Nigel Mansell

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Nigel Mansell
File:Nigel Mansell - Mexican Grand Prix 01.JPG
Mansell at the 2015 Mexican Grand Prix.
Nationality United Kingdom British
Born Nigel Ernest James Mansell
(1953-08-08) 8 August 1953 (age 70)
Upton-upon-Severn, United Kingdom
Formula One World Championship career
Active years 19801992, 19941995
Teams Lotus, Williams, Ferrari, McLaren
Entries 191 (187 starts)
Championships 1 (1992)
Wins 31
Podiums 59
Career points 480 (482)[1]
Pole positions 32
Fastest laps 30
First entry 1980 Austrian Grand Prix
First win 1985 European Grand Prix
Last win 1994 Australian Grand Prix
Last entry 1995 Spanish Grand Prix
CART IndyCar World Series
Years active 19931994
Teams Newman/Haas Racing
Starts 31
Championships 1 (1993)
Wins 5
Poles 11
Fastest laps 4
Championship titles
1993 CART IndyCar World Series champion, CART Rookie of the Year
Awards
1993 Royal Automobile Club Gold Medal, ESPY for Best Driver
24 Hours of Le Mans career
Participating years 2010
Teams Beechdean Mansell
Best finish DNF

Nigel Ernest James Mansell, CBE (born August 8, 1953 in Upton-upon-Severn, Worcestershire) is an English former racing driver who won both the Formula One World Championship (1992) and the CART Indy Car World Series (1993). Mansell was the reigning F1 champion when he moved over to CART, becoming the first person to win the CART title in his debut season, and making him the only person to hold both titles simultaneously.

His career in Formula One spanned 15 seasons, with his final two full seasons of top-level racing being spent in the CART series. Mansell is the second most successful British Formula One driver of all time in terms of race wins with 31 victories, and is seventh overall on the Formula One race winners list behind Michael Schumacher, Alain Prost, Lewis Hamilton, Sebastian Vettel, Ayrton Senna, and Fernando Alonso.[2] He held the record for the most number of poles set in a single season, which was broken in 2011 by Sebastian Vettel. He was rated in the top 10 Formula One drivers of all time by longtime Formula One commentator Murray Walker.[3] In 2008, ESPN.com ranked him 24th on their "Top 25 Drivers of All Time" list.[4] He was also ranked No. 9 of the 50 greatest F1 drivers of all time by the Times Online on a list that also included such drivers as Alain Prost, Ayrton Senna, Jackie Stewart and Jim Clark.[5]

Mansell raced in the Grand Prix Masters series in 2005, and won the championship title. He later signed a one-off race deal for the Scuderia Ecosse GT race team to drive their number 63 Ferrari F430 GT2 car at Silverstone on 6 May 2007. He has since competed in additional sports car races with his sons Leo and Greg, including the 2010 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Mansell was inducted to the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 2005. He is the current President of one of the UK's largest Youth Work Charities, UK Youth.[6] He is also President of the IAM (Institute of Advanced Motorists). In September 2014, it was announced that Mansell would be opening a Mitsubishi franchise on Jersey later in the month.[7] In September 2015 the organisers of the Mexican Grand Prix (which was returning to Formula One after a 23-year absence) announced that the final corner of the redesigned Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez circuit would be named after the 1992 Formula One World Champion and winner of the final race at the Mexico City circuit before it was dropped from the Formula One calendar for the 1993 season.

Early life and career

Nigel Ernest James Mansell was born on 8 August 1953 in Upton-upon-Severn, Worcestershire, the son of Eric, an engineer and Joyce Mansell. Mansell spent 11 years of his life as a Special Constable in the Isle of Man during his driving career and in Devon and Cornwall after he retired from racing and was developing a golf course in Devon.[8]

He had a fairly slow start to his racing career, using his own money to help work his way up the ranks. After considerable success in kart racing, he moved to the Formula Ford series to the disapproval of his father. In 1976, Mansell won 6 of the 9 races he took part in, including his debut event at Mallory Park. He entered 42 races the following year and won 33 to become the 1977 British Formula Ford champion, despite suffering a broken neck in a qualifying session at Brands Hatch. Doctors told him he had been perilously close to quadriplegia, that he would be confined for six months and would never drive again. Mansell discharged himself from the hospital and returned to racing. Three weeks before the accident he had resigned his job as an aerospace engineer, having previously sold most of his personal belongings to finance his foray into Formula Ford.[9] Later that year he was given the chance to race a Lola T570 Formula 3 car at Silverstone. He finished fourth and decided that he was ready to move into the higher formula.[10]

Mansell raced in Formula Three in 1978–1980. Mansell's first season in Formula Three started with a pole position and a 2nd-place finish. However, the car was not competitive, as a commercial deal with Unipart required his team to use Triumph Dolomite engines that were vastly inferior to the Toyota engines used by the leading teams.[citation needed] After three 7th-place finishes and a fourth in his last race, he parted from the team. The next season saw him take a paid drive with Dave Price Racing. Following a first win in the series at Silverstone in March, he went on to finish 8th in the championship.[10] His racing was consistent, but a collision with Andrea de Cesaris resulted in a huge cartwheeling crash which he was lucky to survive. Again he was hospitalised, this time with broken vertebrae.

His driving was noticed by Colin Chapman, owner of Lotus, and shortly after his accident, hiding the extent of his injury with painkillers, Mansell performed well enough during a tryout at the Paul Ricard circuit with Lotus, where he was pitted against a number of other drivers to determine who was going to take the second seat for the 1980 season alongside Mario Andretti, as Argentinean Carlos Reutemann was leaving to go to Williams. Driving a 79, the seat eventually went to Italian driver Elio de Angelis, but Mansell was selected to become a test driver for the Norfolk-based Formula One team.

Formula One

1980–84: Lotus

1980 and 1981

Mansell's skill as a test driver, including setting the fastest lap around Silverstone in a Lotus car at the time, impressed Chapman enough to give him a trio of starts in F1 in 1980, driving a development version of the Lotus 81 used by the team, the Lotus 81B. In his Formula One debut at the 1980 Austrian Grand Prix, a fuel leak in the cockpit that developed shortly before the start of the race left him with painful first and second degree burns on his buttocks. An engine failure forced him to retire from that race and his second, however an accident at his third event at Imola meant he failed to qualify. Team leader Mario Andretti wrote his car off in a start-line accident during the Canadian Grand Prix at Montreal, so Mansell had to give up his car for Andretti to compete in for his home race, the final race of the season at Watkins Glen in the United States. Andretti announced he was leaving to move to Alfa Romeo at the end of the season leaving Lotus with a vacant race seat.

