RIP Tony Brooks

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RIP Tony Brooks

#1

Post by erwin greven »

Brian Redman: "Mr. Fangio, how do you come so fast?" "More throttle, less brakes...."
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#2

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Jackie Stewart & Jacky Ickx are the last surviving winners from the 1960s.
07.04.1968 - Flower of Scotland when will we see your like again?
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Post by Everso Biggyballies »

The Racing Dentist.

So very sad. Dad used to go to Tony Brooks Lancia and Fiat dealership in Brooklands Road Weybridge, for car related things back in the seventies.

The first British driver in a British car to win the British GP. (In a Vanwall at Aintree.) He also was the first to win a GP in a British car when he took a Connaught to victory at the non Championship Syracuse GP on his F1 debut. Actually Sir Henry Seagrave won a GP at San Sebastian in 1924 driving a Sunbeam. Not sure that was an F1 race.

Along with Musso and Fagioli he held a unique position in F1 Championship race winners.... They all won Championship races without actually finishing the race themselves. They all handed their cars to other drivers who won in their cars.

WHEN JUAN MANUEL FANGIO was planning his retirement from motor racing, he was asked who would succeed him as World Champion. He instantly named Tony Brooks - a prophesy that never came true because Brooks was up against such other talented British drivers as Stirling Moss, Mike Hawthorn and Australia's own Jack Brabham.

Brooks was an unlikely looking candidate for a World Champion, or even a racing driver at all for that matter, as he was slightly built, studious and self-effacing - certainly not cast in the swashbuckling, tearaway mould of some of the other hard driving, hard drinking, womanisers of the racing world of the 50s.

Born in 1932, the young Brooks was weaned on sporting cars because his parents were keen drivers, although he seemed set on a career as a dentist until a family friend offered him the loan of a Healey-Silverstone sports car for club races. He scored numerous wins with this car as well as with Frazer-Nash and DKW cars loaned by friends and admirers over the next three years.

In 1955, he was offered a drive in a single seater Formula Two Connaught. In the race, at Crystal Palace, he finished fourth behind three Formula One cars driven by Mike Hawthorn, Harry Schell and Roy Salvadori. The young Brooks, still only 23, had arrived and he soon began to receive tempting offers which persuaded him to abandon temporarily his dental career.

His first works drive was with Aston Martin, who signed him on for their successful sports car team in 1955. He drove a DB3S to third place in the Goodwood Nine Hours and, shortly afterwards, placed a Connaught sports car, loaned by the very rapid Colin Chapman in a Lotus.

This performance prompted the Connaught directors, Mike Oliver and Rodney Clarke, to offer him a drive in their Formula One Connaught at the Syracuse Grand Prix in Sicily. This was asking a lot of any driver, especially as Brooks had never driven a Formula One car before, had never raced abroad and had never even met the top Continental drivers like Musso and Villoresi, who were racing the works Maseratis at Syracuse.

As it was not a World Championship event, some of the top names were missing, but Brooks made third fastest time in practice and in the race he toyed with the opposition before going away to a comfortable victory, leaving the bewildered Italian stars way behind. He also set a new fastest lap for the Syracuse circuit. His cool and unruffled driving showed that he had that indefinable talent which all top drivers seem to possess.

Brooks' victory was doubly important because not only was it his first Grand Prix victory but it was also the first by a British driver in a British car since 1924. This was the first sign of the British domination of Grand Prix racing which was to come in the near future. For the 1956 season, BRM signed Brooks to partner Mike Hawthorn, but the BRM was a troublesome car and Brooks suffered an accident at Silverstone, when the car caught fire after overturning; Brooks was thrown out, but not seriously injured. He gained a few wins in Aston Martin and Cooper cars, but left the BRM team for Vanwall in 1957.

During 1957 he finished British Grand Prix-winning car with Stirling Moss.The following year, Brooks drove the Vanwall to victory in
the German, Belgian and Italian GPs.

The Vanwall team, then owned by G. A. Vandervell of Vandervell bearings, was just coming to the fore and Brooks finished second in the Monaco GP and shared the winning car at the British Grand Prix with Stirling Moss. Brooks had overturned his Aston Martin at Le Mans prior to the British GP and was suffering from badly burned legs so, when Moss' car broke down at Aintree, Brooks handed over his car and Moss went on to victory.

