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Your chance to ask Riccardo a question about his career

Associazione Mondiale Piloti per la Solidarietà

 

Nigel Roebuck

A Man At Peace With Himself / An Absent Gentleman / Monza 1978 / Retrospective / Fine Fellows

Recollections of Riccardo Patrese and his career by the highly respected Grand Prix writer and columnist.

A Man At Peace With Himself

You are Riccardo Patrese, and after 15 years you have become an overnight star. Everyone says how quick you have suddenly become, and it amuses you. You were in the Monaco GP, back in 1977, when Ayrton Senna was a big name in karting, Alain Prost into his first year of Formula 3.

Nigel Mansell recently said he took your pace this year as a great compliment to him: he was the only driver who could motivate you. Had you been of a cheap mentality, you might have railed at that, suggested that in that case perhaps he had motivated you a little too well: you have, after all, outqualified him in each of the first four races this year.

Instead, you say no, it's the car. There is no denying that two quick drivers within one team can have a beneficial effect, for inevitably you push to be quicker than your team mate. But Thierry Boutsen was no slouch either, you point out. He won three races for Williams. An underrated man you feel.

In the end, though, nothing motivates a driver like the feeling he can win, that he has the car to do the job. And this car, the latest Williams-Renault, is the best car you have known. Through the winter you sensed an even greater commitment from the team, a spirit of real optimism, and you determined to put yourself in the right frame of mind.

Initially you were a little concerned about the semi-automatic gearbox. Perhaps, you said to Patrick Head, it would be a problem for 'an old driver to adapt to this new infernal machine'. But you took to it immediately. Within 10 laps of Estoril you were accustomed to this new way of driving, of keeping both hands on the wheel at all times, and you liked it. Now you understand why Gerhard Berger so much missed it when he moved from Ferrari to McLaren. You hope never to go back to a conventional gearbox again.

You like the FW14 primarily because it's quick, on the pace, the first requirement of every racing driver. More than that, though, it is also a lovely car to drive, which is not always the case. Over the last couple of seasons you had a car sometimes very competitive, sometimes not, and this was frustrating. But now you set off to every race in the expectation of being right there.

This is where the motivation comes from, you say. You might think you habitually drive at 100%, and have done so throughout your career - you believe it. But as soon as you see the possibility to win, something happens within you. It's not a conscious thing, but its effect is that suddenly you are driving at 105%. And you reflect that perhaps, when times were not so good, maybe you were not giving everything. Yes, you did the job professionally, but maybe at only 95%. And you suspect that it affects all racing drivers in the same way. All you know 'for sure' is that everything comes easier when you have the right car.

Your normal expression these days is a smile, and this sets you apart from many of your fellows, some of whom are hard pressed to grin even in victory. Perhaps they are blasé about it, you think, take a competitive car for granted. It hasn't been that way through most of your career - you think back with a shudder of those horror days with Euroracing in the mid-eighties.

A good atmosphere within a team is vital to you, and you think one of your strong points an ability to foster it. You feel a great deal of warmth towards you at Williams, the impression that they car about you when you go out, and suffer with you when something goes wrong. And you enjoy their pleasure when the team has had a good day.

You were not too upset when they told you Mansell was coming back to Williams. There was 'a big noise', of course, because first he was leaving Ferrari, then retiring, then rejoining Williams. He had won a lot of races, and it was logical Frank and the others should regard him as the number one. In his contract he insisted on the use of the T-car at every race, but that didn't bother you, either. Williams promised you parity of equipment, and that was good enough for you. Personally, you preferred to concentrate on working with a single car.

There have never been any problems between you and Nigel - indeed, a condition of his return to Williams was that you should be his team mate. Should it be necessary, would you assist his quest for the World Championship? Yes, you say - so long as you never had to give up a victory.

You are amused at the amount of attention coming your way this year. When you beat Prost's Ferrari to steal pole position temporarily at Imola, there were cheers from the grandstands, and that would never have happened at one time. The Italians are 'starting to love me', you chuckle, adding cynically that in Italy 'you become very nice when you have very nice results...' But you don't mind that - it's better than being told to apply for your pension book, as a few papers were advising a few years ago.