Despite Mansell being unpopular with sponsor David Thieme of Essex Petroleum, and much speculation in the press that Jean-Pierre Jarier would fill the vacancy, Chapman announced at the start of the season the seat would be filled by Mansell.

Mansell's four years as a full-time Lotus driver were a struggle, as the cars were unreliable and he was continually out performed by teammate Elio de Angelis. Out of 59 race starts with the team, he finished just 24 of them. He managed a best finish of third place, which he achieved five times during the four years, including Lotus's fifth race of the 1981 season, and only the seventh of Mansell's Formula One career. Team mate Elio de Angelis took a surprise win at the 1982 Austrian Grand Prix, and was frequently faster than his less experienced colleague Mansell.

1982
Mansell's Lotus 91 from 1982 on display

During the 1982 season, Mansell planned to race in the 24 Hours of Le Mans sportscar event in order to earn extra money. At the time Mansell was paid £50,000 a year and was offered £10,000 to take part in Le Mans. Chapman believed that by entering the Le Mans race, Mansell was exposing himself to unnecessary risk and paid him £10,000 to not take part in the race. Chapman extended Mansell's contract to the end of the 1984 season in a deal that made him a millionaire.[11]

As a result of the gestures, such as described above, Mansell became very close to Chapman, who made him equal number one in the team with de Angelis, and was devastated by Chapman's sudden death in 1982. In his autobiography Mansell stated that when Chapman died, "The bottom dropped out of my world. Part of me died with him. I had lost a member of my family". Following Chapman's death, relationships at Lotus became strained, as replacement team principal Peter Warr did not have a high regard for him as a driver or person. Warr in his book titled Team Lotus - My View From The Pit Wall stated about the 1982 season, "After carefully analysing the season just finished, it was completely clear who was the number one. It was Elio. He was faster, he had out-qualified Nigel ten times to three. Elio had seven points scoring finishes to Nigel's two and in addition to Elio's win in Austria, had a tally of more than three times the number of points gained by Nigel. What is more, the margin by which Elio eclipsed his team-mate in qualifying overall was a huge 4.5 per cent. And all this in the year when, as near as can be reasonably achieved, the two drivers were given equal equipment and treatment."

1983

De Angelis was then promoted back to outright number one for the 1983 season. This was demonstrated by the fact that he had exclusive use of the quick but unreliable Renault turbo-charged 93T for the whole season, and Mansell did not get to drive a turbocharged car until the 9th round, the British Grand Prix at Silverstone, a race where he climbed from 16th to 2nd and eventually finished 4th in a brand-new, hastily designed 94T. Due to their tumultuous relationship and a lack of decent results, Warr was not keen on honouring the last year of the contract that Mansell had signed with Chapman. However, with encouragement from Lotus's sponsors, John Player Special (who allegedly preferred a British driver), and with the only other top British driver (Derek Warwick) already confirmed to be joining the factory Renault team, it was announced Mansell would be staying with the team.

1984
Mansell at the 1984 Dallas Grand Prix

In 1984, Mansell finished in the championship top 10 for the first time, and took his first career pole position but still finished behind teammate de Angelis, who finished 3rd, in the championship. At the 1984 Monaco Grand Prix Mansell surprised many by overtaking Alain Prost in a wet race for the lead, but soon after retired from the race after losing control on the slippery painted lines on the road surface on the run up the hill on lap 15. Late in the season, Lotus announced the recruitment of Ayrton Senna for the following year, leaving Mansell with no race seat at Lotus. After receiving offers from Arrows and Williams, and first turning down Williams's offer, it was announced before the Dutch Grand Prix that he would indeed be joining Williams.

Mansell was remembered by many that year when he collapsed while pushing his car to the finish line after the transmission failed on the last lap of the 1984 Dallas Grand Prix. The race was one of the hottest on record, and after 2 hours of driving in 104 °F (about 40 °C) conditions Mansell fainted while pushing his car over the line to salvage a sixth-place finish (and thus 1 championship point) in a race of which he had led half, having started from pole.[12]

In his autobiography, Mansell claimed that his final race with the Lotus team—the 1984 Portuguese Grand Prix—was heavily compromised by Warr's unwillingness to give Mansell the brake pads he desired for the race. With 18 laps of the race remaining, and with Mansell in second position, the brakes on his car failed. On Mansell's departure, Warr was quoted as saying "He'll never win a Grand Prix as long as I have a hole in my arse".[13]

1985–88: Williams

1985

In 1985 Frank Williams hired Mansell to drive alongside Keke Rosberg as part of the Williams team, Mansell later saying "Keke was probably one of the best team-mates I've had in my career".[citation needed] Mansell was given the now famous "Red 5" (also the call-sign of the X-Wing fighter that Luke Skywalker pilots in Star Wars) number on his car, which he carried on subsequent Williams and Newman/Haas cars and which was brought to the public's attention mainly through commentator Murray Walker and his enthusiastic commentary for the BBC.

Rosberg, the 1982 World Champion who was heading into his fourth season with the team, was initially against Williams signing Mansell based on the clash the pair had at Dallas the previous year (Rosberg won that race and in an interview while on the podium publicly berated Mansell's blocking tactics while leading early in the race, which earned Rosberg a round of boos from the crowd who had appreciated Mansell's courage in trying to push his Lotus to the finish in the extreme heat). Other factors were what Rosberg later said in a 1986 interview was second hand information about Mansell which ultimately proved to be false. The drivers found they got along well and from early in the pre-season formed a good working and personal relationship.

1985 initially appeared to provide more of the same for Mansell, although he was closer to the pace than before, especially as the Honda engines became more competitive by mid-season.

During practice for the 1985 French Grand Prix, Mansell unwillingly broke the record for the highest speed crash in Formula One history. At the end of the Paul Ricard Circuit's 1.8 km long Mistral Straight he went off at the fast Courbe de Signes at over 200 mph (322 km/h) in his Williams FW10. Mansell suffered a concussion which kept him out of the race. Team mate Rosberg claimed the pole for the race and finished second behind the Brabham-BMW of Nelson Piquet.

Mansell achieved second place at the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps, and followed this with his first victory in 72 starts at the European Grand Prix at Brands Hatch in England. He achieved a second straight victory at the South African Grand Prix in Kyalami. These triumphs helped turn Mansell into a Formula One star.

