Tom Pryce
Thomas Maldwyn Pryce (11 June 1949 – 5 March 1977) was a British racing driver from Wales known for winning the Brands Hatch Race of Champions, a non-championship Formula One race, in 1975 and for the circumstances surrounding his death. Pryce is the only Welsh driver to have won a Formula One race and is also the only Welshman to lead a Formula One World Championship Grand Prix: two laps of the 1975 British Grand Prix.
Born | Thomas Maldwyn Pryce 11 June 1949 Ruthin, Denbighshire, Wales |
---|---|
Died | 5 March 1977 27) Midrand, South Africa | (aged
Formula One World Championship career | |
Nationality | British |
Active years | 1974–1977 |
Teams | Token, Shadow |
Entries | 42 |
Championships | 0 |
Wins | 0 |
Podiums | 2 |
Career points | 19 |
Pole positions | 1 |
Fastest laps | 0 |
First entry | 1974 Belgian Grand Prix |
Last entry | 1977 South African Grand Prix |
Pryce started his career in Formula One with the small Token team, making his only start for them at the 1974 Belgian Grand Prix. Shortly after winning the Formula Three support race for the 1974 Monaco Grand Prix, Pryce joined the Shadow team and scored his first points in Germany in only his fourth race. Pryce later claimed two podium finishes, his first in Austria in 1975 and the second in Brazil a year later. Pryce was considered by his team and most of its contemporaries as a great wet-weather driver.
In his four seasons in the sport with the Shadow team from 1974 to 1977, Pryce was identified as a potential future race winner and future world champion. Although the car was often unreliable and rarely in the points, it was on occasion quick enough to grab headlines.
During the practice session for the 1977 South African Grand Prix, run in wet conditions, Pryce was faster than everyone, including world champion drivers Niki Lauda and James Hunt. During the race, he collided at high speed with a safety marshal, Frederik Jansen van Vuuren, and both men were killed. A memorial to Pryce was unveiled in 2009 in his home town of Ruthin.
Personal and early life
Tom Pryce was born on 11 June 1949 in Ruthin, Denbighshire, Wales, to Jack and Gwyneth Pryce (née Hughes).[1][2] Jack had served in the Royal Air Force as a tail-gunner on a Lancaster bomber before joining the local police force. Gwyneth was a district nurse.[3] Pryce's older brother, David, died at the age of three leaving Tom an only child for much of the time he was growing up, although his parents did foster a young girl called Sandra for a while.[4] Pryce, known to his friends as Mald, attended Nantglyn Primary School, Denbighshire.[5] The family later moved to Towyn, Denbighshire, due to Jack's job.[5]
Pryce took an interest in cars while driving a baker's van at the age of 10, before informing his parents that he wanted to be a racing driver. During an interview with Alan Henry in 1975, he stated that he had wanted to become a pilot, but thought he was not intelligent enough.[4] Like many future Formula One drivers, Pryce had a childhood racing hero. In his case it was Lotus's Scottish driver Jim Clark.[3] Pryce's mother recalled that he was very upset when Clark died at the Hockenheimring in April 1968. His father noted that "he was very upset when Jochen Rindt was killed, too".[3] After he left school at 16, Pryce's mother insisted that he take an apprenticeship as a tractor mechanic at Llandrillo Technical College, giving him "something to fall back on", as she put it, if his career as a racing driver was unsuccessful.[4]
In 1975 Pryce married Fenella, more commonly known as Nella, whom he met at a disco in Otford, Kent in 1973.[6] Following the death of her husband, Nella went on to run an antiques store in Fulham, London with Janet Brise, the widow of Tony Brise, who died in a plane crash in 1975 with fellow racing driver, Graham Hill and later moved to France.[7][5]
Helmet design
Tom Pryce's helmet design was, in comparison to later drivers', simple and restrained. His helmet was plain white all over until 1970. At that year's race at Castle Combe, his father asked Pryce to make his helmet stand out more so that he could easily identify him in a pack of cars. Pryce added five black vertical lines to his helmet, placed just above his visor.[8] From that time the only change to this design was the addition of a Welsh flag to the side of his helmet in 1974.[9]
