Joakim Bonnier - Biblioteka.sk

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Joakim Bonnier
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Jo Bonnier
Bonnier at Nürburgring in 1966
Born(1930-01-31)31 January 1930
Stockholm, Sweden
Died11 June 1972(1972-06-11) (aged 42)
Le Mans, France
Formula One World Championship career
NationalitySweden Swedish
Active years19561971
TeamsMaserati, Scuderia Centro Sud, Joakim Bonnier Racing Team, BRM, Porsche, Rob Walker Racing Team, Lotus, Brabham, Anglo-Suisse Racing/Ecurie Bonnier and Honda
Entries109 (104 starts)
Championships0
Wins1
Podiums1
Career points39
Pole positions1
Fastest laps0
First entry1956 Italian Grand Prix
First win1959 Dutch Grand Prix
Last win1959 Dutch Grand Prix
Last entry1971 United States Grand Prix

Karl Jockum Jonas "Joakim" Bonnier (31 January 1930 – 11 June 1972) was a Swedish sportscar racing and Formula One driver who raced for various teams. He was the first Swede to both enter and win a Formula One Grand Prix.

Early life

Karl Jockum Jonas Bonnier[1] was born in Stockholm, to the wealthy Bonnier family. His father, Gert, was a professor of genetics at the University of Stockholm, while many members of his extensive family were in the publishing business. He spoke six languages and, although his parents hoped that he would become a doctor, for a while it was his aspiration to enter the family publishing business. He attended Oxford University for a year, studying languages, then went to Paris, France, planning to learn about publishing.

First competition

Bonnier began competitive racing in Sweden at age 17, on an old Harley-Davidson motorcycle. He returned home to Sweden in 1951 after his Paris trip, and later took part in several rallies as the proud owner of a Simca.[2]

Formula One

Bonnier at 1962 German Grand Prix driving a Porsche 804.

Bonnier entered Formula One in 1956, driving a Maserati. His racing career almost ended in September 1958 in a race at Imola. He debuted a 1500cc Maserati and moved up through the field following a bad start, passing Luigi Musso, and was gaining on leader Eugenio Castellotti at around two seconds per lap when he lost control after another car pulled directly into his path as they negotiated a fast corner. His Maserati struck a large rock at the edge of the road and catapulted. The other driver went underneath him as he turned over and over in the air and, while he was upside down, the crash helmet of his competitor made contact with his. Bonnier's Maserati landed on its side before skidding 75 feet and heading into a ditch, where it came to a stop against a pole. Bonnier was thrown out of the car and suffered concussion, several cracked ribs, and a broken vertebra. His car was completely written off.

His greatest achievement in Formula One was taking victory for BRM in the 1959 Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort, when the notoriously unreliable car worked well for once (Dan Gurney and Hans Herrmann had bad crashes after brake failures). He also won the 1960 German Grand Prix with a Porsche 718, a race held for Formula Two in preparation for the rule change of 1961. Bonnier was one of the driving forces behind the Grand Prix Drivers' Association. Despite his win for BRM, Bonnier did not drive for many works teams throughout his career, with only one-offs as a replacement driver for Lotus, Brabham and Honda. After his debut in a works Maserati, he then drove for his own Joakim Bonnier Racing Team and for Mimmo Dei's Scuderia Centro Sud in the late 50s, before finding a spot in the BRM and Porsche teams.

Bonnier in 1966.

After Porsche quit Grand Prix racing at the end of the 1962 season, Bonnier switched to Rob Walker Racing Team, the only privateer to have scored wins in World Championship events, where he drove Coopers and Brabhams, scoring few points.

In 1966, he reformed his own team as Anglo-Suisse Racing Team (later to be renamed Ecurie Bonnier), but his interest in Formula One gradually diminished. His last full season was 1968, in which he traded his old Cooper T86 for an old McLaren. He raced occasionally in Formula One until 1971. In 1966, along with American racing drivers Phil Hill, Richie Ginther and Carroll Shelby, he was racing advisor to the 1966 motor racing epic Grand Prix starring James Garner. All the aforementioned (including Garner, who did all his own driving) were employed as drivers for the racing scenes. While filming the 1966 Belgian Grand Prix at the notorious and extremely fast Spa-Francorchamps circuit, Bonnier, along with more than half the field including Jackie Stewart, Bob Bondurant, Graham Hill and Denny Hulme, crashed out on the first lap of the race. According to Phil Hill, Bonnier went through an upstairs window at a house next to the track and could not take part in the later filming on the circuit.

Sports car racer

Bonnier in a Chaparral, during practice at the Nürburgring in 1966

Alongside Formula One, Bonnier also took part in many sports car races. He won the 1960 Targa Florio, co-driving a works Porsche 718 with Hans Herrmann, and in 1962 took a Ferrari 250 TRI entered by Count Giovanni Volpi to top honours in the 12 Hours of Sebring, sharing the car with Lucien Bianchi. In 1963 he was once again winner at the Targa Florio, with Carlo Mario Abate in another works Porsche 718.

