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Thread: F2: Henry Surtees in hospital after hit from flying wheel

  1. #1

    F2: Henry Surtees in hospital after hit from flying wheel

    http://www.britsonpole.com/f2-henry-...heel-post12421

    Formula 2 driver Henry Surtees has been airlifted to hospital after apparently being knocked cold when a flying wheel hit him on the helmet as he took part in the second race of the weekend at Brands Hatch.

    He is being treated at the Royal London hospital, the regional trauma centre serving Brands Hatch. There is currently no word on his condition.

    Surtees, the 18-year-old son of Formula One and motorcycling world champion John, had finished third in the previous race and qualified eighth for the second.

    He was running line astern with other cars when Jack Clarke spun off ahead of him exiting Westfield Bend.

    Clarke’s fast but relatively innocuous accident was transformed into a dangerous one when he hit a barrier that was positioned curving towards the track as it avoided a tree. His car was sent back towards the circuit and his rear wing and one wheel broke free, tumbling back onto the racing line.

    The wheel gathered pace and hit Surtees on the head as he passed. The blue and yellow number seven car went straight on at the next corner, onlookers noting that its throttle was stuck open and its driver’s helmet visor likewise. It hit the barrier on the approach to Sheene Curve and slid to a halt, with no sign of reaction from Surtees.
    Last edited by bever911; 07-19-2009 at 12:09 PM. Reason: title got messed up
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    Lord have mercy, this does not sound good.
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  3. #3
    Bad day for racing and his family. It's been announced that he has died

    http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/77088

    That sucks

  4. #4
    Life's too short to worry/Life's too long to wait
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  5. #5
    Flavio GUGUELMINI also killed this weekend in a rally accident

  6. #6
    Tragic. Very sad for his family.

    The crash is on You Tube. Just total unluck. The tire bounces direct off his helmet and he just goes straight. The car hits the barrier and slides to a stop.The engine still going full gas with the remaining tire spinning in the grass.

    Poor kid.

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    Very sad day.

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    Paradoxically Sublime Turn13's Avatar
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    Our thoughts go to the family and friends.
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    He was dead as soon as the tire hit him. Sad day RIP Henry.
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    45 below the Equator 45 Below's Avatar
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    Tragic, tragic news. My heart goes out to the Surtees family.

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    This is so sad.

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    Man... that's awful, it looked like such a harmless little accident. To end in a death is unthinkable.

    Were there no wheel tethers?

    Edit: just re-watched the video - even his car didn't keep all 4 wheels, he lost his left rear. Something is not right when wheels aren't staying on cars... if there are tethers, they're not getting the job done, and if there aren't someone should be in prison.

    jono

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    Registered User TC in Indy's Avatar
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    Only 18 years old, how sad.

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    Quote Originally Posted by TC in Indy
    Only 18 years old, how sad.
    This ruined my weekend.
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    I saw the footage of the wreck and reminded me of the horrible Tom Pryce wreck. Very sad
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  17. #17
    Fake Shemp
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    Quote Originally Posted by jonovision_man
    Were there no wheel tethers?


    jono
    That was my first thought. They need them. Very sad.

    I found a video that shows the entire accident:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fqc1Y9kvF8k
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  18. #18
    Just horrible news. I'm terribly sad for his dad and the Surtees family.

  19. #19
    Registered User MoparsRule's Avatar
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    Horrible. God speed, young man.

  20. #20
    Henry Surtees: statement from Jonathan Palmer, chief executive of MotorSport Vision

    I am absolutely devastated that 18 year old Henry Surtees lost his life in an accident in the Formula Two race at Brands Hatch yesterday. This is the saddest time in my 35 years of motor racing and my deepest sympathies are with father John, mother Jane and their daughters Edwina and Leonora, together with other family and friends.

    Henry was driving at about 120 mph between Westfield and Sheene corners on lap 9 of the race when he was struck on the head by a bouncing wheel and tyre from an accident at Westfield corner several seconds earlier. It is clear that Henry was knocked unconscious immediately, and his car then continued straight on at Sheene Curve, hitting the guard rail. I understand that the fatal injury occurred instantly and that the impact at Sheene had no influence on the outcome of the accident.

    The race was immediately red flagged and the medical team were very quickly at the scene. Henry was removed from the car, stabilised and taken to the medical centre, where he was prepared to be air-lifted to the Royal London Hospital, the regional trauma centre. After evaluation and investigations in the intensive care unit, Henry was found to have suffered a major head injury that was not survivable.

    Henry had joined Formula Two for this first season of the new championship and had immediately impressed with a pace, focus and maturity that belied his young age of 18 years. He took an incredible pole position at Brno in the Czech Republic in only his second F2 event, and became the first British driver to win a place on the podium with a magnificent third place at Brands Hatch on the day before he died. Henry made a big mark in just four events and looked very likely to be a winner in F2 in the future and maybe even F1.

    Not only was Henry immensely talented but he was also a very popular member of the whole Formula Two team, making many friends amongst both the other drivers and the team members, earning enormous respect everywhere.

    John Surtees played a major part in his son's success, carefully monitoring everything that was going on and meticulously using his huge experience mentoring Henry and contributing to the all important set up and strategy. It was such a pleasure seeing father and son working together so effectively and it was clear that pursuing Formula Two success was the focus of Henry and John's lives and something they enjoyed immensely.

    There will of course be a detailed investigation into the accident that claimed Henry's life and we will do everything possible to understand exactly what happened and why, and see what can be learnt from this freak accident in the continual quest to make motor racing safer. It is perhaps ironic that John Surtees competed for many years at the highest levels of motorsport on both four wheels and two at a time when safety was given little consideration, but his son Henry should lose his life at a time when driver safety has never been greater.

    The Williams F1 designed Formula Two cars comply with the FIA 2005 F1 safety standards including the fitment of wheel tethers to reduce the risk of wheels coming off in accidents. The F2 car also includes the latest F1 standards of driver head protection with high cockpit sides and lateral deformable structures. As with F1 however, wheel tethers cannot provide an absolute guarantee that a wheel will not come off in an accident and in a single seater race car the front of the head is inevitably exposed to the risk, however small, of being hit by another car or component.

    This accident is particularly poignant for me as a father and brings into sharp and uncomfortable focus the inevitable danger of motorsport. On Sunday morning my 18 year old son Jolyon and Henry were sat together, amidst all the F2 drivers, joking and signing autographs for fans. In the afternoon F2 race Henry was just half a second or so behind Jolyon, trying to move forward after an earlier spin. As they both dived down towards Sheene, the bouncing wheel just missed Jolyon, but hit Henry, who was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. By the evening, I was with John and Jane Surtees in the same intensive care unit at the London hospital that Jolyon had been in nearly two years earlier after his serious quad bike accident.

    The awful tragedy has not just touched, but profoundly affected many people. Our whole Formula Two team and those involved at Williams F1 are enormously saddened, shocked and stunned by what has happened and for Henry's dedicated F2 mechanic Don Old it is a particularly difficult time. When such incidents occur one relies upon the professionalism of all those involved and I am proud of the way the medical team at Brands Hatch did everything possible to save poor Henry's life.

    We all know life can be cruel and we read of young victims of tragedies every day, whether through accident, war or illness. But nothing can prepare someone for the loss of their own child and clearly John and Jane are absolutely distraught. We are all so desperately sorry. At this most difficult time in the Surtees' life we will of course do whatever we can to help as John and Jane in particular try to come to terms with the loss of Henry, someone so special and someone who had already achieved so much in his short life.

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