By
Carlos de Paula
Japanese
Masahiro Hasemi goes down in history as the single GP driver with a 100%
fastest lap performance. It is true that he raced a single time, in the Japanese
Grand Prix of 1976, driving the Kojima, and some have disputed the
accuracy of this fastest lap. Notwithstanding, Kojima has a 50% fastest lap
performance, as the manufacturer only raced twice, in the Japanese Grand Prix of
1976 and 1977.
Few GP
drivers end their careers with fourth place, most closing the book with
retirements. However, three very prominent drivers did so. Juan Manuel
Fangio drove to fourth place after a very strong drive at the French Grand
Prix of 1958. Forty-eight years later, the man who shattered Fagio’s
5-championship record that at once seemed impossible to surpass, Michael
Schumacher, also ended his F-1 career driving to a superb fourth place in
the 2006 Brazilian Grand Prix. Curiously, the man Schumacher replaced as
Benetton’s number 1 driver for 1992, Brazil’s Nelson Piquet, also ended
his F-1 career with a fourth place in the 1991 Australian Grand Prix.
Eery
coincidence I- Americans Phil
Hill and Mario Andretti won their single championships under similar
circumstances, wrapping up the title in Monza. As an additional coincidence,
both lost their teammates in their title winning race, Wolfgang Von Trips
in Hill’s case, Ronnie Peterson in Andretti’s. Adding to the coincidence,
neither Hill nor Andretti would ever win further Grand Prix after winning the
title, and both Von Trips and Peterson ended up runners up to their champion
teammates!
Hill and
Andretti were not alone. Quite a few other drivers never won a race after their
single championship years. Mike Hawthorn retired after 1958 and Jochen
Rindt died before actually being crowned champion in 1970. Two other drivers
did not have the benefit of such excuse: Jody Scheckter and Jacques
Villeneuve would never win again after their successful campaigns in 1979
and 1997, respectively.
A few
champions were born in different countries than their stated nationality:
American Andretti was born in Italy, Austrian Rindt was born in Germany and Finn
Keke Rosberg was born in Sweden.
The only
two drivers who managed to win their official championship GP debuts were
Giuseppe Farina, winner of the inaugural championship event in 1950
(Britain) and another Italian, Giancarlo Baghetti, who won in France in
1961. However, these were not both drivers’ Formula 1 debuts: Farina had been
driving at the highest level since the late 30’s, while Baghetti had already
driven in two non-official Grand prix (winning both). This was pretty much the
end of Baghetti’s success in the Grand Prix circuit, in fact he turned out to be
one of the most unsuccessful GP winners ever.
Eerie
coincidence II: October 6 was a dark day for two years running at Watkins Glen.
In 1973, Francois Cevert was killed in practice for the US Grand Prix,
while Helmut Koinnig was killed during the race in 1974.
The race
with the lowest number of starters was the ridiculous US Grand Prix of 2005:
six. It was only one of two races with 100% of starters finishing the race, the
other being the Dutch GP of 1961, where a more impressive 15 cars started and
finished the Grande Epreuve.
There were
two cars named ATS, with no relation whatsoever to each other: the unsuccessful
Italian operation of 1963/64, among others funded by a Bolivian tin
impresario(!!), and Gunther Schmidt’s operation, that lasted from 1978 through
1984. Schmidt also has the honor of taking another (unsuccessful) crack at GP
racing, with Rial in 1988-1989! Both ATS and Rial are wheel brands owned by
Schmidt.
Between Von
Trips’ GP wins of 1961 and Schumacher’s initial GP win in 1992, German drivers
had poor performances at the front. For a time they seemed to be getting closer,
as three German drivers managed to lead races between 1975 and 1977, in two
cases under very unusual circumstances. In the disaster prone Spanish GP of
1975, Rolf Stommelen had found himself leading the race on merit, when
the wing support of his Lola collapsed, causing Rolf to crash, and kill five
spectators. Rolf would never again lead a GP. His countryman Jochen Mass,
who led a single lap of that race, the last one, ended up declared the winner of
the half-race, winning half points for his trouble. In the German Grand Prix of
1976, though, Mass was poised to walk away with the race: he was the only driver
to start on slicks, on a drying track, and by the end of the first lap he was 30
seconds in front of the second placed car. Unfortunately, Niki Lauda had his
terrifying crash, the race was interrupted and Mass’ advantage evaporated in the
second start. He would never get to prove that he was able to win a GP on merit.
