Formula One: French driver Jules Bianchi dies aged 25, nine months after Japan crash (2024)

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Formula One: French driver Jules Bianchi dies aged 25, nine months after Japan crash (1)

PARIS (AFP) - Formula One was in mourning Saturday for Jules Bianchi, the French driver who died from head injuries he suffered in a crash at last season's Japanese Grand Prix, after spending nine months in a coma.

Bianchi, 25, who died on Friday night, had been fighting for his life under controlled medical conditions in the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire hospital in his home city of Nice, southern France.

He is the first Formula One driver to perish from a racing accident since triple world champion Aryton Senna in San Marino in 1994.

"Jules fought right to the very end, as he always did, but today his battle came to an end," the Bianchi family said in a statement posted on Facebook in the early hours of Saturday.

"The pain we feel is immense and indescribable."

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A Statement from the Bianchi FamilyNice, FranceSaturday 18 July 201502.45hrs France │ 01.45hrs UKC’est avec une...

Posted by Jules Bianchi Fan Club onFriday, July 17, 2015

The gifted young Marussia driver's death sparked a flood of tributes from his pitlane colleagues and the world of politics.

"French motorsport has lost one of its greatest hopes," French President Francois Hollande commented in a statement.

Formula One supremo and the sport's chief executive Bernie Ecclestone stated: "It was so sad to hear the news about Jules.

"We are now going to miss a very talented driver and a really nice person. We must not let this ever happen again."

World champion Lewis Hamilton summed up the sombre mood from the grid, the Mercedes star declaring on Twitter: "A sad, sad day today, guys. Please pray for Jules' loved ones. RIP Jules. God bless."

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Bianchi joined Marussia in 2013 and competed in 34 grands prix, notching two world championship points - still the team's best result.

John Booth, team principal of the team now called Manor F1, said: "Words cannot describe the enormous sadness within our team this morning, as we come to terms with losing Jules.

"He has left an indelible mark on all our lives, and will forever be part of everything we have achieved, and everything we will strive for going forward."

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Formula One: Father 'less optimistic' about Jules Bianchi recovering

Bianchi suffered a traumatic brain injury when his car careered off the rain-drenched Suzuka circuit during the Japanese Grand Prix on October 5 and smashed into a recovery truck at around 200kmh.

Bianchi's death ended a promising career that he hoped would see him join the elite ranks of Ferrari, something the young driver said he felt "ready" to do three days before the race in Japan.

Hopes for his recovery had been fading and on Monday, his father Philippe said he was "less optimistic" that Jules would make a full recovery after spending nine months in hospital with no signs of "significant progress".

RACING IN HIS GENES

Bianchi's crash, which came as Formula One legend Michael Schumacher was battling back from a horrific ski accident, added to anxiety surrounding the high-octane motor racing circus.

While yellow warning flags were up, racing was still intense when Bianchi spun off and experts said the wet track, his tyres and his speed could all have been to blame for the accident.

Questions have also been raised about whether the marshals should have halted the race after Adrian Sutil's Sauber came off the track on the previous lap.

Bianchi's accident led to new safety measures to ensure drivers slowed down for on-track incidents, including the implementation of a 'virtual safety car'.

Born in Nice in 1989 to Italian parents, Bianchi had racing in his genes. His grandfather Mauro had been a well known Formula Three and endurance driver in the 1960s.

His father Philippe for years managed a karting track near the Paul Ricard circuit near Marseille, in southern France, where Jules made his debut as a race car driver.

But his death also recalled another tragic piece of family history: his geat-uncle Lucien, who competed in 17 grands prix, was also killed in a crash while racing in 1969 at the age of 34.

The Bianchi family in their Saturday statement thanked "everyone who has demonstrated their affection for him over these past months, which gave us great strength and helped us deal with such difficult times" and asked for privacy.

Bianchi is the fourth leading French sports figure to perish in 2015, following the deaths of sailor Florence Arthaud, boxer Alexis Vastine and Olympic swimming champion Camille Muffat who were all killed in a helicopter crash in Argentina while competing in a reality TV show.

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Formula One: French driver Jules Bianchi dies aged 25, nine months after Japan crash (2024)

FAQs

Formula One: French driver Jules Bianchi dies aged 25, nine months after Japan crash? ›

(Reuters) - French Formula One driver Jules Bianchi has died of critical head injuries sustained at last year's Japanese Grand Prix

Japanese Grand Prix
The Japanese Grand Prix (Japanese: 日本グランプリ, romanized: Nihon-guranpuri) is a motor racing event in the calendar of the Formula One World Championship.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Japanese_Grand_Prix
, his family said in a statement on Saturday. He was 25. Bianchi had been in a coma since the accident at Suzuka last October.

Who was responsible for Jules Bianchi death? ›

The report found that there was no single cause of Bianchi's accident. Instead, the contributing factors were found to include track conditions, car speed and the presence of a recovery vehicle on the circuit.

Did Jules Bianchi ever regain consciousness? ›

Bianchi never regained consciousness. After weeks in a hospital in Japan, Bianchi was transported back to his native France, to a hospital in Nice. Bianchi was born in Nice in August 1989.

Was Jules Bianchi a good driver? ›

What is beyond doubt is that Bianchi had the underlying pace to succeed. Committed and capable of carrying prodigious speed through the fast corners, precise and good on the brakes for the slower stuff, the raw material was there.

Did Jules Bianchi survive the crash? ›

This year marks the 10th anniversary of Jules Bianchi's crash at the Japanese GP that ultimately cost him his life. He remains the only Formula 1 driver to have died this century as a result of an accident in a grand prix.

Who was the French driver killed? ›

The Spa-Francorchamps circuit is where French driver Anthoine Hubert was killed following a multi-car crash during a Formula Two race at the Belgium Grand Prix in 2019.

Was Jules Bianchi awake? ›

“Jules is no longer in the artificial coma in which he was placed shortly after the accident, however he is still unconscious. He is breathing unaided and his vital signs are stable but his condition is still classified as critical.

Why did Jules Bianchi not slow down? ›

The FailSafe algorithm is designed to over-ride the throttle and cut the engine, but was inhibited by the Torque Coordinator, which controls the rear Brake-by-Wire system. Bianchi's Marussia has a unique design of BBW, which proved to be incompatible with the FailSafe settings.

What was the last death in F1? ›

Since then, only one driver, Frenchman Jules Bianchi in Japan in 2015, has died in a Formula One crash.

Was Jules Bianchi in a coma? ›

Jules is no longer in the artificial coma in which he was placed shortly after the accident, however he is still unconscious,” said the statement released by his parents Philippe and Christine.

Did Jules Bianchi ever win? ›

Jules cut his teeth in go karts at the age of five, and after a string of successes graduated to racing cars in Formula Renault 2.0 in 2007. He won the French series at the first time of asking with five wins, while also competing in the European championship.

Would the Halo have saved Jules? ›

Safety has been taken more seriously since Jules Bianchi's fatal accident at the 2014 Japanese Grand Prix. Since then new safety measures like the Halo and the Virtual Safety Car have been introduced to the sport. However, it is believed that the Halo wouldn't have saved Bianchi.

What happened to Jules Bianchi head? ›

Jules Bianchi's family have confirmed in a statement that the 25-year-old Marussia driver suffered a “diffuse axonal injury” to the head in his heavy crash during the Japanese Grand Prix, where he veered off tract and collided with a recovery vehicle.

Has the FIA ever been sued? ›

This revelation comes at a critical time when Susie Wolff, the F1 Academy's managing director and the spouse of Mercedes' team principal, Toto Wolff, has taken a significant step by filing a criminal lawsuit against the FIA in France.

What relation was Jules Bianchi to Charles Leclerc? ›

Two days before his death, Leclerc lied to his father that he had signed a Formula One contract for the 2018 season; he signed with Sauber a month later. Leclerc's older brother Lorenzo was best friends with the late Jules Bianchi, who became Leclerc's godfather until Bianchi's death in 2014.

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