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Juan Manuel Fangio

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Argentine racing driver (1911–1995)
This article is about the Formula One driver. For his nephew, also a racing driver, seeJuan Manuel Fangio II.

Juan Manuel Fangio
Fangio in 1955
Born(1911-06-24)24 June 1911
Died17 July 1995(1995-07-17) (aged 84)
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Children3
RelativesJuan Manuel Fangio II (nephew)
Formula One World Championship career
NationalityArgentinaArgentine
Active years19501951,19531958
TeamsAlfa Romeo,Maserati,Mercedes,Ferrari
Entries52 (51 starts)
Championships5 (1951,1954,1955,1956,1957)
Wins24
Podiums35
Careerpoints245 (277914)[a]
Pole positions29
Fastest laps23
First entry1950 British Grand Prix
First win1950 Monaco Grand Prix
Last win1957 German Grand Prix
Last entry1958 French Grand Prix

Juan Manuel Fangio (Spanish:[ˈxwanmaˈnwelˈfaŋxjo],Italian:[ˈfandʒo]; 24 June 1911 – 17 July 1995) was an Argentineracing driver, who competed inFormula One from1950 to1958. Nicknamed "el Chueco" and "el Maestro",[b] Fangio won fiveFormula One World Drivers' Championship titles and—at the time of his retirement—held the record for mostwins (24),pole positions (29),fastest laps (23), andpodium finishes (35), amongothers.

From childhood, he abandoned his studies to pursue auto mechanics. In 1938, he debuted in the newly-formed Argentinestock car racing seriesTurismo Carretera, competing in a Ford V8. In 1940, he competed withChevrolet, winning the Grand Prix International Championship and devoted his time to the Turismo Carretera becoming its champion, a title he successfully defended a year later. Fangio then competed in Europe between 1947 and 1949, where he achieved further success.

One of themost successful drivers in Formula One history, he made his debut in theinaugural Formula One season in 1950 to dominate thefirst decade of the championship. He went on to win the World Drivers' Championship five times—a record that stood for 46 years—and became the only driver in F1 history to win titles with four different teams:Alfa Romeo (1951),Maserati (1954 and1957),Mercedes-Benz (1954 and1955), andFerrari (1956).[c] He holds thehighest winning percentage in Formula One at 46.15%, winning 24 of 52 Formula One races he entered.[2] Additionally, Fangio also holds the record for thehighest pole percentage at 55.77%, achieving 29 pole positions from 52 entries.[3] Fangio is the onlyArgentine driver to have won the World Drivers' Championship and theArgentine Grand Prix.[4][5] He also competed insports car racing, winning the12 Hours of Sebring in1956 with Ferrari and in1957 with Maserati.

After retirement, Fangio presided as the honorary president ofMercedes-Benz Argentina from 1987, a year after the inauguration ofhis museum, until his death in 1995. In 2011, on the centenary of his birth, Fangio was remembered around the world and various activities were held in his honor.

Early life

[edit]

Fangio's grandfather, Giuseppe Fangio, emigrated to Buenos Aires from Italy in 1887. Giuseppe was able to buy his own farm nearBalcarce, a small town nearMar del Plata in southernBuenos Aires Province, Argentina, within three years by makingcharcoal from tree branches. Giuseppe brought his family, with his 7-year son Loreto, later the racing driver's father, to Argentina from the small central Italian town ofCastiglione Messer Marino in theChieti province of theAbruzzo region. His mother, Herminia Déramo, was fromTornareccio, slightly to the north. Fangio's parents married on 24 October 1903 and lived on farms, where Herminia was a housekeeper and Loreto worked in the building trade, becoming an apprentice stonemason.[6]

Fangio was born in Balcarce on 24 June 1911,San Juan's Day, at 12:10 am.[7] His birth certificate was mistakenly dated 23 June in the Register of Balcarce.[8] He was the fourth of six children.[9] In his childhood he became known asEl Chueco, the bandy-legged one, for his skill in bending his left leg around the ball to shoot on goal infootball games.[9]

Fangio as a child when he took his Roman CatholicFirst Communion,c. 1920

Fangio started his education at School No. 4 of Balcarce, before transferring to School No. 1 and 18 Uriburu Av.[8] When Fangio was 13, he dropped out of school and worked in Miguel Angel Casas auto mechanics' workshop as an assistant mechanic.[citation needed] When he was 16, he started riding as a mechanic for his employer's customers. He developed pneumonia that almost proved fatal,[citation needed] after a football game where hard running had caused a sharp pain in his chest. He was bed-ridden for two months, cared for by his mother.[10]

After recovering, Fangio served compulsory military service at the age of 21. In 1932 he was enlisted at the Campo de Mayo cadet school near Buenos Aires. His driving skills caught the attention of his commanding officer, who appointed Fangio as his official driver. Fangio was discharged before his 22nd birthday, after taking his final physical examination. He returned to Balcarce where he aimed to further his football career. Along with his friend José Duffard he received offers to play at a club based inMar del Plata. Their teammates at Balcarce suggested the two work on Fangio's hobby of building his own car, and his parents gave him space to do so in a rudimentary shed at the family home.[10]

Early racing career

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1950 Simca Gordini T15s, as raced, and retired, at the1950 24 Hours of Le Mans byJosé Froilán González and Juan Manuel Fangio

After finishing his military service, Fangio opened his own garage and raced in local events. He began his racing career in Argentina in 1936, driving a 1929Ford Model A that he had rebuilt. In theTourismo Carretera category, Fangio participated in his first race between 18 and 30 October 1938 as the co-driver of Luis Finocchietti. Despite not winning the Argentine Road Grand Prix, Fangio drove most of the way and finished fifth. In November of that year, he entered the "400 km ofTres Arroyos", but it was suspended due to a fatal accident.[11]

During his time racing in Argentina, he droveChevrolet cars and was Argentine National Champion in 1940 and 1941. One particular race, the 1940 Gran Premio del Norte, was almost 10,000 km (6,250 mi) long, one that Fangio described as a "terrible ordeal". This rally-style race started inBuenos Aires on 27 September, and ran up through theAndes andBolivia toLima,Peru, and then back to Buenos Aires, taking 15 days, ending on 12 October with stages held each day. This horrendously gruelling race was held in the most difficult and varied conditions imaginable—drivers had to traverse through hot and dry deserts, insect-ridden jungles with crushing humidity, freezing cold and sometimes snowy mountain passes with 1,000 feet (300 m) cliff drops at extremely high altitude, sometimes in total darkness, and cold, highly elevated deserts such as theAtacama- all on a mixture of dirt and paved roads- none of which were closed off to the public. Early in the race Fangio hit a large rock and damaged the car'sdriveshaft, which was replaced in the next town. Later on at an overnight stop in Bolivia one of the townspeople crashed into Fangio's car and bent an axle—he and his co-driver spent all night fixing it. Following this repair the fan blade got loose and punctured the radiator, which meant another repair before it was later replaced. They drove 150 miles (240 km) through scorching desert with no water, and during a night stint one of the headlights fell off and they had to be secured with his co-driver's necktie. The weather in the Andes mountains and the Atacama was so cold that Fangio drove with his co-driver's arms around him for hours. These mountainous routes in Bolivia and Peru sometimes involved going up to altitudes of 14,000 feet (4,300 m) above sea level—a 40 percent reduction of air thickness, making breathing incredibly difficult and the engine being severely down on power. When Fangio finally got out of the mountains and back to Buenos Aires, after traversing all these external challenges, he had won the race, which was his first big victory.[12]

In 1941, he beatOscar Gálvez in the Grand PrixGetúlio Vargas inBrazil, which was a six-day, 3,731-kilometre (2,318 mi) public road race starting from and ending atRio de Janeiro, going through various cities and towns all over Brazil such asSão Paulo andBelo Horizonte. For the second time, Fangio was crowned champion of Argentine TC. In 1942, he took tenth place in the South Grand Prix. In April he won the race "Mar y Sierras", and then had to suspend activity due to World War II.[11] In 1946, Fangio returned to racing with two races inMorón andTandil driving aFord T. In February 1947, Fangio competed at National Mechanics (MN) at the Retiro circuit, and on 1 March, he started the race for Rosario City Award. Subsequently, Fangio triumphed in the Double Back Window Race.[13]

In October 1948, Fangio however suffered a personal tragedy in another gruelling race, this time1948 South American Grand Prix, another point-to-point race from Buenos Aires to Caracas, Venezuela—a 20-day event covering a distance of 9,580 kilometres (5,950 mi) through Argentina, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia and finally Venezuela. In a race that killed 3 spectators and 2 drivers. Fangio, with his co-driver Daniel Urrutia battled hard with brothers Juan and Oscar Galvez, and Domingo Marimon throughout- Fangio was pushing hard to make up lost time he incurred in Argentina. On the 10th day, on the Lima to Tumbes stage in northern Peru, on coastal roads along the Pacific Ocean, Fangio was driving at night in thick fog generated from the ocean in near-pitch black darkness when he approached a left-hand bend at 140 kilometres per hour (87 mph) near the village of Huanchaco, not far from the small city ofTrujillo. With his car's lights not helping him in the thick fog, he approached the bend too fast, lost control of the car and tumbled down an embankment, and Urrutia was thrown out of the car through the front windscreen. Oscar Galvez stopped to help Fangio, who had neck injuries, then soon found the badly injured Urrutia. Another competitor, Luciano Marcilla, stopped and took Fangio and Urrutia to the nearest hospital in the town of Chocope 50 km (31 mi) away. Fangio survived but 35-year-old Urrutia did not, suffering multiple fatal cervical and basal skull fractures. Domingo Marimon won the race, but the race was a disaster and was marred by the deaths of three spectators and three drivers (including Urrutia).[14] Fangio believed he would never race again and entered a depressed state after the death of his friend, but he recovered, and his successes in Argentina caught the attention of the Argentine Automobile Club and theJuan Peron-led Argentine government, so they bought a Maserati and sent him to Europe in December 1948 to continue his career.[15][16]

