Nationality Italian | |
Formula One World Championship career | |
---|---|
Active years | 1961 - 1967 |
Teams | Scuderia Centro Sud, Scuderia Ferrari |
Races | 42 |
Championships | 0 |
Wins | 1 |
Podium finishes | 8 |
Career points | 58 |
Pole positions | 1 |
Fastest laps | 2 |
First race | 1961 Belgian Grand Prix |
First win | 1964 Austrian Grand Prix |
Last win | 1964 Austrian Grand Prix |
Last race | 1967 Monaco Grand Prix |
Lorenzo Bandini (21 December 1935 – 10 May 1967, Monaco) was an Italian motor racing driver who raced in Formula One for the Scuderia Centro Sud and Ferrari teams.
Contents |
Bandini was born in Barce,[1] Cyrenaica,[2] Libya of Italian parents. He had an older sister, Graziella. The family returned to Italy in 1939 and resided near Florence, Italy. When he was 15 his father died. Bandini left home and found a job as an apprentice mechanic in the workshop of Signor Freddi in Milan.[2]
He made his way into auto racing from competing on motorcycles.[3] He started racing cars in 1957 in a borrowed Fiat 1100. The wealthy and kindhearted Signor Freddi moulded Bandini's career and assisted him from the start of it.[2]
He achieved a first class victory at the Mille Miglia, in a Lancia Appia Zagato, in 1958. He then raced in Formula Junior until 1961. Bandini purchased a Volpini Formula Junior car and placed third in his first race in Sicily. In 1959 and 1960 he drove a Formula Junior Stanguellini. In 1960 he placed fourth in the Formula Junior World Championship.
In 1961 Bandini became disappointed when Giancarlo Baghetti, also of Italy, was selected to drive a sponsored Ferrari by the association of Italian motor clubs FISA. However he had the attention of Signor Mimo Dei, the team patron of Scuderia Centro Sud. He was invited to join the Scuderia Centro Sud in Formula One. At a non-championship race, he finished third at Pau. Bandini drove his first world championship race at Spa later in 1961. He retired with engine failure. During the winter of 1961-1962 he drove in the Tasman races in Australia and New Zealand.[2]
The Maranello based Ferrari team's success had declined after the triumphs of Phil Hill and Wolfgang Von Trips in the new rear-engined cars. Hill won the Formula One World Championship in 1961.[2] After Bandini was hired by Ferrari for the 1962 and 1963 seasons, he did fairly well. His debut in a works Ferrari was good one at the Monaco Grand Prix. He placed third.
For 1963 Bandini was retained by Ferrari for sports car races only. Signor Dei once again assisted him by purchasing for him a BRM discarded by Graham Hill. Bandini campaigned the BRM in Scuderia Centro Sud colors.[2]
Bandini, along with Ludovico Scarfiotti, won the Le Mans 24 Hours race for Ferrari in 1963. He again became the number one driver for Ferrari, replacing John Surtees who left in mid-season of 1966. He returned for the Italian Grand Prix[2]
In 1964 Bandini won the first Austrian Grand Prix at the Zeltweg circuit, his only GP win. He also achieved victories for Ferrari in sportscar racing, notably the previously-mentioned 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1963, the Targa Florio in 1965, and the 24 Hours of Daytona in 1967.
