Jackie Stewart | Page 2 | FerrariChat

Jackie Stewart

Discussion in 'Other Racing' started by Gilles27, May 2, 2007.

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  1. F355Bvc

    F355Bvc Formula 3

    Dec 4, 2003
    1,737
    Lawrenceville. GA
    Full Name:
    Vince Canipelli
    As a kid, growing up in the 60's, Jackie was my IDOL!!!!!
     
  2. Senna1994

    Senna1994 F1 World Champ

    Nov 11, 2003
    13,205
    Orange County
    Full Name:
    Anthony T
    Paul, his wife was incredibly beautiful.
     
  3. racerx3317

    racerx3317 F1 Veteran

    Oct 17, 2004
    5,701
    New York, NY
    Full Name:
    Luis
    He did get preachy at times but he was usually right. I remember Jackie was visiting the speed booth at the Daytona 24 hr in 2001 watching Dale Sr drive the vette in the wet at night and commented how he thought it was ridiculous that Dale Sr was still wearing an open face helmet. It was that year at the Daytona 500 that he had his fatal crash. The accident investigators concluded that a full face helmet would have saved his life.....
     
  4. wax

    wax Five Time F1 World Champ
    Lifetime Rossa

    Jul 20, 2003
    52,503
    SFPD
    Full Name:
    Dirty Harry
    I'd take a bullet for Jackie Stewart.
     
  5. V12TR

    V12TR Rookie

    Mar 11, 2007
    41
    Full Name:
    V12TR
    Rod Stewart's not a bad driver
     
  6. tifosi12

    tifosi12 Four Time F1 World Champ
    Lifetime Rossa Owner

    Oct 3, 2002
    49,822
    @ the wheel
    Full Name:
    Andreas
    Paying right now about $ 400 for my seat at the Hungarian GP. That's for about 3 hours. Not really bloody cheap.
     
  7. blaneyge

    blaneyge Rookie

    Nov 10, 2003
    45
    A genius driver.......period.
     
  8. spirot

    spirot F1 World Champ

    Dec 12, 2005
    15,199
    Atlanta
    Full Name:
    Tom Spiro

    Absoultely agree, Jackie Stewart has done more for F-1 than almost anyone... his post F-1 career is probabbly more important than when he was driving... as for a driver he was top class, espoused being smooth, and un emotional... let the car do the work.

    As a figure in Motorsport... I think he THE Figure... nobody has as much respect, yea he older now, but you have to remember he raced F-1 back in the 60's when drivers used to get killed every other race, was World Champ 3 times when you had to really take risks! As for his campaign on Safety... someone had to do it...I think thousands of racing drivers up and down the ladder owe him their lives! For me he is the most outstanding Racing / Driving personality... may not be the best driver, but when you talk about overall influence in the sport... Steward is WAY WAY ahead of anybody else!

    He also wone in F-1, CAN AM, Sports cars, Indy cars, raced Nascar ( with Jim Clark ) and survived to tell it!

    I have met him several times, and he is truly a SUPER NICE MAN! always gives an autograph, poses for a picture, and never is rude... he knows where his bread is buttered, and is a connusmate businessman. It will be a sad day when we no longer have him!
     
  9. tifosi12

    tifosi12 Four Time F1 World Champ
    Lifetime Rossa Owner

    Oct 3, 2002
    49,822
    @ the wheel
    Full Name:
    Andreas
    Most influential person of F1 is IMHO Bernie.

    Steward started the safety discussions, but Bernie took the sport from an "amateur show" to the highly professional level it is at today. For better or worse.
     
  10. Senna3xWC

    Senna3xWC F1 Rookie

    Nov 30, 2006
    3,152
    NYC
    His wife is named Paul?!? :D
     
  11. Ney

    Ney F1 Veteran
    Silver Subscribed

    Apr 20, 2004
    7,453
    Absolutely, the Armco flexes and bends and takes a lot of kinetic energy out of a crash. One of the best readily available examples of this is seen in LeMans the movie when the 917 goes into the barrier at high speed. I would guess that your crash would have been a non-event if the Armco had not been there assuming adequate run off area. Concrete walls are even worse than the Armco barrier.

    I am a proponent of run off area rather than Armco. Get the car that has lost control off of the track where secondary impact from other cars and pieces of the crashing car are not a danger to other cars and drivers.

    Given the escalation of speeds that took place in Stewart's era, the lack of adequate run off area at many circuits and the cost of providing it for an existing track, perhaps it was the best that could be hoped for at the time. That being said, I still feel that Armco cost many drivers, particularly in open wheeled cars, their lives or at least resulted in very serious injury.
     
  12. Senna1994

    Senna1994 F1 World Champ

    Nov 11, 2003
    13,205
    Orange County
    Full Name:
    Anthony T
    Helen
     
  13. James_Woods

    James_Woods F1 World Champ

    May 17, 2006
    12,755
    Dallas, Tx.
    Full Name:
    James K. Woods
    Although at first I considered him "not nearly Jimmy Stewart" I gained respect after a time...especially post career when I read his autobiography "Faster".

