Oh and if you will allow me one further whimsical detour down memory lane, I am here to tell you that the top three drivers in the French F3 championship standings in 1970 were all called Jean-Pierre, namely Jean-Pierre Jaussaud (first), Jean-Pierre Cassegrain (second), and Jean-Pierre Jarier (third). Is such top-three naming homogeneity unique in a racing context? Answers on a postcard please!
Anyway, where were we? Oh yes: we were briefly running through Jarier’s pre-F1 career, and we had got as far as 1972. The following year, 1973, he hit form in a big way, driving a March 732 to seven race victories in that year’s European F2 championship — at Mallory Park, Hockenheim, Nivelles, Rouen, Mantorp Park, Karlskoga, and Enna-Pergusa — taking the title easily. He also raced nine times in F1 that year, first in a March 721G then in a March 731, but it was now that he began to encounter Amon/Behra-style bad luck.
In Argentina a broken radiator ended his run; in Brazil his gearbox failed; in South Africa he encountered heaps of car trouble and, although he was still running at the end, he was 13 laps down; in Belgium he crashed; at Monaco his gearbox failed again; in Sweden his throttle cable snapped; in France he was stopped by a broken halfshaft; in Austria his engine blew; in Canada his car developed various mechanical problems, leaving him nine laps adrift at the finish; and at Watkins Glen he had another shunt.
It had been an extraordinary tale of woe, but all was not lost for, not only had he blitzed Euro F2 in 1973, but also, when his F1 Marches had been functional, he had demonstrated an impressive turn of speed in them. Indeed, he had caught the eye of none other than Enzo Ferrari, whose reaction had been to toy with the notion that he might sign Jarier as Clay Regazzoni’s team-mate for the 1974 F1 season. In the end it was Regazzoni who persuaded the commendatore to select another young gun who had cut his racing teeth in Marches, Niki Lauda. Had Jarier got the nod instead, who knows how successful he might have become?
Instead, Jean-Pierre joined Shadow for 1974, where and when — again — he encountered poor reliability, for he finished only seven of the 14 F1 grands prix he started that year. Nonetheless, he was beginning to show real flair, at Anderstorp finishing a fine fifth and, at Monaco, driving a strong race to third, beaten by only Ronnie Peterson (Lotus) and Jody Scheckter (Tyrrell). Moreover, after the early-season death in a testing accident at Kyalami of Shadow’s team leader, the fast and experienced Peter Revson, Jarier serially outpaced his new Shadow team-mates, Brian Redman and Bertil Roos, and, once Redman and Roos had been jettisoned in favour of the young and super-talented Tom Pryce, Jean-Pierre remained the pre-eminent Shadow man, albeit by a slenderer margin than theretofore.
It was almost exactly 50 years ago — in the two South American rounds of the 1975 F1 world championship, in January of that year — that Jarier could and should have won his first F1 grands prix. In Argentina, in Shadow’s brand-new DN5, an elegant Tony Southgate design, he took the pole by a country mile. However, again, luck was not on his side, for the car’s crown-wheel-and-pinion failed on the warm-up lap and consequently he never even made the grid.
Two weeks later, in Brazil, he took the pole again, this time by a margin larger still. Carlos Reutemann (Brabham) made a fantastic start from the second row to take the lead, but Jarier then shadowed (pun intended) Reutemann for four laps before neatly outbraking him into Turn 4 on lap five. After that he fairly sprinted away from the field. Again and again he posted and reposted the race’s fastest lap, his best effort a tour of 2min 34.16sec, which was more than a second quicker than anyone else managed all afternoon. Soon he was leading by half a minute. Yet again, though, he would be thwarted by misfortune, for, with just eight laps to go, his fuel metering unit seized, and he steered the Shadow slowly onto the grassy infield, he heaved himself out of its cockpit, he slumped against one of its rear tyres, and, sitting but far from basking in the São Paulo sunshine, he watched an overjoyed Carlos Pace (Brabham) win his home race.
In Spain Jarier finished fourth — but the rest of the 1975 F1 season was a disaster for him, for he retired from eight of its remaining 10 grands prix, and he scored no more points. In an updated Shadow DN5B he started 1976 promisingly. Again he qualified well (third) at Interlagos, which circuit staged the season-opening grand prix that year, and again he drove fastest lap, this time three-quarters of a second quicker than anyone else’s. Fifth on lap one, he climbed the leaderboard steadily, and by lap 27 he was up to second, beginning to close on Lauda’s leading Ferrari. By lap 29 he had trimmed Niki’s lead from six seconds to four, and, with 11 laps to run, perhaps at last he was going to enjoy his day of days. Sure enough, five tours later, on lap 34, the gap was down to under two seconds.