Career
1969–1971: Early years
Pryce's first steps into motor racing came at the Mallory Park circuit in Leicestershire when he was 20. Pryce was put through his paces by Trevor Taylor, an ex-Team Lotus driver and old teammate of Pryce's childhood hero Clark. He later became a star in the Formula 5000 series. From there, Pryce went on to compete in the Daily Express Crusader Championship, a series run by Motor Racing Stables for racing school pupils using Lotus 51 Formula Ford cars. Races alternated between the Brands Hatch and Silverstone circuits; Pryce made his début at the former. "The races were £35 a time. But I sold my Mini and my parents offered all the help and encouragement I could wish for" Pryce recalled to Alan Henry.[10]
The prize for the overall winner of the series was a Formula Ford Lola T200 worth £1,500. The series was decided at the last round, held at Silverstone, the day before the 1970 Formula One International Trophy.[10] Pryce qualified on the third row for the race, which was held in rain. Jack Pryce remembered that his son was rubbing his hands in delight: "he always loved racing in the rain". The early part of the race was led by a driver called Chris Smith but then heavy rain started and Pryce was able to catch up with Smith and overtake him before winning by a comfortable margin. He was given his Lola by Sir Max Aitken.[11]
Pryce took his new car to Brands Hatch, where he was allowed to house it in one of the old stables at the bottom of the paddock.[11] Pryce soon abandoned his farming career and moved to a guest house in West Kingsdown, near the Brands Hatch circuit.[12] Pryce continued to make a name for himself during 1971, entering a new twin-seater Sportscar category called Formula F100, which he won with what was described by motorsports author David Tremayne as "embarrassing ease". He then moved up to Formula Super Vee, driving the then-choice Royale RP9, for Team Rumsey Investments,[13] and soon made his Formula Three début for the same manufacturer at Brands Hatch.
1972–73: Lower formulae
"I was fiddling about with the car when I suddenly saw Peter Lamplough coming straight towards me. I just couldn't believe it – I froze on the spot. The next thing I remember is being picked out of a shop window, where my car had been hurled by the impact"
Tom Pryce[14]
In that race at Brands Hatch, Pryce took an unfancied Royale RP11 to first place in the Formula Three support race for the 1972 Formula One Race of Champions against many established Formula Three drivers such as Roger Williamson, Jochen Mass and James Hunt.[15] So large was Pryce's advantage at the end of the race, many of the other teams voiced an opinion that Pryce's car had run the race underweight; it turned out that the circuit's weighbridge certificate had expired and everyone's cars had been underweight.[16] Pryce retired from the leading group in the following two rounds at Oulton Park and Zandvoort, and then during practice for the support race of the 1972 Monaco Grand Prix his car came to a stop at Casino Square after a wire had come loose. He had exited his car to correct the problem when Peter Lamplough lost control of his car and struck the Royale RP11. Pryce was knocked into a shop window and broke a leg.[14]
The Welshman was back in action two weeks after his incident in Monaco. Pryce also ran in the Formula SuperVee series, winning the series by a comfortable margin, "I won just about every race I went in for" Pryce recalled. A run with Royale's Formula Atlantic works team was also in store for Pryce during 1972, where he took pole position for the final three rounds of the championship and won the final round at Brands Hatch.[17]
He continued racing in Formula Atlantic in 1973, winning three races.[18] Royale soon had plans to enter Formula Two, such was the Welshman's talent. The ambition to run in the Formula Two championship was planned to be financially fuelled by a Liechtenstein driver, Manfred Schurti. These plans only resulted in one of Royale's F2 cars being built before the project was scrapped and Bob King, the head of Royale, left the company.[18]