1986

Going into 1986, the Williams-Honda team had a car capable of winning regularly, and Mansell had established himself as a potential World Championship contender. He also had a new team-mate in twice World Champion Nelson Piquet who had joined Williams looking to be a regular winner and contender again after the Brabham-BMWs had become increasingly unreliable and uncompetitive. The Brazilian publicly described Mansell as "an uneducated blockhead" and had also criticised his wife, Roseanne.[14]

Unperturbed by Piquet's mind games, Mansell went on to record five Grand Prix wins in 1986 and also played part in one of the closest finishes in Formula One history, finishing second to Ayrton Senna in the Spanish Grand Prix at Jerez by a mere 0.014 seconds (Mansell later jokingly said they should give himself and Senna 7½ points each). The 1986 season was led mostly by Mansell in championship points, and it went right down-to-the-wire in Adelaide, Australia for the Australian Grand Prix with Prost, Piquet and Mansell all still in contention for the title. The equation was simple, Prost and Piquet needed to win and have Mansell finish no higher than fourth. After aiming for a third-place finish which would guarantee him the title, Mansell would narrowly miss out on winning it after his left-rear tyre exploded in spectacular fashion on the main straight with only 19 laps of the race to go.[15] In a 2012 interview for Sky Sports Legends of F1[16] Mansell revealed that, had he hit the wall rather than wrestling the car safely to a halt in the runoff area at the end of the straight, the stewards would most likely have red flagged the race. As the race was over two thirds distance, he would have kept his position and won his first F1 world title. Instead Mansell ended the season as runner-up to Alain Prost. His efforts in 1986 led to his being voted the BBC Sports Personality of the Year.

1986 proved to be a tough year for both Mansell and the Williams team, off the track at least. After a pre-season test session at the Paul Ricard Ciruit in the south of France, team owner Frank Williams was involved in a horrific road accident which left him a tetraplegic. Williams would not return to the scene until making a surprise appearance at the British Grand Prix at Brands Hatch where Mansell and Piquet finished 1-2. Williams' absence from the day-to-day running of the team actually created tension between the team and engine supplier Honda. The Japanese giant regarded dual World Champion Nelson Piquet as the team's number 1 driver (they were reportedly paying the bulk of Piquet's multimillion-dollar retainer) and were reportedly unhappy that the team's co-owner and Technical Director Patrick Head did not rein in Mansell during races and allowed him to take both points and wins from Piquet. As it was, while Williams dominated the Constructors' Championship, the two drivers took enough points from each other to allow McLaren's Alain Prost to sneak through and win the Drivers' Championship.

Before the season had started Honda had reportedly attempted to persuade Frank Williams to fire Mansell and replace him with their own test driver Satoru Nakajima. Williams, who was always more interested in the Constructors' title than the Drivers' as it showed that his team was the best, refused to do this, rightly believing that having two proven F1 winners in Piquet and Mansell would better serve the team than Nakajima would as an F1 rookie.

1987

Six more wins followed in 1987, including an emotional and hugely popular victory at Silverstone for the British Grand Prix in which he came back from 28 seconds behind in 30 laps to beat team-mate Piquet, with his car running out of fuel on the slowing down lap.[17] However, at the Italian Grand Prix, he missed a gear and let Piquet, who was using an active suspension car, through to win. A heavy qualifying accident at Suzuka in Japan for the penultimate race of the season severely injured Mansell's back (a spinal concussion), and as a result of Mansell absent from the remaining two races, Piquet became champion for the third time even though he failed to score any points in these two remaining races. Piquet called his win over Mansell as "a win of luck over stupidity".[18] The Brazilian also added he won because he was more consistent than his team mate, racking up points and podiums where Mansell often ran into trouble. Piquet's was a percentage driving policy which worked well in the ultra-competitive Williams-Honda, whereas Mansell was a hard charger who many felt often pushed his luck too far.

1988

In 1988, for the first time in his career, Mansell was a team's undisputed #1 driver, having won more races in the previous two seasons than any other driver. However Williams lost the turbo power of Honda to McLaren, and had to settle with a naturally aspirated Judd V8 engine in its first season in F1. A dismal season followed, which saw Mansell's Williams team experiment with a terribly unreliable (but extremely innovative) active suspension system (the system had worked well when introduced by the team in 1987 where it could draw on approximately 5% of the reported 1,000 bhp (746 kW; 1,014 PS) produced by the Honda turbo, but struggled with the 600 bhp (447 kW; 608 PS) Judd V8). Mansell would complete only two of the fourteen races in which he appeared in 1988, both being podium finishes. Ironically, one of these was a second place at the British Grand Prix at Silverstone where literally overnight the team had dumped its active suspension (after months of Patrick Head telling Mansell and team mate Riccardo Patrese that it would take many months of work to do so), and reverted to a passive suspension set-up.

Mansell developed chickenpox in the summer of 1988 and after a competitive (but ill-advised) drive in the very hot conditions of the 1988 Hungarian Grand Prix the illness became even worse, forcing him to miss the next two Grands Prix in Belgium where he was replaced by Martin Brundle, and Italy where he was infamously replaced by Frenchman Jean-Louis Schlesser. By missing the Italian Grand Prix at Monza, Mansell missed the traditional welcome by the Tifosi for a newly signed Ferrari driver after he had announced he would be leaving Williams to join the Maranello based team for 1989.

One thing Mansell did relish about the 1988 season was no longer having Nelson Piquet as his team mate. Piquet had left the team to join Lotus who were running Honda engines, though Mansell relished consistently out-performing the reigning World Champion in his more powerful Lotus-Honda, and it was only unreliability (usually related to the new Judd engines or the troublesome active suspension) that prevented the Englishman from scoring more points than Piquet. His team mate in 1988 was Italian veteran Riccardo Patrese, the most experienced Grand Prix driver at the time. Patrese had replaced the injured Mansell at the 1987 Australian Grand Prix and the two would form a good personal and working relationship.

1989–90: Ferrari

File:Nigel Mansell 1990 USA.jpg
Nigel Mansell during his time with Scuderia Ferrari
1989

In preparation for the 1989 season, Mansell became the last Ferrari driver to be personally selected by Enzo Ferrari before his death in August 1988, an honour Mansell described as "one of the greatest in my entire career". Enzo Ferrari presented a 1989 Ferrari F40 as a gift to Mansell.[19] In Italy he became known as "il leone" ("the lion") by the tifosi (Ferrari fans) because of his fearless driving style. The season was one of change in the sport, with the banning of turbo engines by the FIA and the introduction of the electronically controlled semi-automatic transmission by Ferrari.