Formula One and sports car racing

[edit]

Overview

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Fangio at the1954 German Grand Prix at theNürburgring
Fangio being chased byAlberto Ascari during the1954 Italian Grand Prix
Fangio at the1957 Argentine Grand Prix inBuenos Aires
Fangio driving aMaserati 250F

Fangio was the oldest driver in many of his Formula One races, having started his Grand Prix career in his late 30s. During his career, drivers raced with almost no protective equipment on circuits with no safety features. Formula One cars in the 1950s were for the time not only fast, but very physically and mentally demanding to drive; races were much longer than today and demanded incredible stamina. Tyres were very narrow and cross-ply, and far less forgiving; treads often stripped in a race, andspark plugs fouled. The drivers wore goggles with cloth helmets up to 1952, where from that year on helmets were made mandatory, so they wore pie-shaped crash hats made of paper-mache. The cars had no seatbelts, no roll-over protection, no bodywork to contain the driver (up until 1954) and the front-engined layout of these cars meant that the heated air from the engine and the gearbox would often blast the bodies of the drivers for the hours of the race, with the driveshaft spinning between their legs, and there were, of course, no electronic aids or computer intervention. At the end of a GP, drivers often suffered blistered hands caused by heavy steering and gear changing, and their faces were sometimes covered in soot from the inboard brakes. Despite Fangio's short career, he was one of the top GP drivers in history, rivallingTazio Nuvolari.[citation needed]

Fangio had no compunction about leaving a team, even after a successful year or even during a season, if he thought he would have a better chance with a better car. As was then common, several of his race results were shared with teammates after he took over their car during races when his own had technical problems. His main rivals includedAlberto Ascari andStirling Moss, and on occasionGiuseppe “Nino” Farina andMike Hawthorn (Farina particularly in the early part of Fangio’s career). Throughout his career, Fangio was backed by funding from the Argentine government ofJuan Perón.[17]

World championship successes

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Fangio after winning the1957 German Grand Prix at the Nürburgring

Fangio's first Grand Prix race was the1948 French Grand Prix atReims, where he started hisSimca Gordini from 11th on the grid but retired. Fangio briefly returned to South America to compete in the aforementioned Buenos Aires to Caracas race, he then returned to Europe the following year, and raced inSanremo; having upgraded to aMaserati 4CLT/48 sponsored by the Automobile Club of Argentina he dominated the event, winning both heats to take the aggregate win by almost a minute overPrince Bira. Fangio entered a further six Grand Prix races in 1949, winning four of them against top-level opposition.[16][18]

Alfa Romeo and Monza accident

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For the first World Championship of Drivers in1950, Fangio was taken on by theAlfa Romeo team alongside Farina andLuigi Fagioli. With competitive racing cars following theSecond World War still in short supply, the pre-warAlfettas proved dominant. Fangio won each of the three races he finished at Monaco, Spa and Reims-Gueux but Farina's three wins at races Fangio retired from and a fourth-place allowed Farina to take the title, even though Fangio was quicker than Farina, who was able to take advantage of Fangio's mechanical woes. Fangio's most notable victory that year was at Monaco, where he dodged a multi-car pile-up and easily won the race. In 1950s non-championship races Fangio took a further four wins at San Remo, Pau and the fearsome Coppa Acerbo at the 16-mile Pescara public road circuit, and two seconds from eight starts. At Pescara in 1950, going down a long straight called the Flying Kilometer, he was clocked doing 194 mph (310 km/h) in his Alfa. He also won a handful of races in South America for the Argentine Automobile Club driving a Maserati 4CLT and a Ferrari 166 during the European off-season.

Fangio won three more championship races for Alfa in1951 in theSwiss,French andSpanish Grands Prix, and with the new 4.5-litre Ferraris taking points off his teammates Farina and various others, Fangio took the title at the final race in Spain, finishing six points ahead of Ascari at thePedralbes street circuit. Fangio also finished second at theBritish Grand Prix atSilverstone after his horrendously fuel-inefficient Alfa had to make two lengthy pit stops to refill the car. He then finished second at theGerman Grand Prix at theNürburgring after he lost first and second gear during an intense battle with Alberto Ascari.[19][16][17][18]

With the1952 World Championship being run toFormula Two specifications, Alfa Romeo did not have a car for the new formula and were unable to use their supercharged Alfettas, so they withdrew. As a result, the defending champion found himself without a car for the first race of the championship and remained absent from F1 until June, when he drove the BritishBRM V16 in non-championship F1 races at the public road circuits atAlbi in France andDundrod in Northern Ireland. Fangio had agreed to drive for Maserati in a non-championship race atMonza the day after the Dundrod race, but having missed a connecting flight he decided to drive through the night on pre-motorway mountain roads through the Alps fromLyon, arriving half an hour before the start. Arriving atMonza at 2 p.m., he was badly fatigued and with the race starting at 2:30 p.m., Fangio started the race from the back of the grid but lost control on the second lap, crashed into a grass bank, and was thrown out of the car as it flipped end over end, smashing through trees. He was taken to a hospital in Milan with multiple injuries, the most serious being a broken neck, and spent the rest of 1952 recovering in Argentina.[16][18] Nino Farina, who had won the race, visited Fangio in hospital and gifted him with the winner's laurel wreath.

Maserati and sports car racing successes

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Having returned to Europe and back to full racing fitness in1953, Fangio rejoined Maserati for the championship season, and against the dominant Ferraris led by Ascari he took a lucky win at Monza. Fangio's car had a bad vibration all throughout practice, and he offered the Maserati mechanics 10% of his winnings if they fixed the vibration; they did, and Fangio qualified second, and won the race, setting fastest lap and beatingNino Farina by just 1.4 seconds. Along with that win, Fangio secured three second-places to finish second in the Championship, and also came third first time out in theTarga Florio. He also competed and won one of two heats in the Albi Grand Prix, again withBRM and driving the fearsome and powerfulType 15, a car with a 600 hp supercharged V16 that was difficult to drive.

He also competed in one of the most dangerous and prestigious races in Europe: theMille Miglia, a 1,000 miles (1,600 km) race on open public roads covering nearly all of northern Italy driving an Alfa Romeo 6C 3000 CM entered by the factory. The Mille Miglia and also another championship race in 1953, the Carrera Panamericana in Mexico were much like the races he competed in South America in the 1940s (except all the roads used in Italy and Mexico were paved). At the Mille Miglia, the Alfa team was expected to win, and after Farina, Karl Kling and Consalvo Sanesi all crashed, Fangio was leading when he reached Rome, pushing very hard from when he started in Brescia. Fangio then suffered left front steering arm failure near Bologna and only had consistent steering on the right front; this allowed Mille Miglia expert Giannino Marzotto to catch and beat Fangio by 12 minutes, even though the Argentine driver drove hard to keep up with Marzotto. He ended 1953 by winning the dauntingly dangerous and difficult 2,000 mi (3,200 km)Carrera Panamericana in Mexico driving aLancia D24; Fangio was able to win this 5-day open public road rally that started at the Guatemala-Mexico border and ended at the Mexico-United States border in Ciudad Juarez, setting a new race time completion record of 18.5 hours (despite Fangio not winning a single stage), some 9 hours faster than the winner of the first event in 1950. The race was marred by multiple spectator fatalities, and the death of 50-year-oldFelice Bonetto, like Fangio driving a works Lancia, on the third day of the competition in the town ofSilao.[16][18][20]

Mercedes-Benz

[edit]
Mercedes W196 F1 car in Buenos Aires

In1954 Fangio raced for Maserati untilMercedes-Benz entered competition in mid-season. He won his home Grand Prix inBuenos Aires and at Spa with the iconic250F. Mercedes-Benz's first race was the French Grand Prix at the fast, straight dominated Reims public road circuit, and he won the race with the streamlined, closed-wheelW196 Monoposto- a car that although difficult to drive was ahead of its time. Fangio spent the race battling with teammateKarl Kling down Reims's long straights. Fangio failed to win at Silverstone, with the closed-wheel car designed for straight-line speed struggling at the high speed corner-dominated circuit. Fangio got the more nimble open-wheeled W196 for theNürburgring, and won the race, as he did at Bremgarten and then at Monza, the latter with the streamlined car. Monza was a particularly brutal race in that Alberto Ascari had turned up with the new Lancia, and young British up-and-comerStirling Moss in a private Maserati was also competitive during the race. Ascari and Moss both passed Fangio and raced each other hard until Ascari dropped out with engine problems. Moss's engine blew up near the end of the race and Fangio took victory. Winning eight out of twelve races (six out of eight in the championship) and winning his second championship in that year, he continued to race with Mercedes—driving a further developed W196 with improved performance in1955 in a team that included Moss.

