Henri Toivonen
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henri Toivonen | |
---|---|
Henri Toivonen during his Martini Racing era. |
|
World Rally Championship record | |
Nationality | Finnish |
Active years | 1975 – 1986 |
Teams | Talbot, Opel, Porsche, Lancia |
World rallies | 40 |
Championships | 0 |
Wins | 3 |
Podium finishes | 11 |
Stage wins | 183 |
Points | 194 |
First world rally | 1975 1000 Lakes Rally |
First win | 1980 Lombard RAC Rally |
Last win | 1986 Monte Carlo Rally |
Last world rally | 1986 Tour de Corse |
Henri Toivonen (August 25, 1956 – May 2, 1986) was a Finnish rally driver born in Jyväskylä, the home of Rally Finland. His father, Pauli Toivonen, was the 1968 European Rally Champion for Porsche and his brother, Harri Toivonen, became a professional circuit racer.
Toivonen's first World Rally Championship victory came with a Talbot Sunbeam Lotus at the 1980 Lombard RAC Rally in Great Britain, just after his 24th birthday. He had the record of being the youngest driver ever to win a world rally until his countryman Jari-Matti Latvala won the 2008 Swedish Rally at the age of 22. Toivonen switched to driving for Lancia before finally signing up for a full WRC programme in 1985. Despite nearly ending up paralysed at a rally in Costa Smeralda early in 1985, he returned to rallying later that year. He won the last event of the season, the RAC Rally, as well as the 1986 season opener, the Monte Carlo Rally, which his father had won exactly 20 years earlier.[1]
Toivonen, driving a Lancia Delta S4, died in a mysterious accident on May 2, 1986 at the Tour de Corse rally in Corsica, while leading both the event and the championship. His American co-driver, Sergio Cresto, also died when the Lancia plunged down a ravine and exploded. The fatal accident had no close witnesses and the remains of the car were merely blackened spaceframe, making it impossible to determine the cause of the accident.[2] Within hours of the accident, Jean-Marie Balestre, then President of the FISA, had banned the powerful Group B rally cars from competing the following season, ending rallying's popular supercar era.[3][4]
Although Toivonen is remembered for his exuberant driving style on gravel, he started his career in circuit racing and was also very competitive on tarmac. It is often reported that during the 1986 Rally of Portugal, he drove his Delta S4 at the Estoril track, and recorded a lap time which would have qualified him in sixth position at that year's Formula One Portuguese Grand Prix.[5][6] Eddie Jordan, in whose Formula Three team Toivonen made a few guest appearances, claimed he was certain that Toivonen would have become a winner in Formula One and compared his performances to Ayrton Senna.[7] The annual Race of Champions, originally organised in Toivonen's memory,[8] awards the winning individual driver the Henri Toivonen Memorial Trophy.[9]
Contents |
[edit] Early career
Toivonen had strong ties to rallying at an early age. He was born in Jyväskylä, the city which has hosted the Rally Finland since 1951. His father, Pauli Toivonen, was a successful international rally driver who would go on to win the Monte Carlo, 1000 Lakes and Acropolis rallies and become the 1968 European Rally Champion.[10] Henri Toivonen learned to drive when he was five years old,[11] but despite his rallying connections, started competition in circuit racing. He began with karts and won the Finnish Cup in touring cars before switching to Formula Vee, winning one round of the Scandinavian Championship in his first year. Toivonen graduated to Formula Super Vee the following year and won a round of the European Championship, as well as becoming the 1977 Finnish Champion in the Formula Vee class. Due to his family's concerns about the safety of circuit racing, he switched to rallying full time.[2] Toivonen's kart was purchased by the parents of a 6-year-old Mika Häkkinen, who would later be a two-time Formula One World Drivers' Champion.[12]
