So here we are at attempt number 2. Hopefully we won't have to wait for attempt number 3 to have it actually finished :)
And being that this weekend the new F1 season started, I guess this post is kinda on-spot as well now (It wouldn't have been for the previous F) (and not a bad start at all, with Kimi finishing third).
Just have to share with you this video from yesterday's Press Conference... no one else comes close to such reactions and facial expressions like Kimi ;-))))
And back to the stamps now.
I have a few issues from the Austrian Post (issued in different years), commemorating some of the greatest legends that the F1 world has seen (though I must say I am disappointed there is no Kimi here, but I guess you become a legend once you retire from the sport - though the Hamilton stamp from 2009 proves my theory wrong but oh well...)
first is this huuuge mini-sheet (as absurd as that may sound), issued on 07th June 2006, commemorating 8 great F1 drivers.
Talking in-depth about each and every one of them would be way too much (taking into account there are like 12 more people following below), so just the basics
In the sheet above, you can see:
- Jim Clarke - had won 25 Grand Prix victories, and was F1 Championship twice, in 1963 and 1965.
He was killed in a Formula Two motor racing accident in Hockenheim, Germany in 1968. At the time of his death, he had won more Grand Prix races (25) and achieved more Grand Prix pole positions (33) than any other driver.
- Sir Stirling Craufurd Moss - has been described as "the greatest driver never to win the World Championship". In a seven-year span between 1955 and 1961 Moss finished as championship runner-up four times and third the other three.
- Alain Prost - A four-time Formula One Drivers' Champion. From 1987 until 2001 Prost held the record for most Grand Prix victories and is considered as one of the greatest F1 drivers ever. Schumacher surpassed Prost's total of 51 victories at the 2001 Belgian Grand Prix. In 1999, Prost received the World Sports Awards of the Century in the motor sport category.
- Bruce McLaren - a New Zealand race-car designer, driver, engineer and inventor, whose name lives on in the McLaren team which has been one of the most successful in Formula One championship history. No championships won. He died in an accident during a test-drive on June 2, 1970.
- Jacky Ickx - a Belgian former racing driver who won the 24 Hours of Le Mans six times, achieved eight wins and 25 podium finishes in Formula One, won the Can-Am Championship in 1979 and is a former winner of the Dakar Rally
- Mario Andretti - an Italian-born American former racing driver, one of the most successful Americans in the history of the sport. He is one of only two drivers to have won races in Formula One, IndyCar, World Sportscar Championship and NASCAR (the other being Dan Gurney).
- Jackie Stewart - a British former Formula One racing driver from Scotland. Nicknamed the "Flying Scot", who competed in Formula One between 1965 and 1973, winning three World Drivers' Championships, and twice finishing as runner-up over those nine seasons. (This got me thinking now, cos I have a postcard with a train which says "Flying Scot" - I wonder if it had anything to do with him actually)
- Jack Brabham - was an Australian racing driver who was Formula One World Champion in 1959, 1960, and 1966. He was a founder of the Brabham racing team and race car constructor that bore his name. In the 1966 Formula One season Brabham became the first – and still the only – man to win the Formula One world championship driving one of his own cars.
Next I have this FDC issued on 29 May 2007, featuring again 8 more drivers.
- Phil Hill - was an American automobile racer and the only American-born driver to win the Formula One World Drivers' Championship. He also scored three wins at each of the 24 Hours of Le Mans and 12 Hours of Sebring sports car races.
- Gerhard Berger - an Austrian former Formula One racing driver. He competed in Formula One for 14 seasons, twice finishing 3rd overall in the championship (1988 and 1994), both times driving for Ferrari. He won ten Grands Prix, achieved 48 podiums, 12 poles and 21 fastest laps. With 210 starts he is amongst the most experienced Formula One drivers of all time.
- John Surtees - was an English Grand Prix motorcycle road racer and Formula One driver. He was a four-time 500cc motorcycle World Champion – winning that title in 1956, 1958, 1959 and 1960 – the Formula One World Champion in 1964, and remains the only person to have won World Championships on both two and four wheels.
- Graham Hill - was a British racing driver and team owner from England, who was twice Formula One World Champion. He is the only driver ever to win the Triple Crown of Motorsport—the 24 Hours of Le Mans, Indianapolis 500 and the Monaco Grand Prix.
- Gianclaudio Giuseppe Regazzoni - was a Swiss racing driver. He competed in Formula One races from 1970 to 1980, winning five Grands Prix. His first win was the Italian Grand Prix at Monza in his debut season, driving for Ferrari
- Juan Manuel Fangio - was an Argentine racing car driver. He dominated the first decade of Formula One racing, winning the World Drivers' Championship five times.
- Mika Häkkinen (or the Flying Finn - but there seems to be no train card named after him) - a Finnish former professional racing driver. He was the 1998 and 1999 Formula One World Champion, driving for McLaren and has been ranked among the greatest Formula One drivers in various motorsport polls.
Mika came for a visit in Skopje like over a decade ago, while he was still in the F1 business. It was one of those funny parades when a crowd of people gathers, waiting for their idol to come out and wave at them and then they all fall into trance. Cannot recall why I didn't attend this one, but if nowadays lets say Kimi came for a visit, you bet I would be there in the first row :D
- Emerson Fittipaldi , the last one in this set - a semi-retired Brazilian automobile racing driver who won both the Formula One World Championship and the Indianapolis 500 twice each and the CART championship once
And at last - another minisheet, this one issued on 27 May, 2009. "Only' four stamps here :)
- Wolfgang Alexander Albert Eduard Maximilian Reichsgraf Berghe von Trips - was a German racing driver who can probably take the medal for the longest name ever in the sport!
- James Hunt - was a British racing driver who won the Formula One World Championship in 1976. If you haven't seen Rush, then I recommend you do so, even if you are not an F1 fan. A beautifully done movie about the rivalry between James Hunt and Niki Lauda.
- Gilles Villeneuve - was a Canadian racing driver. Villeneuve spent six years in Grand Prix racing with Ferrari, winning six races and widespread acclaim for his performances. His son, Jacques Villeneuve, became Formula One world champion in 1997 and, to date, the only Canadian to win the Formula One World Championship.
- Bernie Ecclestone - the guy whose face used to pop out in every single F1 Broadcast - the former chief executive of the Formula One Group, which manages Formula One and controls the commercial rights to the sport.
So no wonder this couldn't be done in one go But at least attention has been given to those who deserve it, or at least to those I have on these Austrian stamps.
If you wanna take a break from all these people, check out the other entries for today's Sunday Stamps.
Must admit I'm not a fan of modern day F1 but I always enjoy the soap opera of the drivers.
ReplyDeleteGreat mini-sheet. used to enjoy Formula 1 growing up, but now it seems like watching paint dry!
ReplyDeleteThe stamps are interesting. But I'm not really into F1, and I don't recognise the people on them , except for one or two exceptions.
ReplyDeleteWow - I got 15 out of 20 names that I recognized!
ReplyDeleteAnd I don't really follow F1 that closely.
What a great choice for F!!
Hamilton will never rest util he's on a stamps as well - not that I would buy it. But these are superb.
ReplyDelete