For 1955, Fangio subjected himself to a training programme which was strenuous in an effort to keep up his fitness levels high which was comparable to his younger rivals. He won a particularly brutal race at theGran Premio de la República Argentina. This race was run in Buenos Aires during a gruelling 40 °C (104 °F) heat wave, and with track temperature of over 57 °C (135 °F) few drivers other than Fangio were able to complete the race. The W196's chassis had heated up and Fangio's right leg rubbed against the chassis structure, but even after receiving severe burns he kept going; it took him three months to recover from his injuries. 1955 also saw Fangio attempt the Mille Miglia again, this time without a navigator, driving aMercedes-Benz 300 SLR. After leaving at 6:58 a.m., the car's advanced engine began developing problems when he got to Pescara. The Mercedes mechanics apparently found nothing, and sent him off. Fangio was losing time to Moss and Hans Herrmann, and when he got to Rome the engine was still not running smoothly. Again Fangio was sent away by the mechanics. And when he got to Florence, a few loud bangs were heard, so the mechanics raised the bonnet and they found that one of the fuel injection pipes had broken, so Fangio's 300 SLR was running on seven cylinders instead of eight; this could not be repaired and Fangio drove back to Brescia with a misfiring engine, finishing in 2nd behind Moss. Fangio later surmised that Mercedes felt he could not win the race without a navigator so they did not put as much effort behind preparing his car as they did with the car of Moss, who hada navigator. At the end of the second successful season (which was overshadowed by the1955 Le Mans disaster in which 83 spectators were killed, an accident which happened right in front of and nearly killed him) Mercedes withdrew from racing and after four attempts, Fangio never raced at Le Mans again.[21][16] A number of races were cancelled after this race except for Britain and Italy (which both already had circuits with new and updated safety facilities), which he finished in second in the former and won the latter, allowing him to win his third world championship. Mercedes's last race was the Targa Florio sportscar race, which Mercedes needed to win in order to beat Ferrari and Jaguar to the title; the German firm had skipped the first two races in Buenos Aires and Sebring, Florida. Fangio, driving with Kling finished second to Moss and Peter Collins, allowing Mercedes to win the title by two points over Ferrari.

Last years with Ferrari and Maserati

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In1956 Fangio moved to Ferrari to win his fourth title. Neither Enzo Ferrari nor the Ferrari team manager Eraldo Sculati had a warm relationship with Fangio, despite their shared success with the very difficult-to-drive Ferrari-developed Lancia car. Fangio started the year strongly by winning the gruelling12-hour sportscar race atSebring in America with Ferrari, driving withEugenio Castellotti. But during the Grand Prix season, Fangio took over his teammate's cars after he suffered mechanical problems in three races, theArgentine,Monaco andItalian Grands Prix. In each case the points were shared between the two drivers. After the Monaco Grand Prix, where Fangio struggled with the ill-handling Lancia-Ferrari he asked Ferrari if he could have one mechanic exclusively for his car, as Ferrari did not have his mechanics assigned to any of the cars, as Mercedes had. Ferrari granted Fangio's request, and the performance of Fangio's car improved substantially. In addition to winning in Argentina, Fangio won the British and German Grands Prix atSilverstone and theNürburgring. At the season-ending Italian Grand Prix, Fangio's Ferrari teammatePeter Collins, who was in a position to win the World Championship with just 15 laps to go, handed over his car to Fangio. They shared the six points won for second place, giving Fangio the World title.[18]

"I have never driven that quickly before in my life and I don't think I will ever be able to do it again."

—Fangio after the1957 German Grand Prix[22]

In1957 Fangio returned to Maserati, who were still using the same iconic250F which Fangio had driven at the start of 1954. Fangio started the season with a hat-trick of wins in Argentina, Monaco and France, before retiring with engine problems in Britain. He also won theSebring sportscar race in driving aMaserati 450S withJean Behra for the second year running. But at the Grand Prix after Britain, theGerman Grand Prix at theNürburgring circuit, Fangio needed to extend his lead by six points to claim the title with two races to spare. From pole position Fangio dropped to third behind the Ferraris ofMike Hawthorn and Collins but managed to get past both by the end of the third lap. Fangio had started with half-full tanks since he expected that he would need new tyres halfway through the race. In the event Fangio pitted on lap 13 with a 30-second lead, but a disastrous stop left him back in third place and 50 seconds behind Collins and Hawthorn. Fangio came into his own, setting one fastest lap after another, culminating in a record-breaking time on lap 20 a full eleven seconds faster than the best the Ferraris could do. On the penultimate lap Fangio got back past both Collins and Hawthorn, and held on to take the win by just over three seconds.[23] With Musso finishing in fourth place, Fangio claimed his fifth title. This performance is often regarded as one of the greatest drives in Formula One history, and it was also Fangio's final victory in the sport.[16][17][18] Fangio's record of five championships remained unbroken until 2003, whenMichael Schumacher won his sixth championship.

After his series of consecutive championships he retired in1958, following theFrench Grand Prix. Such was the respect for Fangio that during that final race, race leader Hawthorn, who had lapped Fangio, braked as he was about to cross the line so that Fangio could complete the 50-lap distance in his final race; he crossed the line over two minutes down on Hawthorn. Getting out of the Maserati after the race, he said to his mechanic simply, "It is finished." He was famous for winning races at what he described as the slowest possible speed, in order to conserve the car to the finish. Cars in the 1940s and 1950s were unpredictable in their reliability, with almost any component susceptible to breaking. He won 24 World Championship Grands Prix, 22 outright and two shared with other drivers, from 52 entries – a winning percentage of 46.15%, the highest in the sport's history (Alberto Ascari, who has the second-highest, holds a winning percentage of 40.63%). Both drivers were already experienced Grand Prix drivers before the world championship started.[16][17]

Kidnapping

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PresidentFulgencio Batista of Cuba established the non-Formula OneCuban Grand Prix in Havana in 1957. Fangio won the 1957 event, and had set fastest times during practice for the 1958 race. On 23 February 1958, two gunmen ofFidel Castro's26th of July Movement entered the Hotel Lincoln inHavana and kidnapped Fangio. Batista ordered the race to continue as usual while a crack team of police hunted down the kidnappers. They set up roadblocks at intersections, and guards were assigned to private and commercial airports and to all competing drivers.[24][25][26]

Fangio was taken to three separate houses. His captors allowed him to listen to the race via radio, bringing a television for him to witness reports of a disastrous crash after the race concluded. In the third house, Fangio was allowed his own bedroom but became convinced that a guard was standing outside the bedroom door at all hours. The captors talked about their revolutionary programme, which Fangio had not wished to speak about, as he did not have an interest in politics. He later said: "Well, this is one more adventure. If what the rebels did was in a good cause, then I, as an Argentine, accept it."[26] He was released after 29 hours, after being "treated very well".[27][28]

The captors' motives were to force the cancellation of the race in an attempt to embarrass the Batista regime. When Fangio was handed over to the Argentine embassy soon after the race, many Cubans became convinced that Batista was losing his grip on power because he failed to track the captors down. TheCuban Revolution took over the government in January 1959, and the 1959 Cuban Grand Prix was cancelled. The Fangio kidnapping was dramatized in a 1999Argentine film directed byAlberto Lecchi,Operación Fangio.[26][29][30][31]

Later life and death

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Post-retirement activities

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Fangio andJuan Manuel Bordeu, racer and personal friend of the former racer in 1966.
Juan Manuel Fangio driving aMercedes-Benz W196 in the 1986 Oldtimer Grand Prix at theNürburgring

In the early 1950s, Fangio was involved in a road accident when he was forced to swerve to avoid an oncoming truck. The car, aLancia Aurelia GT, clipped a pole, spinning twice and threw Fangio out, which led him to sustain grazed elbows. One passenger stated the incident was the first time Fangio had been so terrified.[32]

When Fangio attended the1958 Indianapolis 500, he was offered $20,000 to qualify in aKurtis-Offenhauser by the car's owner, George Walther, Jr (father of future Indy 500 driverSalt Walther). Fangio had previously attended the 500 in 1948 at which time he expressed his interest in competing the race. However, he was unable to qualify with a car that did not work properly. Walther allowed Fangio to stand aside (before a contract withBP came to light), still he did not want another driver to take over Fangio's position.[33]

After his retirement, Fangio was distinguished as honorary President of the Automobile Sports Commission of the Argentine Republic.[34] He also participated in many world exhibition races, tributes to motorsport figures and in the organization of events related to his profession. In 1960 he carried out an exhibition at theSarmiento Park inCórdoba city, with a Maserati 2500 ofEttore Chimeri, with which he suffered a run off the track, brushed a curb and accidentally lifted into the air without consequences. He became honorary president of the Club International des Anciens Pilotes de Grand Prix F1 in 1962.[34]

In 1968, he collaborated withAutomóvil Club Argentino in the organization of the Formula 2 International Championship held in Argentina, a task that would become constant during the following years. Shortly thereafter, he headed the "84 Hours of Nürburgring" project for Argentine-madeIKA-Renault Torino cars and traveled to Germany as a driver advisor with the Argentine team.[35]

Fangio took part in the so-called "Carrera del Recuerdo", held on 17 October 1973 at theAutódromo de Buenos Aires with a Fiat Berlina 125. Legendary motorsport figures such asOscar Alfredo Gálvez also took part in the race.[34]

Fangio served as the flagman for the Argentine Grand Prix from 1972 to 1981, and forNASCAR'sWinston 500 in 1975.

