François Cevert

François Cevert

Francois Cevert, 1973
Born Albert François Cevert Goldenberg
25 February 1944
Paris, France
Died 6 October 1973 (aged 29)
Watkins Glen, New York, United States
Formula One World Championship career
Nationality France French
Active years 19701973
Teams Tyrrell
Races 47 (46 starts)
Championships 0
Wins 1
Podiums 13
Career points 89
Pole positions 0
Fastest laps 2
First race 1970 Dutch Grand Prix
First win 1971 United States Grand Prix
Last win 1971 United States Grand Prix
Last race 1973 United States Grand Prix
24 Hours of Le Mans career
Participating years 1970, 19721973
Teams Equipe Matra-Simca
Best finish 2nd (1972)
Class wins 0

Albert François Cevert Goldenberg (25 February 1944 in Paris, France – 6 October 1973 at Watkins Glen, New York, United States) was a French racing driver who took part in the Formula One World Championship. He competed in 47 World Championship Grands Prix, achieving one win, 13 podium finishes and 89 career points.

Family background

The son of Charles Goldenberg (1901–1985), a successful Parisian jeweller (became in the 1930s), and Huguette Cevert,[1] François Cevert was born in Paris in early 1944. His father was a Russian Jewish emigre who had been brought to France as a young boy by his parents, to escape the persecution of the Jews under the Tsarist autocracy. During World War II, with France occupied by the Nazis, as a registered Jew Charles Goldenberg joined the French Resistance to avoid forced deportation to Poland. In order not to draw the authorities' notice to his continuing presence in the heavily controlled capital, Charles and Huguette's four children were all registered with her surname rather than his. Some years after the liberation of France, Cevert's father wanted to rename his children Goldenberg, but the family objected as by now they had become known as Cevert.[2]

Cevert was the brother-in-law of Grand Prix driver Jean-Pierre Beltoise.[3]

Career

Early career

When he was 16, François Cevert began his motorsport career on two wheels, rather than four, initially racing his mother's Vespa scooter against friends, before graduating to his own Norton at the age of 19. After completing his National Service, Cevert switched his attention to cars. In 1966 he completed a training course at the Le Mans school, before enrolling at the Magny-Cours racing school. At the same time he registered for the Volant Shell scholarship competition, which offered the top finisher the prize of an Alpine Formula Three car. Cevert duly qualified for the final race and won.

His first season in F3, at the wheel of his prize Alpine, did not go well. He lacked the funds and experience to properly set up and maintain his car.[2] After finding sponsorship for the 1968 season, Cevert traded in his Alpine for a more competitive Tecno car. With his new mount Cevert finally started to win races, and by the end of the season he was French Formula 3 Champion, just ahead of Jean-Pierre Jabouille.

After winning the French Formula 3 Championship, Cevert joined the works Tecno Formula Two team in 1969, and finished third overall, as well as driving in the F2 class of the 1969 German Grand Prix. At the time, Formula Two was an ideal training ground for ambitious drivers, as many top Grand Prix drivers also competed in the F2 class, when their Formula One schedules permitted. When Jackie Stewart had a hard time getting around Cevert in an F2 race at Crystal Palace the same year, Stewart told his team manager Ken Tyrrell to keep an eye on the young Frenchman. This personal recommendation was to pay off in 1970, as when Tyrrell needed a new driver at short notice Stewart's recommendation was still in his mind. Tyrrell later commented on the reason for Cevert's appointment to the Formula One team that "everybody said it was (French oil company and Tyrrell sponsor) Elf, but it was really what Jackie said about him."[2]

Formula One

When Johnny Servoz-Gavin suddenly retired from the Tyrrell Formula One team three races into the 1970 season, Tyrrell called upon Cevert to be his number two driver, alongside defending World Champion Stewart. Over the next four seasons, Cevert became the veteran Stewart's devoted protégé. After making his debut at the Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort in Tyrrell's second customer March-Ford, he increased his pace and closed the gap to Stewart with virtually every race. He earned his first World Championship point by finishing sixth in the Italian Grand Prix at Monza.

In 1971, with the Tyrrell team now building their own cars, Cevert finished second in France and Germany, both times behind team leader Stewart. Then, in the season-ending United States Grand Prix at the newly extended Watkins Glen race course, the Frenchman earned his first and only Grand Prix win:

Having started from fifth spot, Cevert took the lead from Stewart on lap 14 as the Scot's tires began to go off in the 100° heat. At about half-distance, Cevert finally began to struggle with the same understeer that had plagued Stewart much earlier. Jacky Ickx was closing, and his Firestones were getting better as the race went on. On lap 43, Ickx set the fastest lap of the race, and the gap was down to 2.2 seconds. Then, on lap 49, the alternator on Ickx's Ferrari fell off, punching a hole in the gearbox and spilling oil all over the track! Denny Hulme's McLaren hit the oil and spun into the barrier, bending his front suspension. Hulme was standing beside the track when Cevert came by and also slid off and hit the barrier, but he kept going, now 29 seconds in the lead! Cevert coasted home, taking both hands off the wheel to wave as he crossed the line.[4]

Cevert became only the second Frenchman to win a Formula One World Championship Grand Prix (Maurice Trintignant won at Monaco in 1955 and 1958), and received 50,000 U.S. dollars as award. It was the high point of his career, helping him take third place in the 1971 Driver's Championship behind Stewart and Ronnie Peterson.

François Cevert driving Matra 670 at the Nürburgring 1973

Great expectations for Cevert, Stewart and Tyrrell were not fulfilled in 1972, Cevert finished in the points only three times, with second places in Belgium and the USA, and a fourth at his home race in France at the Clermont-Ferrand circuit. One bright spot in a disappointing year for Cevert was his second place finish at the 24 hours of Le Mans, driving a Matra-Simca 670 with New Zealand's Howden Ganley.

Death

In 1973, the Tyrrell team was back on top in Formula One and Cevert showed he was capable of running with Stewart at almost every race. He finished second six times, three times behind Stewart, who acknowledged that at times the Frenchman had been a very "obedient" teammate. As Cevert began to draw even with Stewart's driving abilities, the Scot was secretly planning to retire after the last race of the season in the United States. For the 1974 season, Cevert would be Tyrrell's team leader.

At Watkins Glen, with Stewart having already clinched his third World Championship, Cevert was killed during Saturday morning qualifying, while battling for pole position with Ronnie Peterson. In the fast left-right uphill combination called "The Esses"[5] Cevert's car was a little too far over towards the left side of the track, getting a bump from the kerbs.[6] This made it swerve towards the right-hand side of the track, where it touched the track's signature powder blue safety barriers causing it to spin and crash into the barriers on the other side of the track at a near 90° angle, uprooting and lifting the barrier. Cevert died instantly of massive injuries inflicted by the barrier.

Cevert had crashed violently in the uphill Esses heading onto the back of the circuit. Fighting the car as he went up the hill, he brushed the curb on the left, whipped across the track and hit the guardrail on the right. The car began to spin, and he swerved back across the track at 150 mph and hit the outside guardrail almost head-on, Stewart said.

Jackie Stewart was one of the last on the scene of Cevert's accident and said later "They [the marshals] had left him [in the car], because he was so clearly dead." Stewart immediately left the scene of the accident and returned to the pits. Because of Cevert's death, Tyrrell withdrew its entry for this GP, and Stewart did not run his final, and 100th race.

Cevert was 29 years and 224 days old. François Cevert is buried in the Cimetière de Vaudelnay in the village of Vaudelnay, Maine-et-Loire.

