The Citizen (KZN)

Villeneuve: Triple Crown very unlikely now

- London

– Jacques Villeneuve has applauded Fernando Alonso’s gladiatori­al spirit in chasing motorsport’s Triple Crown but the retired Formula One world champion and Indianapol­is 500 winner said he was sceptical.

Alonso, who races for Honda-powered McLaren in Formula One, will be at Barber Motorsport­s Park in Birmingham, Alabama, this weekend to soak up the Indy Car atmosphere before competing in the Indy 500 in May.

A win on the famed Brickyard oval would be sensationa­l but the double world champion will still have to win the Le Mans 24 Hours sportscar race to match the unique Triple Crown achieved by Briton Graham Hill in 1972.

Villeneuve, who won Indianapol­is in 1995 and the Formula One title in 1997 before finishing second with Peugeot at Le Mans in 2008, felt the likelihood of Alonso succeeding was “tiny”.

“But he will go for it, and that’s what’s great. That’s what makes it exciting,” the Canadian said at the recent Bahrain Grand Prix.

Indianapol­is was part of the Formula One world championsh­ip from 1950 through to 1960 but the winners were all Americans unfamiliar to European audiences and did not compete in grands prix elsewhere.

In 1965 Jim Clark missed the showcase Monaco Grand Prix – as Alonso will also do this year – to race at Indy. The late Scot won, becoming the only driver to take the Formula One championsh­ip and Indianapol­is in the same year.

Hill, father of 1996 world champion Damon, won the F1 crown in 1962 and 1968, the Indy 500 in 1966 and Le Mans in 1972.

The Canadian competed in Le Mans only after retiring from Formula One, with Alonso – who will be 36 in July – likely to follow the same route.

Villeneuve said he would love another go at the French race but was not kidding himself about his chances, and suggested Alonso should not either.

“I’m waiting for the call. It won’t happen. I’m 46 and you need to be 18 to race now,” he said, with some exaggerati­on about the younger end of the spectrum given that nine-times Le Mans winner Tom Kristensen of Denmark retired at 47.

McLaren won Le Mans in 1995 against faster prototypes in wet conditions but it has been dominated for more than a decade by major manufactur­ers. –

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