On a soaking wet, grey morning, Lauda—who had famously called the track "dangerous" and tried to get the race cancelled—relented to pressure from Hunt and the organizers. On the second lap, approaching the fast left-hand bend at Bergwerk, Lauda’s Ferrari suddenly veered right, slammed into an embankment, and exploded into a fireball.
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Niki Lauda went on to win two more world titles (1977, 1984), become a successful airline entrepreneur, and serve as a sage non-executive chairman for Mercedes. The burns never healed entirely, but the character behind them only grew stronger. 1976 formula 1
James Hunt was the rockstar. Driving for the underdog McLaren team, he lived on cigarettes, champagne, and pure talent. He threw his car into corners sideways, charmed the press, and fought with the establishment as often as he fought with other drivers. On a soaking wet, grey morning, Lauda—who had
If you only know one year in Formula 1 history, it’s probably 1976. And for good reason. Forget the pristine, data-driven, tyre-management chess matches of today. 1976 was raw, lethal, political, and utterly unpredictable. It was a season that had everything: a fiery near-death experience, a bitter title fight, a disqualification scandal, and a finish that came down to a single, rain-soaked lap in Japan. Niki Lauda went on to win two more
He was trapped inside the burning cockpit for over a minute. Fellow drivers Arturo Merzario, Guy Edwards, and Harald Ertl—heroes in their own right—pulled him from the inferno. Lauda had inhaled superheated toxic fumes, searing his lungs and bloodstream. He suffered third-degree burns on his face and scalp. He lost most of his right ear. The last rites were read to him in the hospital. Doctors told Niki Lauda he would be lucky to live. They told him he would never race again.
This was the moment that defined the difference between them.