Brooks later won the Nurburgring 1000- Kilometre race in an Aston Martin. He stayed with Vanwall in 1958, the year Fangio predicted he would win the World Championship, but although he won the German, Belgian and Italian GPs, he did not gain the Championship; largely because his team-mate Stirling Moss also won several races. The Championship finally went to Mike Hawthorn.

For 1959, Brooks joined the Italian Ferrari team, but the big front-engined cars were now up against the little rear-engined Coopers and, although Brooks won the French and German GPs on the faster circuits, Jack Brabham's Cooper took the Championship, with Brooks in second place. 1960 saw Brooks joining the privately owned Yeoman Credit Racing Team with a Cooper, but little success came his way and, after a poor 1961 season, when he drove the new 1½-litre BRM, he decided to retire from racing. After his retirement, he set up a garage business, appropriately; within sight of the famous banking at the old Brooklands track in Weybridge, Surrey, as a successful Fiat and Lancia distributor.

During his all too short career, Brooks won 6 races for Vanwall and Ferrari, secured 4 pole positions, achieved 10 podiums, and scored a total of 74 championship points.

https://www.uniquecarsandparts.com.au/r ... ony_brooks
Last edited by Everso Biggyballies 1 year ago, edited 1 time in total.

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#4

Post by Everso Biggyballies »

With Tony Brooks having been the sole surviving Championship GP winner from the 50's now left us, that leaves Jackie Stewart as the eldest, followed closely by Mario Andretti.... well here are the 10 eldest surviving winners of Championship races.

1. STEWART Jackie 83 next month (June 2022)
2. ANDRETTI Mario 82
3. JABOUILLE Jean-Pierre 79
4. LAFFITE Jacques 78
5. ICKX Jacky 77
6. WATSON John 76 y.o today 4th May 2022
7. MASS Jochen 75
8. JONES Alan 75 (one month younger than Mass)
9. FITTIPALDI Emerson 75 (one month yoounger than Jones)
10. ARNOUX René 73

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#5

Post by PTRACER »

Sad news :sorrow: 90 is not that old these days. Hardly any drivers left from the 1950s now.

Tony Brooks did a Beyond The Grid interview two years ago, I wonder how many listeners had heard his name?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kIiuz7S6fNU
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#6

Post by Everso Biggyballies »

PTRACER wrote: 1 year ago Sad news :sorrow: 90 is not that old these days. Hardly any drivers left from the 1950s now.

Tony Brooks did a Beyond The Grid interview two years ago, I wonder how many listeners had heard his name?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kIiuz7S6fNU
People say Brooks was underrated.... not so sure he was, certainly not when it came to those that raced against him or followers in that era. He was very highly rated. Maybe his talents were under-recognised, such was his humility and humble outlook, particularly by those looking back from more modern times. As a driver he was very much an under the radar type who never sought the limelight and just got on with the job. Almost a silent assassin. If that makes sense.

When Vanwall annonced their withdrawal he was employed again instantly by none other than Enzo, calling him to Marinello for a chat, driving in whatever category he wanted. (Sports cars, F1 etc.) I dont recall in the peak of his career him ever scratching around looking for drives. They always flocked to him. To me that only confirms that those that mattered never underrated him.

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#7

Post by Vassago »

If there would ever be trivia poll to name all F1 Grand Prix winners Tony Brooks would probably be one of the last if not the last name to be mentioned. I guess this is what happens when all the attention was on Stirling Moss back in the day?
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Post by Everso Biggyballies »

Honouring the life of 1950s F1 ace Tony Brooks

F1.Com wrote:The last surviving Formula 1 race winner from the 1950s, Charles Anthony Standish Brooks – better known as Tony Brooks – passed away on May 3, at the age of 90.

Widely regarded as one of F1's most naturally gifted drivers – Mario Andretti once famously described the Englishman as “the best of the best of the best” – Brooks was one of the leading racers of his era, winning 46% of the races he finished between the years 1956-1959.

In a career that totalled just 38 starts, Brooks came up against some of the greats of the sport, like Juan Manuel Fangio and Sir Stirling Moss – with Moss saying that Brooks would be one of the two drivers he'd pick if he were to create his dream F1 team.
You will have to click the "Watch on youtube" button





And another video tribute here from Duke Video.....
Formula One racing driver Tony Brooks passed away this week at 90 years of age. Known as the "racing dentist", he took part in 39 F1 Grand Prix races during his career, achieving six victories and finishing third in the World Drivers' Championship in 1958 with Vanwall and second in 1959 with Ferrari.

