The story appears on

Page A15

May 30, 2019

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Sports » Motor Racing

Austria bids farewell to F1 icon Lauda

Thousands of mourners, including motor racing world champion Lewis Hamilton, bid farewell to Formula One legend and Austrian national hero Niki Lauda at a ceremony in Vienna’s historic cathedral yesterday.

“We all loved and admired Niki. We admired his courage, his will, his strength, his love,” said Austrian-born actor and former California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger during the packed funeral mass at St Stephen’s Cathedral.

Lauda, who died on May 20 at the age of 70, was a three-time world champion whose track victories and comeback from a horrific crash enthralled race fans worldwide.

He suffered horrific injuries on August 1, 1976, when, having already won five races that season, his vehicle burst into flames on the Nuerburgring in Germany. He had severe burns to his face and hands, and inhaled toxic fumes which damaged his lungs.

“Goodbye, world champion! Thank you for everything,” Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen told the mourners, who in addition to his family and hundreds of VIP guests, also included onlookers from Austria and further afield.

The guests included other F1 heavyweights, such as Mercedes chief Toto Wolff and Valtteri Bottas, as well as French former F1 driver Alain Prost, Austrian former F1 driver Gerhard Berger, and former Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, who was removed from office by a no-confidence vote this week.

Songs that were reportedly Lauda’s favorites — such as “Amazing Grace,” “Fast Car” by Tracy Chapman and John Lennon’s “Imagine” — were played.

Many in the crowds both inside and outside the cathedral wore red caps similar to the ones that became Lauda’s trademark, which he used to cover the scars from his accident.

A Ferrari flag could also be seen. Lauda won the drivers’ world championship in 1975 and 1977 with Ferrari and in 1984 with McLaren.

Even after his retirement, Lauda remained a firm fixture on the racing circuit, most recently becoming non-executive chairman at Mercedes F1 in 2012. He was also instrumental in bringing in Hamilton.

After the mass, pallbearers carried the coffin outside, as bells rang out and thousands looked on.

The procession was accompanied by Lauda’s family, Hamilton, and former drivers such as Prost and German-born Nico Rosberg.

Earlier, the casket had arrived with a police motorcade.

And Lauda’s widow Birgit along with two of his sons placed his helmet on top of the coffin, which stood surrounded by flower wreaths and a portrait of Lauda sporting his famous red cap.

Mourners then slowly filed past to pay their respects, taking photos and laying flowers.

It is the first time a sports star has received such an honor in the Gothic Roman Catholic cathedral, a distinction previously accorded only to dignitaries such as the archbishop of Vienna, Cardinal Franz Koenig, and the former crown prince of the Austrian-Hungarian empire, Otto von Habsburg.

“The whole world says today: Bye, Niki!” tabloid Oesterreich said on its front page.

Lauda died at the University Hospital Zurich in Switzerland, nine months after undergoing a lung transplant.

The family has not yet said where Lauda will be buried, but they have reportedly turned down an offer from the city authorities for an honorary grave in Vienna’s sprawling Central Cemetery.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend