It’s difficult to believe that exactly 30 years have now passed since one of Formula One’s most promising prospects, Stefan Bellof, was killed at the 1985 Spa 1000km. A contemporary of Ayrton Senna, the rising star of F1 was on a parallel path to his Brazillian counterpart throughout the 1980s. But while Senna went on to win three World Championships, the record books show that Bellof scored only a single podium finish, at Monaco in 1984.
As with Gilles Villeneuve, however, those record books do not tell the whole story. Bellof’s racing career, though criminally short, was diverse, offering tantalising glimpses of brilliance and visions of a potential German world champion years ahead of Michael Schumacher. We remember the highs and lows.
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One of Bellof’s most impressive drives came at Monaco in 1984. In atrocious conditions, his normally aspirated Tyrrell 012 was more suited to the tight street circuit than the turbocharged cars driven by his rivals, and he took full advantage. When the race was stopped early, Ayrton Senna was catching Alain Prost for the lead – but Bellof was catching the pair of them.
Bellof’s spectacular drive in Monaco offered the driver little consolation, when, at the end of the season, the Tyrrell team was excluded from the World Championship amid political acrimony and allegations of ballast irregularities.