Tazio Giorgio Nuvolari 1:18 by Scale Figures
Limited to 60
Tazio Nuvolari, the “Flying Mantuan”
Tazio Nuvolari (1,65
metres tall and 55 kg in weight) was born in Castel d’Ario (nearby
Mantua) on 16 November 1892 and died in Mantua on 11 August 1953. He
began to race in 1920, when was 28 years old, and went on until 1950,
first on motorcycles and then in cars. He was 58 when he drove his last
race, winning it. During his sporting career he competed in 353 races
(124 bike and 229 car events), won 105 overall and scored 77 class
wins, recording 100 fastest laps.
He won 7 Italian
Championships (2 on bikes, 5 in cars) and even established 5
international speed records (3 on bikes, 2 in cars). He clocked a flying
kilometre average speed of 330,275 km/h. Nuvolari was injured in
several frightening accidents. He risked to die when his car burst into
flames, or to be crushed by its weight when he got trapped into it.
But nothing could ever stop him. His extraordinary performances made
him into a legend. They coined many nicknames for him: “son of the
devil”, “son of the wind”, “musketeer of the risk”, “Flying Mantuan”,
“Nivola” (in the Mantuan dialect means “cloud”), “Campionissimo” “Ace”,
“Master”. Enzo Ferrari called him “the greatest of all”. According to
Ferdinand Porsche he was “the greatest racing driver of all time”.
Streets, squares and even three monuments have been dedicated to his
memory in Mantua, Castel d’Ario and Rome.
Fifty years after his
passing, his name still evokes a strong and immutable emotion. We don’t
know if a racing driver could ever aspire to immortality. Nuvolari
can!
351 races
106 absolute victories
76 class victories
100 fastest laps
5 international speed records (3 motorcycle, 2 car)
7 Campione d'Italia awards (2 motorcycle, 5 car)
106 absolute victories
76 class victories
100 fastest laps
5 international speed records (3 motorcycle, 2 car)
7 Campione d'Italia awards (2 motorcycle, 5 car)
The youthThe speedOn the 5th of September 1904, Tazio saw for the first time a car race: the Circuit of Brescia. He was favourably impressed by the speed and by the ace drivers of that time: Vincenzo Lancia, Nazzaro, Cagno, Hémery, Duray,His first motorcycleIn 1904 and 1905 two episodes were very important and left a mark on his personality. First of all, one day his uncle Giuseppe tought him to drive a motorcycle. And then, one night Tazio stole his father's car and drove it in the moonlight. Later he said: "I was about 13. How fast was I driving? About 30 KpH, no more...".
"You are not cut out for this job"
His great passion for motorcycles and cars,
and his competitive spirit were growing faster and faster. Photos have
been found with Tazio standing tall on a motorcycle driving fast along a
dusty road, or wearing bonnet and goggles at the wheel of a Scat - a
car he never drove during a race, as far as we know. Tazio got the
motorcycle race licence in 1915, when he was 23. However, a few months
later the war broke out and he was in the Army as driver. He drove Red
Cross ambulances, lorries and car with the Officers. One day, while he
was driving, he got out of the road. The Official with him said «Listen
to me: forget driving. You are not cut out for this job».The weddingOn November 10th, 1917, Tazio married Carolina Perina (1894-1981) in Milan, with a civil ceremony. On September 4th, 1918, their first child Giorgio was born.The first racesDuring 1922 Tazio moved from Castel d'Ario to Mantua. He started three competitions by motorcycle and one by car: the Circuito del Garda (Garda Meeting) in Salò, where driving an Ansaldo he finished second overall. Professional pilotThe first meeting with Enzo FerrariDuring 1924, motorcycles took precedence over cars (nineteen races to five). However, Tazio scored his