We look back to the 1958 Belgian Grand Prix at the 8.75 mile Spa Francorchamps circuit, where Tony Brooks marked his first Grand Prix win of the season with a dominant drive behind the wheel of a Vanwall.
RIP Tony Brooks (25 February 1932 – 3 May 2022)


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#9

Post by Ruslan »

Great driver. After Fangio, Moss and Ascari, it was probably either him or Gonzalez who was the fourth best driver of the 50s.
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Post by PTRACER »

Everso Biggyballies wrote: 1 year ago
PTRACER wrote: 1 year ago Sad news :sorrow: 90 is not that old these days. Hardly any drivers left from the 1950s now.

Tony Brooks did a Beyond The Grid interview two years ago, I wonder how many listeners had heard his name?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kIiuz7S6fNU
People say Brooks was underrated.... not so sure he was, certainly not when it came to those that raced against him or followers in that era. He was very highly rated. Maybe his talents were under-recognised, such was his humility and humble outlook, particularly by those looking back from more modern times. As a driver he was very much an under the radar type who never sought the limelight and just got on with the job. Almost a silent assassin. If that makes sense.

When Vanwall annonced their withdrawal he was employed again instantly by none other than Enzo, calling him to Marinello for a chat, driving in whatever category he wanted. (Sports cars, F1 etc.) I dont recall in the peak of his career him ever scratching around looking for drives. They always flocked to him. To me that only confirms that those that mattered never underrated him.
That's probably part of it. Stirling Moss had the superstar image, the pretty girls and so on - no wonder he had the limelight.

As a driver, he was undoubtedly one of the best of the 1950s, but probably his self-preservation and his lack of risk taking prevented him from achieving true greatness.
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Post by Everso Biggyballies »

An article about Tony Brooks behind the Autosport Plus paywall today I thought might be of interest.....

The “solemn promise” that cost quiet hero Brooks an F1 title

After two terrifying crashes, one of the best British racers of the 1950s retired before his career peaked. But that’s why MAURICE HAMILTON was able to speak to Tony Brooks in 2014. Like his friend Stirling Moss, Brooks was regarded as one of the best drivers never to have won the world championship. Here, as our tribute to Brooks who died last month, is that interview in full...

Somehow, it’s rather appropriate that the crowd enjoying the bank-holiday sunshine at the Brooklands Museum should be oblivious to a truly outstanding grand prix driver heading towards our lunch in the clubhouse.

Tony Brooks has been described by his great rival and friend, Sir Stirling Moss, as “The greatest ‘little-known’ driver of all time.”

How else could you sum up a driver who has won at Spa, the Nurburgring Nordschleife and Monza; a man with a start-to-win ratio of 26% while racing for Connaught, Vanwall and Ferrari, yet who is so rarely mentioned?

Modesty has been a hallmark of Tony Brooks since he drove a Connaught to victory in Sicily to produce the first win for a British car and driver abroad in 31 years. Imagine if it happened now; in 1955, it barely got a mention. And nearly 60 years on, he still melts into the background. I can’t wait to shine a spotlight on this quiet hero… 

Image
Maurice Hamilton interviewing Tony Brooks 2014.


Maurice Hamilton: Your start in F1 was unorthodox. You were a dental student, you’d been racing at Goodwood and places like that, and you got a call asking if you’d like to race in a grand prix [the 1955 non-championship Syracuse GP]. That sort of thing is hard to grasp these days. Were you surprised? 

Tony Brooks: Well, yes; very surprised because I’d never even sat in a Formula 1 car, let alone driven one. The only thing that reduced the surprise slightly is I had driven a works Connaught sportscar a few weeks before. So I presumed they were reasonably happy with that.

MH: Was your priority to qualify as a dentist?

TB: Definitely. In no way did I regard motor racing as a long-term, or even medium-term way of earning a living. It was so dangerous then that you couldn’t think of that seriously. It was always my intention to finish my qualifications so I had a good means of earning a living.

MH: The danger element, as you say, was very evident then. Did that not concern you?

TB: Well, you either accepted the risk or you didn’t. But the point is, I never psyched myself up. I was fortunately blessed with a reasonable amount of natural ability and I always drove within that. I never frightened myself as a result of something I did.

MH: You obviously took a great deal of pleasure from being able to control a car, judging by the numerous pictures of you in a four-wheel drift.

