Charlie Whiting: F1 race director dies aged 66 on eve of season-opener in Melbourne
Charlie Whiting, the head of
Formula 1 for governing body the FIA and one of the most influential
people in the sport for decades, has died aged 66.
Whiting
suffered a pulmonary embolism on Thursday morning in Melbourne, where he
was due to officiate this weekend’s season-opening Australian GP.
Whiting was the official race starter and oversaw all rules matters in F1.
FIA president Jean Todt called Whiting “a central and inimitable figure who embodied the ethics and spirit” of F1.
Whiting had worked for the FIA since 1988, when he joined initially as technical director.
He
was previously chief mechanic and then chief engineer of former F1 boss
Bernie Ecclestone’s Brabham team, which won world championships in 1981
and 1983.
Whiting began his F1 career with the Hesketh team in 1977, moving to Brabham for 1978 and staying there until he joined the FIA, where he had been a central part of the organisation’s running of F1 ever since.
Todt added: “Formula 1 has lost a faithful friend and a charismatic ambassador in Charlie.”
Ex-team
boss Ross Brawn, now F1’s managing director, said: “I have known
Charlie for all of my racing life. We worked as mechanics together,
became friends and spent so much time together at race tracks across the
world.
“I was filled with immense sadness when I heard the
tragic news. I’m devastated. It is a great loss not only for me
personally but also the entire Formula 1 family, the FIA and motorsport
as a whole. All our thoughts go out to his family.”
Whiting’s
death leaves a hole in the FIA’s organisation of the Australian Grand
Prix – he was the go-to person for teams on all matters pertaining to an
F1 weekend.
The FIA has not yet announced how he will be replaced.
The McLaren team paid tribute to Whiting, tweeting:
“All at McLaren are shocked and deeply saddened at the news of Charlie
Whiting’s passing. Charlie will be remembered as one of the giants of
our sport, as well as a great colleague.”
Red Bull Racing
said the team was “shocked and saddened” at the news. Team principal
Christian Horner added: “Charlie has played a key role in this sport and
has been the referee and voice of reason as race director for many
years.
“He was a man with great integrity who performed a
difficult role in a balanced way. Charlie was a great man who will be
sadly missed by the entire Formula 1 paddock and the wider motorsport
community.”
Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff described Whiting as a
“fantastic ambassador for our sport and a true guardian of its best
interests”.
Renault described him as “one of the pillars and leaders of the sport”, while British driver George Russell,
who will make his F1 debut for Williams this weekend, called Whiting “a
huge figure in the world of motorsport”, adding: “We’ll all miss him
very much.”
Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc said: “Horrible news from Melbourne. All my thoughts goes to Charlie’s family. The motorsport world will miss you. R.I.P.”
‘Lightness of touch & ready sense of humour’ – analysis
Charlie
Whiting was a giant personality in F1, and it is hard to emphasise just
how big a hole his death leaves in a sport in which he has been a
central figure for 40 years.
As the FIA’s F1 director, Whiting was
the go-to man for all aspects of the sport – he was involved in
everything, from safety, to technical rules to sporting matters.
He certified circuits, he led the drivers’ briefings, he pretty much wrote the rules by himself, and he did all this with a lightness of touch, approachability and ready sense of humour that made a man doing one of the most difficult jobs in F1 one of its most popular characters.
Whiting was the ultimate poacher-turned-gamekeeper. Brabham, when he
was there, were notorious for stretching the rules to breaking point –
and sometimes beyond. And he would happily engage in light-hearted
badinage about some of the more infamous stories.
At the
Brazilian Grand Prix one year recently, Nelson Piquet’s 1981
title-winning Brabham was being demonstrated by its former driver.
The
car was notorious for taking pole at Monaco in 1981, only for the
mechanics to fit a much heavier rear wing – which needed three of them
to carry it – to ensure it was over the minimum weight limit afterwards.
This
writer joked to Whiting that I’d just seen “that illegal 1981 Brabham
that took pole at Monaco”. He replied with a cheeky smile: “No, you
haven’t. You’ve just seen the perfectly legal one that ran later on.”
His
knowledge of the wiles of F1 teams was invaluable in the role he was
given by the FIA in 1988 – on the recommendation of Ecclestone, his
former team boss, who had by now relinquished control of Brabham and was
running the commercial side of the sport.
And he went on to make
that role his own, later expanding his position as technical delegate
into race director and then responsibility for all aspects of F1 for the
FIA.
Whiting combined unquenchable energy, something close to
workaholism and an easy manner to run the most complex of sports in a
way that ensured inevitable controversies were always handled in a
manner that avoided rancour.
He was incredibly busy, but generous with his time, the warmth of his personality and love for the sport always shining through.
From
the FIA’s point of view, he will be incredibly difficult to replace.
And, just as with Ecclestone, it may well be that several people are
needed to manage all the different responsibilities that he had handled
so deftly for so long.
Comments (0 )