Watch this epic onboard footage of Colin McRae from 2001

Getty Images/Ross Land

I should be doing so many other things right now. Instead, here I sit, my face glued to my screen watching some of the best onboard rally footage known to man. Thank you, Nicky Grist.

During a career that spans over three decades, the Welsh navigator has captured 21 overall rally wins, 417 stage wins, and a sole championship in 1993, all from the passenger seat of rally racing’s most formidable cars—like the all-wheel-drive Ford Focus in the video below.

After starting out in amateur rallying, during which he moonlit as a car salesman, in the early 1990s Grist made it to the World Rally Championship—think Formula 1 for rally racing.

Juha Kankkunen glides over a puddle rally
Juha Kankkunen glides over a puddle. PA Images via Getty Images

In 1993, copiloting for Finnish marvel Juha Kankkunen in a Castrol-liveried Toyota Celica, Grist and his teammate earned the WRC championship title. He stayed with Kankkunen until 1997, when he joined a rising star by the name of Colin McRae on the 555 Subaru World Rally team. The duo was a flash of blue-and-yellow brilliance and delivered the Japanese team multiple manufacturer titles.

Colin McRae (left) and Nicky Grist celebrate on the winners podium after their victory in England
Colin McRae (left) and Nicky Grist celebrate on the winners podium after their victory in England. Getty Images/Michael Cooper/Allsport

Then, in 1999 the duo packed their bags and split for the Blue Oval, joining the M-sport Ford team in a shiny new Ford Focus.

McRae never captured a WRC title in the Focus, though he came awfully close in 2001 and showcased some truly brilliant drives throughout the season. One of those epic drives is on display here. In a recently uploaded video by Nicky Grist Motorsports, the hall-of-fame codriver breaks down a stage from the 2001 Rally Great Britain in Wales.

McRae and Grist pose with their Ford Focus, in 1998 rally
McRae and Grist pose with their Ford Focus, in 1998. PA Images via Getty Images/Tom Honan

Grist opens the eight-minute video by providing some context for the 2001 campaign. He then pulls up some of the actual pace notes he used to direct McRae through the second stage of the rally dubbed “St. Gwynno.”

Grist provides an interpretation of his complex instructions: “’Slow,’ which is heavy brake; ‘minus,’ which is a bit of a dab of the brake, and ‘plus,’ [which] means flat-out in that gear.”

McRae and Grist in Auckland, New Zealand, circa 2000 rally
McRae and Grist in Auckland, New Zealand, circa 2000. Getty Images/Grazia Neri /Allsport

“In typical McRae fashion, he’s very committed, very broadsided,” Grist says during the viewing, noting that the British driver’s aggression and commitment pace is a gradual crescendo throughout the stage.

At 6:49 we encounter a rather tense moment: When McRae flicks the Focus through an uphill chicane and comes dangerously close to clipping a roadside post. Grist’s insight and commentary is amazing, and the onboard footage feels like it was directed by some art house guru—morning sun flickering through trees, spectators lining the road, and McRae furiously sawing on the wheel.

The two stars won the stage but lost the battle in Great Britain, missing the season-long war by two points. McRae passed away in 2007 after his helicopter crashed just north of his home in Lanark, Scotland. His legacy lives on in videos like this spectacular onboard footage from Wales.

mcrae 2001 wales racing action
McRae, 2001 in Wales. Getty Images/Clive Mason

 

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Comments

    McRae is one of the all time greats and his work with Subaru in particular made me a huge fan of the cars.

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