Due to Finnish legislation, which at that time limited new drivers to a top speed of 80 kilometres per hour (50 mph) on open roads, Toivonen was unable to compete in rallying until he was 19 years old.[2] With Antero Lindquist as his co-driver, he made his World Rally Championship debut at the 1975 1000 Lakes Rally (now the Neste Oil Rally Finland), driving a privately entered Simca Rallye 2. He retired from the rally during the 36th special stage due to a broken sump.[13] While still focusing on his circuit racing career, he competed in his second world rally two years later and finished fifth in the 1977 1000 Lakes in a Chrysler Avenger.[14] Toivonen started his 1978 season at the Arctic Rally, the second round of both the European Rally Championship and World Rally Championship's "FIA Cup for Drivers", the predecessor to the official drivers' world championship which was established in 1979. He finished second, 3:41 minutes behind Ari Vatanen, and over seven minutes ahead of Markku Alén,[15] who would go on to win the Cup.[16] Toivonen went on to compete in two world championship rallies for Citroën. Although he did not finish either event, his driving attracted attention; a private Porsche team offered Toivonen a car for the 1000 Lakes Rally, as did Chrysler for the Lombard RAC Rally. At his home event, Toivonen had to retire due to an engine failure, but he finished ninth at the RAC Rally.[14] That same year, Toivonen captured his first rally win at the Nordic Rally, an event in the Finnish Rally Championship. In the 1979 season, he gathered rallying experience by competing in 15 rallies in the British, Finnish and European championships. Toivonen also competed in two WRC events: the 1000 Lakes with a Fiat 131 Abarth and the RAC with a Ford Escort RS. He retired from both, but at his home event he had been matching the pace of the leaders before leaving the road.[17] These performances led to a contract with the factory Talbot Competition team for the 1980 season.
[edit] Works career
[edit] Talbot (1980-81)
Toivonen's first season driving for a major car manufacturer's 'works' team was largely a trial year. He started the season by winning the Arctic Rally in January,[17] but only drove his Talbot Sunbeam Lotus in four selected World Rally Championship events. His exuberant driving style often led to crashes, and his results were often not representative of his pace.[18] In hopes of better results, the team partnered Toivonen with three different co-drivers during the season: Antero Lindquist, Paul White and Neil Wilson.[2] At the 1000 Lakes Rally, Toivonen retired due to an accident during the 11th special stage.[19] At the next rally in San Remo with Lindquist, Toivonen finished fifth.[20] In late November, Toivonen, this time partnered by White, surprised both experts and spectators by winning the Lombard RAC Rally, over four minutes ahead of runner-up Hannu Mikkola.[21] Neither Toivonen nor Talbot were expected to be competitive in the rally.[22] In an interview published in Autosport three days before the rally started, Toivonen himself had not expected to challenge for the win:
"I don’t think that I have done enough events to win the rally just by driving skill, for instance. If I win, it will be because I have a little bit of luck and some of the others have trouble. I mean, Hannu Mikkola knows the forests like the back of his hand so there is no use trying to drive to beat him. You have to wait for him to have trouble. Then you are in with a chance."[18]
At 24 years and 86 days, he remained the youngest driver to win a WRC event until his countryman Jari-Matti Latvala won the 2008 Swedish Rally at the age of 22.[23] Latvala stated that "It's a super feeling, it's almost unbelievable. Henri (Toivonen) was one of my idols and secretly I've always wanted to beat his record as the youngest winner."[24] Over 20 years after the 1980 RAC, Paul White (nick-named "Chalkie" by Toivonen)[25] commented that he still receives questions about the rally and Henri Toivonen. He noted that the Talbot team, run by Des O'Dell and 15 full-time personnel, was much smaller than other works teams and "had to draft in 'mercenary' mechanics to help."