As the year draws to a close, it is time to recall one of motorsport’s heroes who we lost in 2020.
Sir Stirling Moss OBE died on Sunday 12 April after fighting a debilitating illness with great courage for more than three years. He was 90.
By any measure Stirling Moss was the greatest racing driver of his era, and one of the greatest of all time.
In 15 seasons, from 1948 until 1962, he took part in 585 events, an average of almost 40 a year. He won 212 of them.
That huge number demonstrates his extraordinary versatility, and his willingness to race virtually anything, anywhere.
He was at the very top of the Grand Prix ladder; he was an unbeatable sports car racer; he was the man to beat whenever he found himself in a Touring Car or a smaller single-seater.
He was even a brilliant rally driver, as well as shining in other disciplines from hillclimbs to record-breaking at Bonneville and elsewhere.
The common cliché, that he was the best driver never to have won the Formula One World Championship, says less about his talent and more about his patriotic determination to race a British car whenever possible.