BBC Top Gear Magazine

SABINE SCHMITZ

Chris Harris pays tribute to the groundbrea­king racing driver and presenter

- Chris Harris

The motoring world lost one of its true legends recently, when the powerful and irrepressi­ble Sabine Schmitz passed away, aged just 51. Already a key figure at the Nürburgrin­g after becoming the first, and still the only woman to win the gruelling 24-hour race, she shot to internatio­nal fame by uttering the immortal phrase: “I do that lap time in a van.”

She came within a whisker of beating Jeremy’s time in a road car, while lobbing a Ford Transit about the Eifel mountains in her normal style. She’s been a part of TopGear ever since, and the thought that she won’t be any more makes me feel very, very sad.

Sabine was born and bred at the Nürburgrin­g. Her mother ran a local hotel and she quickly establishe­d herself as a local specialist around the most challengin­g race circuit on the planet.

On the back of her regular racing outings in the

VLN championsh­ip and the 24-hour events, she became the main tourist attraction as the driver of the ’Ring Taxi. Lord knows how many sets of tyres and brakes she got through over the years, but there are thousands of people who had the pleasure of seeing her driving skills up close, and I think she loved how much she could shock middle-aged men who thought they could drive a bit – until they saw what she could do.

She was a bundle of energy, one of those people whose resting facial expression was a huge grin, and she was so much fun to be around and to work alongside. She had been battling cancer for some time, but I suppose we just assumed that it being Sabine – unstoppabl­e Sabine – she would win that one as well.

The TopGear family will miss her terribly, as will her army of fans. Sending our love and thoughts to Klaus, her family, close friends and the Frikadelli Racing team she was so proud of.

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