Mansell believed that 1989 would be a development year and that he would be able to challenge for the championship the following season. In his first appearance with the team he scored a very unlikely win in the Brazilian Grand Prix at the Autódromo Internacional Nelson Piquet in Rio de Janeiro; his least favourite track, and the home race of his bitter rival Piquet. He later joked[citation needed] that he had booked an early flight home for halfway through the race as he predicted the car's new electronic gearbox would last only a few laps (as it had done throughout pre-season testing and in qualifying for the race). Mansell became the first driver to win a race in a car with a semi-automatic gearbox. He also remained the last man to win on his Ferrari debut until Kimi Räikkönen in the 2007 Australian Grand Prix.

The rest of 1989 was characterised by gearbox and various other problems, including a disqualification at the Canadian Grand Prix and a black-flagged incident at the Portuguese Grand Prix for reversing in the pit-lane, which resulted in a ban for the next race in Spain. However, Mansell finished fourth in the Championship with the help of a memorable second win for Ferrari at the tight and twisty Hungaroring for the Hungarian Grand Prix. Early in practice Mansell had seen that trying to qualify the car high on the grid was a pointless exercise and he decided instead to concentrate on a good race set up. After qualifying 12th (0.681 behind team mate Gerhard Berger in 6th and 2.225 behind pole man Riccardo Patrese in his Williams-Renault) and not even being considered a chance for the race, he charged his way through the field until he pulled off a sensational passing manoeuvre on the McLaren-Honda of World Champion Ayrton Senna on lap 58 to take a lead he would not lose.

1990

A tough 1990 followed with Ferrari, in which his car suffered more reliability problems, forcing him to retire from seven races. He was paired with Alain Prost, (who was also the reigning World Champion), and who took over as the team's lead driver. Mansell recalls one incident where at the 1990 British Grand Prix, the car he drove did not handle the same as in the previous race where he had taken pole position. On confronting the mechanics, it transpired that Prost saw Mansell as having a superior car and as a result, they were swapped without telling Mansell.[20] After retiring from the race, he announced he was retiring from the sport altogether at the end of the season. This, combined with the fact that Frenchman Prost was not only a triple World Champion and the winner of more Grands Prix than anyone in history, but also spoke fluent Italian, whereas Mansell's Italian was only conversational at best, gave Prost greater influence within the Maranello based team.

Mansell scored only a single win, at the 1990 Portuguese Grand Prix, and finished a thrilling second to Nelson Piquet in Australia, and finished 5th in the world championship. His retirement plans were halted when Frank Williams again stepped in. Williams signed Mansell on 1 October 1990 after Mansell was ensured the contract stated that he would be the focus of the team, having experienced being the 'Number Two' driver at Ferrari. Mansell would be paid £4.6 million a season, a deal which made him the highest paid British sportsman at the time.[21]

1991–92: Return to Williams

1991

Mansell's return to Williams was not straightforward. He would agree to return only if a list of demands were met, including undisputed number one status over Riccardo Patrese (who had also been his team mate in 1988), guarantees of support in a wide variety of areas with each guarantee in writing, and assurances from suppliers such as Renault and Elf that they would do everything necessary to help him win. Frank Williams said the demands were 'impossible', Mansell concluded that if that were the case he would be happy to retire. Three weeks later the impossible had happened and Mansell was a Williams driver.[22]

His second stint with Williams was even better than the first. Back in the familiar 'Red 5', he won five races in 1991, most memorably in the Spanish Grand Prix. In this race he went wheel to wheel with Ayrton Senna, with only centimetres to spare, at over 320 km/h (199 mph) on the main straight. Quite a different spectacle was offered following Mansell's victory in the British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Senna's car had stopped on the final lap, but, rather than leave his rival stranded out on the circuit (the two had actually come to blows in the pits following their first lap tangle during the 1987 Belgian Grand Prix and were hardly close friends), Mansell pulled over on his victory lap and allowed Senna to ride on the Williams sidepod back to the pits.

The Williams team's decision to develop their new semi-automatic gearbox by racing with it at the start of the season, was at the cost of points in the opening rounds of the championship. Senna was on 40 points with four straight wins to open the season by the time Mansell gained his first finish with a second in Monaco. Mansell then had the next race in Canada practically won when his Williams FW14 stopped half a lap from the finish with what was reported to be transmission failure, though it was suspected that Mansell had let his engine revs drop too low while he was waving to the crowd in celebration and stalled his engine. Ironically this handed Nelson Piquet his 23rd and last F1 race win. Despite a good mid season, which included a hat-trick of victories, Senna's consistency (and Mansell's retirements at key races) meant that he finished second in the Championship for the third time in his career, this time behind Senna.

1992

1992 would be Mansell's finest season. He started the year with five straight victories (a record not equalled until Michael Schumacher in 2004). At the sixth round of the season in Monaco, he took pole and dominated much of the race. However, with seven laps remaining, Mansell suffered a loose wheel nut and was forced into the pits, emerging behind Ayrton Senna's McLaren-Honda. Mansell, on fresh tyres, set a lap record almost two seconds quicker than Senna's and closed from 5.2 to 1.9 seconds in only two laps. The pair duelled around Monaco for the final four laps but Mansell could find no way past, finishing just 0.2 seconds behind the Brazilian.[23][24] Mansell became the most successful British driver of all time when he won the British Grand Prix at Silverstone, as he surpassed Jackie Stewart's record of 27 wins with his 28th. Mansell was crowned Formula One World Champion early in the season at the Hungarian Grand Prix, the eleventh round of that season, where his second-place finish clinched the Drivers' Championship, securing the title in the least number of Grands Prix since the 16-race season format started. Mansell also set the then-record for the most number of wins in one season (9); both records stood until broken by Schumacher in 2002. He managed 14 pole positions that year, a record only broken by Sebastian Vettel in 2011 in the Brazilian Grand Prix on 26 November.

Other Formula One records set in 1992 that he still holds are the highest percentage of pole positions in a season (88%), most wins from pole position in a season (9) most races before becoming World Champion (180 races) and most runner-up championship finishes before becoming World Champion (3). Mansell also holds the record for obtaining pole position and scoring fastest lap and subsequently retiring from the race (1987 German Grand Prix, 1990 British Grand Prix, 1992 Japanese Grand Prix, and 1992 Italian Grand Prix). He is the driver having the most wins (31) without ever winning Monaco.

He won the BBC Sports Personality of the Year award again in 1992, one of only three people to have won the award twice.