TB: I found this fantastic sensation of driving a car on the limit of adhesion, trying to balance it with the mere caress of the steering wheel and the accelerator. To me it was literally poetry in motion, which is why I chose that expression for the title of my book [Tony’s autobiography Poetry In Motion was published in 2012].

MH: OK, I understand that. But it couldn’t have been a massive amount of help when you’d go to a circuit you had never seen before, drive a car you had never raced – and win!

TB: I don’t want to flog this, but driving came naturally to me. I drove to the limit of my capability and enjoyed it. But I had no idea what the actual level of that ability was; you can’t judge that until you’re up against the top drivers. To everybody’s surprise, not least myself, I won.

MH: I was fascinated by what happened after you had won. There you were, the hero of the moment but also trying to be a dentist – and you’d lost a front tooth!

Image
Tony Brooks celebrates victory on the podium 1958 German GP.... the 3rd of his 6 wins.

TB: [Laughs] Yes, not an ideal situation. I’d been trying to learn the circuit the best I could on a scooter because, of course, we had no cars. I’d done so many miles on the Vespa, twisting the grip, that it had rubbed the inside of my thumb and forefinger. It got to the point where it was so sore, I had to put a handkerchief on it.

Winning the race was obviously a new experience for me and all I wanted to do was escape back to my hotel and have a nice shower. I was being followed by crowds who, I have to say, were very magnanimous and enthusiastic, considering they had gone there to see Maserati win! I was surrounded by these people as I got on the scooter while, at the same time, trying to put the handkerchief round my injured hand. To do that, I had to use my teeth to pull one end of the handkerchief and tighten it. I had a temporary crown at the front and it was not up to a rather strong pull from a handkerchief. It came out – and fell on the floor. So you had the winner of the race surrounded by excited Sicilians while he grovelled around on the ground looking for his tooth. All I could see were these rather smart casual boots the Sicilians were wearing.

I couldn’t find the tooth. It’s bad enough for anybody to lose a central incisor; even worse for a dental student. I was dreading the prizegiving. But I was very lucky in that, being a belt and braces man, I’d kept the previous temporary crown in my baggage and managed to pop it on. But I didn’t have any cement to hold it in place, so it was a question of this Englishman having to demonstrate the stiff upper lip to try to keep his central incisor in place, and also mumble a few words at the prizegiving; a tricky exercise.

MH: You can imagine, if that happened to Lewis Hamilton or Jenson Button now, it would be front-page news. But things were very different then, weren’t they? Here we had a situation where a British driver had won what would have been termed a ‘continental grand prix’ in a British car. A big story. Did anyone pay any attention when you got back home?

TB: No, not really. I think we got the odd paragraph here and there in the national newspapers. Motor racing was nowhere in terms of public perception, so it got very little coverage.

MH: Extraordinary, when you consider what you’d achieved. In terms of your career, however, it put the motor racing spotlight on you.

TB: I was spoiled for choice after winning at Syracuse. Connaught wanted me to stay with them, Rob Walker [later to become entrant for Stirling Moss] was interested, as were BRM. Connaught were a great team, but unfortunately they lacked financial backing and were underpowered compared with the competition because they used a pre-war engine that had been bored out to two-and-a-half litres. Of course, when you stretch something to the limit, you undermine your reliability. BRM had the money and, on paper, seemed to be the best prospect of producing a grand-prix-winning car. But we all make mistakes, some mistakes bigger than others. The BRM was pathetic. Totally unreliable; didn’t hold the road.

MH: Before we discuss the BRM’s shortcomings, can I clarify that you were still studying for your dental exams?

TB: Yes, I qualified in December 1956. That was a good thing because I was more concerned about not slipping behind with my studies than dealing with what was involved in motor racing. I’m not saying I wasn’t totally committed to motor racing but my studies were probably a good distraction. If you didn’t pass the exams, you could lose a year and have to do it all over again. There was a lot at stake if you let it slip.

MH: Were you being paid to drive the BRM? I only ask because, if so, was the rate of pay not sufficient to make you think: ‘Right, forget everything else; I want to be an F1 driver?’

TB: Oh no, it wouldn’t be good enough. In any case, I wouldn’t have done that because nobody with any sense in those days would have regarded motor racing as a way to earn a living. I never intended to make motor racing my career.

Image
Brooks BRM P25 burns after he crashed . 1956 British GP.

MH: Talking about the hazards of racing in those days, you experienced that first hand with BRM and were
very fortunate to get away with it during the 1956 British Grand Prix at Silverstone.

