Motor Sport Magazine

Ringmasters

20 Rolf Stommelen

Bespectacled and spectacular, a precocious talent unfulfilled in F1

Signed by Porsche when just 22 in 1966, he finished second consecutively at the Nürburgring 1000Kms from 1968, in works 907 and 908/2, and also for Alfa Romeo at the Oil Crisis-hit 750Kms of 1974. He showed well for the Italians – fastest lap in 1972 amid superior Ferraris – but the cars were unreliable. The win, when finally it came in a Porsche 935 in 1977 involved another fastest lap. There was an Interserie success in a Porsche 908/3 Turbo, plus victories in Ford and BMW saloons, including the 1972 ETCC round in a 2800CS. Eighth on his 1969 F1 debut, he scored the first point for carbon-fibre brakes in ’76. There was to be another 1000Kms runner-up spot, before his fatal accident at Riverside in 1983.

19 Timo Bernhard/ Marcel Tiemann

Endurance royalty, predictably calm, calculating and quick amid the chaos

This formidable pair combined – in conjunction with Messrs Dumas and Lieb (thrice), and Luhr and Rockenfeller (once) – to win the 24 Hours four times in a row from 2006 in Manthey GT3 Porsches. Both have a record five wins – as does Pedro Lamy – to their names: Tiemann’s first was scored in an Opel Astra V8 in 2003, and Bernhard’s most recent was achieved the season after Tiemann’s career-ending Imola crash of 2010. Bernhard’s Bellof-busting 5min 20sec lap of 2018 in a derestricted Porsche 919 Evo was mind-blowing; but Tiemann, with 19, has almost double his number of wins in the VLN endurance series at the track. Fate separated them. We cannot.

18 Jochen Mass

German strongman who so easily could have lifted the biggest trophy

The only driver shunning wets – due to a mix of local and insider knowledge – for the start of the 1976 GP, his McLaren was 30sec ahead after two laps. His first thought upon seeing red flags was that his advantage had been deemed too great; they were, of course, flying because of Niki Lauda’s fireball. The race eventually reset, with slicks universal, he would have to settle for third place. His single-seater wins were limited to the F2 Eifelrennen of 1972 and 1977, in Marches both. Having scored minor sports car victories in Porsches 935 and 908/80, he made (partial) amends for missing out in the final GP held at the circuit by winning its final 1000Kms, bringing his works 956 home in tricky conditions in 1983.

17 Jo Siffert

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