Lucien Bianchi

Driver

Birthday November 10, 1934

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Milan, Italy

DEATH DATE 1969, Circuit de la Sarthe, Le Mans, France (35 years old)

Nationality Italy

#52058 Most Popular

1934

Lucien Bianchi (10 November 1934 – 30 March 1969), born Luciano Bianchi, was an Italian-born Belgian racing driver who raced for the Cooper, ENB, UDT Laystall and Scuderia Centro Sud teams in Formula One.

1946

Bianchi was born in Milan, Italy, but moved to Belgium in 1946 when he was still a child, with his father who was a race mechanic working, before the Second World War, in the Alfa Romeo competition department.

His brother, Mauro Bianchi, also became a racing driver.

1951

Lucien Bianchi's first race event was at the Alpine Rally in 1951.

1957

He won the 1957, 1958 and 1959 Tour de France as well as the Paris 1000 sports car race in the latter two years.

1959

He entered Formula One in 1959, although only with sporadic appearances at first.

He drove various cars under the banner of the ENB team, including a Cooper T51, a Lotus 18 and an Emeryson.

1961

After a couple of races for the UDT Laystall team in 1961, driving another Lotus, he returned to ENB for whom he drove their ENB-Maserati.

1965

They drove to victory together in the 1965 Nürburgring 500 km. Mauro later won the P1.6 class at the 1967 24 Hours of Le Mans.

His grandnephew, Jules Bianchi, who made his Formula One debut with the Marussia team for the season competing under the French flag, also died as a result of injuries sustained in a racing accident.

1968

He entered a total of 19 Formula One World Championship races, scoring six points and had a best finish of third at the 1968 Monaco Grand Prix.

He finally secured a more regular drive in Formula One in 1968, with the Cooper-BRM team, although success was elusive despite a bright start.

Bianchi managed his best Formula One performance, finishing third at the 1968 Monaco Grand Prix, in his first race for Cooper.

Bianchi also raced touring cars, sports cars and rally cars, being successful in all disciplines, his biggest victories coming in the 1968 24 Hours of Le Mans, behind the wheel of a Ford GT40 with Pedro Rodríguez and at Sebring in 1962 with Jo Bonnier.

He was also leading the 1968 London–Sydney Marathon when his Citroën DS collided with a non-competing car on the closed course near Nowra, 100 km south of Sydney.

1969

He died in a testing crash in preparation for the 1969 24 Hours of Le Mans.

He was killed when his Alfa Romeo T33 spun into a telegraph pole during Le Mans testing in 1969.

At Circuit Zolder, the fourth turn of the circuit, entering the back stretch, is named LucienBianchiBocht in his memory.

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(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap.)