Wheels (Australia)

Classic Wheels

The tragic true story of Ronnie Peterson’s death

-

George Harrison’s 1979 song Faster is a moving tribute to Ronnie Peterson, almost certainly the fastest Grand Prix driver during the 1970s. Superswede, as he was universall­y known, died after an horrific multicar pileup in his Lotus 78 at the start of the 1978 Italian GP.

The story of Peterson’s apparently unnecessar­y death was first described in detail in my story Safe or sorry, which appeared in the August 1997 issue. How do I know? Because the last man to talk to Peterson as he lay dying in Milan’s Niguarda hospital was Peter Varolo, a Swedish-speaking orthopaedi­c doctor and, by coincidenc­e, a friend and neighbour who lived five kilometres from our old home in northern Italy.

Watching the Italian Grand Prix that Sunday, September 11, 1978, Varolo learned that Peterson’s leg injuries were relatively minor and “there was nothing to make you think it was serious”. Only when watching the evening news did he hear that Ronnie was going to be operated on, something that should have happened hours earlier.

With his fluent Swedish and orthopaedi­c experience, Varolo rang the hospital and immediatel­y left for Milan. The doctors had just finished operating on Ronnie’s right femur when Varolo arrived. He knew this was a mistake because they hadn’t touched his feet, “the area most urgently in need of care”.

“The danger,” Varolo told me, “is bone marrow getting into the lungs through the blood (a condition known as fat embolism).” And that’s exactly what happened.

Varolo, Professor Sid Watkins (later the FIA’S official medical officer) and a young Columbian doctor employed by Lotus all signed a document stating that they would not talk about the operation. Varolo had already spoken briefly to a couple of Swedish journalist­s, who reported the news in Swedish newspapers, but signed the document anyway: “I realised it was useless to fight. It could have been a catastroph­e for Italy and the scandal would have meant F1 was finished in Italy.”

Nineteen years later, Varolo finally told me the full story, breaking his confidenti­ality pledge. “Now that I’m retiring, I’m prepared to talk. It was ridiculous,” he told me shaking his head. “If the accident had happened in Sweden, I don’t think Ronnie would have died.”

“IF RONNIE HAD BEEN OPERATED ON IN SWEDEN HE WOULD STILL BE ALIVE TODAY” – PIERANGELO ( PETER) VAROLO, SURGEON, AUGUST 1997

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia