BR Engineering BR1 AER LM P1 British driver Jenson Button looks on before relaying his co-pilot during the 86th Le Mans 24-hours endurance race, at the Circuit de la Sarthe on June 17, 2018 in Le Mans, western France. (JEAN-FRANCOIS MONIER / AFP)
Jenson Button won a ‘Legends Trophy’ esports race on Saturday with fellow retired Formula One world champion Jacques Villeneuve going from last to sixth on his virtual debut.
Button, racing in the Brawn GP colours with which he won the 2009 F1 championship, led from pole to flag on a virtual Sebring track.
ALSO READ: Return to F1 still possible, says Pole driver Robert Kubica
Colombian Juan Pablo Montoya, an Indianapolis 500 and Monaco Grand Prix winner, was second with British touring car racer Andy Priaulx finishing third. All were racing remotely from their homes due to the new coronavirus pandemic.
Button’s winnings of (12,387 pounds) will be donated to a charity of his choice.
It’s amazing how nervous you get. I was more nervous on this in the race than I am in real life. I think it’s because every corner you feel like you’re going to end up in the tyre barriers
Jenson Button
“It’s amazing how nervous you get,” said the Briton. “I was more nervous on this in the race than I am in real life. I think it’s because every corner you feel like you’re going to end up in the tyre barriers.”
Villeneuve, who won the 1997 Formula One title and IndyCar championship in 1995 along with a victory at the Indianapolis 500, was one of three ex-F1 champions competing.
The Canadian’s performance was all the more impressive for using an Xbox controller rather than a racing wheel.
Brazil’s 73-year-old double F1 world champion Emerson Fittipaldi, joining a cast of Indianapolis 500 winners racing in McLaren M23 cars from his 1970s era, finished 16th.
There was mass-car chaos at the start, opening the way for Villeneuve to move up.
READ MORE: Formula One considering closed races once season starts
The virtual series, organized by Torque Esports and http://www.the-race.com, is one of several that have moved to fill the gap left by real motor racing around the world being shutdown by the pandemic.
The Formula One season has yet to start after cancelling the March Australian season-opener.
Canadian race driver, Jacques Villeneuve, poses for photographers after his induction into the FIA Motorsport Hall of Fame at the Automobile Club de France Dec 04, 2017 in Paris. (THOMAS PADILLA / FIA / AFP-SERVICES)
Torque Esports said The Race All-Star Series, which includes the Legends Trophy for drivers over 40, was set to reach more than 600 million homes thanks to a 90-minute highlights agreement with major international TV networks.