne. His gap to Alonso was similar to that of Felipe Massa and Raikkonen, but was never given another chance
Just discovered the channel today and already I’ve watched almost everything you’ve posted. Can’t wait to see more…keep up the great work!
Thank you, and welcome to the channel!
Fantastic insight. I'll subscribe and share, so that you wont't be the Vincenzo Sospiri of F1 UA-cam, but one amongst the champions
Thank you so much!
It’s only after watching this that you discover who Michael got the design of his helmet from. Great stuff!
Definetly my favorite f1-related chanel. I can’t be the only one Who loves These Long-format videos. You make the stories so interesting with your insight and calm voice. Hope you go full-time in the future, more content is very welcome, But quality comes first, and this is top tier.
Thank you Lukas!
Best f1 channel.
Looking at this i think what if Michael never got that Jordan call?
100% agree🕺
Thanks as always!
Huge ripples in the motorsport timeline for sure. Would Benetton have been world champions? Would Ferrari have enjoyed their period of domination, or any small part of championship success?
I today discovered and basically binged pretty much your entire channel, amazing work keep it up, looks like the youtube recommended algorithm is smiling on you
Thank you Matt!
This is amazing. And that Jörg Müller mention is plus points too. Subbed.
Thank you - welcome to the channel!
What a great channel you have,always great content!
Thank you so much!
Great Video! You deserve much more subscribers! Keep up the good work :)
Thanks very much, I will do!
Bravo - This is another highly informative, meticulously researched, beautifully put together, finely scripted and narrated video. A very classy and rewarding watch!
Many talented young drivers who would had the ability to win the F1 title if there were someone to back them. We will never know what he could've achieved at the highest level.
A record to be proud of.
Great video! I do have to point out though as a nerd for the FIA Sportscar Championship, Vincenzo did do a few races in 2002 in the R&M Judd (carbon-tubbed Riley & Scott) alongside Mauro Baldi.
Yes, I spotted I'd accidentally omitted that after I'd finished editing! But good catch ;)
What a random and wild video! Love it!
Thanks!
Thank you for the brilliant video.
Glad to see you cover guys and teams that the world doesn't know. This is quality stuff.
F1 has no short abundance of great stories! Thanks again.
great video mate! really thought you were gonna mention senna saying about terry fullerton being his inspiration for very similar reasons (karting purity).
Thank you! And that's a good point, some great parallels between Senna and Schumacher there.
You videos are good for 300k... don´t stop! Great edition and narration. Good job! From Portugal!
Thank you Siri!
thank you, God bless you man honestly i love you, keep going🏁
I've stumbled to your channel and I must say I'm so glad I did I've seen two videos so far and they have been awesome! I love watching content like this definitely your getting my sub! Keep up the amazing work can't wait to see more!
Thank you so much! Glad you've enjoyed the videos, and welcome to the channel!
phenomenal video, man. love the passion and research put into it. you have great presentation, and your narration style is unique, calming and professional.
keep at it and the algorithm will find you. the views might not be there now, but they will be.
Keep up the good work!
Hope we will see more of 90's themes like Panis winning in Monaco, why will Minardi always be the best backmarker of all time and the best coffee in paddock (that's where i started to love Luca Badoer and found your channel), the story of awful Ferrari in 92', or how Sauber became a ground for making many good drivers, Larousse and Pacific... Great job!
So many good ideas there, may have to steal them!
Great narration
Thank you!
This was very good. I didn't know how much this would fascinate me. Thank You so much. I subbed, but now I'll ring the bell. Arigato gozaimasu Sensei.
Thank you so much! Glad you enjoyed it.
Just discovered your channel and I've been binging all day. Great vidoes mate.
Thanks Rhys!
Loving the channel. Keep it up!
Will do, thank you!
The irony behind Mastercard attempting to not get left out in sponsorship. The way they rushed Lola into '97 (considering '98 was all new regulations as well, so the car was effictively useless after the season) and then pulled the plug after the inevitble happened means I will never get a MasterCard credit card. If they scam them, what's to say they won't scam ME?
