*** Welcome to piglix ***

Alan Stacey

Alan Stacey
Alan Stacey.jpg
Born (1933-08-29)29 August 1933
Broomfield, England
Died 19 June 1960(1960-06-19) (aged 26)
Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Liège, Belgium
Formula One World Championship career
Nationality United Kingdom British
Active years 19581960
Teams Lotus
Entries 7
Championships 0
Wins 0
Podiums 0
Career points 0
Pole positions 0
Fastest laps 0
First entry 1958 British Grand Prix
Last entry 1960 Belgian Grand Prix

Alan Stacey (29 August 1933 – 19 June 1960), was a British racing driver. He began his association with Lotus when he built one of the MkVI kits then being offered by the company. Having raced this car he went on to build an Eleven, eventually campaigning it at Le Mans under the Team Lotus umbrella. During the following years he spent much time developing the Lotus Grand Prix cars, most notably the front engined 16 and then the 18. He participated in 7 Formula One World Championship Grands Prix, debuting on 19 July 1958. He scored no championship points. He also participated in several non-Championship Formula One races.

Stacey teamed with P.H. Ashdown in a Lotus 1098cc in the 1957 24 hours of Le Mans. They finished 9th with an average speed of 159.458 km/h (99.083 mph). The top four places were taken by British Jaguar Racing teams. Stacey drove a Lotus-Climax to victory at Aintree, in a July 1959 race for sports cars of 1400cc to two litres. His time was 37 minutes 39.4 seconds.

Stacey was killed during the 1960 Belgian Grand Prix, at Spa-Francorchamps, when he crashed at 120 mph (190 km/h) after being hit in the face by a bird on lap 25, while lying sixth in his Lotus 18-Climax (the same type Lotus as Stirling Moss, Jim Clark and Innes Ireland).

Stacey went off the road on the inside of fast, sweeping right hand Burnenville curve (the same corner where Moss crashed the previous day), climbed a waist-high embankment, penetrated ten feet of thick hedges, and fell into a field. He died within a few minutes of Chris Bristow, and within a few hundred feet of that wreck. In a mid-1980s edition of Road and Track Magazine, Stacey's friend and teammate Innes Ireland wrote an article about Stacey's death, in which he stated some spectators claimed a bird had flown into Stacey's face while he was approaching the curve, possibly knocking him unconscious, or even possibly killing him by breaking his neck, before the car crashed.


...
Wikipedia

...