He was appointed president of Mercedes-Benz Argentina in April 1974 and the following year, he was part of an exhibition test inDijon on the occasion of the Swiss Grand Prix aboard a Maserati 250F. On the 50th anniversary of the Nürburgring circuit, Fangio took part in the Fifth International Race of Historic Racing and Sports Cars, called "Parade of Remembrance", with the Mercedes-Benz W196 R. In 1979 he raced at the English circuit ofDonington Park on the occasion of an event organized by the Gunnar Nilsson Foundation.[34]

Fangio was the special guest of the 50th anniversary1978 Australian Grand Prix at theSandown Raceway inMelbourne (seven years before theAustralian Grand Prix became a round of the World Championship in1985). After awarding theLex Davison Trophy to race winnerGraham McRae (who stated that meeting Fangio was a bigger thrill than actually winning the race for the third time), Fangio drove his 1954 and 1955 World Championship-winning Mercedes-Benz W196 in a spirited three lap exhibition against three other cars, including the1966 World Championship winningBrabham BT19 driven by Australia's own triple World ChampionJack Brabham. Despite his car being over ten years older than theRepco Brabham, Fangio pushed the Australian all the way to the flag. Before the event, Fangio (who at 67 years of age and not having raced competitively in 20 years, still held a fullFIASuper Licence) had stated his intention of racing and not just putting in a demonstration drive.[36]

After racing in the Brussels Rally in 1981, he participated aboard a Chevrolet TC in the Gran Premio del Recuerdo, a caravan held in 1983 through the center of the Buenos Aires city to raise funds for the Patronato de la Infancia and the Asociación de Ayuda al Menor of the Buenos Aires province.[34]

In 1980,Konex Foundation granted him the DiamondKonex Award as the best Sportsman of the decade in Argentina. In 1981 Fangio travelled to Monza for the Italian Grand Prix, where he was reunited with his Tipo 159 Alfa Romeo from 1951 and the 1954 Lancia D50 for a couple of demonstrative laps. For the event Fangio was joined by old friends and fellow racers, includingToulo de Graffenried,Luigi Villoresi andGiorgio Scarlatti as well as former Alfa Romeo managers from the 1950s Paolo Marzotto and Battista Guidotti.[37]

Fangio met the young Brazilian driverAyrton Senna at the opening of the Grand Prix Strecke, the short circuit inside the Nürburgring Norschleiffe, in 1984. After that initial meeting, the five-time champion told the young driver, "Now I understand why people speak so highly of you". The good chemistry between the two drivers was immediate, and over time the friendship was firmly forged. Senna often traveled to Argentina to meet with Fangio, where, among other things, the young Brazilian would ask the champion for advice on how to run better on the circuits, and the experienced former driver would happily give it to him.[38] One of Senna's trips to Argentina to see Fangio saved the Brazilian driver from a dangerous situation: in those days,Comando Vermelho, one of the most powerful and dangerous narco-criminal groups in Brazil, had planned to kidnap Senna.[38]

In the1990 Australian Grand Prix, which was held on theAdelaide streets, Formula 1 celebrated its 500th race and to celebrate it, they staged a photo-op that would go down in history. They brought together several champions:Nelson Piquet (active driver), Jack Brabham,James Hunt,Jackie Stewart,Denny Hulme, Senna and theChueco. Ayrton raised Fangio's arm, as if he were the judge of a boxing match, giving his blessing to the winner. After the event, the Argentinean former driver invited the then McLaren driver to Argentina to celebrate that season's title.[38][39]

Fangio was inducted into theInternational Motorsports Hall of Fame in 1990. He returned to the spotlight in 1994, when he publicly opposed a newProvince of Buenos Aires law denying driving licences to those over 80 (which included Fangio). Denied a renewal of his card, Fangio reportedly challenged Traffic Bureau personnel to a race between Buenos Aires and seasideMar del Plata (a 400 km (250 mi) distance) in two hours or less, following which an exception was made for the five-time champion.[40]

Ayrton Senna would later invite Fangio again to the1993 Brazilian Grand Prix race held at theInterlagos circuit in São Paulo, where the Brazilian driver emerged victorious. Senna celebrated his victory with Fangio, the last time they were seen together in public. Both drivers would later have private meetings where Senna would often travel to Argentina or Fangio would travel to Senna's house in Brazil.[41] When Senna died in an accident at theSan Marino Grand Prix in May 1994, Fangio deeply mourned the driver's death. "I have lost my heir and successor" said Fangio at the time, showing his regret for the death of the young Brazilian driver.[38] The former driver participated in Senna's funeral, and the subsequent burial, which was held with honors worthy of a state funeral due to the driver's great popularity, at theMorumbi Cemetery.[42][38]

He was appointed honorary president of Mercedes-Benz Argentina in 1987, the only distinction granted in its history by the German company, and held the position until 1994. Fangio was appointed president of theRenault Foundation in 1990 and continued to make public appearances especially in international exhibition races until his health began to deteriorate. He held his last competition on theSardinia Island in 1993 aboard an Alfetta 159 in the company of other figures of his time.[43]

His role at Mercedes-Benz during the Argentine military dictatorship

[edit]

On the centenary of his birth in 2011, two projects were presented in the Legislature of the City of Buenos Aires by thePRO to honor him, which were resisted by both the Buenos Aires Deputy Ombudsman's Office and by the representativeDelia Bisutti,[44] who pointed out that "a claim is being made for Fangio in its entirety and someone of his renown could not be oblivious to what was happening. "Here there was a military dictatorship with civic accompaniment, and it is very important to highlight what happened to Fangio." Fernando de Andreis, the deputy who presented the project, dismissed the accusation, stating that it was unfounded.Graciela Borges, widow of Juan Manuel Bordeu, also defended Fangio, arguing that the visit to Venezuela made by the broker in the 70s would have been made with any other government.[45]

Juan Manuel Fangio Motorsport Museum

[edit]
Main article:Museo Juan Manuel Fangio
Juan Manuel Fangio Motorsport Museum.

In 1979, some residents of the city of Balcarce began to promote the formation of a work commission to the construction of a Museum when they learned of Fangio's intention to gather all his trophies, cars and presents accumulated throughout his life sports in one place. On 26 October of that year, the "Juan Manuel Fangio Motorsport Pro-Museum Commission" was established under municipal support.[46]

An old building from 1906, in which the Municipality and the Deliberative Council of Balcarce had functioned, was chosen to establish the museum. Although the building had been closed for years, and was in a deplorable state of conservation, it occupied a lot of significant proportions and was located in the southern corner of the town's main square. The community history of the building generated a desire to recover it as the city's architectural heritage.[46]

Aware at the end of 1980 of the proposal of the Pro-museum Commission,Province of Buenos AiresDe facto Governor, Ibérico Saint Jean, promoted it and provided the initial capital that made the bidding and the beginnings possible. of the work.[46]

The economic contributions, which given the inflationary process was close to 18% of the cost (at the beginning it represented 75%-80%), was expanded with donations from national and international companies, people adhering to the project, contributions from Fangio himself and was completed with different activities organized by the commission.

The former racer donated all his trophies and a wide variety of automobiles to the municipality of Balcarce in 1983 for later presentation at the Museum.[34] Finally, on 22 November 1986, theJuan Manuel Fangio Technological-Cultural Center and Automobile Museum was inaugurated.[46][47]

The restoration of the building and its contents caused astonishment among visitors and world journalists, leading it to be described as the most important motorsports museum in South America and the best dedicated to a competitive driver.[46]

Upon concluding its objective, the Pro-Museum Commission was dissolved. However, at the request of Fangio andJuan Manuel Bordeu, the Juan Manuel Fangio Automobile Museum Foundation was created, an entity that manages and governs the destiny of the museum and is responsible for preserving, maintaining and increasing Fangio's sports heritage.[46]

Decreased health and death

[edit]

The former racer's health deteriorated in the last decades of his life.[34][43] In December 1970, he suffered a serious heart attack and in 1981, after exhibiting a Mercedes-Benz 300 SLR inDubai, he had another heart attack. The following year he was subjected to a surgical intervention in which the renowned Cardiologist DoctorRené Favaloro implanted fivebypass.[48]

In the late 1980s he was diagnosed with chronickidney failure and in 1992, he underwent surgery to remove abenign tumor from hiskidneys. He suffered an intestinal infection in 1993 inStuttgart, for which he had to be hospitalized. At the end of that year he had to be admitted again for fifteen days to the Mater Dei Clinic due to bloodhypercalcemia.[43] In his last years he had to undergo three weekly sessions ofdialysis by Doctor Roque Sala at the same time that he began with a progressive loss of consciousness and motor problems derived from his previous pathologies. After an emergency hospitalization in January 1995, he confined himself to his home in Palermo Viejo, where he continued with treatment and abandoned practically all his public appearances.[43]

