Daily Star Sunday

Brave Billy aims to reach the big time

- By RICHARD EDWARDS

BILLY MONGER is still intent on becoming a Formula 1 world champion – just 20 months after the horror smash that almost ended his life.

The 120mph crash in a Formula 4 race at Donnington Park in April 2017 led to a double leg amputation.

His collision with a stationary vehicle just days before his 18th birthday was the most horrendous blow imaginable.

But the teenager, known as Billy Whizz, wasted no time in getting back behind the wheel – and defying stratosphe­ric odds.

By March 2018 he was back competing in the British F3 Championsh­ip and showing the kind of flare that makes him British motorsport’s brightest young talent since five-time F1 champion Lewis Hamilton.

And now Monger, 19, is looking to 2019 as the year he can reach the big time.

“Depending on whether I can raise the budget, I would like to race in Europe in the Formula 3,” he said. “That for me is the next step on the way to F1 and it’s a great way for me to test myself against the best.

“That’s what I want to do and we’re getting there. We need to raise a crazy amount, something like a million euros.

“Motorsport is expensive and I’ve got to this stage through hard work and that’s not going to stop now. I’ll keep going and I’ll make it work.”

There had been talk of Monger targeting the Le Mans 24-hour race in 2020.

But that now looks to be on the back-burner as he continues to progress at lightning speed in single-seater racing.

He said: “Single-seat at the minute is the way I want to go. This year has really opened my eyes up to what I can achieve.”

Monger has coped with everything thrown at him since an accident that not only changed his career but also turned his life upside down.

Last week he won the Helen Rollason award at the 2018 Sports Personalit­y of the Year awards.

And his progress behind the wheel has been matched by the great progess he has taken away from the car since the crash.

He said: “I don’t see myself as disabled – I see myself as an able-bodied person who does stuff differentl­y.

“That’s the way I look at it. Disability can at times seem like a harsh term and I don’t think it’s quite right.

“I’m just really trying to push myself to show that what I’ve been through and what other people have been through shouldn’t stop people from trying to achieve their dreams.

“If I can do it then what excuse do people without disabiliti­es have?”

 ??  ?? IN TALKS: Chris Eubank Jr
IN TALKS: Chris Eubank Jr
 ??  ?? PALS: Billy with Lewis Hamilton
PALS: Billy with Lewis Hamilton

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