xpensive wrote:Only Bernt Rosemeyer left then. Rats, I knew that one.
Well done!! over to you X
Bernd with celebrity flyer wife Elly Beinhorn and Ferdinand Porsche
In his streamline GP car on the AVUS Berlin
Drifting at Donnington Park
http://www.kolumbus.fi/leif.snellman/dr.htm#RO
Bernd Rosemeyer (D)
14 Oct 1909 - 28 Jan 1938
In sheer natural speed and car control, was he the best ever? The only car Rosemeyer ever raced was the monstrous rear-engined Auto Union, a car that even Nuvolari found hard to master. Yet, in a meteoric career Rosemeyer established himself as the world's fastest driver and Germany's most popular GP driver ever. Starting in 1935 he was challenging for the lead in only his second race. In 1936, in his first full season, he clinched the European Championship and forced the mighty Mercedes to retire from racing in the middle of the season. On the infamous Nürburgring track, the ultimate challenge for any driver, Rosemeyer's abilities came to his own. He held the lead every single time he raced there and he finished 2nd, 4th, 1st, 1st, 1st and 3rd. No one (with the possible exception of Gilles Villeneuve) has been able to fully copy Rosemeyer's driving style. In total disregard for the laws of physics the thrill seeking driver, whose favourite number was "13", threw the heavy car around in impossible angles. While he made the occasional mistake, his 10 victories during a time of just two years show his class. Sadly his career was cut short by a 400 km/h crash during a world speed record attempt in early 1938.
http://www.ddavid.com/formula1/rose_bio.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernd_Rosemeyer