148 episodes

Bring Back V10s celebrates a classic era when Formula 1 was loud on the track and off it. Join host Glenn Freeman and a range of guests as they take a deep-dive into a golden age of F1 from 1989 to 2005, when superstars like Schumacher, Senna, Mansell and Prost were thrilling fans and rising talents like Alonso, Button and Raikkonen were establishing themselves as modern greats. Go back in time as we recall information you might have forgotten and unearth previously unknown details about some fascinating tales from F1's history.

Bring Back V10s - Classic F1 stories The Race

    • Sport
    • 4.9 • 28 Ratings

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Requires subscription and macOS 11.4 or higher

Bring Back V10s celebrates a classic era when Formula 1 was loud on the track and off it. Join host Glenn Freeman and a range of guests as they take a deep-dive into a golden age of F1 from 1989 to 2005, when superstars like Schumacher, Senna, Mansell and Prost were thrilling fans and rising talents like Alonso, Button and Raikkonen were establishing themselves as modern greats. Go back in time as we recall information you might have forgotten and unearth previously unknown details about some fascinating tales from F1's history.

Listen on Apple Podcasts
Requires subscription and macOS 11.4 or higher

    1993 British GP - Hill's heartbreak

    1993 British GP - Hill's heartbreak

    Season 10 of Bring Back V10s is here!

    Karun Chandhok and Edd Straw join Glenn Freeman to look back on a memorable weekend at Silverstone, where Damon Hill came agonisingly close to claiming his first F1 victory in front of his home crowd.

    But a rare Renault engine failure for Hill allowed his Williams team-mate Alain Prost to claim a then-record 50th win, while Prost's bitter rival Ayrton Senna stopped on the final lap of the race for the third year running. 

    The weekend played out with tension brewing between the FIA and teams over the legality of driver aids, and Bernie Ecclestone taking shots at Indycar racing where reigning F1 champion Nigel Mansell was making international headlines.

    We also get the inside story of how Williams upset one of its sponsors so badly that they decided to quit F1 at the end of that season. 

    1997 Revisited: British GP

    1997 Revisited: British GP

    We've got one more 1997 Revisited episode for you before this series takes a break for the small matter of series 10 of Bring Back V10s! 

    To sign off on the first half of the season, we head back to Silverstone, where Jacques Villeneuve got his campaign back on track with victory, despite suffering a problem in the pits that left him stationary for over half a minute. 

    Villeneuve's recovery was aided by title rival Michael Schumacher retiring, and a late engine failure for Mika Hakkinen, who looked on course to take his first F1 win, despite McLaren taking a puzzling approach to the first half of the race when Hakkinen was stuck behind his struggling team-mate David Coulthard. 

    And at last there is something to celebrate for the Damon Hill fans, as the reigning world champion picked up his first point of the year with Arrows.

    1997 Revisited will resume in September with our look back at the German Grand Prix. 

    BBV10s Exclusive Q&A with Williams legend Patrick Head

    BBV10s Exclusive Q&A with Williams legend Patrick Head

    To celebrate The Race Members' Club launching on Patreon, we've dug out this never-before-released interview with Williams founder and F1 technical genius Patrick Head, revisiting several key storylines from his team during the V10 era. 

    Some of Patrick's comments were clipped up for previous episodes, but the entire interview has never been heard uncut before - until now! 

    So join Bring Back V10s host Glenn Freeman for a little journey through some of Williams' biggest moments from the 1990s and 2000s, featuring tales of Nigel Mansell (several times), Adrian Newey, Jacques Villeneuve, and 'The Walrus'...

    1997 revisited: French GP

    1997 revisited: French GP

    Michael Schumacher appeared to take control of the 1997 F1 title fight with a commanding performance at the French Grand Prix, where a newly-blond Jacques Villeneuve had one of his scrappiest weekends of the season. 

    In the latest episode of our 1997 Revisited series, Glenn Freeman and the team look back on the main talking points from that weekend at Magny-Cours, including Jarno Trulli's call-up to race for Prost, more misery for Damon Hill, Michael Schumacher doing his brother Ralf a favour, and what on earth was going wrong for Villeneuve and Williams. 

    1997 revisited: Canadian GP

    1997 revisited: Canadian GP

    The 1997 Canadian Grand Prix featured all kinds of drama: Jacques Villeneuve crashed out of his home race early on, some drivers could barely make a set of tyres last 10 laps, David Coulthard lost victory when his car stalled while making a precautionary pitstop, and Michael Schumacher claimed the win in a race that was cut short when Olivier Panis crashed heavily in his Prost, breaking both of his legs. 

    Glenn Freeman, Matt Beer, Ben Anderson and Edd Straw debate all of that, plus Alex Wurz's F1 debut and how the Benetton team he joined was getting on 18 months on from losing Schumacher to Ferrari. 

    1997 revisited: Spanish GP

    1997 revisited: Spanish GP

    Jacques Villeneuve got his faltering F1 title bid back on track at the 1997 Spanish Grand Prix, as Williams's superiority - with one car, at least - was restored at Barcelona.

    Behind Villeneuve, Olivier Panis came through from the middle of the pack to claim second on Bridgestone tyres that held up much better than the Goodyears - but could he have won the race without an unwanted intervention from a lapped Eddie Irvine? 

    We also discuss Ferrari's lack of pace, Michael Schumacher's lap one heroics, and what on earth was going on with Heinz-Harald Frentzen in the second Williams. 

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5
28 Ratings

28 Ratings

Justin Ress ,

Best Classic F1 Podcast

A great podcast with great inside into the topics. It brings back nostalgia about the best era in F1. My question would be what is in your opinion the dullest race of this era (excluding Indy 05)?

Von Tols ,

Probably the best F1 podcast

I can recommend this podcast to all true F1 fans who love racing without DRS, complaints about track limits and over-organized teams. Great inside stories! Irony: the cover features the last race win by a V12!

krasser kurac ,

Best Podcast of all time

Honestly I can’t tell you how much I love this podcast. First of all the topic is an absolute throwback to the time I started watching F1. They tell the storys in such detail that you really find yourself in that era. I can’t imagine how much effort the put in each episode but it is definitely worth it because they created a masterpiece. Thank you so much for this podcast and please keep on with it. If I am allowed to suggest a topic for you guys I would like to know a something from you about pit stop strategies. For example how did Schumachers 2004 French GP win came together. Also Spygate would do a good episode even if it is missing 2 zylinders. Thanks again.
Your Jonas

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