TB: The accelerator linkage broke so I brought the BRM into the pits for repairs and lost umpteen laps. I was out of the race in terms of getting a decent place. I rejoined and, still very much a new boy in F1, I thought: ‘If I can’t finish up anywhere decent, at least I’d better demonstrate that I know how to drive a grand prix car.’ The way things had turned out, this was my first world championship grand prix.

I noticed straight away that the accelerator was sticking. They’d not done a complete job and I should have brought it back in. I had been going through Abbey Curve flat without any problem but, while I’d been in the pits, a lot more oil and rubber had been put down. So, I was drifting the car – as much as you could drift that BRM – through Abbey Curve on the correct line and at the correct speed, but because of the rubber and oil I needed a quick lift off the throttle and down again. When I lifted off, it didn’t happen. The car ran wide out of the corner and, with any decent car such as a 250F Maserati, you’d have run on the grass for 50 yards or so and edged back onto the circuit. But the BRM spun, finished up on the other side of the circuit then flipped over, but on the grass. I think it hit the banking; I wasn’t taking an awful lot of notice at the time. I was thrown out. I was very lucky – the car deposited me nicely on the grass verge rather than the macadam. Then the car set fire to itself which, as I’ve said many times, was the only reasonable thing it could do.

MH: The following year, 1957, you’ve taken another big step, this time with Vanwall, the domain of industrialist Tony Vandervell. Did you feel this was a team going somewhere?

TB: Indeed. I believe that a grand prix team has to have an autocrat. Tony Vandervell was a committed person. He called the shots and paid the money. Like everyone else, he made some mistakes, but he very quickly put them right. He was very straightforward: I got on well with Tony. The success of Vanwall was down to him.

MH: It was such a nice looking car with a lot of aerodynamic thought put into it – which was quite unusual then, wasn’t it?

TB: People didn’t realise the part aerodynamics could play. They thought aerodynamics were more a question of how fast a car went in a straight line, not how it affected the road holding; that was not appreciated at that time.

MH: Was it a tricky car to drive?

TB: Yes, it was hard work. But I won’t knock a car that won the world manufacturers’ [constructors’] championship in 1958, and beat Ferrari, Maserati and so on. It was the complete opposite of a 250F Maserati, which would say to the driver: ‘Please four-wheel drift me.’ The Vanwall didn’t say that; it would be much happier cornering closer to a geometrical line. We did drift it, but it was hard work. In the end, whatever you may think about driving the car, it’s the results that count, isn’t it?

MH: Exactly. I think it’s fair to say that a grand prix car shouldn’t necessarily be easy to drive.

TB: That’s right. Front-engine cars were not easy to drive but the balance of the 250F Maserati was such that it encouraged people to have a go.

Image
Brooks fought for the F1 championship in both 1958 and 1959, but fate and principles denied him both times.


MH: There are two things connected with 1957 I’d like to chat about. They’re both related – even though one occurred at Le Mans and the other happened a few weeks later at the British GP. You had an accident while you were driving an Aston Martin, and this was significant because it would affect how you approached racing and your thinking. Then you went on to share the winning Vanwall with Stirling Moss at Aintree. First, tell me what actually happened at Le Mans. The car was stuck in gear and you thought you could get it out?

TB: Yes, that’s right. It was locked in fourth gear. This had also happened to me at Spa, but I’d managed to win that race nevertheless; I’d managed to free it. That’s why I thought I could do the same thing when it happened again at Le Mans. Noel Cunningham-Reid brought in the car some time after midnight and he said it was stuck in fourth gear. I thought: ‘Well, we’re lying second, we don’t want to lose time, so I’ll have a go at getting it out.’

I managed to slip the clutch and get out of the pits. I took the first opportunity to try to apply the system which had worked at Spa. And the first opportunity was not really a long enough straight; I should have waited for Mulsanne, but this was the short straight between the Esses and Tertre Rouge. I was accelerating and then suddenly taking my foot off the accelerator, loading the gearbox with acceleration and then de-loading it hoping that would help the gear lever pop out – as it had done before.

And, of course, I was doing the first thing you’re told not to do when you learn to drive, and that is looking down at the gear lever. So I was monkeying about with this gear lever, looked up and discovered I’d passed my braking point.

