Jacques Villeneuve has made the grid for Sunday's 64th running of the Daytona 500, the 1997 F1 world champion adding a start in NASCAR's historic event to his storied motorsport career.

It wasn't the Canadian's first attempt at qualifying for the showcase event, but his efforts had been vain last time out at Daytona back in 2008.

Villeneuve posted the 36th-fastest lap in pole qualifying on Wednesday evening which has put him P18 on the grid of Thursday's second Duel race, with the 60-lap races defining the final starting order for stock car racing's 'Great American Race'.

Villeneuve and his Team Hezeberg have been preparing diligently for NASCAR's season-opening event.

The 50-year-old explained his motivation for attempting to add the Daytona 500 to his eclectic track record.

"The Daytona 500 is one of the three big races on the planet," said Villeneuve, whose career in the US includes a win in the Indy 500 in 1995.

"You have the Le Mans 24 Hours the Indy 500 and Daytona, so that’s one reason for doing it. And you know, you have a good race, then you end up doing a few more.

"I’ve never stopped racing. I’ve never stopped wanting to race in NASCAR, which is why I was racing a little bit in Europe."

©EuroNascar

Celebrations were in order in the Team Hezeberg camp, and a relieved Villeneuve admitted his qualifying performance was a surprise given the initial pace of his #27 Mustang in practice.

"Sometimes, you know you’re quick and you expect [to make it] and it goes wrong," the Canadian said on pit road. "And that’s a big letdown.

"Well now I thought, ‘okay, we can’t get in on time.’ So it’s the biggest surprise and it’s such a relief. It’s amazing."

The eleven-time Grand Prix winner admitted that tackling the Daytona 500 with a non-chartered team such as Team Hezeberg hasn't made his task any easier.

But Villeneuve is still excited by the prospect of racing in the pack on Florida's famous tri-oval and its banking.

"We’re a tiny team from Europe," he said. "We didn’t work with a big team to get here. And we really think we didn’t think we had to speed to get in on time.

"So we were hoping to get maybe third or fourth (of the open cars) so we would have a better shot at the race tomorrow. But to be in on time is a big load off our shoulders. And it’s been 14 years since I tried. It’s been a long time coming."

Villeneuve says that merely qualifying for the Daytona 500 is in itself an "incredible" success.

"Obviously, it’s not a win. It’s not like winning the Indy 500 or the F1 championship," he added.

"But at this point in my career, the last time I tried to qualify here was 14 years ago. Just to make the show is incredible because it’s a small team. We didn’t link up with a big team to get the car ready and it’s highly unexpected to be able to make it on time, so it ranks right after these big wins.”

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via Facebook and Twitter

Michael Delaney

Recent Posts

Marko: ‘No chance at all’ for Red Bull in Las Vegas

Helmut Marko believes that Red Bull and Max Verstappen are unlikely to challenge for victory…

3 hours ago

GM revives bid to join F1 with accelerated talks for 2026 entry

Automotive giant General Motors is reportedly back in the game as a potential entrant in…

4 hours ago

Las Vegas GP: Thursday's action in pictures

The opening day of running at the Las Vegas GP was a smooth but chilly…

6 hours ago

Williams' headaches persist into Vegas practice

Williams is continuing to fight uphill battles this weekend in Las Vegas as a knock-on…

7 hours ago

Ferrari's Sainz 'not satisfied with where we are' in Vegas

It was a solid start to the Las Vegas weekend for Ferrari with Carlos Sainz…

8 hours ago

Norris labels McLaren long-run pace ‘shocking’ in chilly Vegas

Lando Norris didn’t hold back in his assessment of McLaren’s performance on the opening day…

9 hours ago