Amazing work man, keep it up!
Thank you!
This video is so well done! I had to subscribe! Your channel is a true gem, please continue to make these kind of videos in the future!
Yes I remember Sospiri in karting and in Formula Ford.
World kart championship is a wonderful title to win.
Terry Fullerton beat Senna to win and was always mentioned as one of the best Senna ever drove against.
Sospiri was lucky in many ways not to race a Nick Wirth design F1 car, yet you can understand why he would of driven anything.
The Mastercard debacle was extremely sad,
I so wanted Lola to succeed.
Ah well
Good to see Sospiri running his own team and doing well.
Great little insight in the troubles you can have trying to advance your career.
Thanks for posting.
Subbed. Keep up the good work my friend!
Thank you, will do!
Amazing video!
Thank you Bimon!
Maybe you could take a look at Roberto moreno, he is one of my favorite drivers who had such bad luck, and was stuck at back marker teams for most of his career, he’s like sospiri in many ways
Definitely could be an interesting one - like you say, stuck at some many backmarkers for the longest time, and even his breakthrough role at Benetton was tainted through no fault of his own.
@@TheMobileChicane yeah If Schumacher didn’t come in he might have been a champion
Fantastic video!!!!
Thank you Gabe!
Beautiful! Thank you.
Absolutely love your channel and videos!
Thanks Bilal!
Great storytelling, great hints to british homour, great topics! Keep on!!!
Thank you Jan, I will!
Nice video, I used to wonder about the story of the master card Lola. Also your channel name is awesome.
Thanks Tre!
I just watched all of your awesome videos, Hope to watch more stories on other categories as well like CART, WEC and others. Keep going
Thanks Arturo! F1 will most likely be my main focus, but I'd look to branch into some other series in the future!
Well done Simon💪 keep going👍
Never thought I’d see Mark from Aunty Donna in an F1 video ♥️ 😂 nice one 👌
You'd be amazed at the collection of pop culture clips in my hard drive!
Your videos have so much quality! Wonderful video essay with great relevant media-and narration. It’s crazy you don’t have a million subscribers.
Thank you John! Very kind of you. And here's hoping - one day!
Best Italian race driver ever
ascari turned up in his grave 😂
Luca Badoer entered chat.......
Great video, appreciate the effort that has gone into it.
Thanks very much!
I know who jorg mueller is as a driver as a J J Lehto fan I know he was quick as hell.
Thanks for the video
Was the frontrunner for a seat at Williams in 2000 but just lost out in the end. I believe he did some testing for Arrows too if my memory serves me correctly.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Vincenzo Sospiri man, if only we saw him in an F1 car that could actually qualify
Would’ve been a solid midfield runner, for sure!
I never once noticed the similarities in their helmets till now. 1:29
I always thought it saw a Schuey original.
I distinctly remember him having a good sportscar run in ISRS Co driving with Emmanuel Collard in the 333SP.
Won a couple titles,maybe a few.
I knew who he was through his junior formulae,and he was the last F3000 champ before it went "Spec."
So he obviously had some kind of chops.
I just never knew he was that inspirational to MS.
Did not expect a Dayoman cameo LOL
There’s always time for a Dayoman cameo
Thank you for this video! This guy was screwed by f1 and just couldn’t get a break. Mastercard bloody Lola! And his useless team mate got another two stabs whilst he was never seen again!
Glad you enjoyed it! A lot of people have been asking for a video on Rosset.. maybe one day!
This is a fairly sad story of a man with clear talent who just never got the chance due to finances
Awesome video. Can we get one on Giorgio Pantano?
Both he and Vitantonio Liuzzi are on my list!
Guy must be a formula 3000 veteran back then, spending his time there for quite a long time.
From a quick glance at the list of all the Formula 3000 drivers, there weren't very many more experienced than him - looks like the clear winner is Tomas Enge, who spent 6 years there, and briefly drove for Prost in F1 in 2001.
