The British Grand Prix, 1995, into the closing stages. For once, the cards have fallen in Johnny Herbert’s favour.
Damon Hill has bungled a pass on Michael Schumacher, leaving both the Williams and Benetton in the Silverstone gravel. David Coulthard in the other Williams had been a pest and got past, but a pit-lane speeding penalty has now knocked him back. Herbert leads.
After everything, the operations, the setbacks, the endless physio, the constant pain… It’s been seven years since he mangled both feet and nearly lost one in that damned accident.
Now here he is, about to win his home grand prix. But as usual, he’s distracted by the sheer effort of simply driving. “I was literally screaming in the car,” Herbert recalls today.
The toe that “got chopped off and stitched back on” was causing agony from the constant shift from throttle to brake, brake to throttle.
“I thought: I have to find a way to get around this. I cannot carry on. I could do left-foot braking, but braking is all in your ankles – and neither of mine move. In those laps at Silverstone I learned I could do one lap left-foot braking, two laps with the right foot, then another with the left. That relieved the pain.”
Through the tips of his toes
Instead of feeling the pedal through the tips of his toes and moderating pressure through his ankle like racing drivers normally do, Herbert had to rely on sensations through his knees and hips… Unnatural, but when you don’t have a choice, needs must.
The pain has never left him. He lives with it still today. At 60, “I’m lucky I’m not in a wheelchair,” he says. ‘Lucky’ is a word Herbert uses often. Given the state of his feet, that might seem strange. But from his perspective, it’s amazing he had a racing career at all.
Between 1989 and 2000, he started 160 grands prix – for Benetton (two spells), Tyrrell, Lotus, Ligier, Sauber, Stewart and Jaguar – winning three of them.
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Great interview, thanks for this. Oh what could have been. He didn't really make very much of his injuries publicly when he was in F1, but clearly that accident had a terrible impact on him.
I'm sorry but, as much as I loved watching F1 over the years, the actual racing isn't or seems to be taken over by petulant,never had no said to adults, when Verstappen came on the scene he seemed like a breath of fresh air to the sport, fearless, upset the established heroes by beating them on the Track, it also lost my interest when Global media took over, and as said, knowing the rules and how to use them of your actual driving isn't up to par doesn't make F1 any more likeable.
This current crop of drivers seem relatively likeable, to be honest. The emotion at the end of today's GP in Abu Dhabi was quite something.
Hard to dislike Lando Norris, Lewis and Sainz both very affected by leaving their teams, Tsunoda is hilarious, so is Alonso for different reasons, plenty of characters.
Verstappen is a petulant brat though.
Next season could be a classic.