Memorial service pays tribute to racing legend Sir Stirling Moss
SIR Jackie Stewart said there will never be another Sir Stirling Moss as he paid tribute to the unforgettable British driver at Westminster Abbey yesterday.
Four years after Moss’s death, close to 2,000 people – including Red Bull team principal Christian Horner and former Formula One world champions Nigel Mansell and Damon Hill – attended a service in his memory.
Three-time world champion Stewart, 84, who sat alongside the Duke of Kent, said at the memorial: “There will never be another Stirling Moss.
“He drove well, he presented himself well, he dressed well and he was just an amazing character. I don’t think in the history of the sport there has been somebody so well loved and who is continued to be so well loved. It is wonderful for Great Britain to have a Briton that was as famous as this. He will never be forgotten.”
Moss never won an F1 world championship, yet his remarkable talent at the wheel set him apart from his peers.
Enzo Ferrari, the founder of the Italian racing giants, described Moss as the greatest driver in the world. Five-time world champion Juan Manuel Fangio called Moss the best of his era.
Moss’s career ended on Easter Monday 1962 when he was cut out of his car following a terrifying 100mph crash at Goodwood that almost killed him.
He tried to test himself behind the wheel again, but reluctantly called time on front-rank competition at the age of 32.
Despite his official retirement, Moss continued to race until he was 81. But in the postwar years – where he carried British sporting fame across the globe – Moss accumulated a record 212 wins from 529 races across 15 scintillating seasons. Perhaps his most famous win was the 1955 Mille Miglia in which he covered 1,000 miles of open Italian roads at an average speed of 97.96mph in 10 hours, seven minutes and 48 seconds. The Mercedes which carried him to victory was on display outside the Abbey.