‘Competitive, kind and an extremely talented driver’ – Leclerc remembers close friend Bianchi
Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc shares memories of his close friend and godfather Jules Bianchi.
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On the 10th anniversary of Jules Bianchi’s passing, his close friend, godson and eight-time Grand Prix winner for Ferrari Charles Leclerc shares some memories of the highly-rated Frenchman...
The first memories that I recall of Jules are not of Jules the driver, but rather Jules the person as I experienced him a lot more as a human being rather than a racer.
We spent so much time together growing up and both of our families were and still are extremely close. My older brother and him were best friends, so he was always around.
Jules was eight years older than me, he was closer to the age of my older brother. I was six or seven and when you're that age, you can definitely feel the age difference.
Then growing up, the age difference just felt smaller in a way and we became close friends.
I've got some stories from that time, like the first horror movie I watched was actually with Jules.

He didn't know I was pretending to be asleep. He was trying to make sure that I was asleep because he wanted to watch that movie with my older brother!
Jules was such a genuinely nice person. He was very funny and he had his crazy moments when you got to know him very well.
He was just always happy to help and very happy to have fun as well.
The memories that are the clearest are probably when I was six or seven years old and it was the first time that I would be allowed to race a rental kart with him and my brother.
Normally rental karts are for adults but his father was managing the track and obviously was letting us do things that maybe we were not too allowed.
I looked up to him so to be racing with him, with my older brother, with his younger brother, and many, many other professional karting drivers at the time was incredible.
We had so much fun. We would hang out and wait for the karting track to close to the public so we could get on. Then we’d go crazy on track for hours and hours.
These are probably the most special memories I have.
Jules was the most competitive person I've ever met and I feel like I have that competitiveness in me because of Jules.
When we were doing some races in karting, there was that competitiveness but also in the most stupid things we did at home, there was exactly the same competitiveness. He would get so frustrated when he lost anything!
I feel like I have that competitiveness in me because of Jules.
He was also very obsessive in a way that whenever he wasn't good enough at something, you would see him one month, two months or three months later and he will have trained at every single opportunity he had.
I remember playing him at squash, for example. The first few times, he was already much better than me but then I remember like five or six months later, he had organised a tournament with one of the top 20 in the world.
He was actually doing really well and that was very, very impressive because he had just trained every single day to get better at squash. This is a trait that I've always admired from Jules.

He would never, ever give up and he would work so hard in order to get better at something. Anything he would do, he would give the absolute maximum.
I hope Jules will be remembered as an extremely talented driver, who unfortunately never had the chance to be in a top team with a car that was helping him to show the extent of his talent.
There are some people where you can see through their eyes, through their smile, how good of a person they are – and I think Jules is one of them.
This is probably the most important thing for me to remember from Jules – how kind of a human being he was and how dedicated he was to try and reach his goals.
#JB17
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