At Imola you led Senna in the wet opening laps, but later there were problems, and you retired. Afterwards people were quick to sympathise with your bad luck, but you shrugged it off: 'Look', you said, 'I'm still here. I still have the chance to win some more races. We can talk about luck when I've retired'. In any case, you look at your life, and think it happy in every respect - how could you claim to be unlucky? You love driving racing cars, and away from racing everything else is good. 'I'm a lucky person', you smile. 'A bloody lucky person...'

© Autosport magazine - Reproduced with permission

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An Absent Gentleman

This article appeared in Autosport on 17th March 1994

On the eve of last year’s Australian Grand Prix, as our shuttle bus prepared to move off from the paddock to the car park, the door was flung open, and Riccardo Patrese gratefully climbed aboard.

As usual, his expression was good-natured, but there was a poignancy about his presence now. For days all the talk had been of Alain Prost’s forthcoming retirement, and too little thought was given to others, whose final Grand Prix this might also be. Prost, at least, was going voluntarily; for others, it would be the last time around because no work was on offer. Two years earlier, it had happened that way to Nelson Piquet.

If it was inevitable, given his unequalled record, that Prost should be the focus of attention, so it was also sad that other Grand Prix careers, particularly Patrese’s, were ending without fanfare of any kind. Very well, Alain had 51 victories from 199 races, where Riccardo had but half a dozen from 256; statistics, like bikinis, show a lot, but not everything.

No record book will ever provide a clue as to the personality of Patrese, or any of his colleagues. You will not tell, from any column of figures, who was a civilised human being, and who was not. There have never been points for dignity or humour or grace.

That evening in Adelaide someone hesitantly broached the subject of Riccardo’s future. “It’s simple,” he said, very firmly, “if I get a top team, I drive. If not, I stay at home.”

As he spoke, it was as if he didn’t really mind one way or the other. But that was Riccardo, and his innate sense of dignity. He did mind. He minded terribly.

Of all the racing drivers I have known, he, next to Mario Andretti, never spoke of retirement, nor appeared even to consider it. “I love the life of a Grand Prix driver,” he would say, in a manner reminiscent of Clay Regazzoni. “I absolutely love it. There is nothing else I want to do.”

To an extent, a racing driver’s ability may be judged by his results; you can, in any case, come to see over time if he is any good or not simply by standing at the trackside. Assessing his worth as a man, however, is a different matter. You have your own opinions, of course, but for the unvarnished truth you speak to his mechanics.

Most of the time, during his five years at Williams, Patrese was the man in the background, the number two, but Riccardo’s own mechanics would never have any of that, thank you very much. If they accepted that, day for day, he was not in the very highest echelon as a driver, it was with grudging reluctance.

Steve Nichols, who worked at McLaren with both Senna and Prost, once described how gratifying it was to improve a car, perhaps minutely, and to see that improvement reflected instantly in its laps times. “That was the great thing about those two guys,” he said. “You got an immediate reward for your efforts, and it did wonders for your motivation.”

If Patrese did not have that once-and-for-all ability, still there were days of undeniable greatness. Let us remember, for example, that throughout the first half of the 1991 season, he outqualified team-mate Mansell on every occasion, and generally had the beating of him in the races. And his pole position at Estoril that year, set with the T-car in the dying seconds of the final session, stands as one of the finest I have ever seen. The following day he won the race, to Patrick Head’s very obvious delight.

What Patrick most appreciated in Riccardo was his willingness to work as a team man. “You call him up, ask him to test at a moment’s notice, and he says fine, no problem, I’ll be there. He’s not a selfish man that’s the thing, which is quite race in a racing driver. His ego’s under control too. Which is also quite rare…”

Patrese gives the lie to the proposition that people never change. In his early days in F1, I thought him surly, precocious, something of a brat. He was very prone to Latin outbursts for a long time, probably because he spent too many years in uncompetitive cars, and felt that his career was ebbing away to nowhere. A two-season spell with Alfa Romeo, in the mid-‘80’s, brought him close to breaking point.

“By 1985,” he said, “it was beginning to affect my private life, and so I said to myself, hey, Riccardo, you have to do something. I mean, I was not smiling at all! So I changed, and I still don’t know how I made myself do it. I changed my approach, my mentality, everything. And life became easier.”

Patrese had his best racing days with Williams, and loved everything about the team. Through the summer of 1992 though, the drivers for the following season looked like being Mansell and Prost, and it was suggested to Riccardo he should look elsewhere. By the time Mansell made up his mind to quit, it was too late for Patrese who had by then committed himself to Benetton. Last season was not his happiest; long before the end of it he knew his contract would not be renewed.