Following an invitation to test one of his cars, Pryce found himself racing in the Formula Two series with Ron Dennis's Rondel Racing outfit. His best result for the team came at the Norisring where he was leading the race until a brake failure meant he had to give up first place to teammate Tim Schenken.[19] At the end of 1973, Pryce won the Grovewood Award for his efforts during the year. Jack Pryce recalled that his son did not want to win the award, as he thought it was "a jinx on a driver's career".[20]
1974: Token
At the age of 25, Pryce graduated to Formula One, the highest category of circuit racing defined by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), motorsport's world governing body, joining the newly formed Token Racing team. The team was created by Tony Vlassopulos and Ken Grob after the original Token team closed down in 1973 due to a lack of financial backing which had led to the end of the previous Rondel Racing outfit. Pryce was given the seat thanks to his backing from Titan Properties, and what David Tremayne described as "evident promise".[21] Pryce made his début for the team at the BRDC International Trophy, a non-championship Formula One event held at Silverstone, but lack of an airbox and an engine cover, along with his shortage of experience in the car, made him the slowest driver of the 16 competitors during qualifying: 26 seconds slower than James Hunt's Hesketh in pole position.[22] The Welshman retired 15 laps into the race with a gear linkage problem. Pryce's World Championship début came at the 1974 Belgian Grand Prix, where he qualified in 20th place, 3 seconds slower than the fastest time set by Clay Regazzoni. Once again, he failed to finish, completing 66 laps before retiring after a collision with Jody Scheckter's Tyrrell.[23]
Pryce was refused entry to the 1974 Monaco Formula One Grand Prix, as he was deemed "inexperienced".[22] Tony Vlassopulos decided to prove a point and replaced normal Formula 3 driver Buzz Buzaglo, with Pryce for the supporting Formula Three race, driving for Ippokampos Racing, in a March 743, which he won by 20.8 seconds.[24][25]
1974
"I think that people who are involved in motor racing and have achieved something, have an ability to spot talent. It was abundantly clear that Tom's ability was above and beyond most of his contemporaries."
John Watson[26]
Following his drive in Monaco, and a short spell in Formula Two,[27] Pryce was signed by Shadow as replacement for Brian Redman, who had in turn replaced the late Peter Revson.[28] Pryce made his début for the team in Holland. He qualified in 11th position, less than 0.4 seconds slower than his teammate, Jean-Pierre Jarier,[29] who was in his second full season of Formula One competition. Pryce retired on the first lap of the race after a collision with James Hunt at the first corner broke his Shadow DN3's rear suspension.[29] Pryce qualified third in his second Grand Prix for the team, in France, 0.32 seconds slower than Niki Lauda's pole position time but nearly half a second quicker than Jarier.[30] Once again, Pryce's race ended at the first corner, when minor contact with Carlos Reutemann's Brabham deflected Pryce's Shadow into the path of James Hunt.[30] The second collision between the two British drivers in as many races eliminated them both. Later in the season, Pryce received 100 bottles of champagne for finishing fastest in the practice session for the British Grand Prix at Brands Hatch.[31][32] He went on to qualify on the fourth row of the starting grid.
Pryce scored the first point of his career in Germany, at the most challenging circuit on the F1 calendar at the time, the 14.2 mile Nürburgring circuit. After finishing 6th from 11th on the grid, he then qualified in 16th for the next Grand Prix in Austria, but spun off on lap 22, ending his race. He qualified in 22nd place in Italy, and finished 12 places higher. His season ended with an engine failure in Canada, and the Shadow severely off the pace at Watkins Glen in the United States. At the end of the season Pryce was equal 18th in the Drivers' Championship with veteran Graham Hill and Vittorio Brambilla.