I was going too quick for the corner and the second mistake was to think I could put the car into a four-wheel drift and get it round the corner; I was on a perfectly good line. But I needed about another 10 feet of grass on the exit to be able to go off and come back again. Unfortunately, the sand came right down to the road. The car started to run up the sand bank, got to the top and flipped over, trapping me beneath the rear of the car. I was trapped in the cockpit and just waiting for the next car to come round. It seemed like it was a choice of either cremation or simply being run over.

MH: You’d just pitted, so was it full of fuel?

TB: Oh yes, it was. Absolutely full. I could smell it. The chap who came round next – a very nice bloke, dear old Umberto Maglioli – he’d seen the back of my car was sticking out and into the road. So he came round the corner and obviously didn’t use the full width of the corner. He just hit the back of the Aston Martin and carried on. But he had done just enough to take the weight off me and allow me to scramble up the sand bank and into the arms of the marshal – who I think was far more astonished than I was.

So again, I was very, very lucky. It was a result of these two incidents – the BRM at Silverstone and the Aston Martin at Le Mans – that I made an absolutely committed resolution not to try to drive substandard cars at competitive speeds. Racing was dangerous enough without loading the dice against yourself by trying to race cars that weren’t fit to race. That’s not to say that I wouldn’t finish a race with a car, making the best use of it I could, but not trying to race it to the limit because it was no longer fit.

I would never retire just because of, I don’t know, you have the mudguards rattling or something like that. I would do the best with what the car was capable of doing, but I wouldn’t try to do something beyond what I thought was the capability of the car in that mechanical condition. That was my firm resolution, which is the reason I lost the championship in 1959, and it’s also the reason why I’m here talking to you today and having a nice glass of wine.

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Brooks (#20 Aston Martin) says his crash at Silverstone and accident at Le Mans changed his approach to racing.

MH: I take your point. And nice to have you here… cheers! Before we get on to the championship in 1959, I want to stay with 1957. After the Le Mans accident, you were covered with abrasions; you referred to having a hole in your right side. I take it that was no exaggeration?

TB: No. You could get tennis ball in the hole. I don’t know what caused it; it must have been part of the cockpit; it may have been pressed against the door handle or something. But that contributed towards the firm resolution I refer to. If you can’t take hints like that, you are thick.

MH: So, the British GP at Aintree was coming up and you had a commitment to Vanwall. But you weren’t in the best of shape, were you?

TB: It was less than a month between the two events. I’d been in bed until the Tuesday before the British Grand Prix. The first time I drove a car after Le Mans was my father’s Ford Zephyr to go to Aintree for the first day of practice, which would have been the Thursday because the race was on Saturday in those days. I’d lost a stone; with my physique, that’s quite a lot to lose. I wasn’t in a fit state to race, but the obvious thinking was that we’d have a better chance of winning the race if we could start three cars rather than just two, Stirling and Stuart Lewis-Evans being the other drivers.

I equalled the lap record in practice, which I was pleased about. Stirling, in fact, was slower in my car when he tried it. But, in his new car, he was something like two tenths of a second quicker. I was on the front row, but putting in a fast lap is one thing; 90 laps at competitive speed in my state of health wouldn’t have been on. So we agreed that in the event of Stirling or Stuart having a problem with their cars, they would take over my car – which was how it worked.

MH: Stirling had a misfire, came in, took over your car and climbed back through the field to win; a joint win for you both, which, of course, was allowed in those days.

TB: I was very sorry that I was in that sort of state, but it was my fault, really. It resulted in a great success for Vanwall and for British motor racing, and that’s what mattered. It was a wonderful feeling but, obviously, I regret I wasn’t able to do it alone. But the main thing was that Vanwall won the first [of an eventual nine] world championship events.

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Brooks alongside Tony Vandervell and Stirling Moss having handed over his Vanwall to Moss on the way to winning the 1957 British GP

MH: Although you might not have said anything, was part of that weekend at Aintree quietly proving to yourself that you were still OK after the Le Mans accident?

TB: Absolutely. It was very important, psychologically. Neither of the accidents undermined my confidence because there was a perfectly good reason for them; a sticking throttle at Silverstone and sheer stupidity at Le Mans. It wasn’t a driver error as such, you see, and that makes all the difference.

MH: You really proved it by winning at Spa and the Nurburgring; two wonderful circuits.

TB: Yes, well, I thought the three great circuits were Spa, Nurburgring and Monza, and it was lovely to win them all in one season: 1958 was a very, very satisfying year, it really was.

