Nobody expects a Formula 1 Grand Prix auto race to end the way it did for Romain Grosjean on November 29, 2020, on the track in Bahrain.
Driving at a speed of 119 miles per hour, his Haas VF-20 got hit by fellow driver Daniil Kvyat. It sent his car ramming into a guardrail, generating a peak gravitational force equivalent (G-force) of 67. For comparison’s sake, fighter pilots experience a G-force of about nine during their maneuvers.
After Kvyat hit him, Grosjean knew the impact was coming . But he is no stranger to such an event. Wrecking your $15 million racecar is an occupational hazard of being an F1 driver. When the inevitable was nigh in Bahrain in the middle east, he did what he always does in such situations.
“I closed my eyes and tensed very hard,” he told The Post. “Then I

New York Post

Atlanta Black Star Entertainment
Raw Story
Cleveland Jewish News
Wheeling Intelligencer
CNN Health
RadarOnline
TODAY Video
NBC Bay Area Sports
Mediaite