Niki Lauda, byname of Andreas Nikolaus Lauda (born February 22, 1949, Vienna, Austria) Austrian race-car driver who won three Formula One (F1) Grand Prix
world championships (1975, 1977, and 1984), the last two of which came
after his remarkable comeback from a horrific crash in 1976 that had
left him severely burned and near death.
Lauda was born into a
wealthy paper-manufacturing family that disapproved of his interest in
racing. Undaunted, he began racing Minis in 1968, moving on to Formula
Vee and Formula Three thereafter. In 1971 he secured a loan against his
life insurance policy to buy his way into the March Engineering Formula
Two team. While still primarily a Formula Two driver, Lauda participated
in his first F1 race during his initial season with March, and in 1972
he raced in 12 F1 events.
Lauda raced in the 1973 F1 season as a
member of the British Racing Motors team. In 1974 he signed with the
prestigious Scuderia Ferrari team and garnered his first career F1
victory (as well as an additional win), finishing the season in fourth
place. He broke out in 1975, winning five races to capture his first
world championship.
The 1976 racing season is one of the most
storied in F1 history. Through nine races, Lauda had five victories and
more than twice as many points in the championship standings as his
closest competitor. Lauda tried to get the other drivers to agree to a
boycott of the 10th race of the season, the German Grand Prix at the
Nürburgring, because of safety concerns about racing through the Eifel
Mountains, but he was outvoted. In the race’s second lap, Lauda lost
control of his car and slammed into an embankment. The car burst into
flames, and Lauda was pulled from the wreckage, having inhaled noxious
gasses. He sustained burns that cost him his eyelids, half of an ear,
and large portions of his scalp. He later lapsed into a coma and was
administered last rites by a priest, but he recovered and returned to
racing after missing just two events. Britain’s James Hunt
had won the German Grand Prix, as well as one more contest in Lauda’s
absence, and he and Lauda entered into an electrifying chase for the
1976 title. Hunt was three points behind Lauda heading into the final
event, the Japanese Grand Prix. Heavy rains on the day of the race led
Lauda to withdraw because of safety concerns, and Hunt finished in third
place to capture the championship by one point.
Lauda won three
races and finished in second place six times in 1977 to win another
world championship. However, his relationship with Ferrari was strained
by his decision to withdraw from the previous season’s final race
and—having already clinched the title—he, in protest of his treatment,
stopped racing for the team with two events left in 1977. He joined the
Brabham team for the 1978 F1 season, but, after winning just two races
over two years because of the inferior cars he was given, he retired
from racing in September 1979 to focus on Lauda Air, the airline that he
had founded earlier in the year. Lauda was lured back into racing in
1982 when he was offered what was then the most lucrative driver
contract in F1 history from the McLaren
team. After finishing 1982 and 1983 in 5th and 10th place,
respectively, he tallied five wins in 1984 to win his third career world
championship by a half-point margin. He retired from the sport for good
after a 10th-place finish in 1985. After his retirement, he served in
various executive capacities for a number of racing teams, was a
television racing analyst, and founded another airline, NIKI (he later
sold his stakes in both airlines).
The rivalry between Lauda and Hunt during the 1976 F1 season was the basis of Ron Howard’s film Rush (2013). Lauda was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 1993.
- Homemain page
- Aboutthe author
- Contact ussay hello
- Free Blogger Templates
- Subscribe to RSSkeep updated!
Saturday, 4 June 2016
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Links Partners
Pages
Categories
Blog Archive
Popular Posts
-
On August 1, 1976, while driving for Scuderia Ferrari in the German Grand Prix, Niki Lauda’s Ferrari 312T2 exited the Nuerburgring circuit j...
-
There are many great moments in Rush , but although the film is a cocktail of fast racing, faster women, old-school male bravado and gener...
-
Niki Lauda was a champion Formula 1 race car driver known for his long-standing rivalry with fellow driver James Hunt Synopsis Niki Lau...
-
Motor racing legend objects to gay men competing together on prime time programme Niki Lauda demanded a halt to 'a gay show on state ...
-
Niki Lauda , byname of Andreas Nikolaus Lauda (born February 22, 1949 , Vienna, Austria) Austrian race-car driver who won three Formula On...
Powered by Blogger.
Text Widget
Sample Text
Ads 468x60px
About Me
About Me
- Unknown
No comments:
Post a Comment