Formula 1 | Former French pilot Patrick Tambay dies at 73

(Paris) The former French Formula 1 driver Patrick Tambay died following a long illness at the age of 73, we learned on Sunday from his family.


Patrick Tambay won two Grands Prix, one in 1982 and the other in 1983, driving a Ferrari. He also raced for the McLaren and Renault teams. He also twice won the CanAm North American Championship (1977 and 1980).

He had suffered from Parkinson’s disease for many years.

Born in Paris on June 25, 1949, Patrick Tambay started in F1 in 1977 with the Theodore team before joining McLaren in 1978 then Ferrari in 1982.

Promoted within the Italian team following the death of Canadian Gilles Villeneuve, he joined another Frenchman, Didier Pironi, who was himself the victim of a serious accident a few weeks later during qualifying for the Grand Prix d ‘Germany.

Tambay clinched victory at the same Grand Prix, thus putting a distraught Scuderia back on track. He finishes that year 7e in the World Championship standings.

He achieved further success in 1983 at Imola, Italy, and finished 4e in the championship, but left Ferrari at the end of the season to join Renault, a team for which he did not win, but signed a leading position. Renault is however at the bottom of the wave and it only finishes 11e at the World Championship in 1984 and 12e in 1985.

Considered a “gentleman driver”, Tambay also took part four times in the 24 Hours of Le Mans with the best result being a 4e seat at the wheel of a Jaguar in 1989. He also entered the Paris-Dakar rally where he twice obtained 3e place (1988 and 1989).


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