Formula 1 is not a business founded on sentiment, and it never surprises me to hear folk suggest that so-and-so should get out and make way for a younger charger. Often, on a pragmatic level, I find myself in agreement, for I don’t like to see a driver become an embarrassment to his own name, any more than I care to see youthful ability thwarted. But I hate to see a genuinely fine man like Riccardo Patrese disappear from the sport – particularly when some of those with drives this year would seem to lay only tenuous claim to a Superlicence.

Riccardo, I imagine, will not much enjoy the weekend of the Brazilian Grand Prix, wherever he is. But he is not an F1 moron, not an obsessive, and he will cope. “You know,” he said to me a year or so ago, “you have to try to stay philosophical in F1 or you can go out of it completely broken. I don’t intend to do that.” In Sao Paulo I’ll raise a glass to him.

© Autosport magazine - Reproduced with permission

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Monza 1978

Nigel Roebuck Q&A in Autosport 18th July 2001

I remember very well the aftermath of the 1978 Monza tragedy, which cost the life of Ronnie Peterson, and a thoroughly unsavoury episode in Formula 1 history it was. Most of us had fairly clear ideas about how, and why, that multiple startline accident came about – and they had little to do with Riccardo Patrese. Anyone with eyes only needed to watch the film once to know he was blameless, and later, of course, he was formally exonerated.

"I was only in my second season," Riccardo says, "and... quite fast. And maybe I did a few things that I wouldn't have done later in my career. Everyone thought I was arrogant, but the truth was that I was shy. I was very young still, and didn't know any of the other drivers very well. And I must admit, I was very intense..."

Disliked, too. Riccardo was one of those young drivers very quick from the outset, and he frequently drove over his head in those early days. In the hysteria which followed the Monza tragedy, other drivers judged him culpable for the chain reaction disaster. At the time it seemed not to matter that the blame lay plainly elsewhere; this upstart had been disconcerting them all season long, and was a natural whipping boy, who needed to be taught a lesson. If Patrese's entry for the next race, at Watkins Glen, were to be accepted, they said, they would not take part. Thus, they effectively had him banned for a race. Shameful.

"It was because they didn't like my attitude over the season, but by timing it when they did, it looked as if they were punishing me for the Monza accident. Psychologically, I had no problem with that, because I knew it hadn't been my fault. But it took a long time to forget how the other drivers treated me..."

Years later, one of them – a major star – told me that this was the only incident in his career of which he felt truly ashamed. It had been a witch-hunt, nothing more or less, and the loudest voice, sad to say, was that of James Hunt. To the end of Hunt's life, the rift between James and Riccardo was never repaired.

© Autosport magazine - Reproduced with permission

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Riccardo Retrospective

Nigel Roebuck Q&A in Autosport 15th May 2002

Riccardo was a driver I much admired, and a bloke I like very much - but it wasn't always so...

Absurd as it seems now, for much of Patrese's career, I resolutely avoided contact with him, this the consequence of a brief conversation we had at Zandvoort in 1979. He had crashed (brake failure) at the end of the pit straight in what Jackie Stewart would call, "A fairly important way", and when I later asked him what had happened, he gave me advice not only anatomically impossible, but also, I thought, bloody rude. That being so, I made a similar suggestion to him, and stalked off, siding with those who thought him a brat.

Thus, we had one those ridiculous 'situations', and it persisted until Patrese joined Williams in the late eighties. "Look," Ann Bradshaw, the team's PR said to me one day, "I love you both, and it's stupid you don't talk to each other." In the motorhome Riccardo and I shook hands, exchanged apologies, and were good friends ever after.

"I think," he said, "that maybe I often used to behave like that in those days. Everyone thought I was arrogant, but the truth was that I was shy. I was very young still, and didn't know any of the other drivers very well. And I must admit, I was very intense..."

Disliked, too. Riccardo was one of those young drivers very quick from the outset, and he frequently drove over his head in those early days. But what affected him more than anything was the multiple accident at Monza, in the autumn of 1978, which cost the life of Ronnie Peterson.

In the subsequent hysteria, other drivers judged Patrese culpable for the chain reaction disaster, which occurred within seconds of the start. At the time it seemed not to matter that the blame lay plainly elsewhere; this upstart had been disconcerting them all season long, and was a natural whipping boy, who needed to be taught a lesson. If Patrese's entry for the next race, at Watkins Glen, were to be accepted, they said, they would not take part. Thus, they effectively had him banned for a race.

"It was because they didn't like my attitude over the season, but by timing it when they did, it looked as if they were punishing me for the Monza accident. Psychologically, I had no problem with that, because I knew it hadn't been my fault. But it took a long time to forget how the other drivers treated me..."

Years later, one of them told me that this was the only incident in his career of which he felt truly ashamed. It had been a witch hunt, nothing more or less, and one of the loudest voices, sad to say, was that of James Hunt. To the end of Hunt's life, the rift between himself and Patrese was never repaired.

World Kart Champion in 1974, Riccardo came into F1, via F3, with Shadow in 1977, and spent years - too many years - with Arrows, then as now a fringe team. Bernie Ecclestone was always a fan, and tried to get him to Brabham in 1979, but at that time Patrese was starry-eyed about Ferrari, and declined to sign long contracts, so as to be free to accept The Offer, which was constantly promised, ultimately never delivered.

In 1982, finally, he committed himself to Brabham, winning his first Grand Prix at Monaco and his second, the following year, at Kyalami. For 1984, though, Ecclestone unfathomably chose to replace him with the terminally overrated Teo Fabi, and Riccardo, against his better judgement, signed for the Euroracing Alfa Romeo team. Two seasons in the deep wilderness followed.

"The cars were hopeless, and I was so angry about it that, by 1985, it was beginning to affect my private life. I can remember one day saying to myself, 'Hey, Riccardo, you have to do something.' I mean, I was not smiling at all! It was a turning point in my life. I changed my approach, my mentality, everything - and I still don't know how I made myself do it. After that, life became easier."

Bernie Ecclestone has been really close to very few drivers, but Patrese was one of them, and he went back into the Brabham fold for two more years. "It was lucky for me that Bernie and I were friends. Even though he decided to give up being a team owner in 1987, he recommended me to Frank Williams..."

So began the most productive relationship of Riccardo's career. "When I went to Williams," he said, "it was like a camera which had finally come into focus." Over time everyone in the team became very fond of him, not least because he established an excellent technical rapport with Patrick Head - not least, either, because he was so much easier to live with than Nigel Mansell, who returned to Williams in 1991. Rather more of a team player, too.

"You call Riccardo up," said Head, "ask him to test at a moment's notice, and he'll say fine, no problem, I'll be there. He's not a selfish man, that's the point, which is quite rare in a racing driver. His ego's under control, too. Which is also quite rare..."

Speaking of egos, in 1991 Mansell said this of his team-mate: "I take Riccardo's speed this year as a great compliment to me." Er, how so? "Well, because I'm the only one who can motivate him." Ah, yes. Had Patrese been inclined to return the back-handed compliment, he might have suggested that perhaps Mansell had overdone the motivation: that season it was not until Silverstone, after all, that the great man managed to out-qualify him...

As it was, Patrese always tolerated Mansell's excesses with admirable fortitude. And although the Williams-Renaults were not conspicuously reliable in '91, Riccardo had a very fine season, with four pole positions and a couple of victories, in Mexico and Portugal.

While not on the same page, week in, week out, as a Senna or a Prost, when the mood was on him Patrese was a magnificent racing driver, and my abiding memory of him will always be final qualifying at Estoril that year. Early in the session his own car blew up, and his behaviour was pure Latin theatrical as he stomped back to the pits. There the spare Williams sat, but, under the terms of Mansell's contract, it was for his use alone. Not until the last five minutes of the session, when Nigel clearly wouldn't need it, was Riccardo permitted to climb aboard.

There had no opportunity for set-up work, merely an educated guess or two, and the Renault V10 was of an earlier, less powerful, type, but Patrese had ire and adrenalin to spare that afternoon; after a single warm-up lap, he shoved Senna, Berger and Mansell aside, and put himself on the pole. "That was good, wasn't it?" Patrick Head beamed afterwards, and he was even sunnier the next day, when Riccardo won the race.

The following year, though, Williams went 'active', and although their performance advantage was stupendous, Patrese was less at his ease, and rarely now on terms with Mansell. "I admit I prefer passive cars," he said, "because they have so much more feel. Nigel either has more bravery, or less imagination, or both..."