Finally, Hans Stuck led the US Grand Prix from the front row in 1977,
only to crash with transmission trouble. Poor Stefan Bellof, who many
considered future world champion material, died after a few starts for down on
power (and luck) Tyrrel in 1984 and 1985.
Chris
Amon was not only
the unluckiest GP driver ever, but he also was the driver who drove the largest
variety of makes, having raced or attempted to qualify a total of 13 marques:
Lola, Lotus, Brabham, Cooper, Ferrari, March, Matra, Tecno, Tyrrel, Amon, BRM,
Ensign and Williams. He experienced a
large number of engines as well: Climax 1.5, BRM 1.5, BRM 2.0 (V8), BRM 3.0
(V12), Maserati 3.0, Ferrari 3.0, Cosworth 3.0, Matra 3.0, Tecno 3.0.
Another
prolific driver in terms of variety was Stirling Moss. He drove HWM, ERA,
Connaught, Cooper, Maserati, Mercedes Benz, Vanwall, BRM, Lotus. He also
practiced a Porsche and a Scarab, and was disqualified when he took over the Ferguson four wheel
drive car from Jack Fairman in the British GP of 1961. Moss was by far
the driver with most engine experience: Alta 4 (2.0), Bristol 6 (2.0), Lea
Francis (2.0), Maserati 2.5, Mercedes Benz 2.5, Vanwall 2.5, Climax 4 (2.5), BRM
2.5, Climax 1.5.
Moss was
also the man who won races in the greatest number of makes: five. He won races
driving for Maserati, Mercedes Benz, Vanwall, Cooper and Lotus. A few drivers
won races in four different makes: Fangio (Mercedes, Alfa Romeo, Ferrari and
Maserati), Prost (McLaren, Renault, Ferrari, Williams), Stewart (BRM, Matra,
March, Tyrrel).
Eerie
coincidence III: Lotus lost drivers in three of the six years in which it won
the championship (Clark in 1968, Rindt in 1970 and Peterson in 1978). The last
man to win in a Lotus, Ayrton Senna (Detroit GP, 1987), died in 1994, the
same year in which the make itself disappeared from Grand Prix racing.
A large
number of French drivers won their first (or only) race at Monaco: Maurice
Trintignant, Jean Pierre Beltoise, Patrick Depailler, Olivier Panis.
Curiously, the Frenchmen who won more often (Prost, Laffitte, Arnoux),
won their first races elsewhere.
A few
drivers scored pole position in their very first race: Farina (British GP 1950),
Mario Andretti (US GP, 1968), Carlos Reutemann (Argentina , 1972),
Jacques Villeneuve (Australia, 1997). But for one race, Andretti came
close to scoring pole in his last race as well: he was on pole at Italy, 1982,
but he also raced one final time at Las Vegas that same year.
Eerie
coincidence IV: Shadow lost two top drivers at Kyalamy, South Africa: Peter
Revson in practice for the 1974 race, Tom Pryce in the actual race,
in 1977.
John
Watson won five
races, but he made a statement when he did. He was the only man to win from
lower than a 20th starting place, when he won at Long Beach in 1983, having
started a lowly 22nd. He also won another U.S. street race, the Detroit GP,
starting 17th.
The longest
run of single championship winners was 1978 through 1980. Mario Andretti,
Jody Scheckter and Alan Jones won single championships. It is curious
to note that the 1976 and 1982 title winners were also single timers (James
Hunt and Keke Rosberg) so this era was definitely the opposite of what we
have today!
Jim
Clark was the only
driver to win a GP in a 16 cylinder car in the modern era, driving the unloved
BRM H16 engined Lotus to victory in the 1966 US Grand Prix.
A few GP
drivers were born in rather exotic locations, although holding more common
nationalities. Brit Mike Beuttler was born in Egypt, while Frenchman
Jo Schlesser was born in Madagascar.
