Luigi Fagioli (9 June 1898 – 20
June 1952) was an Italian motor racing driver. Born in the
small city of Osimo, Ancona Province in the Marche region
of central Italy, as a boy Luigi Fagioli was fascinated
by the relatively new invention of the automobile and the
ensuing racing. Blessed with great natural driving instincts,
a young Fagioli spent several years participating in hillclimbing
and sports car races before entering Grand Prix racing in
1926. By 1930, his racing success led to an opportunity
to join the Maserati team on the Grand Prix motor racing
circuit. He immediately made his presence felt, winning
the Coppa Ciano and Circuit of Avellino. In April of the
following year he went head to head with Louis Chiron and
his Bugatti Type 51 at the Monaco Grand Prix. In what is
one of racing's most famous battles, Chiron eventually won
but Fagioli showed how skilled he was in a car geared for
great speed on long stretches, not the tight twists and
short runs of Monte Carlo. Fagioli went on to take the victory
at the Autodromo Nazionale Monza in Monza, Italy beating
Chiron as well as fellow Italian greats, Achille Varzi and
Tazio Nuvolari. In 1932, Fagioli won the Grand Prix of Rome
driving for Maserati but for the 1933 season he was signed
by the Alfa Romeo team of Scuderia Ferrari. Driving an Alfa
Romeo Tipo B P3, he won the Coppa Acerbo, the Grand Prix
du Comminges, and the Italian Grand Prix.
A supremely confident Fagioli often displayed
a fiery temper and retaliated against other drivers on the
track when he felt they had done something wrong. Also,
he frequently took chances that others might not and as
such he developed a somewhat negative reputation after he
had several significant race crashes. Nevertheless, his
talents were considerable and for the 1934 season he was
lured away by Mercedes to drive one of their Silver Arrows
with the brilliant Hermann Lang as his chief mechanic. The
move proved successful for Fagioli but his relationship
with the German team manger and co-drivers was extremely
difficult. In his very first race for Mercedes, one their
cars dominated, a furious Fagioli abandoned his vehicle
after having been given orders by team manager Alfred Neubauer
to stay in second place and allow fellow Mercedes driver
Manfred von Brauchitsch to win. Despite the problems, Fagioli
remained part of the German team, earning his second consecutive
Coppa Acerbo and together with Rudolf Caracciola, drove
a Mercedes W25A to claim his second straight Italian Grand
Prix title. Following this, Fagioli went on to take first
place at the Spanish Grand Prix at the Circuito Lasarte.
For the 1935 racing season, his factory
Mercedes was upgraded to a W25B model with which he captured
the Monaco Grand Prix and the AVUS and Penya Rhin Grand
Prix races. However, his relationship with his team-mates
worsened, in particular, Rudolf Caracciola and in some races
Fagioli tried to pass Caracciola against team orders. He
left Mercedes at the end of the 1936 season and joined Auto
Union where his rivalry with Caracciola escalated, culminating
at the Tripoli Grand Prix when Fagioli physically attacked
his former team-mate. Health problems, including crippling
rheumatism, soon began to severely affect Luigi Fagioli's
racing ability. At the Coppa Acerbo he needed the aid of
a cane just to walk and had no choice but to drop out of
the race. With his health somewhat improved, following the
end of World War II, 52-year-old Luigi Fagioli joined Alfa-Romeo's
1950 Formula One team, earning five podium finishes in six
races en route to finishing a remarkable third overall in
the first ever FIA World Championship. His only Grand Prix
of 1951 was his last, but he nevertheless won the French
Grand Prix with Juan-Manuel Fangio, earning the distinction
of being the oldest person to ever win an F1 race.
For 1952, Fagioli signed with Lancia
to drive sports cars and took great personal delight by
finishing in third place in the Mille Miglia ahead of arch
rival Rudolf Caracciola. Shortly after, while practicing
for a touring car race to be held as part of the Monaco
Grand Prix, he had what appeared to be a minor crash but
one where his internal injuries were such that he died in
hospital three weeks later. Luigi Fagioli ranks as one of
Italy's greatest race car drivers.
(c)
Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 2009