On 14 July 1995, he suffered fromrespiratory failure with excess phlegm that led to his admission to the Mater Dei Clinic, where he was diagnosed withbronchopneumonia. One day later he had a respiratory crisis and his diagnosis worsened on 16 July when he suffered a decompensation in his state of health that until then had remained stable. Fangio died on 17 July 1995 at 84 years old at 4:10 AMUTC-3 inBuenos Aires.[43][49][50]

After learning of the death of the former racer, President of the Nation ArgentinaCarlos Saúl Menem arranged the White Room of theCasa Rosada for his funeral. His pallbearers were his younger brother Ruben Renato ("Toto"), fellow racing iconsStirling Moss and Jackie Stewart, compatriot championsJosé Froilán González andCarlos Reutemann, and the president of Mercedes-Benz Argentina at the time.[51]

The president of FIFA,João Havelange, expressed his condolences andJackie Stewart, three-time Formula 1 world champion and personal friend of Fangio, decided to travel for the funeral. The president of the FIA,Max Mosley, immediately traveled to Argentina upon learning of Fangio's death.[48]

After the first funeral at the Casa Rosada, the remains of the former racer were transferred for a new funeral at the headquarters of the Automóvil Club Argentino and then a last funeral was held at the Fangio Museum before finally being placed in the family pantheon of the Balcarce Cemetery.[43][52]

In 2021, the remains of the racer were moved from the Balcarce Cemetery to theMuseum that bears his name, in the same city where he was born and grew up more than 110 years ago, being the culmination of a ceremony that lasted two days full of tributes to Fangio, coinciding also with the 70th anniversary of his first Formula 1 victory. The ceremony was attended by Oscar “Cacho”, Ruben and Juan Carlos, the three sons of the quintuple, together with outstanding national and world motorsport personalities such as Sir Jackie Stewart, Oreste Berta andHoracio Pagani, who were also Fangio's friends. After the Roman Catholic religious service, officiated by the Mar del Plata's Bishop, the coffin with the remains of the former racer was placed in a special vault in the Museum, next to the trophies he won and some of the cars with which he had his successful racing career.[53]

Personal life

[edit]
Andrea Berruet congratulates Fangio after his victory in the1957 German Grand Prix.

Fangio never married, but was romantically involved for more than twenty years with Andrea “Beba” Berruet, with whom he had a son on April 6, 1938: Oscar “Cacho” Espinoza. He was registered with the surname of Berruet's husband, Luis Alcides Espinoza, because they were not legally separated, since at that time civil divorce did not yet exist in Argentina.

The relationship between Berruet and Fangio did not last beyond the racer's sporting retirement in the early 1960s, but shortly before, in 1955, Fangio began legal proceedings for the adoption of his own eldest son, something he abandoned shortly thereafter.

Oscar Espinoza's first opportunity to try to get his real last name was in 1966. "Cacho", who against his father's wishes (Fangio wanted his son to study medicine at University) became a racing driver, had the opportunity to go racing in theEuropean Formula Two Championship.[54] Because he had to renew his passport to travel to Europe, and the renewal process was delayed, Juan Manuel told his son that the only chance to get his passport renewed as quickly as possible was to add the surname Fangio to his Identity Card, and that was how it was given. Thus began his professional career in motorsport as "Cacho" Fangio, although it was known that this was only a patch and not a concrete reality.[54]

"Cacho" even participated in the Argentine Mission, organized by his father, of the 84 Hours of Nürburgring in August 1969, where national carsIKA Torino, prepared by the renowned mechanicOreste Berta, competed.[55]

In the 1970s, the relationship between Fangio and his eldest son deteriorated almost completely because "Cacho" began to demand that his father give him his real last name. Espinoza filed a filiation lawsuit against Juan Manuel Fangio, repudiating Luis Alcides Espinoza's paternity. The lawsuit was rejected in First and Second Instance by the National Civil Court of the Capital Federal. Fangio and his son stopped talking to each other for many years. Even, in the homage that the President of the Nation ArgentinaCarlos Saúl Menem paid to the former racer in 1994 for the 25th anniversary of the 84 Hours of Nürburgring 1969, they met again and only shook hands. The following year, with Fangio's health deteriorating, they met again at the racer's home in Buenos Aires, where father and son were able to reconcile and have a quiet chat, being the last time Fangio was able to see his eldest son, shortly time before his death.[54]

In 2000, Espinoza publicly admitted in an interview toOlé that he was the former racer's unrecognized son and in 2008 he initiated a case in a Buenos Aires civil court to prove his filiation and to be able to use his paternal surname.[56][57]

After Fangio's death, it was “Cacho's” youngest daughter, Carolina, who urged her father to continue with the parentage claim even though the former racer was no longer physically present. Espinoza stopped the filiation claim because his daughter, who had urged him to continue with the claim, died of Cancer in 2011. "Cacho" was plunged into sadness by the death of his daughter and only two years later was he able to resume the search for his true identity.[54]

In 2005, Rubén Juan Vázquez, a former railway and hotelier employee born in Balcarce and currently residing in the town ofCañuelas, filed a paternity suit similar to the one already filed by “Cacho” Espinoza to find out if he is indeed also Fangio's son. Born 4 years after Espinoza (on June 25, 1942, the day after Fangio's 31st birthday), Vázquez claimed to be the fruit of an extramarital relationship between his mother, Catalina Basili, and Fangio, whom he met when Rubén's maternal half-brother, Ricardo Vázquez, suffered an accident while working in the mechanical workshop that the racer owned in Balcarce. The extramarital relationship between Basili and Fangio that later resulted in the pregnancy was a secret that not even Pedro Antonio Vázquez, Basili's husband, knew about during his lifetime.[58] Fangio was Vázquez's baptismal godfather, and even at one point, at that time without knowing or suspecting that he was his biological father, he turned to the former racer to ask for a recommendation to go to work at Mercedes Benz, due to the difference salaries since they paid better salaries in the automotive industry than in the Railway, where Vázquez worked at that time.

Rubén's first suspicion about his true identity arose in 1995 when he worked in a Hotel inPinamar. A doctor, a client of the Hotel, who noticed Vázquez's physical resemblance to Fangio told him that when he took a DNA test he was going to get a surprise.[54]

After ten years and after receiving more comments that he was similar to Fangio not only physically but also in his voice, in 2005 Vázquez decided to confront his mother to find out the truth about whether or not he was the son of the former racer, although she was still weighed down by the extramarital relationship she had had with the “Chueco” decades ago. After several refusals, Basili finally confessed the truth to his son. Vázquez turned to theLaw firm of the renowned Lawyer Miguel Ángel Pierri and his partner, Lisandro Faisal, who initiated the filiation case that would determine if Vázquez was indeed Fangio's son.[59]

Catalina Basili died in December 2012, at 103 years old, but shortly before her death she had signed a deed before aNotary Public admitting that her son was the fruit of a relationship with Fangio.[58]

In order to initially follow up on the filiation lawsuit filed by Espinoza, on July 16, 2015, the Civil and Commercial Judge of Mar del Plata, Rodrigo Cataldo, ordered the exhumation of Fangio's body from the Municipal Cemetery of Balcarce, which took place on August 7 of the same year. After the exhumation and in order to extract samples from the racer's remains, experts sent by the Civil and Commercial Judge of La Plata, Daniel Dipp, who was in charge of Rubén Vázquez's filiation case, were also present. The samples were sent to laboratories inLa Plata, where they were compared with the blood samples of Espinoza and Vázquez[60][61] In December 2015, the Court confirmed that Espinosa was indeed Fangio's son,[62] and in February 2016, it was confirmed that Rubén Vázquez was also Fangio's son.[63]

In June 2016, Juan Carlos Rodríguez, a retiredAgricultural Engineer, born in 1945 in Balcarce and currently residing in the same City, underwent an initial DNA study with Oscar Fangio, who had known each other for more than three decades, although at that time both did not know they were brothers, because although Rodríguez knew that his father was Juan Manuel, “Cacho” believed that Rodríguez was the son of Rubén Renato Aniceto Fangio, “Toto”, the younger brother of the racer and father of the also racing driverJuan Manuel Fangio II.[54]

Juan Carlos was the fruit of a brief relationship between Silvia Rodriguez, who was fifteen years old at the time, and the racer, who was already thirty-three years old. The genetic result between Rodriguez and Cacho Fangio was that they are brothers with a certainty of almost 98%, which would lead to the conclusion that Rodriguez would also be the son of Juan Manuel, although the next step was still missing, which was to perform the same study by matching the DNA samples of Rodriguez with those extracted from the remains of the “Chueco”.“[64]

In May 2021 DNA studies confirmed that Juan Carlos Rodriguez is also Fangio's son.[65][66]

In June 2018, Oscar and Rubén Fangio became the heirs of the multimillion-dollar fortune that their father amassed during his years in motorsport, thus displacing their cousins, the former racer's nephews, who had been left with most of the material assets after Fangio's death.[67] Some time later, the youngest of the three Fangio brothers, Juan Carlos, joined as the third heir to the fortune.[68]

His nephew,Juan Manuel Fangio II, is also a racing driver.

Legacy

[edit]

"You must always strive to be the best, but you must never believe that you are."

—Juan Manuel Fangio[69]

Fangio's record of five World Championship titles stood for 46 years until German driver Michael Schumacher surpassed it in 2003. Schumacher said, "Fangio is on a level much higher than I see myself. What he did stands alone and what we have achieved is also unique. I have such respect for what he achieved. You can't take a personality like Fangio and compare him with what has happened today. There is not even the slightest comparison."[70][71] WhenLewis Hamilton equaled Fangio's five titles in2018 he praised Fangio calling him the "Godfather of our sport".[72]

In October 2020,The Economist ranked champion drivers by the relative importance of car quality to driver skill.[73] According to this ranking, Fangio is Formula 1's best driver of all time.

In November 2020, Carteret Analytics used quantitative analysis methods to rank Formula One drivers. According to this ranking, Fangio is Formula 1's best driver of all time.[74] Similar mathematical analysis has also placed Fangio as the greatest of all time, once the era of racing was considered.[75]

In his home country ofArgentina, Fangio is revered as one of the greatest sportsmen the nation has ever produced. He is nicknamedEl Maestro (the master).[76][77]

"What he did in his time is something that was an example of professionalism, of courage, of style and as a man, a human being. Every year there is a winner of the championship, but not necessarily a world champion. I think Fangio is the example of a true world champion"

—Ayrton Senna[78]
Statue of Fangio by Joaquim Ros Sabaté at theCircuit de Barcelona-Catalunya.

Six statues of Fangio, sculpted by Catalan artist Joaquim Ros Sabaté, stand at race venues around the world:Puerto Madero, Buenos Aires;Monte Carlo, Monaco;Montmeló, Spain;Nürburgring, Germany;Stuttgart-Untertürkheim, Germany; andMonza, Italy.

TheMuseo Juan Manuel Fangio was established in Balcarce (Fangio's birthplace) in 1986.

Argentina's largest oil company,Repsol YPF, launched the "Fangio XXI" gas brand. TheZonda 2005 C12 F, also known as the Zonda Fangio, was designed in honour of Fangio and was released 10 years after his death.[79] Maserati created a special website in 2007 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of his fifth and final world championship triumph.[80] AMercedes-Benz W196R Formula 1 race car, driven by Fangio in his World Championship-qualifying Grand Prix races in 1954 and 1955 was sold for a record $30 million at an auction in England on 12 July 2013.[81]

Racing record

[edit]

Career highlights

[edit]
SeasonSeriesPositionTeamCar
1940Turismo Carretera Argentina[82]1stChevrolet Cupé
Gran Premio Internacional del Norte[83]1stChevrolet 40 Cupé
1941Turismo Carretera Argentina[82]1stChevrolet Cupé
Gran Premio "Getulio Vargas" Brasil[84]1stChevrolet 40 Cupé
Mil Millas Argentinas[84]1stChevrolet 40 Cupé
1947Premios Primavera Mecánica Argentine[84]1stVolpi-Chevrolet
Premio de Mecánica Argentina[84]1stFord-Chevrolet T
Premio de Mecánica Rioplatense[84]1stVolpi-Chevrolet
Turismo Carretera Argentina[84]3rdChevrolet Cupé Model 39
Gran Premio de Buenos Aires[84]3rdFord-Chevrolet T
Gran Premio de Vendima[84]3rdFord-Chevrolet T
1948Premio Doble vuelta Ciudad de Coronel Pringles[84]1stChevrolet Cupé
Gran Premio Otoño[84]1stVolpi-Chevrolet
Gran Premio Ciudad de Mercedes[84]1stVolpi-Chevrolet
Premio Cien Millas Playas de Necochea[84]3rdVolpi-Chevrolet
Turismo Carretera Argentina[84]4thChevrolet Cupé
1949Premio Jean Pierre Wimille[85]1stVolpi-Chevrolet
Gran Premio Mar del Plata[85]1stMaserati 4CLT/48
Premio Fraile Muerto[85]1stVolpi-Chevrolet
Gran Premio di San Remo[85]1stScuderia Achille VarziMaserati 4CLT/48
Grand Prix de Pau[85]1stMaserati 4CLT/48
Grand Prix du Roussillon[85]1stAutomóvil Club ArgentinoMaserati 4CLT/48
Grand Prix de Marseille[86]1stScuderia Achille VarziSimca-Gordini T15
Gran Premio dell'Autodromo di Monza[87]1stA.C.A. Achille VarziFerrari 166 F2
Gran Premio Internacional San Martín[88]1stAutomóvil Club ArgentinoMaserati 4CLT/48
Grand Prix de l'Albigeois[89]1stAutomóvil Club ArgentinoMaserati 4CLT/48
Gran Premio de Eva Duarte Perón[88]2ndAutomóvil Club ArgentinoMaserati 4CLT/48
Gran Premio del General Juan Perón y de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires[88]2ndAutomóvil Club ArgentinoFerrari 166 F2
Turismo Carretera Argentina[85]3rdChevrolet Cupé
1950Grand Prix de Pau[90]1stAutomóvil Club ArgentinoMaserati 4CLT/48
Gran Premio di San Remo[91]1stScuderia Alfa RomeoAlfa Romeo 158
Grand Prix Automobile de Monaco[92]1stAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 158
Grand Prix d'Angoulême[93]1stAutomóvil Club ArgentinoMaserati 4CLT/48
Grote Prijs van Belgie[94]1stAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 158
Grand Prix de l'A.C.F.[95]1stAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 158
Grand Prix des Nations[96]1stAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 158
Circuito di Pescara[97]1stAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 158
Gran Premio de Paraná[98]1stAutomóvil Club ArgentinoFerrari 166 FL
Gran Premio del Presidente Alessandri[98]1stAutomóvil Club ArgentinoFerrari 166 FL
500 Millas de Rafaele[99]1stAnthony LagoTalbot-Lago T26C
Formula One World Championship[100]2ndAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 158
Gran Premio di Bari[101]2ndAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 158
Daily Express BRDC International Trophy[97]2ndAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 158
Grand Prix de Marseilles[102]3rdScuderia Achille VarziFerrari 166 F2
Mille Miglia[103]3rdAlfa Romeo 6C 2500 Competitzione Berlinetta
1951Formula One World Championship[104]1stAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 159
Großer Preis der Schweiz[105]1stAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 159A
Grand Prix de l'A.C.F.,[106]1stAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 159A
Gran Premio di Bari[107]1stAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 159A
Gran Premio de España[108]1stAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 159M
RAC British Grand Prix[109]2ndAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 159B
Großer Preis von Deutschland[110]2ndAlfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo 159B
Gran Premio del General Juan Perón y de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires[111]3rdDaimler-Benz AGMercedes-Benz W154
1952Grande Prêmio de Interlagos[112]1stA.C.A.Ferrari 166 FL
Grande Prêmio da Qunita da Boa Vista[112]1stA.C.A.Ferrari 166 FL
Gran Premio del General Juan Perón y de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires[112]1stA.C.A.Ferrari 166 FL
Gran Premio Maria Eva Duarte de Perón y de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires[112]1stA.C.A.Ferrari 166 FL
Gran Premio de Uruguay[112]1stA.C.A.Ferrari 166 FL
Gran Premio de Montvideo[112]1stA.C.A.Ferrari 166 FL
1953Vues des Aples[113]1stMaserati A6GCM/53
Gran Premio d'Italia[114]1stOfficine Alfieri Alfieri MaseratiMaserati A6GCM/53
Gran Premio di Modena[115]1stOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati A6GCM/53
Supercortemaggiore[116]1stScuderia Alfa RomeoAlfa Romeo 6C 3000 CM Spider
Carrera Panamericana[117]1stScuderia LanciaLancia D24 Pininfarina
Formula One World Championship[118]2ndOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati A6GCM/53
Mille Miglia[119]2ndSP.A. Alfa RomeoAlfa Romeo 6C 3000 CM
Gran Premio di Napoli[120]2ndOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati A6GCM/53
Grand Prix de l'ACF[121]2ndOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati A6GCM/53
Daily Express Trophy[122]2ndOwen Racing OrganisationBRM Type 15
RAC British Grand Prix[123]2ndOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati A6GCM/53
Großer Preis von Deutschland[124]2ndOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati A6GCM/53
Woodcote Cup[125]2ndOwen Racing OrganisationBRM Type 15
Grand Prix de Bordeaux[126]3rdEquipe GordiniGordini T16
Targa Florio[127]3rdOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati A6GCS/53
1954Formula One World Championship[128]1stOfficine Alfieri Maserati
Daimler Benz AG
Maserati A6SSG
Mercedes-Benz W196
Gran Premio de la Republica Argentina[129]1stOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati A6SSG
Grand Prix de Belgique[130]1stOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati 250F
Grand Prix de I'ACF[131]1stDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz W196
Großer Preis von Deutschland[132]1stDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz W196
Großer Preis der Schweiz[133]1stDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz W196
Gran Premio d'Italia[134]1stDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz W196
RAC Tourist Trophy[135]2ndScuderia LanciaLancia D24
Grosser Preis von Berlin[136]2ndDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz W196
Gran Premio de España[137]3rdDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz W196
1955Formula One World Championship[138]1stDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz W196
Gran Premio de la Republica Argentina[139]1stDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz W196
Gran Premio de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires[140]1stDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz W196
Internationales ADAC-Eifel-Rennen Nürburgring[141]1stDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz 300 SLR
Grote Prijs van Belgie[142]1stDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz W196
Grote Prijs van Nederland[143]1stDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz W196
Sveriges Grand Prix[144]1stDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz 300 SLR
Gran Premio d'Italia[145]1stDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz W196
Gran Premio de Venezuela[146]1stEquipo MaseratiMaserati 300S
Mille Miglia[147]2ndDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz 300 SLR
RAC British Grand Prix[148]2ndDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz W196
RAC Tourist Trophy[149]2ndDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz 300 SLR
Targa Florio[150]2ndDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz 300 SLR
1956Formula One World Championship[151]1stScuderia FerrariLancia-Ferrari D50
Ferrari D50
Gran Premio de la Republica Argentina[152]1stScuderia FerrariLancia-Ferrari D50
Gran Premio de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires[153]1stScuderia FerrariLancia-Ferrari D50
Florida International Grand Prix of Endurance powered by Amoco[154]1stScuderia FerrariFerrari 860 Monza
Gran Premio di Siracusa[140]1stScuderia FerrariLancia-Ferrari D50
RAC British Grand Prix[155]1stScuderia FerrariFerrari D50
Großer Preis von Deutschland[156]1stScuderia FerrariFerrari D50
Grand Prix Automobile de Monaco[157]2ndScuderia FerrariFerrari D50
Internationales ADAC 1000 Kilometer Rennen auf dem Nürburgring[158]2ndScuderia FerrariFerrari 860 Monza
Gran Premio d'Italia[159]2ndScuderia FerrariFerrari D50
Gran Premio de Venezuela[160]2ndScuderia FerrariFerrari 860 Monza
Supercortemaggiore[161]3rdScuderia FerrariFerrari 500 Mondial
1957Formula One World Championship[162]1stOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati 250F
Gran Premio de la Republica Argentina[163]1stOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati 250F
Gran Premio de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires[164]1stOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati 250F
Gran Premio de Cuba[165]1stScuderia MaduninaMaserati 300S
12-Hour Florida International Grand Prix of Endurance for The Amoco Trophy[166]1stOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati 450S
Grand Prix Automobile de Monaco[167]1stOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati 250F
Circuito de Monsanto[168]1stOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati 300S
Grand Prix de l'ACF[169]1stOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati 250F
Großer Preis von Deutschland[170]1stOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati 250F
Gran Premio de Interlagos[171]1stMaserati 300S
Gran Premio de Bos Vista[171]1stMaserati 300S
Gran Premio di Pescara[172]2ndOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati 250F
Gran Premio d'Italia[173]2ndOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati 250F
1958Gran Premio de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires[174]1stScuderia Sud AmericanaMaserati 250F
Formula One World Championship[174]14thOfficine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati 250F

