Difference between revisions of "Giuseppe Campari"

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[[Image:180px-GiuseppeCampari.jpg|thumb|160px|right|'''Cavaliere Giuseppe Campari''']]
 
[[Image:180px-GiuseppeCampari.jpg|thumb|160px|right|'''Cavaliere Giuseppe Campari''']]
 
[[Image:Piloti Alfa Romeo 1.JPG|thumb|250px|The racecar drivers Giuseppe Campari (2nd from left), [[Achille Varzi]] (3rd) and [[Tazio Nuvolari]] (4th) of Alfa Romeo with [[Prospero Gianferrari]] (6th).]]
 
[[Image:Piloti Alfa Romeo 1.JPG|thumb|250px|The racecar drivers Giuseppe Campari (2nd from left), [[Achille Varzi]] (3rd) and [[Tazio Nuvolari]] (4th) of Alfa Romeo with [[Prospero Gianferrari]] (6th).]]
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'''Giuseppe Campari''', born [[June 8]], [[1892]] - died [[September 10]], [[1933]], was an Italian [[Opera|opera singer]] and [[Grand Prix motor racing]] driver.                             
 
'''Giuseppe Campari''', born [[June 8]], [[1892]] - died [[September 10]], [[1933]], was an Italian [[Opera|opera singer]] and [[Grand Prix motor racing]] driver.                             

Latest revision as of 09:25, 23 October 2009

File:180px-GiuseppeCampari.jpg
Cavaliere Giuseppe Campari
The racecar drivers Giuseppe Campari (2nd from left), Achille Varzi (3rd) and Tazio Nuvolari (4th) of Alfa Romeo with Prospero Gianferrari (6th).


Giuseppe Campari, born June 8, 1892 - died September 10, 1933, was an Italian opera singer and Grand Prix motor racing driver.

Born Cavaliere Giuseppe Campari near the city of Lodi southwest of Milan, Italy, as a teenager he went to work for the Alfa Romeo automobile company. Campari's job eventually involved test driving factory cars and his skills and interest led to his participation in competitive hillclimbing events. In 1914 the 21-year-old rookie showed his abilities with a fourth place finish at the Targa Florio. Unfortunately, his career was just getting going when World War I broke out and European racing came to a halt.

Following the Armistice that ended the war, racing resumed and in 1920 Campari earned his first major race win and the first for the Alfa Romeo company when he drove to victory at the Circuit of Mugello in Tuscany. He repeated as champion at Mugello the next year and took third place at the Targa Florio but did not earn another major championship until he captured the French Grand Prix in 1924 when he was part of a powerful three-man Alfa Romeo team with Count Gastone Brilli-Peri and Antonio Ascari in cars designed by Vittorio Jano.


Campari at the 1921 Targa Florio

In addition to his love of automobile racing, Giuseppe Campari had two other passions: food, in great quantities that he liked to prepare himself, and the opera. Blessed with a great baritone voice from the depths of an expansive paunch, he took singing lessons and while still racing began to sing professionally.

The 1925 racing season was less than successful for Campari as he and the Alfa Romeo team withdrew from the French Grand Prix in July after Ascari crashed and died. In 1926, Maserati came out with the Tipo 26, its first highly competitive race car that led to Maserati winning the Constructors' title and Ernesto Maserati taking the Italian driving championship in 1927. Despite Maserati's strong performances, Campari claimed victory for Alfa Romeo in the 1927 Coppa Acerbo.

The 1928 season saw Giuseppe Campari win his second consecutive Coppa Acerbo and his first at the Mille Miglia. He earned a second-place finish in the Targa Florio, a race he entered several times and although he frequently finished near the top, he never managed a win. The following year he repeated as champion at the Mille Miglia and along with top drivers such as Malcolm Campbell and Rudolf Caracciola, he traveled to Ireland to compete in the inaugural Irish International Grand Prix at Phoenix Park in Dublin. Run in front of more than 100,000 spectators, Campari was hit in the eye by a flying small rock but was successfully treated in hospital and the race was won by the Russian émigré, Boris Ivanowski. Campari also raced in the Tourist Trophy Races at the Ards course in Belfast where he finished second to Caracciola's Mercedes.

In 1930, Tazio Nuvolari joined Campari on the Alfa Romeo team. After a sensational debut season, Nuvolari and Campari combined to win their first Italian Grand Prix, a victory that made them national heroes for taking the championship from the French who had won it for the past three years. That same year, Campari won his third Coppa Acerbo but for 1933 he became part of the Maserati team with Baconin Borzacchini and Luigi Fagioli. Campari won his second French Grand Prix driving for Maserati, but at age 41 was ready to retire at the end of the season. The Italian Grand Prix on September 10, 1933 at the Autodromo Nazionale Monza in Monza, Italy was to be his last race. After 20 years without any major accidents, disaster stuck in one of the blackest days in Grand Prix racing history. While leading the race, Campari was instantly killed when his car crashed after skidding in a sharp turn on a patch of leaked engine oil. Immediately behind him in second place, team-mate Baconin Borzacchini tried unsuccessfully to avoid Campari's wrecked vehicle and was killed when his car veered off the track. Later on, when the race was restarted, the vehicle of Polish driver, Count Stanislas Czaykowski, crashed and caught on fire, burning him to death.


Major career wins:


Complete European Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position)

Year Entrant Make 1 2 3 EDC Points
1931 Alfa Corse Alfa Romeo ITA
1
FRA
2
BEL
Ret
2 9
1932 Alfa Corse Alfa Romeo ITA
4
FRA
GER
9= 20