(("
Stefan Bellof"))
20 November 1957 –
1 September 1985 was a
German Racing Driver,
"best known for setting the fastest lap ever on the
Nordschleife" configuration at the
Nürburgring in
1983,
driving a
Porsche 956. He was the winner of the Drivers'
Championship in the
1984 World Sportscar
Championship, driving for the factory
Rothmans Porsche team. He also competed with the
Tyrrell
Formula One team during
1984 and 1985. He was killed in an accident during the
1985 1000 km of Spa
World Sportscar Championship race.
-Death-
Regarded as a likely future
Formula One World Champion, Bellof was racing at the
1000 km of
Spa World Sportscar Championship race at the Spa-Francorchamps circuit in
Belgium on
1
September 1985, the seventh race of that season's championship. Bellof was making his fourth
appearance of 1985 in the series, despite there not being any clashes with his
Tyrrell campaign
in
Formula One.
Partnering Thierry Boutsen as he had done in his other appearances during the
season, their
Brun Motorsport Porsche 956 would start the race from third on the grid, 0.86 seconds ´
adrift of the pole position-winning
Lancia LC2.
On lap 78, Bellof was racing
Jacky Ickx's works
Porsche 962C from the
La Source hairpin on the run
to
Eau Rouge corner. Both drivers had just commenced their stints in their respective cars after
Boutsen and
Jochen Mass started them.
Entering the left kink of
Eau Rouge, Bellof moved to the left
of Ickx in an attempt to set up a pass for the immediate right-hand Raidillon corner up the hill. Bellof's
right front came into contact with Ickx's left rear, and both drivers spun into the barriers. Ickx's car hit
the wall on the right rear side, while Bellof's car went straight into the barriers, breaking through and
hitting a secondary wall. The
Brun Porsche caught fire moments after the wreck, while Ickx – able to
climb unaided from his car – attempted to help safety workers in extricating Bellof. During the caution
period, members of the Brun team also arrived to aid in the rescue. With smoke pouring from the
wreckage, the emergency medical team struggled for over 10 minutes before extricating him. Bellof
was pronounced dead of massive internal injuries after he had reached the track hospital.
Out of respect for Bellof, the race organisers chose to end the event some
150 kilometres (93 miles)
earlier than planned. The entire incident was recorded on an in-car camera that Ickx's 962C was carrying.
Even after the accident, the camera continued to work, and was pointed in the direction of Bellof'
s wreckage.
The accident involving Bellof was the second in the space of three weeks in which a driver was killed at the
wheel of a Porsche. At the previous
World Sportscar race at
Mosport Park in
Canada, Fellow
West German
and F1 driver
Manfred Winkelhock died of severe head
trauma after crashing into a concrete wall while at
the wheel of a Kremer Racing-run Porsche 962C. Many of the customer teams had concerns with using the
956 for the remainder of the season, and the 956 was eventually withdrawn from the series by the end of the
1986 season, taking victory on its final start at the
1000 km of Fuji.
-Effect and legacy-
After Bellof's death at Spa, teams became unwilling to allow their expensive drivers to compete in other races that were not part of the championship. Fellow Formula One driver
Jonathan Palmer was injured in an unrelated accident during a free practice session at the same meeting, with the result being that many teams would have drivers' contracts tightened to prohibit them from competing outside their respective championships. Bellof's talent had been noted by many of the rival teams that he had been competing against in Formula One, including an offer from
Ferrari for the 1986 season, with a meeting scheduled with
Enzo Ferrari before his death.
Today, he is often mentioned as
Michael Schumacher's childhood racing idol, and during an interview for the
January 2007 issue of the
911 and Porsche
World magazine, teammate
Derek Bell felt Bellof's death was caused by lack of discipline in his driving style, and that the blame for his death lay with those around Bellof, including team personnel, who should have allowed him to mature.
Recently, Bellof's family donated his racing mementos to the local Sammler und Hobbywelt museum for public display. The donated items included his go-kart from his early racing days, his racing overalls and helmets from his works Porsche and Tyrrell days and trophies. There is a karting circuit named in his honour known as Motorsportarena Stefan Bellof, located in Oppenrod.
In 2009, a poll of 217
Formula One drivers chose Bellof as their
35th greatest Formula One driver, in a survey conducted by
British magazine Autosport.
In
August 2013, Bellof was honored after management of the Nürburgring renamed the section of the Nordschleife previously known as Pflanzgarten II as the Stefan-Bellof-S.
- published: 02 Dec 2014
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