1964 was his best year in sports car racing, where he co-drove a Ferrari P entered by Maranello Concessionaires with Graham Hill, taking a 330P to second place in the 24 Hours of Le Mans and to a win at Montlhéry, while a 12-hour race in Reims also gave him a first place in a 250LM. He then won the 1000km Nürburgring in a Chaparral in 1966 (with Phil Hill), his last win in a major sports car event, but still managed to snatch victories in the minor 1000 km of Barcelona at Montjuïc in 1971 (with Ronnie Peterson), and the 4 Hours of Le Mans in 1972 (with Hughes de Fierlant).

Bonnier purchased a McLaren M6B to campaign in the 1968 Can-Am series. In the first outing at the Karlskoga Sweden GP, Bonnier had the pole but an off course excursion on the first lap caused him to finish second to David Piper in a Ferrari 330P3/4. He then ran his McLaren in five of the six Can-Am races with his best finish an eighth at Las Vegas.[3] He was plagued with mechanical problems most of the season. However, he finished 3rd in the M6B at the Mt Fuji 200-mile race.[4]

In 1970, he drove a Lola T210 to victory in the European 2-Litre Sports Car Championship, securing the drivers title at the end of the season with 48 points.[5]

Team management, safety campaigning and death

Joakim Bonnier in 1965

By the early seventies, he had taken to managing his team, entering several cars in World Sportscar Championship events, and taking a backseat to driving. He had also taken a lead in the fight for track safety, which had started around that time. Nevertheless, he was killed in a crash during the 1972 24 Hours of Le Mans. On the straight between Mulsanne Corner and Indianapolis, his open-top Lola T280-Cosworth collided with a Ferrari Daytona driven by a Swiss amateur driver Florian Vetsch. His car was catapulted over the Armco barriers and into the trees next to the track and he was killed instantly. According to Vic Elford, who was driving a factory-entered Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 and who had stopped to assist Vetsch escape from his burning Ferrari, the last he had seen of Bonnier's Lola was that it was "spinning into the trees like a helicopter".

Racing record

Complete Formula One World Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Joakim_Bonnier
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Year Entrant Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 WDC Pts
1956 Officine Alfieri Maserati Maserati 250F Maserati 250F1 2.5 L6 ARG MON 500 BEL FRA GBR GER ITA
Ret
NC 0
1957 Scuderia Centro Sud Maserati 250F Maserati 250F1 2.5 L6 ARG
7
PES
Ret
ITA
Ret
NC 0
Jo Bonnier MON
DNA
500 FRA GBR
Ret
GER
1958 Scuderia Centro Sud Maserati 250F Maserati 250F1 2.5 L6 ARG
DNA
GER
Ret
20th 3
Jo Bonnier MON
Ret
NED
10
500 BEL
9
GBR
Ret
POR
Ret
Giorgio Scarlatti FRA
8
Owen Racing Organisation BRM P25 BRM P25 2.5 L4 ITA
Ret
MOR
4
1959 Owen Racing Organisation BRM P25 BRM P25 2.5 L4 MON
Ret
500 NED
1
FRA
Ret
GBR
Ret
GER
5
POR
Ret
ITA
8
USA 8th 10
1960 Owen Racing Organisation BRM P25 BRM P25 2.5 L4 ARG
7
18th 4
BRM P48 MON
5
500 NED
Ret
BEL
Ret
FRA
Ret
GBR
Ret
POR
Ret
ITA USA
5
1961 Porsche System Engineering Porsche 787 Porsche 547/3 1.5 F4 MON
12
NED
11
15th 3
Porsche 718 BEL
7
FRA
7
GBR
5
GER
Ret
ITA
Ret
USA
6
1962 Porsche System Engineering Porsche 804 Porsche 753 1.5 F8 NED
7
BEL
WD
FRA
10
GBR
Ret
GER
7
ITA
6
USA
13
RSA 15th 3
Porsche 718 Porsche 547/3 1.5 F4 MON
5
1963 R.R.C. Walker Racing Team Cooper T60 Climax FWMV 1.5 V8 MON
7
BEL
5
NED
11
FRA
NC
11th 6
Cooper T66 GBR
Ret
GER
6
ITA
7
USA
8
MEX
5
RSA
6
1964 R.R.C. Walker Racing Team Cooper T66 Climax FWMV 1.5 V8 MON
5
15th 3
Brabham BT11 BRM P56 1.5 V8 NED
9
BEL
Ret
FRA GBR
Ret
GER
Ret
Brabham BT7 Climax FWMV 1.5 V8 AUT
6
ITA
12
USA
Ret
MEX
Ret
1965 R.R.C. Walker Racing Team Brabham BT7 Climax FWMV 1.5 V8 RSA
Ret
MON
7
BEL
Ret