Post-World War II Grandes Épreuves results

[edit]

(key)

YearEntrantChassisEngine12345
1948Equipe GordiniSimca GordiniT11Simca-Gordini 1.4L4MONSUIFRA
Ret
ITAGBR
1949Automóvil Club ArgentinoMaserati4CLT/48Maserati 4CLT 1.5L4sGBRBEL
Ret
SUIFRA
Ret
ITA
Source:[175]

Complete Formula One World Championship results

[edit]

(key) (Races inbold indicate pole position; races initalics indicate fastest lap)

YearEntrantChassisEngine1234567891011WDCPts[a]
1950Alfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo158Alfa Romeo 158 1.5L8sGBR
Ret
MON
1
500SUI
Ret
BEL
1
FRA
1
ITA
Ret*
2nd27
1951Alfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo159Alfa Romeo 158 1.5L8sSUI
1
500BEL
9
FRA
1*
GBR
2
GER
2
ITA
Ret
ESP
1
1st31
(37)
1953Officine Alfieri MaseratiMaseratiA6GCMMaserati A6 2.0L6ARG
Ret
500NED
Ret
BEL
Ret*
FRA
2
GBR
2
GER
2
SUI
4*
ITA
1
2nd28
(2912)
1954Officine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati250FMaserati 250F1 2.5L6ARG
1
500BEL
1
1st42
(5717)
Daimler Benz AGMercedes-BenzW196Mercedes M196 2.5L8FRA
1
GBR
4
GER
1
SUI
1
ITA
1
ESP
3
1955Daimler Benz AGMercedes-BenzW196Mercedes M196 2.5L8ARG
1
MON
Ret
500BEL
1
NED
1
GBR
2
ITA
1
1st40
(41)
1956Scuderia FerrariLancia-FerrariD50Ferrari DS50 2.5V8ARG
1*
MON
2*
500BEL
Ret
FRA
4
GBR
1
GER
1
ITA
2*
1st30
(33)
1957Officine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati250FMaserati 250F1 2.5L6ARG
1
MON
1
500FRA
1
GBR
Ret
GER
1
PES
2
ITA
2
1st40
(46)
1958Scuderia Sud AmericanaMaserati250FMaserati 250F1 2.5L6ARG
4
MONNED14th7
Novi Auto Air ConditionerKurtis Kraft 500FNovi 3.0L8s500
DNQ
Juan Manuel FangioMaserati250FMaserati 250F1 2.5L6BELFRA
4
GBRGERPORITAMOR
Sources:[177][178]

* Shared drive.

Car ran with streamlined, full-width bodywork.

Complete non-championship Formula One results

[edit]

(key) (Races inbold indicate pole position; Races initalics indicate fastest lap)

YearEntrantChassisEngine12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334
1950Scuderia Achille VarziMaserati4CLT/48Maserati 1.5s/cstraight-4PAU
1
RICALB
Ret
NED
Ret
Alfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo158Alfa Romeo 1.5s/cstraight-8SRM
1
PAREMPBAR
2
JERNAT
1
NOTULSPES
1
STTINT
2
GOOPEN
1951Alfa Romeo SpAAlfa Romeo159Alfa Romeo 1.5s/cstraight-8SYRPAURICSRMBORINT
4
ULSSCONEDALBPESBAR
1
GOO
Equipe GordiniSimca Gordini Type 11Gordini 1.5s/cstraight-4PAR
Ret
1952British Racing MotorsBRMType 15BRMP15 1.5s/cV16SYRVAL
DNA
RICLAVPAUIBSMARASTINTELÄNAPEIFPARALB
Ret
FROULS
Ret
Officine Alfieri MaseratiMaseratiA6GCMMaserati 2.0L6MNZ
Ret
LACESSMARSABCAEDMTCOMNATBAUMODCADSKAMADAVUJOENEW
1953Officine Alfieri MaseratiMaseratiA6GCMMaserati 2.0L6SYRPAULAVASTBOR
3
INTELÄNAP
2
ULSWINFROCOREIFMOD
1
MADJOECUR
British Racing MotorsBRMType 15BRMP15 1.5s/cV16ALB
Ret
PRIESSMIDROUCRYAVUUSFLACBRICHESABNEWCADREDSKALON
1954Officine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati250FMaserati 250 2.5L6SYR
DNA
PAULAVBORINTBARCURROM
DNA
FROCORBRCCRYROUCAEAUGCOROULREDPESJOECAD
Daimler Benz AGMercedes-BenzW196Mercedes M196 2.5L8BER
2
GOODTT
1956Scuderia FerrariFerrariD50Ferrari DS50 2.5V8BUE
1
GLVSYR
1
AININT
Ret
NAP100VNWCAEBRH
1957Officine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati250FMaserati 250 2.5L6BUE
1
SYRGLVNAPRMS
8
CAEINTMODMOR
4
Source:[179]

Formula One records

[edit]

Fangio holds the followingFormula One records:

RecordRef
Highest percentage of wins46.15%[180]
Highest percentage of pole positions55.77%[181]
Highest percentage of front row starts92.31%[182]
Highest percentage of fastest laps45.10%[183]
Highest percentage of podium finishes68.63%[184]
Oldest World Champion46 years, 41 days[185]
World Champion with most teams4[186]

World Sportscar Championship results

[edit]
YearEntrantChassisEngineClass1234567
1953S.P.A. Alfa RomeoAlfa Romeo 6C 3000Alfa RomeoStraight-6S +2.0SEBMLA
2
LMS
Ret
SPA
Ret
Scuderia LanciaLancia D24LanciaV6S+1.6NÜR
Ret
DUNCPA
1
1954Scuderia LanciaLancia D24LanciaV6S5.0BUESEB
Ret
MLALMS
Lancia D25S5.0DUN
Ret
CPA
1955Daimler-Benz AGMercedes-Benz 300 SLRMercedes-BenzStraight-8S+2.0BUESEBMLA
2
LMS
WD
DUN
2
TGA
2
1956Scuderia FerrariFerrari 410 SportFerrariV12S+3.0BUE
Ret
Ferrari 860 MonzaFerrariStraight-4SEB
1
NÜR
2
KRI
2
Ferrari 290 MMFerrariV12MLA
4
1957Officine Alfieri MaseratiMaserati 450SMaseratiV8S5.0BUE
Ret
SEB
1
MLANÜR
Ret
LMSKRICAR
1958Scuderia Centro SudMaserati 300SMaseratiStraight-6S3.0BUE
Ret
SEBTGANÜRLMSGWD
Source:[175]

