Sunderland Echo

‘One lap too many’ for motor racing legend Moss

- PA Sport nep.sport@jpimedia.co.uk

Motor racing great Sir Stirling Moss died at the age of 90 yesterday.

His wife Lady Moss said he died peacefully at his London home following a long illness.

"It was one lap too many," she said. "He just closed his eyes."

Though Moss famously never won the Formula One title, he was regarded as one of the greatest ever drivers as he survived and thrived in the sport's most dangerous era.

Enzo Ferrari once called Moss the greatest driver in the world while five-time champion Juan Manuel Fangio – who beat Moss to the title three times between 1955 and 1957 – called Moss the best of his era.

Moss finished runner-up in the championsh­ips standings four times and finished third three times in a career during which he won 16 Grands Prix.

In an age when racing drivers competed in several different discipline­s alongside Formula One, Moss won a total of 212 of the 529 races he entered in his career.

Born in London in 1929, Moss was the son of amateur racing driver Alfred and his wife Aileen.

He began his career in 1948 behind the wheel of his father's car. In the early years of his Formula One career, he often struggled due to his machinery, preferring to drive British cars rather than their often superior foreign rivals.

But his breakthrou­gh came in a Mercedes as he took his first Formula One win in 1955 at the British Grand Prix at Aintree, becoming the first British winner of the event.

It was the beginning of the best period of his career as he challenged for the title year after year, ultimately unsuccessf­ully.

A heavy crash at Goodwood in 1962 left Moss in a coma for a month, and partially paralysed for six months.

Moss officially retired in the wake of that crash, though he would continue to take part in occasional events until 1981.

He was knighted in the New Year Honours list in 2000 for services to motor racing.

His former team Mercedes tweeted: "Today, the sporting world lost not only a true icon and a legend, but a gentleman. The Team and the Mercedes Motorsport family have lost a dear friend. Sir Stirling, we'll miss you."

 ??  ?? Sir Stirling Moss (waving) after a win with Jaguar in the 1953 12-hour sports car race at Rheims, France, by covering 1,274 miles at an average speed of 105.5 miles per hour. Picture PA Wire
Sir Stirling Moss (waving) after a win with Jaguar in the 1953 12-hour sports car race at Rheims, France, by covering 1,274 miles at an average speed of 105.5 miles per hour. Picture PA Wire
 ??  ?? Sir Stirling Moss driving an historic Grand Prix car after taking part in the Goodwood Festival of Speed in 2011. Picture PA Wire
Sir Stirling Moss driving an historic Grand Prix car after taking part in the Goodwood Festival of Speed in 2011. Picture PA Wire

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