F1 remembers Fangio at 100th anniversary

22 June 2011 - 14:32 By Cristian Hollmann, Sapa-dpa
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Michael Schumacher shed a few tears when he matched Juan Manuel Fangio’s five Formula One world titles in 2002, but at the same time he was well aware that their achievements can not really be compared.

World champion Argentinian racing driver Juan Manuel Fangio in action driving a Maserati at the 1957 Italian Grand Prix at Monza. He finished second behind Stirling Moss in a Vanwall
World champion Argentinian racing driver Juan Manuel Fangio in action driving a Maserati at the 1957 Italian Grand Prix at Monza. He finished second behind Stirling Moss in a Vanwall
Image: Central Press

  “I can never reach what he achieved then,” said Schumacher when he reached the milestone at the French Grand Prix.

   Schumacher went on to eclipse Fangio’s mark with a tally of seven titles, but the Argentinian, who would have turned 100 on Friday, June 24, remains an icon on the sport.

   Fangio won his world titles 1951 and 1954-1957 for four teams, Alfa Romeo, Mercedes, Maserati and Ferrari. He competed in 51 Grands Prix, winning 24 races and claiming 28 pole positions.

   The clinching of the final world title, at age 46, epitomises the career of Fangio, a car mechanic who started racing in South America back in 1936 in a borrowed Ford T.

   At the German Grand Prix on August 4, 1957, Fangio did what was all but unheard of at the time, pitting for fuel at the Nuerburgring.

   The pit stop did not go well and Fangio fell almost two minutes behind the Ferraris of Peter Collins and Mike Hawthorn. But Fangio then smashed the track records to win the race after all.

   Fangio agreed that he drove “in a state of grace,” and that experience may have played a role as well in his decision to retire  two races into the 1958 campaign.

   “I didn’t have to prove anything to myself and the world anymore. I was satisfied and felt at the same time that it was time  for me (to quit),” he said.

   A museum in Balcarce, where he was born on June 24, 1911, as one  of six children of Italian immigrants, commemorates the national idol who died on July 17, 1995, of a kidney illness.

   He maintained a special relationship with Italy by winning titles for Alfa Romeo, Ferrari and Maserati, with Maserati standing  out.

   “I always had a special relationship with Maserati. Not only were they safe and reliable cars, always on the cutting edge of technology, but there was friendship and a special atmosphere there. I felt at home,” he said.

   But Fangio also maintained a special relationship with Mercedes,  in whose silver arrows he won two titles 1854 and 1955, working as a representative of the German company in Argentina after his racing career.

   Fangio would be pleased to know that he remains an F1 idol as the affection of the fans never bothered him.

   “I don’t consider the affection of my countrymen and others a burden, but rather as praise for good performances,” he said.

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