Complete 24 Hours of Le Mans results

[edit]
YearTeamCo-DriversCarClassLapsPos.Class
Pos.
1950FranceAutomobiles GordiniArgentinaJosé Froilán GonzálezGordini T15SS3.095DNFDNF
1951FranceLouis RosierFranceLouis RosierTalbot-Lago T26CS5.092DNFDNF
1953ItalyS.P.A. Alfa RomeoArgentinaOnofre MarimónAlfa Romeo 6C 3000 CMS5.022DNFDNF
1955West GermanyDaimler Benz AGUnited KingdomStirling MossMercedes-Benz 300 SLRS3.0134DNFDNF
Sources:[187][188]

Complete 12 Hours of Sebring results

[edit]
YearTeamCo-DriversCarClassLapsPos.Class
Pos.
1954ItalyScuderia Lancia Co.ItalyEugenio CastellottiLancia D24S5.051DNFDNF
1956ItalyScuderia FerrariItalyEugenio CastellottiFerrari 860 MonzaS5.01941st1st
1957ItalyMaserati FactoryFranceJean BehraMaserati 450SS5.01971st1st
Source:[189]

Complete 24 Hours of Spa

[edit]
YearTeamCo-DriversCarClassLapsPos.Class
Pos.
1953ItalyS.P.A. Alfa RomeoItalyConsalvo SanesiAlfa Romeo 6C 3000 CM SpiderS5DNFDNF
Source:[189]

Complete Mille Miglia results

[edit]
YearTeamCo-Drivers/NavigatorCarClassPos.Class
Pos.
1950ItalyAugusto ZanardiAlfa Romeo 6C 2500 CompetizioneS+2.03rd3rd
1952ItalyGiulio SalaAlfa Romeo 1900 SprintGT2.022nd7th
1953ItalyS.P.A. Alfa RomeoItalyGiulio SalaAlfa Romeo 6C 3000 CMS+2.02nd2nd
1955West GermanyDaimler Benz AGMercedes-Benz 300 SLRS+2.02nd2nd
1956ItalyScuderia FerrariFerrari 290 MMS+2.04th4th
Source:[189]

Complete Carrera Panamericana results

[edit]
YearTeamCo-Drivers/NavigatorCarClassPos.Class
Pos.
1953ItalyScuderia LanciaItalyGino BronzoniLancia D24 Pinin FarinaS+1.61st1st
Source:[189]

Indianapolis 500 results

[edit]
YearChassisEngineStartFinishTeamRef
1958Kurtis KraftNoviDNQNovi Auto Air Conditioner[190]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abUp until1990, not all points scored by a driver contributed to their final World Championship tally (seelist of points scoring systems for more information). Numbers without parentheses are Championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored.[176]
  2. ^In Spanish,el Chueco means "the Bow-Legged One" or "the bandy-legged one", andel Maestro means "the Master".
  3. ^Fangio competed in the 1954Argentine andBelgian Grands Prix withMaserati, then completed the1954 Formula One season withMercedes, making him also the only driver in F1 history to win a championship driving for more than one team in the same season.[1]

References

[edit]
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Further reading

[edit]
  • Gerald Donaldson.Fangio: The Life Behind the Legend. Virgin Books.ISBN 978-0753518274
  • Karl Ludvigsen.Juan Manuel Fangio: Motor Racing's Grand Master. Haynes Manuals Inc.ISBN 978-1859606254
  • Pierre Menard & Jacques Vassal.Juan-Manuel Fangio: The Race in the Blood. Chronosports.ISBN 978-2847070453

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toJuan Manuel Fangio.
Juan Manuel Fangio achievements
Sporting positions
Preceded byTurismo Carretera champion
1940–1941
Succeeded by
Preceded byFormula One World Champion
1951
Succeeded by
Preceded byFormula One World Champion
1954,1955,1956,1957
Succeeded by
Records
Preceded by
None
Youngest race leader,
for at least one lap in Formula One

38 years, 323 days
(1950 British Grand Prix)
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Giuseppe Farina
43 years, 195 days
(1950 British GP)
Youngest Grand Prix polesitter
38 years, 331 days
(1950 Monaco Grand Prix)
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Giuseppe Farina
43 years, 195 days
(1950 British GP)
Youngest Grand Prix
race winner

38 years, 331 days
(1950 Monaco Grand Prix)
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Giuseppe Farina
43 years, 195 days
(1950 British GP)
Youngest driver to set
fastest lap in Formula One

38 years, 331 days
(1950 Monaco Grand Prix)
Succeeded by
Preceded by
None
Youngest Formula One
World Drivers' Championship runner-up

39 years, 71 days
(1950 season)
Succeeded by
Alberto Ascari
33 years, 107 days
(1951 season)
Preceded by
Giuseppe Farina
43 years, 308 days
(1950 season)
Youngest Formula One
World Drivers' Champion

40 years, 126 days
(1951 season)
Succeeded by
Alberto Ascari
34 years, 16 days
(1952 season)
Preceded byMost Grand Prix wins
6 wins,provisionally,

3rd at the1950 French GP
Succeeded by
Alberto Ascari
13 wins,
7th at the1952 Dutch GP
Preceded byMost Grand Prix wins
24 wins,

14th at the1955 Argentine GP
Succeeded by
Preceded by
None
Most Grand Prix entries
52 entries, 51 starts
(19501958)
Succeeded by
Jean Behra
53 entries (52 starts),
53rd at the1959 German GP
Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Inaugural award
Olimpia de Oro
1954
Succeeded by
   
Winners of the12 Hours of Sebring
Six-time
Five-time
Four-time
Three-time
Two-time
One-time
Alfa Romeo S.p.A. (19501951)
Autodelta/Team Alfa Romeo (19791985)
Alfa Romeo F1 Team (2019–2023)
Mercedes-AMG Petronas F1 Team (2010present)
Ownership
Mercedes-Benz Group (33.3%)
Toto Wolff (33.3%)
Ineos (33.3%)
Executive management
Toto Wolff (CEO & team principal)
Ola Källenius (Head of Mercedes-Benz)
Current personnel
James Allison
Peter Bonnington
Simon Cole
Bradley Lord
Ron Meadows
Jarrod Murphy
John Owen
Simone Resta
Markus Schäfer [de]
Britta Seeger
Andrew Shovlin
Hywel Thomas [ja]
Geoff Willis
Former personnel
Enrico Balbo
Bob Bell
Loïc Bigois
Eric Blandin
Ross Brawn
Aldo Costa
Andy Cowell
Jock Clear
Tad Czapski
Jérôme d'Ambrosio
Mark Ellis
Mike Elliott
Nick Fry
Thomas Fuhr
Norbert Haug
Ben Hodgkinson [ja]
Jürgen Hubbert
Niki Lauda
Paddy Lowe
Tony Ross
Wolfgang Schattling
Loïc Serra
Mark Slade
James Vowles
Craig Wilson [ja]
Thomas Weber
Ian Wright
Dieter Zetsche
2025 Race drivers
12.ItalyKimi Antonelli
63.United KingdomGeorge Russell
2025 Test and reserve drivers
FinlandValtteri Bottas
DenmarkFrederik Vesti
Simulator drivers
United KingdomJake Hughes
United KingdomAnthony Davidson
Junior Team drivers
Australia James Anagnostiadis
United Kingdom Kenzo Craigie
ChinaYuanpu Cui
Spain Luna Fluxá
United Kingdom Ethan Jeff-Hall
FranceDoriane Pin
JamaicaAlex Powell
United Arab EmiratesRashid Al Dhaheri
France Andy Consani
France Julia Montlaur
France Many Nuvolini
NorwayNoah Strømsted
World Champions
United KingdomLewis Hamilton
GermanyNico Rosberg
Ambassadors
GermanyNico Rosberg
MexicoEsteban Gutiérrez
United KingdomSusie Wolff
Notable drivers
 FinlandValtteri Bottas
 GermanyMichael Schumacher
Drivers' titles
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
Constructors' titles
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
Formula One cars
W01
W02
W03
W04
W05
W06
W07
W08
W09
W10
W11
W12
W13
W14
W15
W16
Engine division
Mercedes AMG High Performance Powertrains
Related
Mercedes-Benz Group
Mercedes-Benz
Mercedes-AMG
Daimler-Benz AG (19541955)
World Championships with Mercedes-Benz engines
Drivers
2025 race drivers
Test and reserve drivers
Ferrari Driver Academy
World Drivers' Champions
Grand Prix winners
Personnel
Founder
Current
Former
Cars
Formula One
Formula Two
IndyCar/CART
Sports cars
Engines
Current
Past
  • L4 (1952–1956)
  • V6 (1958–1966)
  • Turbocharged V6 (1981–1988)
  • V8 (1956–1958, 1964–1965, 2006–2013)
  • V10 (1996–2005)
  • V12 (1950–1951, 1964–1980, 1989–1995)
Formula One titles
Drivers' titles
Constructors' titles
Related
International
National
Academics
People
Other
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