Many
reputable Grand Prix resources report Brazilian Fritz D’Orey died in
1961. In fact, D’Orey had a severe crash at Le Mans the previous year, was
reported dead by much of the specialized press, but he is alive and kicking to
this day!
On the
subject of Brazilian drivers, until the arrival of Emerson Fittipaldi in
1970, their appearances were far and few, but things seemed to be changing in
the early 1956 season: Brazilian drivers scored points in two races back to
back: Landi scored 1.5 points from fourth in Argentina, while Da Silva
Ramos scored 2 points from 5th in Monaco. Then, there was a long drought
until 1970!
Long spans:
Jan Lammers took a whopping ten years to go back to GP racing. He dropped
out of the GP circuit for the first time in 1982, and after enjoying a
successful career in sports cars, he tried GP racing again in 1992, without
success. It also took Mario Andretti ten years to win his single 1978 Formula 1
title, having debuted in 1968.
Eerie
coincidence V: Roger Penske lost his great friend and long time
collaborator Mark Donohue in the Austrian Grand Prix of 1975, through a
very freaky accident. In 1976, the Penske team was not only back at the
Osterreichring, but it also won the race with John Watson, only to quit
GP racing at the end of the year!
Bernie
Ecclestone actually
tried to qualify a 2.5 Connaught in two Grand Prix in 1958. He failed both
times, becoming much more successful as team owner and Formula 1 supremo. Lotus’
Colin Chapman almost started a single GP in 1956, but surprisingly, it
was not in a Lotus: he was slated to drive a Vanwall. He did not start the race
and was supposed to start 5th!
The last GP
driver to wear an open faced helmet in a GP event was Finn Leo Kinnunen,
in 1974.
Arrows,
known as the make which run more GP races without scoring a single win, almost
won its second Grand Prix! Riccardo Patrese qualified 7th and had worked
his way up to the front in the debuting team’s FA1 design.
Jean
Pierre Jabouille
apparently knew how to win GPs better than just plainly scoring points. He won
two Grand Prix, including the first ever by a turbo-engined GP car, and scored
only one additional time, a 4th place, out of 49 starts!
The Rob
Walker team was by far the most successful privateer team, having won seven
races with Stirling Moss, one race with Maurice Trintignant and
one race with Jo Siffert. One of Ferrari’s 1961 wins (Baghetti)
were achieved by a FISA entered car, but it was really a works entry.
Additionally, Jackie Stewart won the 1970 Spanish Grand Prix driving a
non-factory March. Nominally at least, Emerson Fittipaldi did not win the
1972 World Championship in Monza driving a factory Lotus: the car was entered
under the name World Wide Racing. The Italian judiciary was still looking into
Rindt’s 1970 death, and Colin Chapman was advised to enter the team under a
different name, just in case, lest the judiciary impound his equipment. But it
was still the Lotus works!
In 2006,
the national level championship that by far boasts the largest number of former
formula 1 drivers is the Brazilian Stock Cars championship, six. The following
ex GP drivers are racing in the championship: Chico Serra, Ingo Hoffmann,
Christian Fittipaldi, Tarso Marques, Raul Boesel and Luciano Burti.
Lola, the
top racing car manufacturer, was involved in Formula 1 as a chassis suppliers,
several times from the early 60s until the 90’s. When it did decide to enter the
championship as a works team, in 1998, with plans for a proprietary engine, no
less, the company almost folded, the effort lasting a single race. The entry was
to be funded by a novel, yet rather naïve, sponsorship scheme through
Mastercard. Lola initially provided chassis to teams such as Bowmaker and Reg
Parnell, in the first years of the 1.5 liter formula. Next, it was involved with Honda, in 1967/1968, and then the
manufacturer quit F-1. In 1974 and 1975, Lola provided chassis for Graham Hill’s
team. It would also provide chassis for the short lived Beatrice/Force team, in
1985/1986, settling the longest with the Larrousse team from 1987 to 1993. The
marque won a single race, the 1967 Italian Grand Prix, mostly identified in the
record books as a proprietary Honda chassis, and led in other occasions.
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