Bandini was married to Margherita Freddi in 1963 and managed a garage owned by his wife's parents in Milan. He resided in Maranello, near the Ferrari headquarters.[4]
In May 1967 Bandini was racing at the Monaco Grand Prix, running second to Denny Hulme on the 82nd lap, when he lost control of his car at the harbour chicane. He had just entered an S-turn when his Ferrari's left rear wheel hit the guard rail, sending him into an erratic skid. It impacted a light pole and overturned.[5] The car hit straw bales which lined the harbour side, rupturing the fuel tank, and sparks ignited the fuel as the car rolled over, with Bandini trapped beneath it. Marshals flipped his car upright and pulled Bandini, unconscious, out from the flaming Ferrari. It is thought that during the effort to right the overturned car that gasoline leaked on the hot brake line or the exhaust pipe and exploded. A second fire occurred when the gas tank exploded after Bandini had been pulled away from the Ferrari.[1]
Bandini's burns were extensive, with third degree burns covering more than 70% of his body. The worst burns were on his arms and legs with slight burns on his face. Doctors were forced to wait for twenty-four to forty-eight hours before resolving to move Bandini to a hospital in Lyon, France, which specialized in the treatment of burns. Another option was flying in skin grafts from Italy [1] or a specialist burns unit in East Grinstead in England. The burns caused severe lesions, and he also sustained a chest wound and ten chest fractures.[5]
Three days later he succumbed to his injuries. He died at Princess Grace Polyclinic Hospital in Monte Carlo. There were concerns about the promptness of Bandini's rescue. However, investigators from the Principality of Monaco ruled on May 10 that the security operation had functioned properly.[3] The straw bales were replaced by an extended guard-rail the following year.[6] Bandini's only previous race accident was not a severe one. It happened during a 1957 Formula Junior race near New York.[4]
Bandini was buried in Reggiolo,[7] and there were 100,000 people who attended on May 13.[8]
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)
Year | Entrant | Chassis | Engine | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | WDC | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1961 | Scuderia Centro Sud | Cooper T53 | Maserati Straight-4 |
MON |
NED |
BEL Ret |
FRA |
GBR 12 |
GER Ret |
ITA 8 |
USA |
NC | 0 | |||
1962 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari 156 | Ferrari V6 | NED |
MON 3 |
BEL |
FRA |
GBR |
GER Ret |
ITA 8 |
USA |
RSA |
12th | 4 | ||
1963 | Scuderia Centro Sud | BRM P57 | BRM V8 | MON |
BEL |
NED |
FRA 10 |
GBR 5 |
GER Ret |
10th | 6 | |||||
Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari 156 | Ferrari V6 | ITA Ret |
USA 5 |
MEX Ret |
RSA 5 |
||||||||||
1964 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari 156 | Ferrari V6 | MON 10 |
GBR 5 |
GER 3 |
AUT 1 |
4th | 23 | |||||||
Ferrari 158 | Ferrari V8 | NED Ret |
BEL Ret |
FRA 9 |
ITA 3 |
|||||||||||
North American Racing Team | Ferrari 1512 | Ferrari Flat-12 | USA Ret |
MEX 3 |
||||||||||||
1965 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari 1512 | Ferrari Flat-12 | RSA 15 |
MON 2 |
BEL 9 |
FRA 8 |
ITA 4 |
USA 4 |
MEX 8 |
6th | 13 | ||||
Ferrari 158 | Ferrari V8 | GBR Ret |
NED 9 |
GER 6 |
||||||||||||
1966 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari Dino 246 |
Ferrari V6 | MON 2 |
BEL 3 |
9th | 12 | |||||||||
Ferrari 312/66 | Ferrari V12 | FRA NC |
GBR |
NED 6 |
GER 6 |
ITA Ret |
USA Ret |
MEX |
||||||||
1967 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari 312/67 | Ferrari V12 | RSA |
MON Ret |
NED |
BEL |
FRA |
GBR |
GER |
CAN |
ITA |
USA |
MEX |
NC | 0 |
Preceded by Olivier Gendebien Phil Hill |
Winner of the 24 Hours of Le Mans 1963 with: Ludovico Scarfiotti |
Succeeded by Jean Guichet Nino Vaccarella |
Preceded by John Taylor |
Formula One fatal accidents May 10, 1967 |
Succeeded by Bob Anderson |
|
|
Since 1992, Bandini's hometown of Brisighella has awarded the Lorenzo Bandini Trophy (Trofeo Lorenzo Bandini in Italian), to an outstanding figure from the world of racing.[9][10]
Year | Winner |
---|---|
1992 | Ivan Capelli |
1993 | Not awarded |
1995: for 1994 | David Coulthard |
1996: for 1995 | Jacques Villeneuve |
1997: for 1996 | Luca di Montezemolo* |
1998: for 1997 | Giancarlo Fisichella |
1999: for 1998 | Alexander Wurz |
2000: for 1999 | Jarno Trulli |
2001: for 2000 | Jenson Button |
2002: for 2001 | Juan Pablo Montoya |
2003: for 2002 | Michael Schumacher |
2004: for 2003 | Kimi Räikkönen |
2005: for 2004 | Fernando Alonso |
2006: for 2005 | Mark Webber |
2007: for 2006 | Felipe Massa |
2008: for 2007 | Robert Kubica |
* Luca di Montezemolo, the winner of 1997, was the president of Ferrari.