[26] Toivonen's results led to another year in the Talbot squad. In the 1981 season, he was signed up for a larger WRC programme and had a new co-driver, Fred Gallagher, who would later partner Juha Kankkunen and Björn Waldegård in a Toyota Celica Turbo.[27] Toivonen's rear-wheel drive Group 2 Talbot Sunbeam was now outdated compared to the new Group B cars, successors to both Group 2 and the more popular Group 4, but with second places at Rally Portugal and San Remo, as well as a fifth place at the Monte Carlo Rally, Toivonen's seven WRC outings resulted in a seventh place overall in the World Rally Drivers' Championship.[28] He also competed in the last round of the British Open Rally Championship, the Audi Sport International Rally, and won the event.[2]
[edit] Opel (1982-83)
For the 1982 season, Toivonen switched to the Rothmans-sponsored Opel team, which was co-managed by David Richards.[29] Toivonen's team mates were Ari Vatanen, who had won the previous year's championship (with Richards as his co-driver), the 1980 and 1982 World Rally Champion Walter Röhrl and Jimmy McRae, the previous year's British Rally Champion and father of future rally star Colin McRae. Toivonen had problems adapting to Opel's Ascona 400 and competed in only five WRC events, but finished on the podium twice, at the Acropolis Rally and at the RAC Rally.[14] In the European Rally Championship, he participated in four rallies, registering three podiums and one retirement. He also made a guest appearance in one round of the British Formula Three circuit racing championship, where he finished tenth driving a Ralt RT3.[2]
Toivonen continued with Opel into the 1983 season, now driving the Manta 400. The Manta was a Group B car, but it was underpowered against the likes of the Audi Quattro A2 and Lancia 037, which were controlling the world rally scene at the time. Toivonen achieved a win at the Manx International Rally, a round of the British Open Rally Championship and the European Rally Championship, in the Isle of Man, at his first attempt. He also finished first at the Mille Pistes rally in France, but the organisers decided to ban the Group B cars halfway through the event. Toivonen and his co-driver, Ian Gindrod, received only a consolation trophy.[2] In the World Rally Championship, he retired in three rallies, finished sixth at the Monte Carlo Rally and fourth at the San Remo Rally.[14] He also drove a Ferrari 308 GTB at the San Marino Rally, where he was co-driven by Juha Piironen for the first time. The pair retired from the event, but Piironen would become his main co-driver for the next two seasons, and later have a long and successful partnership with four-time World Rally Champion Juha Kankkunen.[30] In late October, Toivonen again competed on the circuits. This time he entered two sportscar races, driving a Porsche 956 for Richard Lloyd Racing in the World Endurance Championship. Partnered with Derek Bell and Jonathan Palmer, he finished fourth at Imola and third in the next race at Mugello.[31]
[edit] Porsche (1984)
After a score of ten starts, two podiums and five retirements, Toivonen left Opel Team Europe for the 1984 season. He was linked to the lead drive at the Peugeot-Talbot team, but eventually signed to drive a Porsche 911 for the Rothmans-sponsored Porsche factory team in the European Rally Championship. The team was run by Prodrive, a new motorsport group set up by David Richards, Toivonen's former boss at Opel.[32] Toivonen also drove for Lancia Martini who offered him a Lancia 037 for three WRC events. His European season with Porsche turned out to be a success. He started with two retirements, a third and a second place, but went on to win five rallies in a row, and despite missing several events due to ill health,[2] he finished second in the championship, narrowly losing the title to Italian Lancia driver Carlo Capone.[33] In the World Rally Championship, his best result was third at his home event, the 1000 Lakes Rally.[34] He stayed with the Lancia team for the 1985 season.