Cause of the accident analysed by Stewart

When practice resumed, Stewart went out on the track in his car on a personal fact-finding mission. His conclusion was that his preference was to take The Esses complex in fourth gear in the Tyrrell, hence he would be at the low end of the engine's rev range, making the car more tractable and less nervous (in exchange for a bit less throttle response). Cevert, however, preferred to use third gear and be at the top end of his engine's power range: it was always something of a compromise because of the need to accelerate through the combination of corners.[7] Stewart noted that the Tyrrell always felt jumpy through this section of the Watkins Glen track owing to its short wheelbase; he felt that this was somewhat counteracted by driving in the higher gear even though this meant a time penalty if he got his line wrong through the corner. A film documentary of the time, shot minutes before the start of the fatal practice session, captures Stewart and Cevert in a spirited debate on exactly this point. A similar accident occurred at the same circuit a year later in the 1974 USA Grand Prix when another young Formula One driver, Helmuth Koinigg, died when his car suffered a suspension failure sending him straight into the barrier at turn 7. The lower portion of the barrier failed and Koinigg's car slid under the top portion, decapitating him. As a response to Cevert's and Koinigg's accidents, a chicane was added in 1975 in order to slow the cars through the "Esses". The chicane was removed in 1985 after the track lost its Formula One race in 1981.[8]

Films

The 2013 film Rush portrays a composite of Cevert's qualifying fatal accident, combining what appears to be the remains of a blue liveried 1973 Tyrrell 006 with the configuration of Helmuth Koinigg's accident and decapitation while driving the Surtees TS16 in the 1974 race.

Cevert was extensively profiled and interviewed in the Formula One documentary, The Quick and the Dead.

Racing record

Complete Formula One World Championship results

(key) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 WDC Pts.
1970 Tyrrell Racing Organisation March 701 Ford V8 RSA ESP MON BEL NED
Ret
FRA
11
GBR
7
GER
7
AUT
Ret
ITA
6
CAN
9
USA
Ret
MEX
Ret
22nd 1
1971 Elf Team Tyrrell Tyrrell 002 Ford V8 RSA
Ret
ESP
7
MON
Ret
NED
Ret
FRA
2
GBR
10
GER
2
AUT
Ret
ITA
3
CAN
6
USA
1
3rd 26
1972 Elf Team Tyrrell Tyrrell 002 Ford V8 ARG
Ret
RSA
9
ESP
Ret
MON
NC
BEL
2
FRA
4
GBR
Ret
GER
10
AUT
9
ITA
Ret
6th 15
Tyrrell 006 Ford V8 CAN
Ret
USA
2
1973 Elf Team Tyrrell Tyrrell 006 Ford V8 ARG
2
BRA
10
ESP
2
BEL
2
MON
4
SWE
3
FRA
2
GBR
5
NED
2
GER
2
AUT
Ret
ITA
5
CAN
Ret
USA
DNS
4th 47
Tyrrell 005 Ford V8 RSA
NC

Non-Championship results

(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
1971 Elf Team Tyrrell Tyrrell 002 Ford V8 ARG ROC QUE SPR INT RIN OUL VIC
7

References

  1. Huguette's photo
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Cooper, A. 1998. A Date With Destiny? Motor Sport, LXXIV/11 (November 1998), 66–73.
  3. "8W – What? – Tyrrell". Autosport. Retrieved 8 August 2010.
  4. http://www.forix.com/asp/notes.asp?z=0&k=0&l=0&i=3582&c=6
  5. After The Esses, there is Backstraight.
  6. described by Niki Lauda in his book The Art and Science of Grand Prix Driving as unbelievably dangerous. (The kerbing at the circuit was not changed until 2005 when the Indy Racing League began racing at the circuit)
  7. In this case of third gear, percentage for gear is low, and the change of the wheel axis(impact) reaches engine directly. As for fourth gear, percentage for gear is high, it causes cushion works, and absorbs the change of impact gently. So, that does not reach engine directly.
  8. Short History of Road Racing at Watkins Glen, http://www.silhouet.com/motorsport/tracks/wat.html

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to François Cevert.
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Henri Pescarolo
French Formula Three
Champion

1968
Succeeded by
François Mazet
Preceded by
Roger Williamson
Formula One fatal accidents
6 October 1973
Succeeded by
Peter Revson