He finished second to Mansell in the World Championship in 1992, and then left for Benetton, with whom he had signed when it seemed certain that Frank would run Prost and Mansell the following year. Almost as soon he had put pen to paper, Riccardo learned that Mansell was quitting F1, and that he could have stayed, after all.

"That's life, isn't it?" he shrugged. "Two weeks after I signed with Benetton, there was a chance for me to stay with Williams, but I said, 'No, Riccardo, if you have signed something - or even given your word - that's it.'" Sadly, Benetton behaved rather differently when it came to the second year of his contract, and at the end of a disappointing '93 season, partnering the youthful Michael Schumacher, he had to accept that his 256-race F1 career was at an end.

There were only six victories, fewer by far than might have been predicted when he blitzed into Grand Prix racing in the late seventies, but I'll warrant that Patrese got more pure pleasure from his racing life than any of his more highly-touted colleagues. In a paddock, particularly after his 'transformation' in 1985, he was patently a happy man.

Away from it, too, thanks to the divine Suzy and their three kids, to whom he was devoted. It was never in Riccardo's nature to be flashy - no private jets or helicopters for him - and nor was he greedily obsessive about money, which also stood him proud of your average meeting of GPDA members. "I know other drivers make much more than I do," he would say, "but I can make a good life from what I earn, and I think what Frank pays me is correct for a driver of my record." Team owners dream of folk like this.

Perhaps, on reflection, Patrese left F1 at the right time, for he had little in common with the average grand prix driver of the nineties, preferring Beethoven to the inevitable 'Phil Collins and George Michael', and devoting himself, as well as to golf and skiing, to unusual hobbies, like collecting classic watches and rare Marklin model trains. Although he kept an apartment in Monte Carlo, in reality home was always Padua, where he was born, where he went to university.

You can tell a lot about a driver, I have found, from talking to his mechanics, and among them Patrese was always adored, not least because he never took them for granted. Grand Prix drivers are traditionally slow when it comes to reaching for their wallets, but in Adelaide every year Riccardo would treat the entire team - Williams and Renault personnel – to a memorable end-of-season dinner. Folk remember these things.

It was a sign of the team's affection for him that Patrese was invited to have a run in the Williams-Renault FW18 in the autumn of 1996. Tanned and fit as ever, Riccardo savoured the experience, and proved he could still do this, eventually setting a time which would have qualified him in the first couple of rows at the British Grand Prix.

I briefly wrote about it at the time, and later a letter of thanks came chattering over my fax. Unlike some, Riccardo Patrese will always be one of those guys you hope you'll run into in the paddock at Imola or Monza or wherever. Silly now to think how long we avoided each other...

© Autosport magazine - Reproduced with permission

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Fine Fellows

This article appeared in Autosport on 28th November 1996

Had I had the time, a few weeks ago, I would have gone up to Silverstone to see Riccardo Patrese in the Williams-Renault FW18, but unfortunately the test was scheduled for the day before we were to fly to the Japanese Grand Prix, and there was too much last-minute stuff requiring attention. It was a pity, though, not least because Riccardo gave a remarkably good account of himself, getting round in 1m 28s, which would have qualified him fifth for this year¹s British Grand Prix. Not too dusty, I thought, for a man of 42, who last drove a Formula 1 car three years ago. I would not, though, have gone there in the expectation of fast times, or anything of the like, but simply for the pleasure of meeting up again with as pleasant a man as I have known in racing. Invariably we run into each other at Imola or Monza, but there is rarely time for more than a brief chat, and it would have been good to talk to him at greater length.

Patrese, a well-rounded individual, with an awareness of life beyond F1, is dealing with retirement rather more readily than some of his colleagues. "At Williams we won¹t hear a word said against Riccardo", Frank Williams has remarked. "The guy¹s an absolute gentleman, and he¹s welcome here any time." It was at Monza in September that Patrese wistfully murmured that he would love a run in a contemporary Williams and, lo, it was done, which says everything about the affection in which the team holds him. There were plenty of opportunities for him to be political Frank said, but he never was. Not once.

It is actually quite rare for a driver to be remembered so fondly by a team. Oh, they might recall Joe Soap's speed with awe, but quite often they will balance that with memories of what a pillock he was out of the car. You can tell a lot about a driver's real self from what his mechanics have to say about him, and the Williams boys adored Riccardo.

