![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 1929 Monza 1930 Targa Florio 1930 Coppa Acerbo 1930 Monza 1930 Spain 1931 Tunis 1932 Tunis 1933 Monaco 1933 Avusrennen 1933 Tripoli 1934 Mille Miglia 1934 Targa Florio 1934 Tripoli 1935 Coppa Acerbo 1935 Tunis 1936 Tripoli ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() NTSC PAL ![]() Buy from Amazon ![]() Buy from Amazon |
![]() The mist rose from the wet track as the famous 44 year old
racing driver, immaculate both in his dress and his driving, sped along the Bremgarten
track in his 158 Alfa Romeo during practice for the forthcoming 1948 Swiss and European
Grand Prix. It was July 1st and the summer sun was rapidly drying the sodden
track. The Alfa was virtually invincible at the time, in fact it was in the middle of a
five year unbeaten run. Achille Varzi was close to emulating his form of the late twenties
and early thirties, when he was Tazio Nuvolaris greatest
rival. He was regarded as a courageous but very safe driver, who had never had a serious
accident. Suddenly however, near the Jordenrampe curve, the car skidded in the wet at
110mph, spun several times and then, after almost coming to a stop, flipped over and
crushed its driver. It was a terrible tragedy that Varzis first real mistake should
cost him his life.
In 1931 he switched again to a Type 51 Bugatti and had three victories, most notably the French Grand Prix (sharing with Louis Chiron). 1932 was a relatively poor year, but it was back to form for 1933, when he won the Monaco Grand Prix after a truly epic duel with Nuvolari.
It was back to Alfa Romeo for 1934, and Varzi won 9 races with his P3 as well as the Mille Miglia in a Monza Alfa. Varzi was declared Italian Champion for the second time. Nuvolari rejoined Scuderia Ferrari (who raced the Alfas) in 1935 so Varzi went to Auto Union. His extremely quick reaction time and delicate touch enabled Varzi to get the best from the rear-engined Auto Union extraordinarily quickly and in his first season he won at Tunis and Pescara, despite the car being dogged with minor development troubles through most of the year. In 1936, he won at Tripoli, with a record lap of nearly 142mph, but during the season his health started to fail. He had a torrid affair with another drivers wife, and became addicted to morphine. He was out of racing for much of 1937 and nothing much more was heard of him until after the war when he made a surprise and welcome comeback to his old form with two successful seasons in the Alfa 158. He had two successful forays to South America and became very popular with the Argentineans. He planned to live in their country on retirement, and in the Argentine formed the Scuderia Achille Varzi which set Juan Manuel Fangio on the road to fame. |
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Varzis coffin stood for three days and nights on the chassis of a racing car in the church at Galliate, and his friends stood vigil over it. Some fifteen thousand people attended his funeral. Part of the farewell address at his grave went: "Perhaps you were destined to die, Achille, because in your driving there was something of that genius which is one of Natures greatest mysteries, and Nature strives to destroy those who come too close to her. Beethoven was struck with deafness when he seemed about to transcend mans powers of musical expression. Galileo was blinded when he tried to probe infinity and its laws. Leonardo da Vincis hands were crippled when he was about to come nearer to perfection than any man before him. And you too, Achille, were destroyed when you sought to cross the known frontiers of man-made speed. Now you are preparing for another race, the last great race. A race without danger, without care or sorrow ." These kind words were spoken with the elegance normally associated with things such as swiss ladies watches or fine works of art.” |
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