Strangely enough I was reading his Wikipedia page this morning to see how many times the word 'crash' appeared (12) and now this. Am I right in thinking he crashed his motorbike? Very sad, and although the nickname De Crasherist was a bit undeserved at times and now oddly prophetic, he was a real stalwart of the sport.
Crazy! I was just watching the 1982 U.S. Grand Prix West on youtube yesterday. A world without De Cesaris is a sad world indeed. Rest in Peace. You will be sorely missed.
Proud supporter of the United States 2nd Amendment.
What?! This is messed up, Bianchi getting hurt, De Cesaris passing away...blimey, this sucks.
RIP Andrea, you are a true legend.
Mitch Hedberg wrote:I want to be a race car passenger: just a guy who bugs the driver. Say man, can I turn on the radio? You should slow down. Why do we gotta keep going in circles? Man, you really like Tide...
watka wrote:I find it amusing that whilst you're one of the more openly Christian guys here, you are still first and foremost associated with an eye for the ladies!
dinizintheoven wrote:GOOD CHRISTIANS do not go to jail. EVERYONE ON FORMULA ONE REJECTS should be in jail.
I was refusing till believe it until it was on Autosport. Goodbye to a legend - the first season I watched really closely so one of the first memories I had of him was Spa that year.
"Poor old Warwick takes it from behind all throughout this season". (Tony Jardine, 1988)
I just saw this topic on the forums and had to do a double take. What an awful, awful day for Formula One.
RIP Andrea.
Fetzie on Ferrari wrote:How does a driver hurtling around a race track while they're sous-viding in their overalls have a better understanding of the race than a team of strategy engineers in an air-conditioned room?l
I saw this on Taki Inoue's page and was hoping for it not to be true.
I know I bang on about how rubbish the BBC Sport website is, but the currently have a 'tribute' page with a picture of an Alfa labelled as a McLaren, and a caption that claims he 'drove for Cosworth' in 1988. Come on guys, this stuff isn't hard to get right.
Anyway, I will do my own tribute on Facebook. I always loved the fact that he got to redeem his reputation at the end of his career, and always cheered him on for Dallara and Jordan. RIP Andrea.
What a bad day. RIP Andrea. A truly great character. Bless his soul.
I met him at Spa on the Thursday in '92 when I had sneaked into the paddock without a ticket. He was very friendly and kindly gave me an autograph. Thanks again.
I'll remember him as the guy who took F1's most beautiful car ever and took it to where it belonged: to the front!
"I don't think we should be used to finance (the manufacturers') R&D because they will produce that engine anyway" said Monisha Kaltenborn. "You will never see a Mercedes using a Ferrari engine or the other way round."
RIP Andrea de Cesaris, a remarkable driver in many ways.
Check out the position of the sun on 2 August at 20:08 in my garden
Allard Kalff in 1994 wrote:OH!! Schumacher in the wall! Right in front of us, Michael Schumacher is in the wall! He's hit the pitwall, he c... Ah, it's Jos Verstappen.
A driver with a huge impact. Just name all the teams he drove for and you don't need to explain anything else. A great loss, without doubt. Perhaps he was remembered as the only italian in the world who never liked to look into mirrors, but there's no denying that he could get results in average cars, and he was unquestionably talented, and as far as i heared, a nice person.
What day :'( Just terrible :'( I know he deserved at least some wins. Good bye Andrea de Cesaris. We miss you :'(
Rio Haryanto for the win! He upon seeing me accidentaly paint Belgian flag rotated 90 deg to right tommykl returns from the bathroom tommykl reads the chat logs tommykl has a stroke
How sad. It was only a day or two ago I was telling my daughter that when I was her age the equivalent of Maldonado was a bloke who we called 'de Crasheris' who - even if he was erratic - was a true racer who gave it everything he had in his fragile and flawed Alfa Romeo and no matter what misfortune befell him, would always come out swinging in the next race. Characters like de Cesaris were a large part of why F1 captured my imagination as a young boy - thanks, Andrea, for all the memories.
CoopsII wrote:Wouldnt it be lovely if just for once someone said "I really want to emulate Boutsen and get a decent, if not spectacular, result with some solid points".