CART IndyCar World Series

Mansell in the CART series in 1993

Despite being world champion, Mansell had a public disagreement with Williams. In his autobiography Mansell writes that this was because of a deal made at the previous Hungarian Grand Prix, which Williams reneged on, and the prospect of his former teammate Alain Prost, who had sat out the 1992 season, joining the Renault-powered team.

Williams had neglected to tell Mansell that Prost had signed for 1993 at only the second race of the 1992 season in Mexico, a position that Mansell felt would be similar to their days together at Ferrari. To boot, Ayrton Senna had expressed a strong desire to drive for Williams and even offered to drive for them at no salary (only to later be rebuffed as Prost, whose rivalry with the Brazilian was just as intense as the one he had with Mansell, had a clause written into his contract which enabled him to block Senna's effort). Williams decided that there was little sense in paying the high fees Mansell went on to demand. With the original offer revoked, and with the premiere teams already committed to their incumbent drivers, Mansell decided to move on. An eleventh hour offer was made to him at the Italian Grand Prix, but by then the damage was done; Mansell retired from F1.

Mansell then signed with Newman/Haas Racing to pair with Mario Andretti in the CART series, replacing Mario's son Michael who moved to F1 and McLaren. At the season opener at Surfers Paradise, Australia, he became the first "rookie" to take pole position and win his first race. A few weeks later however, he suffered a substantial crash at the Phoenix International Raceway, severely injuring his back. At the 1993 Indianapolis 500, Mansell would lead the race only to finish third after losing the lead to Emerson Fittipaldi and Arie Luyendyk after a poor restart. On his 40th birthday, however, Mansell would avenge his loss at Indianapolis to score a 500-mile race victory at Michigan, considered by many a tougher 500 mile race to win. He would go on to score five wins for the 1993 CART season, which, with more high-placed finishes, was good enough to earn him the championship. This enabled Mansell to become the only driver in history to hold both the Formula One and CART championships at the same time, because when he won the 1993 CART championship he was still the reigning F1 world champion, with the 1993 F1 championship not yet having been decided.

Following this successful season in CART, Mansell received several awards, including a Gold Medal from the Royal Automobile Club and the 1993 ESPY Award for Best Driver.

His Newman/Haas car was much less reliable the following year, 1994, and results suffered. It was during this season that Mansell "wore out his welcome" in the United States with glimpses of rude behaviour, particularly after he was knocked out of the Indianapolis 500. After the crash, he stormed out of the track hospital, and refused medical care. When reporter Dr. Jerry Punch asked Mansell if he had spoken with Dennis Vitolo, the driver who had crashed into him, Mansell replied, "You speak to him" and shoved the camera away. Subsequently, Mansell was due to sign autographs at a K-mart store (the primary sponsor of his car), but because of a lack of demand the event was cancelled. Mansell was also the catalyst for the breakdown in the relationship between himself and Mario Andretti. Mario has since remarked "I guess if Ronnie Peterson was the best team-mate I ever had, Nigel Mansell was the worst" and "I had a lot of respect for him as a driver, but not as a man".[25]

Brief return to Formula One

Williams (1994)

In 1994, after the CART season ended, Mansell returned to F1 and rejoined the Williams team. Since he left the team in 1993, it had undergone some significant changes. Damon Hill had been promoted from test driver and was running full-time in one Renault. Prost, Mansell's replacement, won the 1993 driver's championship and then retired after the season. This allowed Williams and Ayrton Senna to finally work out an agreement, and the team received a new sponsor in Rothmans International for a season in which they were expected to repeat as champions. However, Senna struggled early in the season and then was killed in a crash at Imola.

Mansell took over the car Senna was brought in to drive toward the end of the 1994 campaign Mansell was paid approximately £900,000 per race, compared to his teammate Hill being paid £300,000 for the entire season.[26] Mansell's return was helped by Bernie Ecclestone helping unravel his contracts in the United States. It was important for F1 to have a world champion driving that season and with worldwide TV viewing figures starting to decline, they needed Mansell. The 40-year-old wasn't as quick as Damon Hill in race trim but signs that his speeds were coming back were evident in Japan during a fantastic battle with the Ferrari of Jean Alesi. Mansell took his final Grand Prix victory in Adelaide, the last race of the season, having out-qualified the two title contenders at the time, Damon Hill and Michael Schumacher, in the process (helped out by the second qualifying session being held on a wet track, with the times from the 1st session making up the grid). The plan initially was for Mansell to protect Hill from Schumacher, but both drivers passed him at the start and eventually collided (causing the retirement of both), handing Schumacher his 1st world title.

Williams had an option on Mansell's services for 1995 which Mansell was convinced they would take. Williams however, opted for youth over experience and hired Coulthard.

McLaren (1995)

Mansell was quick again and on the back of winning two titles, he was still hot property. After losing the Williams seat to David Coulthard, Mansell signed to drive for McLaren in 1995.

It was well documented that Mansell and Ron Dennis never saw eye to eye and Dennis had reportedly said he would never hire a driver he did not understand, a category in which he placed Mansell. McLaren's title sponsors Marlboro wanted a world champion, whereas McLaren and their engine suppliers Mercedes wanted a lower-key profile driver for what was their first official year back in Formula One since 1955.[27] Dennis also had two other options. The first option was an unsuccessful attempt to lure Alain Prost out of retirement, though the 4 time champion ultimately declined (he did become a part-time test driver for the team). The second option, reigning champion Schumacher, was contracted to Benetton and he would not leave the team that year as they had obtained use of the championship winning Renault V10 engines. Media speculated from the start that they would not last together because of their two contrasting personalities.

Before the season started, Mansell could not fit into the narrow car and was deputised by Mark Blundell for the opening two rounds. Mansell's car was completed in 33 days and in time for Imola, where despite being in the top 6 late in the race, a clash with Eddie Irvine saw him finish 10th and out of the points.[28] The Spanish Grand Prix saw Mansell become frustrated over his car's handling characteristics, he chose to retire after just two races with the team. Mansell cited the decision to retire as his not wanting to make up the numbers and with no hope of the McLaren MP4/10 being competitive.

A few testing sessions with F1 teams including Jordan suggested another comeback could be on the cards, but it never happened. Reports at the time suggested[29] that the Mansell-Jordan partnership for 1997 was a real possibility with Eddie Jordan's title sponsor willing to pay for the deal.[29]

British Touring Car Championship

File:Mansell BTCC1998.jpg
Mansell competing at Brands Hatch in the BTCC.

