Former Formula One boss Max Mosley dies of cancer aged 81
Send a link to a friend
[May 25, 2021]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) -Max Mosley, the
former head of Formula One's governing body who went on to become a
high-profile privacy campaigner, has died aged 81 after suffering
from cancer, his family said on Monday.
"The family of Max Mosley can confirm that he died last night after
a long battle with cancer. They ask to be allowed to grieve in
private," a statement said.
His old friend and ally in the world of motor sport Bernie
Ecclestone paid tribute, along with Mosley's successor at the FIA
helm Jean Todt.
"We were like brothers for 50 odd years," Ecclestone, 90, told
Reuters by telephone from Ibiza. "Better he's gone than suffer the
way he was suffering."
The youngest son of Oswald Mosley, the leader of the British fascist
movement in the 1930s, Mosley was a racing driver, a team owner and
lawyer before becoming president of the International Automobile
Federation (FIA) in 1993.
He stayed in office for 16 years, serving three terms, before handing
over to former Ferrari boss Todt.
In 2008 he won a high-profile privacy case against the now-defunct News
of the World newspaper after it published video footage of him taking
part in what it called a "sick Nazi orgy".
The tabloid said it involved Nazi-style role-play, which Mosley denied
and the newspaper failed to back up in court.
Refusing to be shamed, Mosley acknowledged an interest in sado-masochistic
sex but said he had nothing to hide.
He later gave financial backing to the court costs of claimants in
newspaper phone hacking cases.
The Oxford-educated and aristocratic Mosley, whose mother was the
socialite and Nazi sympathiser Diana Mitford, forged a close alliance in
Formula One with Ecclestone, the son of a trawlerman.
Both were team bosses in the 1970s, Mosley a co-founder of March and
Ecclestone owner of Brabham.
They had already tried their hand at racing, Mosley in Formula Two and
Ecclestone failing to qualify for the 1958 Monaco Grand Prix, before
realising their talents lay elsewhere.
[to top of second column]
|
Former FIA racing chief Max Mosley
leaves the High Court in London January 14, 2015. REUTERS/Stefan
Wermuth
DOUBLE ACT
Together they formed a double act, controlling and growing the sport
from amateurish beginnings into a $1 billion business, while also
pushing through much-needed safety measures.
"We had differences of opinions but we could talk to each other
about them and sort them out, whatever they were," said Ecclestone,
who acquired the sport's commercial rights from the FIA on a
100-year lease.
Formula One's rights are now controlled by U.S.-based Liberty Media.
The sport hailed Mosley on Monday as "a huge figure in the
transition of Formula One."
"He was a very straightforward guy, Max. Did a lot for the sport,
did a lot for the general industry to make sure that people were
complying with the right regulations when they built road cars,"
said Ecclestone.
"If he thought something needed to be done, and someone needed to be
punished, Max was the guy to do it... he didn't make too many
mistakes."
Such punishment famously included a $100 million fine for McLaren,
who were also stripped of all their constructors' championship
points, in a 2007 spying controversy involving Ferrari data.
Damon Hill, Britain's 1996 world champion, said Mosley's sporting
legacy would be the safety measures introduced after the death of
Brazil's triple world champion Ayrton Senna at Imola in 1994.
"He came in and imposed safety measures with authority and very
swiftly," said the Briton, who was Senna's team mate at Williams.
"It became a shop window really for
engineering safety, the drive towards what can be achieved if you
put your mind towards it and what F1 could do."
(Reporting by Paul Sandle and Alan Baldwin; Editing by Toby Chopra
and Ken Ferris)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|