first overall victory at the "Circuito Golfo del Tigullio", driving a Bianchi 2 litres.Tazio was driving the Chiribiri Tipo Monza when he had to face a man who was going to be another legend in car racing, though not as a pilot. The big man from Modena, Enzo Ferrari, wrote in his memories: "I met Nuvolari for the first time in front of the Basilica di S. Apollinare in Classe, near Ravenna, during the 2nd "Circuito del Savio". At the start I did not take into consideration that small, thin man; but during the race I realized he was the only one who could threaten my success. I was driving an Alfa Romeo 3 litres while he had a Chiribiri*. We crossed the finishing line in that order, and the same happened a few weeks later at the Circuito del Polesine". * 1486cm3 powered, versus the 2994cm3 of the RL Sport driven by Ferrari The Scuderia NuvolariBetween 1927 and 1928 Tazio made his choice: in order to intensify his own activity as a car driver, he started his own racing team in Mantua. He bought four Bugatti Grand Prix, and then resold two of them to Achille Varzi (Tazio's tough rival; but also one of his best friends) and to Cesare Pastore. The Scuderia Nuvolari's debut, on March 11th, was a triumph: nine days after his second son's birth, Alberto, Tazio won the Gran Prix of Tripoli, scoring his first big international victory. He won also the "Circuito del Pozzo" in Verona, beating the great Pietro Bordino who was to die in an accident shortly afterwwards, during a practice to race the Circuito di Alessandria. So Nuvolari took part in the Circuito di Alessandria - dedicated to the memory of Bordino - honouring the died champion with a great win.The breaking off with Achille Varzi1930, the turning pointThe Scuderia Ferrari and Tazio's farewell to motorcycle racingIn 1930 Nuvolari raced even more often, alternating tracks and road competition; especially hill climb. At the Trieste - Opicina he gave the new born Scuderia Ferrari their first win, and soon became their standard bearer. He also won the Cuneo-Colle della Maddalena, the "Vittorio Veneto-Cansiglio and the Tourist Trophy run at the Ards Circuit near Belfast. During 1930 Nuvolari retired from motorcycle racing, activity in which he had excelled for a long time, with four final exploits: among them the Lario Trophy, where he was first overall, first in class, and drove the fastest lap. His 350CC Bianchi crossed the finishing line before all the 500CC motorcycles.Bugatti and Alfa1932: a successful seasonBy this time Nuvolari's star (the "Flying Mantuan", as he was called) blazed in the racing world. Out of 16 races, Tazio won 7: the Gran Prix of Monaco, the Targa Florio, the Italian Grand Prix, the French Grand prix, the Circuito di Avellino, the Coppa Ciano and the Coppa Acerbo. There were also 5 first in class and 9 fastest laps. The only race he did not managed to finish was the Mille Miglia: coming out Florence, his car run out of the road. Nuvolari's triumphal year was made complete by two other titles of great prestige: the Italian driver's championship and the International Championship, won on the basis of the three victories in the Grand Prix races of Italy, France, Germany.D'Annunzio and the turtleNuvolari and MussoliniThe divorce from FerrariAt the start of the Belgium Grand Prix, he appeared with a Maserati 8CM prepared by his personal mechanic Decimo Compagnoni. He won in Belgium, in the Coppa Ciano and in the Grand Prix of Nice, ending the season on the Spanish track in San Sebastian, where he had a serious accident. In 1933 he drove 5 different cars: Alfa Romeo 8C 2300 Spyder (Passo Corto), Alfa Romeo 8C 2300 Le Mans, 8C 2600 Monza, Maserati 8CM. He had also a MG Magnette K3 for the Tourist Trophy where Nuvolari was, of course, first overall.