@@TheMobileChicane yeah, going to F1 is difficult and no guarantee you can race there, or if can, you can't stay 2-3 years in an F1 team without earn point(s) or even a win.
Sospiri’s plight as a driver that legends love is very similar to Giorgio Pantano. He was reportedly unreal at karting level, and a lot of 30-mid 30’s guys now mention him as a legend
Pantano's tale is another I'd love to explore one day.
Great video but just one small point; if I recall correctly Berger was out for 3 races on compassionate grounds as he was grieving the death of his father, not due to illness.
It was both, he'd had sinusitis surgery, whilst his father also sadly died in an aircraft crash.
At least he raced 🏎 , if he stayed at indycars he would have won more but perhaps he knew how dangerous oval racing 🏁 is. Perhaps there was a different reason 🤔. Still he has won races in his life and that a wonderful reward:)
I was one of his mechanics in Italian F3 in 1992. He was very fast and intelligent and a really nice bloke.
That's so cool!
I can't wait for someone to become the next Hamilton and say their inspiration was lord Mahaveer raghunathan
Grand Prix winner or not, he drove an F1 car and you can never take that away from him
It's more than any of us will do in our lifetimes!
Riccardo Patrese.
Good guy too.
Shout out to Heather Small.
I actually didn't know about the whole Simtek thing. I'm moved to wonder whether or not one could argue, rather crudely of course, that Sospiri owes his life to whoever supplied Ratzenberger with more money as he would've been sat in that very car at Imola 1994.
I wonder how many people actually catched the "moving on up" reference😂
Not enough for me to justify it being in my Spotify Wrapped that year 😅
Ah Alex Wurz....now there was a driver that was far too good looking for F1....or at least that's my feeling anyway.
I've only really got to know of the Mastercard Lola (and by turn Sospiri's) saga later as even though I was watching F1 at the time, I hadn't really taken it all in as to what was going on (I was a kid and the inner politics of every team eluded me for a while. It was a great shame but nothing out of the ordinary although I do feel sorry that a man like him got just one race while Tosser...ahem, sorry, Rosset got another chance the next year. The fact that he still managed to keep his enthusiasm alive for motorsport truly is an inspiration because I sure as hell couldn't cope with that amount of rejection. Here's to his continued success in motorsport.
The man is truly an inspiration!
I honestly can’t blame the guy for jumping on the Lola train, I probably would’ve too.
Giorgio Pantano Sr. Sospiri deserved at least 2 full F1 seasons to see his real level and not that pathetic Lola
In other words, f1 is 10% racing talent 10% car, and 80% political connections…
That contract Lola signed with MasterCard must have been absolutely terrible.
As Antônio Pizzonia learned the hard way….. All that matters is money… No money, no F1 seat
Antonio Pizzonia is another interesting case - I started an essay on him many months ago, and he was definitely an interesting character.
"the man who inspired MS and MS consider to be the GOAT"... Senna. It's Senna. MS talked about this a million times ffs.
Don't you think young Vincenzo Sospiri looked a little like young Billy Bragg?
The Lola story is exactly why accountants just ruin everything when they are in charge.
10:11
Big juan spotted
Mentioning he couldn't afford his Simtek seat followed by who it went to...talk about dodging a bullet
What about Stefan Bellof?
As a video idea? That could be interesting.
@@TheMobileChicane Well it has been said that Stefan Bellof was Schumacher's hero.
Really shitty of MasterCard, push them team into an early campaign then bail when the inevitable calamity takes place.
Sospiri was robbed of his F1 career with MasterCard Lola :(
Good video with obvious good research, although you used Schumacher name as a pure bate 😀
Where you could improve is making your commentary a bit lively. It sounds too clinical. And the occasional joke attempts come out of place.
But content is good, keep up.
27:18 :D:D:D
Have anyone told you that you have such a soothing voice. Great content as always btw!