[edit] Lancia (1985-86)
The 1985 season started badly when Toivonen crashed his Lancia 037 into a brick wall at the Costa Smeralda Rally, in the European Championship, seriously injuring his back and breaking three vertebrae in his neck.[2] At the beginning of May, Lancia drivers Toivonen and Markku Alén lost a friend and team-mate, when driver Attilio Bettega crashed fatally during the fourth special stage at the Tour de Corse.[35] Toivonen made his comeback from his injuries at the 1000 Lakes Rally in August and finished fourth. He finished third at the next rally in San Remo, his first podium finish in a 037[14] and his final rally with the car. The 037 did not suit Toivonen's driving style[36] and had fallen well behind Audi and Peugeot in terms of performance, as it had only 325 horsepower (242 kW) compared to the 440 of Peugeot and 500 of Audi.[37] It was replaced by the Lancia Delta S4 for the final event of the season: the RAC Rally. The Delta S4 was both supercharged and turbocharged, the former increasing power in the middle of the engine's speed range and the latter boosting power at higher engine speeds.[38] The Delta S4 turned out to be a success. Toivonen won the rally and Alén finished second only 56 seconds behind.[39] Although Toivonen competed in only four world rallies in 1985, his results placed him sixth overall in the championship.[40]
The 1986 season started with a dominant win for Toivonen at the Monte Carlo Rally with new co-driver Sergio Cresto. Fellow Flying Finns Timo Salonen and Hannu Mikkola finished second and third.[41] Toivonen's father, Pauli Toivonen, had won the event 20 years earlier after ten cars, including the first four to cross the finishing line, were disqualified due to having non-standard headlights. The disqualification had caused an uproar and Prince Rainier of Monaco refused to attend the prize-giving ceremony.[42] Henri Toivonen's victory caused his father to comment "now the name of Toivonen has been cleared".[43] The Monte Carlo win made Toivonen the favourite for the title. However, at the Swedish Rally he retired from the lead due to an engine failure.[44] At the next rally in Portugal, Joaquim Santos lost control of his Ford RS200 on a special stage and plunged into the crowd. The accident killed three spectators and injured more than 30.[45] Lancia, along with the other factory teams, decided to withdraw from the event.[38] During the Portuguese rally, Toivonen is often reported to have tested his Delta S4 at the Estoril circuit and to have set a fastest lap time that would have qualified him in sixth position at the 1986 Portuguese Grand Prix.[5] Despite the setbacks, Toivonen remained the title favourite with no driver seeming able to match his pace.
[edit] Death
The 1986 Tour de Corse, a world rally around the island of Corsica, began on Thursday, May 1. Toivonen had a sore throat and was suffering from flu, but he insisted on driving after having his championship lead reduced in the last two rallies. According to several sources, he was also taking medicine to treat fever. Despite his ill health, he was taking stage win after stage win and leading the rally by a large margin.[36] After the first leg, Toivonen commented:
"This rally is insane, even though everything is going well at the moment. If there is trouble, I'm as good as dead." [36]
Toivonen was complaining about the car being too powerful for a rally like the Tour de Corse. He found it very hard to keep the car balanced on the road and admitted it was very exhausting. In a short interview before he steered his Lancia into the 18th stage, Toivonen made a comment which would remain his last words in public:
"Today, we have driven the equivalent of a full Jyskälä. It's hard to keep up with the speed."[7]
During the second leg, on Friday, May 2, at the seventh kilometre of the 18th stage, Corte - Taverna, Toivonen's Lancia went off the side of the road at a tight left corner with no guardrail. The car plunged down a ravine and landed on its roof. The aluminium fuel tank underneath the driver's seat was ruptured by the trees and exploded.[2] The fuel tank was not protected by a skid plate, an item used mainly on gravel rallies, which was not fitted for the all-asphalt Tour de Corse. The explosion happened within seconds of the crash, and Toivonen and his co-driver, Sergio Cresto would not have time to get out had they still been alive. The fire caused by the explosion was so intense that the Delta S4, built of fast-burning kevlar-reinforced plastic composite, was unidentifiable as a car afterwards.[5] Both Toivonen and Cresto died in their seats. Toivonen left behind wife Erja and two young children, son Markus and daughter Arla, while Cresto was single with no children.