MH: Tell us about driving for Ferrari in 1959. When you got the call, how did you feel about it?

TB: They say every driver has a wish to drive part of their career with Ferrari and I was fortunate that it was thrust upon me; I didn’t have to ask him [Enzo Ferrari]. In January 1959, Tony Vandervell announced his team’s retirement from grand prix motor racing and Romolo Tavoni, the team manager at Ferrari, rang me up within a few days and asked if I would be interested in driving for Ferrari. So what do you say?

MH: How did you find Enzo Ferrari? Was there a translator? Did you speak Italian by that stage?

TB: Yes I did. I never had any problem with Enzo Ferrari. We must have had a chat for about 45 minutes, without the need to have an accountant or a lawyer on either side. We agreed the terms for me to drive for Ferrari for ’59. I really didn’t want to do Le Mans and, to my amazement, he agreed – because obviously Le Mans was very important when it came to selling his road cars.

MH: How was the Formula 1 car in 1959?

TB: We were in the middle of a transformation from front engine to rear engine. But the point is, Ferrari could and should have won the world championship that year. But there was a strike and they didn’t go to the British Grand Prix at Aintree. Jean Behra and I had been first and second in the Aintree 200 [a non-championship race] a few weeks beforehand, so the chances were high. But we never appeared at the British Grand Prix, so no points there for Ferrari.

Then, the Belgian Grand Prix was cancelled. I’d won every time I’d been to Spa, which was three times, and if ever there was a Ferrari circuit, this was it. So, the odds were that I should have got some points there. Then there was the Italian Grand Prix where I was on the front row, next to Stirling, who was on pole with the Cooper-Climax. Probably the words I most regret ever uttering in this life was after practice when I said: “Oh, I’m smelling Ferodo a little bit; I’m pretty sure it’s the brakes.” They decided it might have been the clutch and changed it overnight – which was totally unnecessary. Either there was a faulty clutch or they didn’t  put it in properly, because I did 100 metres at the start of the Italian GP and that was it. No points.

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Brooks was convinced Ferrari had the car to win with in 1959.

MH: And now we come to the final round, the US Grand Prix at Sebring. This is significant in the light of the pact that you’d made with yourself.

TB: That’s correct. Dear old Wolfgang von Trips rams me up the backside on the first lap. Remembering my decision that you must check the car, I had half a lap agonising about it. I’m proud I had the courage, and that’s what it needed, because I knew I was blowing the championship: I still had a chance of winning the title at that point.

By going in, I was honouring the solemn promise to myself, but I was also saying cheerio to the championship. The car was OK. The irony was Stirling retired and Brabham ran out of petrol; Jack was always trying to cut it too fine! I would have won the race and the championship. Instead, I finished third and Jack took the title. That’s why I say Ferrari could have won the championship that year.

MH: I take it you have absolutely no regrets whatsoever about that decision at Sebring.

TB: No, and I’d do the same again. I would have been dishonourable to myself if I’d broken it. And as I say, that’s one of the reasons why I’m sitting here having lunch with you.

MH: Because your belief is that God has given us a life and it shouldn’t be abused in any way?

TB: That’s right; absolutely. It’s sacred.

MH: There’s a lot of talk today about team-mates, particularly with Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg being competitive drivers in a very competitive car. Did that arise in those days because you had, at Ferrari for example, quite a mixed band of team-mates? Did you just do your own thing, and that was the start and end of it?

TB: In my conversation with Ferrari, he made it perfectly clear there would be no number one driver until it became obvious who was most likely to win the championship. Then you would become the number one driver, which fell on my shoulders. And he said number one doesn’t mean ‘I’ll have that car, I’ll have that engine, I’ll have that chassis and put them all together.’ It means the team objectives and programme would try to ensure the driver in question went ahead and won the title. When I established myself as the most promising winner, then I became number one, but only then. Which was very sensible.

MH: And it’s all recorded in detail in your book – which I believe you wrote entirely yourself.

TB: Every word. It’s a true autobiography!

MH: Well, on the basis of your remarkable story, I have to say it’s a shame you’re not world champion because you deserve to be. But nice, as you say, to have you here to tell us about it.

TB: You’re very generous. Thank you. 

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Brooks passed away at the age of 90 in May of this year.
https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/the-s ... /10329106/

* I started life with nothing, and still have most of it left


“Good drivers have dead flies on the side windows!” (Walter Röhrl)

* I married Miss Right. Just didn't know her first name was Always
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