Mansell took part in the 1993 TOCA Shootout, held at Donington Park. Mansell drove a Ford Mondeo with his usual red number 5. The race ended in disaster for Mansell; he was knocked unconscious following a crash with 6 laps remaining.[30] He lost control of his car through the exit of the Old Hairpin, over-corrected the slide and collided with Tiff Needell's Vauxhall Cavalier, resulting in a spin and a heavy impact with the tyre wall under the bridge.[31]

Mansell made a return to racing in 1998 in the British Touring Car Championship, driving in a Ford Mondeo for three rounds. With the number 5 already taken by James Thompson, Mansell raced with the red number 55.[32][33]

At his first event at Donington Park, he retired 3 laps into the sprint race, meaning he would start the feature race in 19th position on the grid. As the conditions changed and the track got wetter, Mansell found himself leading the race for several laps, and he finished in 5th position.[34] The race was regarded by many fans as one of the greatest in touring car history.[35]

It was to be his best finish in the series, as he failed to finish either race at the next round he participated in at Brands Hatch, and at his final race at Silverstone he finished in 14th and 11th place.[36][37] Having competed in 3 of the 13 rounds, he finished 18th out of 21 in the drivers' championship.[38]

Subsequent appearances

File:Mansell jordan 2004.jpg
Mansell demonstrating a Jordan EJ14 in London, 2004

On 16 July 2005, Mansell took part in a Race of Legends exhibition event at the Norisring round of the DTM.[39] He competed against other Formula One World Champions Jody Scheckter, Alain Prost and Emerson Fittipaldi, as well as Motorcycle Grand Prix World Champions Mick Doohan and Johnny Cecotto (himself a former F1 driver), each driver having an opportunity to drive Audi, Mercedes and Opel cars. Prost was announced as the winner by the DTM organisers.[40]

Mansell became a financial stakeholder and a driver in the new Grand Prix Masters series. Following a period of testing and developing the car, Mansell made a successful race comeback by winning the inaugural race of the series in Kyalami in November 2005 (Mansell had won at the old Kyalami circuit in 1985 and had also won at the new circuit in 1992).[41] After the success of the race at Kyalami, four dates were scheduled for the GP Masters Series in 2006, including one at Silverstone. Mansell won the season opener at Qatar in April from pole position.[42] The Monza round of the series was cancelled due to noise limitations at the venue, whilst technical issues quickly ruled him out of the Silverstone race.[43]

Also in 2006 he appeared at Brands Hatch, scene of his first Grand Prix win, in October 1985, driving some demonstration laps in the BMW M3 GTR that Andy Priaulx drove to victory in the 2005 24 Hours Nürburgring, as part of the World Touring Car Championship event.

On the weekend of 6 May 2007 he made an appearance in the second round of the FIA GT Championship at Silverstone driving a Ferrari 430 GT2 for the Scuderia Ecosse team.[44] He was paired with Chris Niarchos, finishing 7th in class and 21st overall.[45]

Mansell, with his son Leo, tested a Chamberlain-Synergy team Le Mans prototype Lola-AER B06/10 during the week commencing 14 July 2008, at the Estoril circuit. The pair were said to be considering a drive in the American Le Mans series, possibly commencing as soon as October 2008 in the Petit Le Mans event,[46][47] although neither driver was in the final field.

On 3 July 2009, Mansell tested his other son Greg's World Series by Renault car at the Silverstone Circuit, setting a best time six seconds off the pace of the fastest driver in the session.[48]

Mansell took part in the last round of the 2009 Le Mans Series, the 1000 km of Silverstone, driving Team LNT's Ginetta-Zytek GZ09S alongside his son Greg and team boss Lawrence Tomlinson.[49]

Mansell raced a Ginetta-Zytek GZ09S in the 2010 24 Hours of Le Mans, alongside his two sons.[50] According to the BBC, this was the first time a father has raced at Le Mans in the same car as his two sons. However, in the race he crashed out after only five laps, following a puncture.[51]

For the 2010 Formula One season, the Sporting Regulations were changed so that a former driver sits on the stewards' panel. Mansell took this role at the 2010, 2011 and 2012 British Grand Prix.

Endorsements

On 1 October 2009 Nigel appeared as the 'Face of Euronics'.[52]

In 2010, Nigel paired with Iranian-British comic Omid Djalili in an UK television advertising campaign for price comparison website Moneysupermarket.com and at the end of the first ad, Djalili put a fake moustache on Mansell's upper lip.

Video games

There were three video games endorsed by Mansell: Nigel Mansell's Grand Prix (1988, Martech), Nigel Mansell's World Championship (1993, Gremlin Graphics), and Newman/Haas IndyCar (1994). Mansell also appeared as a playable driver for Williams in Codemasters' F1 2013.

Personal life

Mansell currently lives in Jersey, Channel Islands. Mansell lived in Port Erin on the Isle of Man during most of his F1 career until 1995.[53]

A keen golf player, Mansell revealed a desire to compete in the British Open Golf Championship[54] and briefly participated in the 1988 Australian Open.[55]

Mansell is the owner of the Team UK Youth cycling team.[56]

In 2009, Mansell purchased a Personal Protection Dog for £15k.[57] The dog, a German Shepherd called Geisha, had been professionally trained and was bought to protect Mansell and his family at his home in Jersey.

After his official retirement from Formula One in 1995, he shaved off his well known moustache. The last time before that he appeared without the moustache was in the first half of the 1988 season. The moustache made a re-appearance when Mansell was interviewed by the BBC at the 2014 Japanese Grand Prix.

His sons Leo and Greg are also racing drivers, while his daughter Chloe is a designer.

Helmet

Mansell raced with a blue helmet with two red and white arrows on each side forming on the frontview a drawing resembling the Union Flag with the upper angles of the arrows united by a red and white 'U', with the white chin area, when he entered to Williams, it was added a blue ring on the white part of the helmet. His sons Leo and Greg inherited his helmet design, but Leo's helmet has the red chin area and the white part that envelopes the visor (not counting the top) is red with white outline, while Greg's helmet has the blue chin area and the white area that envelopes the visor is blue with white outline.

