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The flamboyant former team owner and TV pundit has died from cancer | Autocar TechTricks365


Extravagant former Formula 1 team boss Eddie Jordan, whose eponymous outfit claimed four race wins during the 1990s, has died. He was 76.

The Irishman, who had been living with aggressive prostate cancer, died in Cape Town on Thursday morning, according to a statement issued by his family.

Former world champion Damon Hill, who claimed Jordan Grand Prix’s first race win in 1998, told BBC Radio Five Live: “Eddie was a huge influence on me and many people in motorsport and around the world. There will never be another like him.

“He was gregarious. He was irreverent, he was crazy… I was privileged to have won a grand prix with Eddie, to see the effect and he influenced everyone. There isn’t a single person, in that era and since, that has not been positively impacted in someway by Eddie.

“He gave a huge amount to charity, he never stopped, he never wasted a single second of his life and he energised everyone he was near. It’s a huge loss.”

Martin Brundle, who raced for Jordan’s British F3 team while rising up the ranks, said: “What a character. What a rock star. What a racer. So many drivers owe you so much, you gave us our chances and believed in us.”

In a statement the FIA, world motorsport’s governing body, called Jordan “a legend of Formula 1”, and hailed the “invaluable contribution” he made to global motorsport.

Born in Dublin, Jordan originally worked in banking and developed property interests, before entering the Irish Kart Championship in 1971. He reached Formula 2 as a driver, but achieved most success as a team boss.

Jordan founded his own team in 1979, running numerous future grand prix stars in the British junior ranks. Most notably in 1983, Brundle battled for the British F3 title with Ayrton Senna. His squad then moved up to Formula 3000, claiming the 1989 title with Jean Alesi.

Jordan’s small team entered Formula 1 in 1991 and, despite a limited budget, caused an immediate stir thanks to the simple and effective 191 chassis designed by Gary Anderson. At a time when many smaller teams struggled simply to qualify for races, Jordan’s squad took a pair of fourth-place finished with Andrea de Cesaris.

Perhaps most notably, Jordan Grand Prix gave Michael Schumacher his F1 debut at the 1991 Belgian Grand Prix, when the future seven-time world champion stood in for Bertrand Gachot, who had been imprisioned for a CS gas attack on a taxi driver in London. It was a short-lived debut, with Schumacher’s clutch failing on the first lap. Before the next race, there was a legal battle between Jordan and Benetton, and Schumacher eventually signed with the latter squad, with whom he went on to claim two world titles.


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