Toivonen's accident remains a mystery because it had no close witnesses. Although it was caught on tape by a spectator further down the stage, it proved to be impossible to determine the cause of the crash from the footage. No race marshalls were close to the scene to notice the black smoke and no-one at the race finish knew about the accident. Toivonen's team only started to fear something might have happened after he failed to arrive from the stage on schedule.[2] The next rally crew through the stage then mentioned they had seen some black smoke. By the time the emergency vehicles arrived on the accident scene, they could only put down the flames, which had been fanned by breezes. Lancia engineers and technicians could not determine the cause of the accident because the remains of the car were so charred. Walter Röhrl later confirmed that Toivonen was taking medicine for his flu, but the cause of the accident is still unknown.[2]
[edit] Aftermath
Within hours of Toivonen's accident, Jean-Marie Balestre and the FISA decided to ban Group B cars from competing in the 1987 season.[3] The planned Group S was also cancelled and manufacturers got stuck with cars they could not race.[46] Audi and Ford withdrew from Group B racing immediately, but other teams competed until the end of the season. The Tour de Corse continued the next day and Bruno Saby won with his Peugeot 205 Turbo 16 E2.[47] FISA was criticised for concentrating too much on Formula One and not noticing how fast and uncontrollable rally cars had become.[48] Toivonen's Lancia Delta S4 could accelerate from 0-60 mph (96 km/h) in 2.3 seconds, on a gravel road.[49] A FISA investigation later proved that drivers' reactions were too slow to keep up with the speed of the Group B cars, and drivers' eyes could not adjust their focus between the fast corners, resulting in tunnel vision.[5] However, due to the high speed of the cars, rallying was more popular among spectators than ever. FISA had to face criticism also for overreacting to Toivonen's accident. John Davenport, former rally driver and author of The Complete Book of the World Rally Championship, claimed in 2004 that "Group B could have been tamed. They were only unsafe in so much as the fuel system, which caused Toivonen's death, and the crowd control needed changing – it wasn't the actual cars."[50] Group B cars have been described as "too fast to race."[51]
Toivonen's car at the Tour de Corse carried number four. A year earlier, Attilio Bettega carried the same number at the same rally at the exact same date and also died in an accident.[52] The number was subsequently banned from cars in the Tour de Corse until it reappeared in the 1997 event under FIA regulations on car numbers, as teams now carried the same number for the entire season. The rally has since proved to be a tricky venue. During the 1997 event, Tommi Mäkinen hit a cow at 150 kilometres per hour. His Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IV plunged into a ravine and rolled 50 metres down a slope. Although the car was completely wrecked, both Mäkinen and his co-driver Seppo Harjanne were unharmed[53] Mäkinen had another bad accident in 2001, when he crashed his then-new Mitsubishi into a mountain badly injuring his co-driver Risto Mannisenmäki.[54] Toivonen's death is still the last driver fatality in the World Rally Championship [55]
[edit] Legacy
Toivonen was known as a competitive driver both on gravel and tarmac surfaces, since he found it difficult to choose between circuit racing and rallying.[7] After becoming a rally driver, he still competed in some circuit racing events, successfully in two World Endurance Championship events and also in a few races for Eddie Jordan's British Formula Three Championship team. Jordan called Toivonen's performances "incredible" and compared him to Ayrton Senna.[7] After Toivonen's death, Jordan weighed in on his chances in Formula One:
"I don't know if he would have become a champion in Formula One. It always takes a lot of luck, and now [after the accident] one can doubt if he would have been granted that. But he would have won Grands Prix – of that I'm absolutely sure."[7]
During his World Rally Championship career, Toivonen competed in 40 world rallies, gathering three wins, 11 podium places, 183 stage wins and retiring 22 times.[56] He died at the peak of his career, leading the championship and the Tour de Corse. With only wins and retirements in the last seven rallies, he seemed invincible in the Lancia Delta S4, after finally finding a car that was both competitive and suitable for his driving style. However, Toivonen admitted having problems with the car: "I may have won the RAC Rally with Lancia, but I just did not know how to drive it. It seemed to have a mind of its own."[43] Lancia team boss, Cesare Fiorio, later claimed that Toivonen was the only driver who could really control the Delta S4.[7]
