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Ronnie Peterson, pilote de F1

personnel

Swedish
14 fvrier 1944
11 septembre 1978 (34)
Bayliss Levrett (14 fvrier 1914)
Ricardo Rodríguez (14 fvrier 1942)

Acheter Ronnie Peterson marchandises Acheter Ronnie Peterson marchandises

statistiques

10 (8.1%)
26 (21.1%)
14 (11.4%)
0 (0%)
1st
9
123
123
206 (1.7 points par course en moyenne)
52 (42.3%)
1970 Monaco Grand Prix
1978 Italian Grand Prix
1973 French Grand Prix
1978 Austrian Grand Prix

environ Ronnie Peterson

Bengt Ronnie Peterson (Swedish pronunciation: [?r?ni ?p?t???on]; 14 February 1944 – 11 September 1978) was a Swedish racing driver. Known by the nickname 'SuperSwede', he was a two-time runner-up in the FIA Formula One World Drivers' Championship.

Peterson began his motor racing career in kart racing, traditionally the discipline where the majority of race drivers begin their careers in open-wheel racing. After winning a number of karting titles, including two Swedish titles in 1963 and 1964, he moved on to Formula Three, where he won the Monaco Grand Prix Formula Three support race for the 1969 Grand Prix. Later that year he won the FIA European Formula 3 Championship and moved up into Formula One, racing for the March factory team. In his three-year spell with the team, he took six podiums, most of which were scored during the 1971 Formula One season in which he also finished as runner-up in the Drivers' Championship.

After seeing out his three-year contract at March, Peterson joined Colin Chapman's Team Lotus in the 1973 season, partnering defending champion Emerson Fittipaldi. During his first two seasons with Lotus, Peterson took seven victories, scoring a career-best 52 points in 1973. After a poor 1975 season, Peterson moved back to March and scored his final victory for the team at the 1976 Italian Grand Prix. After spending the 1977 season with Tyrrell, he moved back to Lotus for the 1978 season as "number two" driver to Mario Andretti. Peterson scored two wins, at the South African and Austrian Grand Prix races, and would finish second in the Drivers' Championship standings despite his fatal first-lap accident at Monza during the Italian Grand Prix.


la source: Wikipedia

saisons

1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978,

positions de finition

positions de la grille

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Ronnie Peterson, pilote de F1

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