*** Welcome to piglix ***

Massimo Biasion

Miki Biasion
Lanciaq delta 16v biasion.jpeg
Miki Biasion driving a Lancia Delta Integrale 16v
Personal information
Nationality Italy Italian
Born (1958-01-07) January 7, 1958 (age 59)
Bassano del Grappa
World Rally Championship record
Active years 19801994
Co-driver Italy Tiziano Siviero
Italy Carlo Cassina
Teams Lancia, Ford
Rallies 78
Championships 2 (1988, 1989)
Rally wins 17
Podiums 40
Stage wins 373
Total points 768
First rally 1980 Rallye Sanremo
First win 1986 Rally Argentina
Last win 1993 Acropolis Rally
Last rally 1994 RAC Rally

Massimo 'Miki' Biasion (born January 7, 1958) is an Italian rally driver, two-time World Rally champion.

Born at Bassano del Grappa, Biasion came to prominence in the early 1980s, winning both the Italian and European Rally Championships in 1983, driving a Lancia 037. He was later drafted in to play a key role for the works Lancia World Rally Championship team in the mid-1980s as the squad sought to regroup after previous star driver Henri Toivonen's fatal crash, and would go on to dominate early Group A rallying, taking the world championship in the years 1988 and 1989. At his peak, Biasion was notching victories in almost three quarters of all events he entered. He also was only the second driver to successfully defend his title (after Juha Kankkunen) and the third one to win two titles (after Kankkunen and Walter Röhrl).

After his championship years, Biasion was never able to achieve that level of success again. He failed to win an event for Lancia in 1991, and switched to Ford for 1992 on a contract that made him the highest-paid driver of his day, and gave him some managerial input. The optimism did not last. Biasion reputedly described the Ford Sierra RS Cosworth 4x4 as "a pile of shit" after his first event for the team (the 1992 Monte Carlo Rally), although on the Portuguese Rally he did give the car its best WRC result by finishing second. The following year, driving the new Ford Escort RS Cosworth, he won the Acropolis Rally and led the driver's championship for part of the season.

Throughout Biasion's tenure at Ford he was overshadowed by the younger François Delecour, who generally proved to be faster, especially on tarmac. Moreover, Delecour's road accident, which forced him to sit out much of the 1994 season, exposed the weaknesses in the team. Insufficient resources meant that development of the Escort slipped behind its rivals, and Biasion's relationship with the team worsened as the season progressed. He was subsequently dropped for the following year. After contesting a couple of rallies for private teams, he retired quietly at the end of the 1995 season (his 2 last WRC events were part of the 2LWC prior to the late Colin McRae's honor as '95 World Rally Champion, but this truly last WRC event was the RAC (now Wales Rally GB) in '94 when it was won by McRae himself and Didier Auriol's honor as '94 World Rally Champion).


...
Wikipedia

...