1975
At the start of the 1975 season, Pryce's future was subject to much speculation. Rumour linked him with a drive at Lotus, the team run by Colin Chapman, who had been keeping an eye on Pryce's progress throughout 1973 and 1974. At the time, Lotus was experiencing financial difficulties and reports suggested that Shadow and Lotus would swap Pryce and Swede Ronnie Peterson. The trade was viewed as a good acquisition for both teams, as Pryce was considered a driver of the same ability as Peterson, but would cost Lotus less, while Peterson could attract sponsorship to the relatively new Shadow team.[33] The deal never materialised, although Shadow team manager Alan Rees claims that it came very close to being completed.[34]
Pryce's Shadow teammate, Jean-Pierre Jarier, out-qualified him in the early part of the 1975 season, as the French driver had the new Shadow DN5 car, while Pryce was in the older DN3.[35] It was not until the third round, the South African Grand Prix, that Pryce was able to use a DN5.[36] The team's fourth race of the season was the non-championship Race of Champions held at Brands Hatch. Pryce qualified on pole position and, following a poor start, passed Peterson and Jacky Ickx before closing an eight-second gap to race leader Jody Scheckter, whose engine failed while Pryce harried him,[37] letting Pryce through to become the first Welshman to win a Formula One race.[38] Pryce showed other signs of promise during the season, most notably in Monaco and Silverstone where he qualified on the front row of the grid, the latter being in pole position.[39] Pryce also achieved his first World Championship podium finish, in extremely wet conditions at the Austrian Grand Prix and finished in the points four more times. The highest of those came in Germany where he finished fourth, despite the fact that while he was running second behind Carlos Reutemann fuel had been leaking into the cockpit of his DN5 during the final laps around the Nürburgring, reportedly "searing his skin and almost blinding him with fumes".[40] The Welshman later received the Prix Rouge et Blanc Jo Siffert award, named after the Swiss Formula One driver, for this achievement.[41]
At the end of December 1975, Pryce and Dave Richards, future head of the Prodrive motorsports engineering company, entered a Lancia Stratos in the Tour of Epynt, a rally event contested by many established rallying names.[42] Pryce needed little persuasion to team up for the one-off event on home soil with Richards, both of whom were from Ruthin.[42] Pryce crashed into a bridge 10 miles (16 km) into the first stage, but still competed in the afternoon stages after his car was rebuilt.[43]
1976
Once the 1976 Formula One World Championship season got under way Pryce instantly added a second podium finish to his tally, at the first round in Brazil. This came at the expense of continuing teammate Jarier, who was caught out by oil on the track from James Hunt's McLaren. Both Shadows enjoyed reasonable competitiveness during the next two races at Kyalami and Long Beach. Changes in car regulations, meaning that teams had to lower their airboxes and mount the cars' rear wings further forward, along with revised Goodyear tyres, meant the Shadow DN5B lost much of its competitiveness; Pryce still achieved a second points scoring finish of the season in Britain.[44] The new Shadow DN8 was not introduced until the twelfth round at Zandvoort, where Pryce qualified the new car in third, and finished the race only one place lower in fourth: it was the last points scoring finish of his career. The Welshman finished his last full season 12th in the Drivers' Championship with 10 points, 59 points behind World Champion James Hunt.[45]
1977
Rumors that Pryce would run as Mario Andretti's teammate for the Lotus team in 1978 were strong, as it coincided with the end of his contract with Shadow. A Lotus mechanic of the era even claimed many years later that the signing of Tom Pryce for the team would have become a reality if he had not died, as Peterson was hired at the last minute after an express offer from Chapman for a succulent amount of money in exchange for being Mario Andretti's number two in replacement of Gunnar Nilsson, who was going to go to the Arrows team in 1978 to team up with Riccardo Patrese. This latter fact was confirmed by Patrese in Motorsport magazine in an interview by Simon Taylor in 2010.[46]
Jarier left Shadow before the start of the 1977 Formula One season, for ATS, and was replaced by Italian Renzo Zorzi, who was later rated by Jackie Oliver, part of the managerial team at Shadow, as "the worst driver we [the Shadow team] ever had".[47] The new signing brought in sponsorship from Italy, easing Shadow's financial position. Pryce started the first race of the year in Argentina in ninth place and stayed with the leading group until a gear linkage failure on the 45th lap of the 52 lap race. Following a long pit stop to fix the fault, he was not classified. Pryce qualified 12th for the second round in Brazil, but on lap 34 retired from the race, while running in second place, as the result of an engine failure.