Over five seasons with the team, he tested endlessly, with enthusiasm and never made waves. While his natural ability may not have been at the level of a Senna or Prost, he had periods of pure inspiration; let us not forget that in the first half of 1991 he outqualified team mate Nigel Mansell at every single race, and on occasion - as in Mexico - squarely  beat him. At Estoril, he jumped into the spare Williams-Renault at the very end of qualifying, took one warm-up lap, and put the car on pole. Won the race, too.

Neither was Riccardo avaricious, a quality much appreciated by F WiIliams. "I know some other drivers make a lot more than I do," he said, "but, you know, I can have a very good life on what I earn, and look at the fun I have earning it! I think Frank is very fair with me; what he pays me is appropriate for a driver of my record."

Can't say fairer than that. In general, Grand Prix drivers have a reputation for being, er, careful with a dollar, but at the end of each season Patrese would take the entire team - Williams and Renault personnel - out to dinner
in Adelaide. On one occasion someone suggested that his team mate, a man earning many times more, should split the bill it fell on deaf ears. No wonder the mechanics remember Riccardo well.

Over at Benetton, there is similar regard for Alessandro Nannini, who this week has been testing an F1 car at Estoril. As with Patrese, this was simply for old times sake, A matter of 150% emotion according to Flavio
Briatore. "I always said we¹d give Sandro a run in a car any time he wanted it, and that¹s what we¹re doing."

Everyone remembers that in 1989 Prost and Senna had their first Suzuka Two-Step, but perhaps rather fewer will recall that it was Nannini who ultimately took the top step on the podium that day, for the first and only
time in his short F1 career.

He nearly did it twice more, the following season. At Hockenheim he rather shook McLaren-Honda by holding off Senna for much of the race with his Ford V8 powered car, and at the Hungaroring I always felt he would have won, had he not been literally turfed off the road by Ayrton with a dozen laps to go. At Monza that year, the big story was that Nannini was being bought of his Benetton contract, and would be Prost¹s team mate at Ferrari in 1991. The following week he duly presented himself in Lugano to meet with Ferrari's Swiss lawyer, and was there told, sorry it's not you, after all but Jean Alesi. The usual tortured and convoluted Italian polemics were at work but he shrugged off his disappointment and announced he would be staying with Benetton, after all.

In fact, Sandro's F1 career was about to end. Three weeks later, days after he finished third at Jerez, behind Prost and Mansell, his right hand was severed in a helicopter accident, and although it was miraculously sewn back on, the prognosis was that he would never have full strength or movement in it again.

Such, sadly has proved to be the case, but this has not kept Nannini from resuming his racing career, very successfully, in Alfa Romeo¹s DTM and ITC teams. "Even with one hand," my colleague Pino Allievi grinned this summer, "I think he is still the best Italian driver..."

A year ago, at the Magny-Cours ITC race, I met him in the paddock, and was reminded of just how much of a character had been lost to F1. Sandro was, and is, everyone's idea of the archetypal Italian racing driver, but not perhaps from the contemporary era, for his are not the habits of the politically correct 90s.

When you saw him at the Benetton motorhome, invariably he had an espresso in one hand, and a cigarette in the other, and both of these delicious and addictive evils he consumed in profusion. In the last few months of his F1
career, there were signs that he was beginning to take the profession a little more seriously, for he had succeeded in rejecting the pleasures of both nicotine ad caffeine at the same time. Heroic it seemed to me. At Magny-Cours, though, both were in evidence once more. "You went back to them?" I said "Yeah, sure," he smiled. "Well, this...is different from F1, no? This is more...hobby!"

Nannini was a man who absolutely loved the life of a Grand Prix driver, and there is little doubt that he misses it to this day. One of the last of the carefree, old-fashioned racers, in the mould of Clay Regazzoni, he has charm
and humour to throw away, and it is no surprise to me that Flavio Briatore and other Benetton team members retain a soft spot for him.

"I always put racing drivers into two categories," a F1 luminary said to me a while ago. "Those I'd be happy to sit next to on a flight to Australia, and those I wouldn¹t. As a rule of thumb, the second category is the guys you'd hire to win the World Championship for you." "And the first?" "Oh, they¹re the ones who wouldn¹t quite get there- but would have fun on the way." A thought we may reserve for Riccardo and Sandro.

© Autosport magazine - Reproduced with permission

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