The peace with Enzo FerrariSo "the flying Mantuan" signed the peace with Enzo Ferrari, and in 1935 Tazio was back in the Scuderia Ferrari. He soon began again to win: in the first race of the season (at Pau, on an Alfa Romeo Tipo B called P3), and again in Bergamo, Biella and Turin with a more powerful and modified model P3 of the Scuderia Ferrari. 1935: the "impossible win" at NürburgringTazio knocked everybody out, scoring maybe his most emblematic, epic win. The record along Firenze-MareIn the Italian Gran Prix, Nuvolari started with the new Alfa 8C-35 monoposto (single-seater) with whom he won, later, the Modena Circuit. The Vanderbilt Cup1937, a bad year1937: the German cars dominated all the races, so it was a bad year for all the other drivers. Above all, Nuvolari had a death in his family: on June 27th, while Tazio was going overseas for the Valderbilt Cup on board of "the Normandie", he received a telegram from Mantua telling him of the death of his elder son, Giorgio, from myocarditis. The boy would have been 19 in September; the success of the previous year seemed gone far away. During the race, moreover, the Alfa Romeo driven by Tazio caught fire and the driver once more had to remove himself from the car in haste.He had another accident (during the test of the Turin circuit), few races (9 alltogether) and only one win: at the Grand Prix in Milan. The 370CV of his 12C-36 were not enough in comparison with the 520CV 6 litres, 16C of the Auto Union Tipo C, and even less in comparison with the 646CV 5.6 litres 8C of the Mercedes Benz W125. The Auto union and Tazio's coming back to raceIn 1938 the season opened with a new formula for Gran Prix cars (3000cm3 limit powered for boasted engine, and 4500 for the sucked-up ones) but the arrangement did not change at all: the Alfa Romeo had on the track the new 308 (2991cm3, 8C compressor, 295CV, 260KpH) but the Mercedes Benz replied with the W154 (2962cm3, 12C compressor, 468CV, 300 KpH). During practice for the Grand Prix of Pau the Alfa Romeo caught fire.
The war and the last race of Auto UnionThe second son deathIn 1946 Nuvolari suffered another personal tragedy: on the 11th of April his second son died, aged only 18. Somehow he found the strength to start racing again. On the 12th of May he raced at the Grand Prix of Marseilles.He showed that he was anything but past history, doing the fastest lap before his engine let him down. He would race anywhere, anyhow he could to survive his great pain."Without steering wheel"He did not win as often as before, but he became more and more popular. In Turin, on September 3rd, he started the Coppa Brezzi driving a Cisitalia D46. He was in the lead at the end of the first lap. On the second one he passed in front of the pit area waving the steering wheel which had come off in his hands. He did another lap driving the steering column but then he had to stop for the inevitable repairs. He started again and ended the race ranking 13th. The story went around the world and added popularity to his already formidable myth.The last victoriesIn 1946 Tazio drove in 19 races, gaining three overall wins. Still with the Maserati, he got at Albi what was to be his last international triumph. Among the car he drove, we can count the Maserati 4CL, Fiat 1100S, and Cisitalia D46.The Mille MigliaNuvolari started only six races in 1947. He had an overall win at the Circuito of Parma. The facts so given make it seem a fairly routine year - not much for a champion like him - but do not tell the whole story. Another race added to the myth: the Mille Miglia. Tazio was 55 but managed his usual incredible feat. He went into the the lead with his little Cisitalia 202 Spyder and was well ahead to the pack. He fought off fatigue (by the way, that year the route was 1800 instead of 1600Km long), vomiting attacks and the rain. An ignition fault was repaired, but a violent storm filled the cockpit with water. He had to stop briefly and, when he restarted, Biondetti's Type 8C 2900 Alfa Romeo Berlinetta had passed him, entering Brescia in the lead. Tazio, who thrilled the hearts of millions of Italians, was right behind him.Aged 56, his last featIn 1949 he only raced once, almost symbolically, at Marseilles where he completed just one lap before handing the Maserati A6GCS to Piero Carini. The epilogueThen he was seen less often, becoming increasingly isolated. His health declined and he died on August 11th, 1953, in his bed and not (as he had so frequently chanced - and what could have perhaps wished for him) at the wheel of a car. Ferdinand Porsche said then that Nuvolari was "the greatest pilot of the past, the present and the future". |
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