Legacy
In 2016, in an academic paper that reported a mathematical modeling study that assessed the relative influence of driver and machine, Pryce was ranked the 28th best Formula One driver of all time.[48]
Death
Tom Pryce began his final race weekend, the 1977 South African Grand Prix at Kyalami, by setting the fastest time in the Wednesday practice session, held in wet weather. Pryce posted a time of 1 minute 31.57 seconds with the next best, the eventual 1977 World Champion Niki Lauda, one second slower. The weather dried up prior to the Thursday session, and he slipped back down the grid to fifteenth place, almost two seconds slower than James Hunt's pole position time.[49]
Pryce made a poor start to the Grand Prix in his DN8 and by the end of the first lap was in last place. Pryce started to climb back up the field during the next couple of laps, overtaking Brett Lunger and teammate Renzo Zorzi on lap two, and Alex Ribeiro and Boy Hayje the following lap. By lap 18 Pryce had moved from 22nd to 13th place.[50]
On lap 22, Zorzi pulled off to the left side of the main straight, just after the brow of a hill and a bridge over the track. He was having problems with his fuel metering unit, and fuel was pumping directly onto the engine, which then caught fire. Zorzi did not immediately get out of his car as he could not disconnect the oxygen pipe from his helmet.[nb 1]
The situation caused two marshals from the pit wall on the opposite side of the track to intervene. The first marshal to cross the track was a 25-year-old panel beater named Bill, and the second was 19-year-old Frederik "Frikkie" Jansen van Vuuren, who was carrying a 40-pound (18 kg) fire extinguisher.[50] George Witt, the chief pit marshal for the race, said that the policy of the circuit was that in cases of fire, two marshals must attend and a further two act as back-up in case the first pair's extinguishers were not effective enough. Witt also recalled that both marshals crossed the track without prior permission.[51] The former narrowly made it across the track, but the latter did not. As the two men started to run across the track, the cars driven by Hans-Joachim Stuck and Pryce came over the brow of a rise in the track.[52]
"As we got to the top I suddenly sensed this marshal running across the track from my right, carrying an extinguisher. I took a big chance and I don't know how I got away with it. There was no time, I just reacted on pure instinct."
Hans-Joachim Stuck[53]
Pryce was directly behind Stuck's car along the main straight. Stuck saw Jansen van Vuuren and moved to the right to avoid both marshals, missing Bill by what Tremayne calls "millimetres". From his position Pryce could not see Jansen van Vuuren and was unable to react as quickly as Stuck had done. He struck the teenage marshal at approximately 270 km/h (170 mph).[54] Jansen van Vuuren was thrown into the air and landed a few yards in front of Zorzi's car. He died on impact, and his body was badly mutilated by Pryce's car.[55] The fire extinguisher he had been carrying smashed into Pryce's head, before striking the Shadow's roll hoop. The force of the impact was such that the extinguisher was thrown up and over the adjacent grandstand. It landed in the car park to the rear of the stand, where it hit a parked car and jammed its door shut.[53]
The impact with the fire extinguisher wrenched Pryce's helmet upward sharply. Death was almost certainly instantaneous. Pryce's Shadow DN8, now with its driver dead at the wheel, continued at speed down the main straight towards the first corner, called Crowthorne. The car left the track to the right, scraping the metal barriers, hitting an entrance for emergency vehicles, and veering back onto the track. It then hit Jacques Laffite's Ligier, sending both Pryce and Laffite head-on into the barriers. Jansen van Vuuren's injuries were so extensive that, initially, his body was identified only after the race director had summoned all of the race marshals and he was not among them.[56]
The eventual race winner was Austrian Niki Lauda, his first win since his near fatal accident during the 1976 German Grand Prix. At first he announced it was the greatest victory of his career, but when told on the victory podium of Pryce's death, he said that "there was no joy after that".[51]
Aftermath
Pryce's death was met with great grief from all those who knew him, especially his wife Nella, his parents Jack and Gwyneth and the Shadow team. His body was buried at St Bartholomew's Church in Otford, near Sevenoaks, Kent, the same church where he and Nella were married two years earlier.[57]
