|
Juan Manuel
Fangio II, nephew of five-time Formula 1 world champion
Juan Manuel Fangio, will take to the track at the wheel
of a Maserati 250F as the world’s biggest
annual sporting series celebrates its 60th
anniversary at the Bahrain Grand Prix this
weekend. |
|
|
|
Juan Manuel
Fangio II, nephew of five-time Formula 1 world champion
Juan Manuel Fangio, will take to the track at the wheel
of a Maserati 250F as the world’s biggest annual
sporting series celebrates its 60th anniversary at the
Bahrain Grand Prix this weekend. As the first round of
the 2010 season, Bahrain is hosting a landmark
celebration with more than 20 title-winning cars and
virtually every surviving world champion is expected to
attend.
Former sports car and IndyCar racer Fangio II will drive
the evocative Maserati 250F in a spectacular cavalcade
of title-winning cars that will form part of the
on-track entertainment through the weekend. In many
minds his uncle remains the greatest driver of all time,
and Fangio II is delighted to represent ‘the Maestro’ in
Bahrain. “I imagine being him and looking back from his
perspective I would say to myself how quick life goes
by, and how strange it feels to endure as a defining
contributor,” he said. “I’m sure he would think what a
privilege it is just to be remembered so fondly 60 years
later.”
Juan Manuel Fangio was the most successful driver of the
1950s, winning five world championships in the seven
full seasons that he contested. Born in Argentina in
1911, he raced in the gruelling South American
cross-country events and regional circuit races until
his Formula 1 debut at the 1948 French Grand Prix.
Returning to Europe the following year Fangio won the
San Remo, Pau, Roussillon, Marseille and Albi Grands
Prix and in so doing earned a drive with the
all-conquering Alfa Romeo team for the first season of
the world championship in 1950.
After losing the inaugural title by just three points to
his team leader ‘Nino’ Farina, Fangio claimed the
honours in 1951 after fending off Alberto Ascari and the
rising Ferrari team. In 1952 a major accident early in
the season left Fangio with a broken neck from which he
made a long recovery, returning to form in 1954 when he
became team leader for Mercedes-Benz and swept
majestically to his next two world championship titles.
When Mercedes-Benz withdrew from the sport at the end of
1955, Fangio switched to an uncomfortable alliance with
Ferrari. He won the world championship when his young
team-mate and title rival Peter Collins voluntarily
handed his car over at the deciding Italian Grand Prix
after Fangio’s own car failed.
For 1957 Fangio moved to Maserati and drove his greatest
season in the 250F. Although 46 years of age he would
often use the gruelling three-hour race format to his
advantage, keeping pace with the younger men in the
first hour then increasing the pressure relentlessly to
the finish. His final race victory in the 1957 German
Grand Prix remains the greatest in the history of the
sport when, having lost 48 seconds in the pits, he
charged out and broke the lap record nine times to pass
the leading Ferraris of Collins and Mike Hawthorn. “I
have never driven that quickly before in my life and I
don't think I will ever be able to do it again," he
said. Fangio retired the following year and returned to
Argentina, where he nurtured the talents of Juan Manuel
Fangio II before passing away in 1995.
“I really feel
that his true legacy is the commitment he demonstrated to
live life in pursuit of your passion - no matter what,” said
Fangio II, who is looking forward to taking the wheel of the
car his uncle made legendary. “I would say that the old cars
are defining examples of art, while the new ones are pure
precision,” he added. Juan Manuel Fangio II joins former
champions including Sir Jack Brabham (1959, 1960, 1966),
John Surtees (1964), Emerson Fittipaldi (1972, 1974) and
Mario Andretti (1978) in this once-in-a-lifetime celebration
as part of the Bahrain Grand Prix weekend.
|