In a Henri Toivonen obituary, titled Rebel With a Cause, published in Motor five days after Toivonen's fatal accident, rally author Martin Holmes named him a "rebel driver", and proof that young drivers can be successful in rallying, a sport which had previously been dominated by older, more experienced drivers.[43] However, Toivonen could not achieve the necessary level of consistency to avoid a number of high speed accidents. Prior to the introduction of the Delta S4, he was known for his ability to make up large amounts of time in single stages.[1] This led to a number of stage wins but also to several bad accidents resulting from driving mistakes. Toivonen's career almost ended in early 1985, when he was nearly paralysed in the Costa Smeralda Rally accident – 1985 would have been his first full WRC season. Toivonen never did get to drive a full season; the closest he came was 1981, when he competed in seven out of the 12 rounds. The World Rally Archive's Hall of Fame now names him an "icon for the one of the most controversial periods of rallying."[57]
Toivonen was buried in Espoo, where his family moved from Jyväskylä when Toivonen was still very young. In Corsica, a marble slab dedicated to him and Sergio Cresto was placed at the curve where Toivonen drove out. The memorial place always has an unopened bottle of Martini, which is a reference to Toivonen's Martini-sponsored teams; Martini Racing and Lancia Martini. A local resident puts new flowers by the slab every day.[58] In 1988, former rally driver and arguably the most successful female race car driver in history,[59] Michèle Mouton, organised the first Race of Champions to commemorate Toivonen's death. The Race of Champions was originally restricted to rally drivers, but became even more popular with the introduction of Formula One and NASCAR stars.[60] The Henri Toivonen Memorial Trophy is still awarded to the winner of the individual event every year. Another trophy bearing Toivonen's name was the Henri Toivonen Grand Attack Trophy, which was awarded by Peugeot's Rally Challenge, organised by Des O'Dell, "to the driver who most embodied the spirit shown by the young Finn."[61] In 2006, Toivonen was honoured at the Neste Oil Rally Finland. An exhibition in memory of him was opened on August 17 in the Rally HQ Jyväskylä Paviljonki.[62] The interviewing event was attended by his former team mate Markku Alén, former co-driver Juha Piironen, current Ford factory team boss Malcolm Wilson and his brother Harri Toivonen.[63] Harri Toivonen quit his racing career in 2002, ending the 40-year racing history of the Toivonen family.[64]
[edit] References
- (Italian) Site dedicated Henri Toivonen
- ^ a b Henri Toivonen. Historic Racing. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Maruszewska, Witolda. Henri Toivonen biography. Post 14. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ a b "40th Anniversary Supplement - On the death of Henri Toivonen" . Autosport.
- ^ Focus on safety in aftermath of Park death. Eurosport. Retrieved on 2006-11-16.
- ^ a b c d Cullen, John. Petrolheads: Too fast to stay. Sligo Weekender. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.
- ^ Biggs, Henry. Top 10: greatest-ever Lancias. MSN Cars UK. Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- ^ a b c d e f Flying Finn: Häikäisevä Henri Toivonen (Finnish). Vauhdin Maailma. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ Phillips, David. Who's the Best?. Speed TV. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ Vrignaud, Stéphane. Formules de compétitions (French). Eurosport. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ Pauli Toivonen. The Flying Finns. Retrieved on 2006-11-24.
- ^ Deinel, H; Klein, R; Lizin, M; Williams, D. "Henri Toivonen feature". Rally.
- ^ Gagnon, Marie-Julie. Le fil de Mika (French). Radio Canada. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ 25th 1000 Lakes Rally. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2006-11-16.
- ^ a b c d e Henri Toivonen. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ 13th Arctic Rally. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.
- ^ 1978 FIA Cup for Rally Drivers. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.
- ^ a b Hope-Frost, Henry; John Davenport (2004). The Complete Book of the World Rally Championships: The First 30 Years. MotorBooks/MBI Publishing Company, p. 165. ISBN 0-7603-1954-5.
- ^ a b "Interview with Henri Toivonen" (November 13, 1980). Autosport 81 (7).
- ^ 30th 1000 Lakes Rally. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- ^ 22° Rallye Sanremo. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- ^ 29th Lombard RAC Rally. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ Lombard-RAC Rally 1980. Sunbeam Lotus Owners Club. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ 30 youngest WRC winners. World Rally Archive. Retrieved on 2008-02-10.