Pryce's performances in a Formula One car earned him much respect amongst the F1 paddock. David Tremayne named his son after the Welshman.[58] The Tom Pryce Award, also known as the Tom Pryce Trophy, was instigated, and is given annually to Welsh personalities who have made an outstanding contribution to motoring or transport.[59]
During its re-design, the Anglesey Circuit in North Wales named the Tom Pryce Straight after a request from Ruthin Town Council. Eddie Knipe, a South African living in Sevenoaks, sought permission from Nella Pryce to approach the Ruthin Town Council to commemorate her late husband. Having gained her consent and that of Tom's parents, a trust was established in 2006 under the chairmanship of David Richards to create a memorial to Tom Pryce in Ruthin. Neil Dalrymple, a local artist, was commissioned by Ruthin Town Council in 2008 to design an 8-by-4-foot (2.4 by 1.2 m) plaque and in February 2009, an auction of Formula One pit passes to fund its manufacture was announced.[1][60] The memorial was unveiled on 11 June 2009, on what would have been Pryce's 60th birthday.[61]
Complete Formula One World Championship results
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; small number denotes finishing position)
Year | Entrant | Chassis | Engine | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | WDC | Pts. | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1974 | Token Racing | Token RJ02 | Cosworth V8 | ARG | BRA | RSA | ESP | BEL Ret |
MON | SWE | 18th | 1 | ||||||||||||||
UOP Shadow Racing Team | Shadow DN3 | NED Ret |
FRA Ret |
GBR 8 |
GER 6 |
AUT Ret |
ITA 10 |
CAN Ret |
USA NC |
|||||||||||||||||
1975 | UOP Shadow Racing Team | Shadow DN3 | Cosworth V8 | ARG 12 |
BRA Ret |
10th | 8 | |||||||||||||||||||
Shadow DN5 | RSA 9 |
ESP Ret |
MON Ret |
BEL 6 |
SWE Ret |
NED 6 |
FRA Ret |
GBR Ret |
GER 4 |
AUT 3 |
ITA 6 |
USA NC |
||||||||||||||
1976 | Shadow Racing Team | Shadow DN5B | Cosworth V8 | BRA 3 |
RSA 7 |
USW Ret |
ESP 8 |
BEL 10 |
MON 7 |
SWE 9 |
FRA 8 |
GBR 4 |
GER 8 |
AUT Ret |
12th | 10 | ||||||||||
Shadow DN8 | NED 4 |
ITA 8 |
CAN 11 |
USA Ret |
JPN Ret |
|||||||||||||||||||||
1977 | Shadow Racing Team | Shadow DN8 | Cosworth V8 | ARG NC |
RSA Ret |
USW | ESP | MON | BEL | SWE | FRA | GBR | GER | AUT | NED | ITA | USA | CAN | JPN | NC | 0 | |||||
Shadow DN5B | BRA Ret |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Non-championship Formula One results
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; small number denotes finishing position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)
Year | Entrant | Chassis | Engine | 1 | 2 | 3 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1974 | Token Racing | Token RJ02 | Ford-Cosworth DFV V8 | PRE | ROC | INT Ret |
1975 | Shadow Racing Team | Shadow DN5 | Ford-Cosworth DFV V8 | ROC 1 |
INT 9 |
SUI 7 |
1976 | Shadow Racing Team | Shadow DN5 | Ford-Cosworth DFV V8 | ROC 6 |
INT 4 |
|
Source:[64] |
References
Notes
- Oxygen pipes were used to prevent drivers being suffocated if they were trapped in the car in a fire.[50]
Footnotes
- "Tom Pryce Memorial". Tom Pryce Memorial Trust website. Tom Pryce Memorial Trust. 2009. Archived from the original on 20 February 2012. Retrieved 14 January 2010.
- Matthews, Gethin (7 April 2014). "PRYCE, THOMAS MALDWYN (1949-1977), racing driver". Dictionary of Welsh Biography. National Library of Wales. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 27.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 28.
- Williams, Kelly (10 August 2013). "Most shocking moments: The death of Tom Pryce". North Wales Daily Post. Llandudno Junction. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 120.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 257.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 34.
- Roberts, James (19 July 2010). "Tom Pryce: Wales' fastest man". BBC Online. Retrieved 24 May 2014.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 29.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 30.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 31.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 35.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 61.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 56.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 60.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 62.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 70.
- "GP Encyclopedia – Drivers – Tom Pryce". GrandPrix.com. Archived from the original on 20 February 2006. Retrieved 11 September 2006.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 72.
- Tremayne (2006), pp. 127–129.
- "Token Profile". F1Rejects.com. 15 September 2003. Archived from the original on 5 March 2007. Retrieved 26 September 2006.