"Red 5"

Although teams in motor racing series are generally allocated numbers, for many years Mansell has been associated with the number 5. This began when he joined Williams in 1985 and was allocated car number 5. For the first four races of the 1985 season, both Williams cars had white numbers, but from a distance the numerals "5" and "6" resembled each other. As a consequence, it was decided to give Mansell's car a red number to make it more distinctive. While this was initially just for recognition, BBC F1 commentator Murray Walker began describing Mansell's car as "Red Five", leading to Mansell retaining the red coloured number throughout his first spell at Williams. On his return to the team in 1991, Williams had retained the number 5 car, allowing Mansell to race as "Red Five" once again. After his departure to Indy Car Racing in 1993 to drive for Newman/Haas, he again retained the red number 5.[58] When he returned to Williams for four races in 1994 the team's numbers were 0 and 2 as they had won the Drivers' and Constructors' titles in 1993 but would not run #1 as Alain Prost had retired. Damon Hill drove car #0 while Mansell raced the #2 with the number on the nose of the car painted red. So associated with the red 5 is Mansell that, in 2004, he purchased a yacht from Sunseeker, one of his longtime sponsors, which he named Red 5.[59]

Awards

Mansell was awarded the title of BBC Sports Personality of the Year in both 1986 and 1992.[60][61] Only two other people have won the award twice, one of whom being fellow racing driver and former F1 World Champion Damon Hill. Mansell was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 2005.[62] Mansell won the Hawthorn Memorial Trophy, an award for the leading British or Commonwealth driver in F1 each year, a record seven times in his career.

Already Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE), Mansell was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2012 New Year Honours for services to children and young people (as president of UK Youth).[63][64]

Racing career results

Complete European Formula Two Championship results

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

Year Entrant Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Pos Pts
1978 ICI Chevron Cars Chevron B42 Hart THR HOC NÜR PAU MUG VAL ROU DON
DNQ
NOG PER MIS HOC 0
1980 Ralt Racing Ltd. Ralt/RH6 Honda THR HOC NÜR VAL PAU SIL
11
ZOL
Ret
MUG ZAN
5
PER MIS HOC
2
12th 8

Formula One World Championship results

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

Year Team Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 WDC Points[1]
1980 Team Essex Lotus Lotus 81B Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8 ARG BRA RSA USW BEL MON FRA GBR GER AUT
Ret
NED
Ret
ITA
DNQ
CAN USA
DNA
NC 0
1981 Team Essex Lotus Lotus 81B Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8 USW
Ret
BRA
11
ARG
Ret
SMR
WD
BEL
3
14th 8
John Player Team Lotus Lotus 87 MON
Ret
ESP
6
FRA
7
GBR
DNQ
GER
Ret
AUT
Ret
NED
Ret
ITA
Ret
CAN
Ret
CPL
4
1982 John Player Team Lotus Lotus 87B Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8 RSA
Ret
14th 7
Lotus 91 BRA
3
USW
7
SMR BEL
Ret
MON
4
DET
Ret
CAN
Ret
NED GBR
Ret
FRA GER
9
AUT
Ret
SUI
8
ITA
7
CPL
Ret
1983 John Player Team Lotus Lotus 92 Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8 BRA
12
USW
12
FRA
Ret
SMR
12
MON
Ret
BEL
Ret
DET
6
CAN
Ret
13th 10
Lotus 93T Renault EF1 1.5 V6 t GER
Ret
Lotus 94T Renault EF1 1.5 V6 t GBR
4
AUT
5
NED
Ret
ITA
8
EUR
3
RSA
NC
1984 John Player Special Team Lotus Lotus 95T Renault EF4B 1.5 V6 t BRA
Ret
RSA
Ret
BEL
Ret
SMR
Ret
FRA
3
MON
Ret
CAN
6
DET
Ret
DAL
6
GBR
Ret
GER
4
AUT
Ret
NED
3
ITA
Ret
EUR
Ret
POR
Ret
10th 13
1985 Canon Williams Honda Williams FW10 Honda RA164E 1.5 V6 t BRA
Ret
POR
5
SMR
5
MON
7
CAN
6
DET
Ret
FRA
DNS
GBR
Ret
GER
6
AUT
Ret
NED
6
ITA
11
BEL
2
EUR
1
RSA
1
AUS
Ret
6th 31
1986 Canon Williams Honda Williams FW11 Honda RA166E 1.5 V6 t BRA
Ret
ESP
2
SMR
Ret
MON
4
BEL
1
CAN
1
DET
5
FRA
1
GBR
1
GER
3
HUN
3
AUT
Ret
ITA
2
POR
1
MEX
5
AUS
Ret
2nd 70 (72)
1987 Canon Williams Honda Williams FW11B Honda RA167E 1.5 V6 t BRA
6
SMR
1
BEL
Ret
MON
Ret
DET
5
FRA
1
GBR
1
GER
Ret
HUN
14
AUT
1
ITA
3
POR
Ret
ESP
1
MEX
1
JPN
DNS
AUS 2nd 61
1988 Canon Williams Williams FW12 Judd CV 3.5 V8 BRA
Ret
SMR
Ret
MON
Ret
MEX
Ret
CAN
Ret
DET
Ret
FRA
Ret
GBR
2
GER
Ret
HUN
Ret
BEL ITA POR
Ret
ESP
2
JPN
Ret
AUS
Ret
9th 12
1989 Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFAC Ferrari 640 Ferrari 035/5 3.5 V12 BRA
1
SMR
Ret
MON
Ret
MEX
Ret
USA
Ret
CAN
DSQ
FRA
2
GBR
2
GER
3
HUN
1
BEL
3
ITA
Ret
POR
DSQ
ESP
EX
JPN
Ret
AUS
Ret
4th 38
1990 Scuderia Ferrari SpA Ferrari 641 Ferrari 036 3.5 V12 USA
Ret
BRA
4
SMR
Ret
MON
Ret
5th 37
Ferrari 641/2 Ferrari 037 3.5 V12 CAN
3
MEX
2
FRA
18
GBR
Ret
GER
Ret
HUN
17
BEL
Ret
ITA
4
POR
1
ESP
2
JPN
Ret
AUS
2
1991 Canon Williams Renault Williams FW14 Renault RS3 3.5 V10 USA
Ret
BRA
Ret
SMR
Ret
MON
2
CAN
6
MEX
2
FRA
1
GBR
1
GER
1
HUN
2
BEL
Ret
ITA
1
POR
DSQ
ESP
1
JPN
Ret
AUS
2
2nd 72
1992 Canon Williams Renault Williams FW14B Renault RS3C/RS4 3.5 V10 RSA
1
MEX
1
BRA
1
ESP
1
SMR
1
MON
2
CAN
Ret
FRA
1
GBR
1
GER
1
HUN
2
BEL
2
ITA
Ret
POR
1
JPN
Ret
AUS
Ret
1st 108
1994 Rothmans Williams Renault Williams FW16 Renault RS6 3.5 V10 BRA PAC SMR MON ESP CAN FRA
Ret
GBR GER HUN BEL ITA POR 9th 13
Williams FW16B EUR
Ret
JPN
4
AUS
1
1995 Marlboro McLaren Mercedes McLaren MP4/10 Mercedes FO 110 3.0 V10 BRA ARG SMR
10
ESP
Ret
MON CAN FRA GBR GER HUN BEL ITA POR EUR PAC JPN AUS NC 0