- ^ Latvala takes first career win in Sweden. Guardian Unlimited. Retrieved on 2008-02-10.
- ^ Maruszewska, Witolda. Henri Toivonen references. Post 14. Retrieved on 2006-11-18.
- ^ Gardiner, Tony (2005). RAC Rally Action!: From the 60s, 70s and 80s. Veloce Publishing Ltd, p. 158. ISBN 1-903706-97-1.
- ^ Fred Gallagher - WRC starts. World Rally Archive. Retrieved on 2006-11-16.
- ^ 1981 World Rally Championship for Drivers. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2006-11-16.
- ^ Saward, Joe. David Lapworth (Prodrive). GrandPrix.com. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ Juha Piironen. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- ^ European Championship - Sport 1983. WSPR Racing. Retrieved on 2006-11-16.
- ^ Heselwood, Jeff. On the fast track to success. Cargonews Asia. Retrieved on 2006-11-16.
- ^ 1984: Audi's revenge. Lancia rally 037. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ 34th 1000 Lakes Rally. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ Vauhdin Maailma 1980 (Finnish). Vauhdin Maailma. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ a b c Henri Toivosen kuolemasta tulee 20 vuotta (Finnish). MTV3. Retrieved on 2006-11-18.
- ^ Wan, Mark. Group B rally cars. AutoZine. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ a b Noakes, Andrew. Group Therapy. PistonHeads.com. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
- ^ 34th Lombard RAC Rally. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ 1985 FIA World Rally Championship for Drivers. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- ^ 54ème Rallye Automobile de Monte-Carlo. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ 1966: Future of Monte Carlo rally in doubt. BBC. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.
- ^ a b c Holmes, Martin (May 7, 1986). "Rebel With a Cause - Henri Toivonen Obituary". Motor.
- ^ Fabricatorian, Shant; Granger, James. 20 years of the Lancia Delta. Italia Speed. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
- ^ Rally of Portugal. World Rally Archive. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ Audi Groupe S à moteur central (Sport quattro RS 002) (French). Audi Passion. Retrieved on 2006-11-15.
- ^ 30ème Tour de Corse - Rallye de France. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- ^ Rallying after Group B. MotorSportsLive. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ Biggs, Henry. Top 10: Group B rally cars. MSN Cars UK. Retrieved on 2007-02-07.
- ^ The WRC - looking back over 30 years.. Crash.net. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
- ^ 1986 Ford RS200 Evolution. Supercars.net. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
- ^ 29ème Tour de Corse - Rallye de France. RallyBase. Retrieved on 2006-11-16.
- ^ Tour de Corse '97. World Rallying. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ Rallye de France. World Rally Archive. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ Subaru boss wants radical reforms. BBC. Retrieved on 2006-11-15.
- ^ Henri Toivonen. World Rally Archive. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ Hall of Fame - So close. World Rally Archive. Retrieved on 2006-11-21.
- ^ Williams, Jerry. From the Service Park: Corsica. WRC. Retrieved on 2006-11-15.
- ^ Russell, Richard. History of Audi's Quattro all-wheel-drive system. CanadianDriver. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.
- ^ Weaver, Alistair. Michelin Race of Champions. European Car. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.
- ^ Oswin, Keith (March 18, 1999). "An eccentric Englishman". Autosport.
- ^ Neste Oil Rally Finland. "Flying Finns theme in honour of Finnish legends". Press release. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ Legendat vierailivat Henri Toivosen muistonäyttelyssä (Finnish). Moottorimaailma. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.
- ^ Harri says 'farewell and thank you'. Motorsport.com. Retrieved on 2006-11-15.
Persondata | |
---|---|
NAME | Toivonen, Henri |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Finnish rally driver |
DATE OF BIRTH | August 25, 1956 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Jyväskylä, Finland |
DATE OF DEATH | May 2, 1986 |
PLACE OF DEATH | Corsica, France |