- "The 35th Anniversary of the Death of Tom Pryce, the Formula 1 Welsh Dragon". Bleacher Report. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
- "1974 Monaco F3 Support Race results". Formula2.net. 4 August 2003. Retrieved 15 March 2007.
- Brown, Allen. "Tony Vlassopulos". oldracingcars.com. Retrieved 10 January 2017.
- "BBC North East Wales Sport – quotes". bbc.co.uk/Wales. Archived from the original on 9 January 2008. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
- Tremayne (2006), pp. 135–136.
- "Tom Pryce Profile at GPRacing.net". GPRacing.net. Archived from the original on 27 March 2006. Retrieved 14 March 2006.
- Jenkinson, D.S. (23 June 1974). "The Dutch Grand Prix – Ferrari all the way". Motor Sport (August 1974): 840–842.
- Jenkinson, D.S. (7 July 1974). "The 7th Grand Prix of France – Miniscule". Motor Sport (August 1974): 815–817.
- "Pryce, in the Ford-engined Shadow, won 100 bottles of champagne for his efforts ...". Country Life. 156: 204.
- "British Grand Prix, 1974". MotorSport: 47. September 1974. Retrieved 13 May 2015.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 150.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 152.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 151.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 153.
- Gill (1976), pp. 96–97.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 158.
- Blachford (2011), p. 29.
- Gill (1976), pp. 73–75.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 189.
- Heseltine (2013), p. 122.
- Tremayne (2006), pp. 214–218.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 218.
- "F1 Championship Standings Drivers & Teams – 1976 Season". Sky Sports. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
- "Lunch with... Riccardo Patrese, by Simon Taylor". Motorsport Magazine. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 252.
- Hanlon, Mike (12 May 2016). "The Top 50 F1 drivers of all time, regardless of what they were driving". New Atlas. Retrieved 23 December 2017.
- Tremayne (2006), pp. 231–232.
- Tremayne (2006), pp. 232–233.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 239.
- "South African Grand Prix: Pryce tragedy overshadows Lauda victory". ESPN. 5 March 1977. Retrieved 13 March 2015.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 235.
- Dalglish (2012), p. 39.
- Tremayne (2006), p. 234.
- "Historic Racing – Tom Pryce". HistoricRacing.com. Archived from the original on 5 March 2007. Retrieved 23 November 2006.
- "The Tragic Tale of Tom Pryce". Archived from the original on 21 May 2014. Retrieved 21 May 2014.
- Finlay, David (23 October 2006). "'The Lost Generation' book review – Tom Pryce". CarKeys.co.uk. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 6 November 2006.
- "Tom Pryce Trophy". Welsh Group of Motoring Writers. Archived from the original on 19 August 2008.
- "Bid for F1 passes!". Inside F1, Inc. Retrieved 3 February 2009.
- "Plaque to commemorate F1 winner". BBC Online. 11 June 2009. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
- "All championship race entries, by Tom Pryce". ChicaneF1. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
- "Tom Pryce Formula One". Motorsport Stats. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
- "Tom Pryce – Involvement Non World Championship". StatsF1. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
Bibliography
- Blachford, Christine (2011). That'll be the Day: 365 F1 Stories (Part 2). ISBN 978-0-9569393-1-9.
- Dalglish, Geoff (2012). Lost and Found: From Racecar Driver to Pilgrim, from Soweto to Findhorn. Findhorn Press. ISBN 978-1-84409-591-9.
- Gill, Barrie, ed. (1976). The World Championship 1975 – John Player Motorsport yearbook 1976. Queen Anne Press. ISBN 0-362-00254-1.
- Heseltine, Richard (2013). A Chequered Life: Graham Warner and The Chequered Flag. Veloce Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-84584-413-4.
- Tremayne, David (2006). The Lost Generation. Haynes Publishing. ISBN 1-84425-205-1.
Further reading
- Tremayne, David (1991). Racers Apart: Memories of motorsport heroes. Motor Racing Publications. p. 293. ISBN 0-947981-58-6.
External links
- Tom Pryce memorial commission and pictures of the construction