American Open-Wheel racing results

CART

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position)

Year Team Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Rank Points
1993 Kmart Texaco Newman/Haas Racing Lola T93/00 Ford Cosworth XB SUF
1
PHX
INJ
LBH
3
INDY
3
MIL
1
DET
Ret
POR
2
CLE
3
TOR
Ret
MIC
1
NWH
1
ROA
2
VAN
6
MDO
12
NAZ
1
LAG
Ret
1st 191
1994 Kmart Texaco Newman/Haas Racing Lola T94/00 Ford Cosworth XB SUF
9
PHX
3
LBH
2
INDY
Ret
MIL
5
DET
Ret
POR
5
CLE
2
TOR
Ret
MIC
Ret
MDO
7
NWH
Ret
VAN
Ret
ROA
13
NAZ
Ret
LAG
8
8th 88

Complete British Touring Car Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position – 1-point awarded all races) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap) (* signifies that driver lead feature race for at least one lap – 1-point awarded)

Year Team Car 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Pos Pts
1998 Ford Mondeo Racing Ford Mondeo THR
1
THR
2
SIL
1
SIL
2
DON
1
DON
2
BRH
1
BRH
2
OUL
1
OUL
2
DON
1

Ret
DON
2

5*
CRO
1
CRO
2
SNE
1
SNE
2
THR
1
THR
2
KNO
1
KNO
2
BRH
1

Ret
BRH
2

Ret
OUL
1
OUL
2
SIL
1

14
SIL
2

11
18th 7

Complete Grand Prix Masters results

(key)

Year Team 1 2 3 4
2005 Team Altech RSA
1
2006 Team Altech QAT
1
ITA
C
GBR
Ret
RSA
C

Complete 24 Hours of Le Mans results

Year Team Co-Drivers Car Class Laps Pos. Class
Pos.
2010 United Kingdom Beechdean Mansell United Kingdom Greg Mansell
United Kingdom Leo Mansell
Ginetta-Zytek GZ09S LMP1 4 DNF DNF

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Up until 1990, not all points scored by a driver contributed to their final World Championship tally (see list of points scoring systems for more information). Numbers without parentheses are Championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Murray Walker's F1 Greats Video
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. Who We Are | Our Supporters. UK Youth (13 November 2010). Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  9. Mansell, Nigel My Autobiography page 88 Collins Willow ISBN 0-00-218497-4
  10. 10.0 10.1 King Nigel Mansell Statistics. Nigelmansell.free.fr. Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  11. Mansell, Nigel My Autobiography page 120 Collins Willow ISBN 0-00-218497-4
  12. United States GP, 1984. grandprix.com. Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  13. Mansell, Nigel My Autobiography page 141 Collins Willow ISBN 0-00-218497-4
  14. Malcolm Folley: Senna versus Prost Century, 2009, ISBN 978-1-84605-540-9, p. 221
  15. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  17. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  18. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  19. Mansell, Nigel My Autobiography page 199 Collins Willow ISBN 0-00-218497-4
  20. Mansell, Nigel My Autobiography page 222 Collins Willow ISBN 0-00-218497-4
  21. Hamilton, Maurice Frank Williams page 186 Macmillan ISBN 0-333-71716-3
  22. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  23. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  24. Autocourse 1992 pp.150, 153
  25. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  26. Hamilton, Maurice Frank Williams page 244 Macmillan ISBN 0-333-71716-3
  27. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  28. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  29. 29.0 29.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  30. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  31. Motorsportmad.com: 1993 TOCA Shootout Donnington Park – Mansell massive crash
  32. James Thompson – Honda Accord 1998. Redshoes Archive (26 April 1998). Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  33. Nigel Mansell – Ford Mondeo 1998. Redshoes Archive (20 September 1998). Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  34. Donington Park 14 June 1998. BTCC Pages. Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  35. Reid 150 Not Out. Crash.net (1 January 1980). Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  36. Brands Hatch 31 August 1998. BTCC Pages. Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  37. Silverstone 20 September 1998. BTCC Pages. Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  38. BTCC 1998 Season. Btccpages.com. Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  39. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  40. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.. Note: In-depth information on times set by each driver do not appear to have been formally published by the organisers.
  41. Mansell secures GP Masters glory. BBC News (13 November 2005). Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  42. Mansell wins first ever Grand Prix in Qatar Archived 11 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  43. Odds against Mansell in GP Masters[dead link]
  44. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  45. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  52. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  53. BBC SPORT | Motorsport | Formula One | Mansell makes Isle of Man return. BBC News (20 December 2007). Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  54. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  55. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  60. 1986 bbc.co.uk: BBC Sports Personalility of the year. BBC News. Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  61. 1992 bbc.co.uk: BBC Sports Personalility of the year. BBC News. Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  62. Waltrip Heads Class of 2005 at Motorsports Hall of Fame. Motorsportshalloffame.com. Retrieved on 2011-06-11.
  63. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 60009. p. 7. 31 December 2011.
  64. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

References

External links

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Sporting positions
Preceded by British Formula Ford Champion
1977
Succeeded by
Peter Morgan
Preceded by Formula One World Champion
1992
Succeeded by
Alain Prost
Preceded by CART Series Champion
1993
Succeeded by
Al Unser, Jr.
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Hawthorn Memorial Trophy
1985–1987
Succeeded by
Derek Warwick
Preceded by Autosport
British Competition Driver

1985–1986
Succeeded by
Jonathan Palmer
Preceded by BBC Sports Personality of the Year
1986
Succeeded by
Fatima Whitbread
Preceded by Autosport
International Racing Driver Award

1986–1987
Succeeded by
Ayrton Senna
Preceded by Autosport
British Competition Driver

1989
Succeeded by
Martin Brundle
Preceded by Hawthorn Memorial Trophy
1989–1992
Succeeded by
Damon Hill
Preceded by Autosport
British Competition Driver

1991
Succeeded by
Derek Warwick
Preceded by BBC Sports Personality of the Year
1992
Succeeded by
Linford Christie
Preceded by Autosport
International Racing Driver Award

1992–1993
Succeeded by
Damon Hill
Preceded by Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year
1993
Succeeded by
Jacques Villeneuve
Preceded by CART Rookie of the Year
1993
Succeeded by
Jacques Villeneuve

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