    He intimates that a lot of his safety crusade came about after the fatal crash of Joichim Rindt, his close friend. And he frankly states that a lot of the other drivers were derisive of the safety crusade.

    I was also very impressed that he overcame dyslexia, became not only world champion, but was also an olympic quality trap shooter.
     
  14. PSk

    PSk F1 World Champ

    Nov 20, 2002
    17,673
    Tauranga, NZ
    Full Name:
    Pete
    Maybe, but I might also have ended up on a railway line :eek: ... oops. It was a stupid bit of driving ...

    Later in the season I grew to respect sand traps ;), anybody that thinks they are dangerous, etc. has it wrong IMO.
    Pete
     
  15. PSk

    PSk F1 World Champ

    Nov 20, 2002
    17,673
    Tauranga, NZ
    Full Name:
    Pete
    Agree with you there.

    When I go to Melbourne, I just pay general admission and no stand seat ... I can then wander around (the other races are boring, so I go and look at the historics). All I have to do is work out where I want to watch the race from and get there early on race day and RUN ;) to get that spot.

    Pete
     
  16. Whisky

    Whisky Three Time F1 World Champ
    Silver Subscribed

    Jan 27, 2006
    32,505
    In the flight path to Offutt
    Full Name:
    The original Fernando
    Name a track that has not been drastically changed, a chicane at LeMans, Kyalami reconfigured, the 'Ring, Hockenheim, all of them...
     
  17. DeSoto

    DeSoto F1 Veteran

    Nov 26, 2003
    7,875
    I read an article written by a top team designer, I don´t remember, maybe he was Gavin Fisher, where he said that it´s safer to put the driver ahead of the front tires because there is less risk of being hit by a flying wheel or suspension arm. The cars where more dangerous in the 60s becuase the chassis resistance was slower than in the 70s and 80s.
     
  18. boffin218

    boffin218 Formula Junior

    Oct 8, 2005
    888
    Philadelphia
    Full Name:
    Chris
    Are you boys talking about that nice little old scottish woman who volunteered to come on Top Gear and teach 'Captain Slow' how to drive more quickly?
     
  19. Gilles27

    Gilles27 F1 World Champ

    Mar 16, 2002
    13,337
    Ex-Urbia
    Full Name:
    Jack
    The only problem was when they started putting the drivers too far forward in the early 80s. After aerodynamics dictated that the cooling systems be hidden inboard as much as possible the feet of the drivers suddenly became the forward-most point of the car. Any time there was a wreck, it almost became automatic for the driver to sustain foot and leg injuries. F1 as well as Indy.
     
  20. SoftwareDrone

    SoftwareDrone F1 Veteran
    Sponsor Owner

    Jan 19, 2004
    7,878
    San Jose, California
    Full Name:
    Mike
    The fact that JYS's name doesn't come up reguarly among the all time greats is not so much a reflection on JYS as it is the misaligned (and that's putting it WAY nicely) attitudes of most racing fans. Most tend to idolize only those who have no problem being an ********* to win.
     
  21. kizdan

    kizdan F1 Veteran

    Dec 31, 2003
    5,505
    Any driver that has 3 WCs ranks among the very best ever to compete in F1. I certainly bring him up in any conversation about past greats.

    I got to meet Jackie a few years ago. I got his autograph (something I so rarely ask for, but how often to you get to meet a triple WC????). He was such a gentleman - I was very impressed! A class act, through and through.
     
  22. Senna1994

    Senna1994 F1 World Champ

    Nov 11, 2003
    13,205
    Orange County
    Full Name:
    Anthony T
    Perfect example is poor Pironi and also even Piquet's devasting injuries at Indy in 1992.
     
  23. DeSoto

    DeSoto F1 Veteran

    Nov 26, 2003
    7,875
    Yep. That could be avoidable with impact absortion zones and all that stuff we have now.
     
  24. marankie

    marankie Formula Junior

    Aug 30, 2004
    252
    Agoura Hills, Calif
    Full Name:
    Martin
    I think all modern GP drivers own Stewart a vote of thanks for making the sport infinitely safer. I loved F1 racing in the old pre-aerodynamic days but definitly not the blood and guts of that time.

    On TV Stewart appears to be somewhat of a school-mistress type lecturing prima dona. But I am glad to hear form previos posts of people that have met him that this is not so.

    As far as driving ablity ranking is concerned, I break the rankings into 3 catergories. (and yes, there are drivers that span more than one)

    Emotional divers: Mansell, Senna, Villenueve (the first), Rindt

    Thinking/analytical drivers: Stewart, Prost, Schumacher

    Engineering Drivers: Brabham, McLaren, Hulme
     
  25. Senna1994

    Senna1994 F1 World Champ

    Nov 11, 2003
    13,205
    Orange County
    Full Name:
    Anthony T
    +1
     

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