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Jules Bianchi: F1 announce number 17 will be retired after death of driver

Bianchi died at the weekend from a result of his crash at last year's Japanese Grand Prix

Phil Blanche
Tuesday 21 July 2015 07:42 BST
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Jules Bianchi's number 17 will be retired from the Formula One World Championship in his honour.

The 25-year-old died last Friday following the devastating brain injuries he sustained in a crash at the Japanese Grand Prix on October 5.

And now world governing body the FIA have confirmed that his number 17 will be absent from the grand prix grid in future.

"As F1 car numbers are now personally chosen by each driver, the FIA believes it to be an appropriate gesture to retire Jules Bianchi's number 17," president Jean Todt announced on the official FIA website.

"As a result, this number can no longer be used for a car competing in the FIA Formula One World Championship."

Todt's announcement came after former Ferrari chairman Luca di Montezemolo revealed that Bianchi was being lined up as a future driver for the Italian team in place of Kimi Raikkonen.

"Jules Bianchi was one of us," Di Montezemolo told Sky Sports Italia.

"He was a member of the Ferrari family and was the driver we had picked for the future - once the collaboration with Raikkonen was over.

"He was first class: private, fast, polite, very attached to Ferrari and promising."

Di Montezemolo, who left Ferrari at the end of last year, added: "A bitter fate has taken him away from us, leaving us with a huge void.

"I am close to his family, which in recent months has shown great courage in these difficult times, as well as his many friends at Ferrari.

"We lost a great guy, and we will remember him with great affection."

Bianchi never regained consciousness after he hit a recovery vehicle head-on at the rain-lashed race in Suzuka, and became the first F1 driver to die as a result of injuries at a grand prix weekend since three-time world champion Ayrton Senna was killed in San Marino in May 1994.

The Frenchman was driving for Marussia, now renamed Manor, at the time of the accident but he had been guided by Ferrari, who had helped secure his F1 debut and planned to switch him to Sauber for this season.

Bianchi's funeral will be staged in his home city of Nice on Tuesday with Todt, his son Nicolas, Bianchi's manager in F1, and executives from the Manor team are expected to attend.

Vijay Mallya, team principal at Force India, has become the latest F1 figure to pay tribute to Bianchi, describing him as "a tremendous talent" as well as "a friend".

Bianchi was a reserve driver for the Silverstone-based outfit during the 2012 season and participated in nine Friday free practice sessions at various race weekends that year.

"The thoughts of everyone at Sahara Force India are with the friends and family of Jules Bianchi at this terrible moment," said a Force India statement released from Mallya on their Facebook page.

"We had the pleasure of working with Jules during 2012 (as the team's third driver) where he left a strong impression on everyone in the team.

"We came to know an outstanding young man and a tremendous talent who was destined for great things in Formula One.

"The world has lost a true racer and we have all lost a friend."

This weekend's Hungarian Grand Prix promises to be a sombre event following Bianchi's death and the Grand Prix Drivers' Association insists safety in F1 should never be compromised.

"It is at times like this that we are brutally reminded of how dangerous racing still remains," a GPDA statement read.

"Despite considerable improvements, we, the grand prix drivers, owe it to the racing community, to the lost ones and to Jules, his family and friends, to never relent in improving safety."

PA

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