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Tom Pryce: Wales' fastest man

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James Roberts James Roberts | 12:39 UK time, Monday, 19 July 2010

Thirty-five years ago today: the at Silverstone. A dashing young chap from north Wales sits in his Formula One car at the front of the grid. A Welsh speaker on pole position, a Welsh flag emblazoned on his crash helmet.

Thomas Maldwyn Pryce may not be a household name, but he was faster than most; and was one of Wales' greatest sportsmen you never heard of.

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On this July day in 1975 amidst the girls, the celebrities, Ferrari, McLaren, Lotus, the historic tapestry of James Hunt, Stirling Moss, death-defying speed and derring-do, Tom Pryce, from Nantglyn, near in Denbighshire became the only Welshman ever to start from pole position in a Formula One Grand Prix.

The unassuming Pryce had previously graduated quickly from being a tractor mechanic in rural Wales to the pinnacle of motor racing. Cutting his teeth in lower formulae he astounded experts and fans the world over with his sideways car control and gentle demeanour out of the car.

By 1974 he had graduated to Formula One with the unfancied Token team and, following a brief demotion to Formula Three, a spellbinding performance on the streets of Monte Carlo caught the attention of all the major Formula One teams of the day. He was rewarded with a seat in the Shadow Formula One team, run by fellow Welshman Alan Rees.

In his first full season, in 1975, Pryce had already become the only Welshman to win a Formula One race. That it was the non-championship Race of Champions was academic. In his black Shadow, starting from pole position, he slithered on the damp and cold Brands Hatch circuit, the famous, undulating stripe of Kentish tarmac, and beat some of the greatest names in the history of motor racing. This included the likes of Emerson Fittipaldi, Jacky Ickx and Ronnie Peterson.

This Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Wales News video from 1975 catches a rare interview with the shy, introverted Pryce as his star burned brightest. Here he reflects in a typically understated way about his victory at Brands Hatch. The clip also includes some high praise from none other than three-time champion Jackie Stewart.

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Rival, friend and five-time Grand Prix winner John Watson confirms Tom's reticence towards the jet-setting world of Formula One. "Tom was possessed of a huge talent," remembered Watson, "We spent a bit of time together because we both did Formula Two in 1974 and traveled around a bit together. I remember one time having dinner in Italy, and what Tom wanted was chicken and chips. And there in Italy you had the choice of the most incredible food - but that was all he wanted."

With the Ford-powered Shadow, Pryce's potential came to the fore throughout 1975. Despite the odd crash and his car's dubious reliability his pole position achievement on that Saturday in July was something few men have achieved.

"He did it with a malfunctioning clutch, and a hitherto unseen smoothness in place of his trademark oversteering style," says journalist David Tremayne, author of The Lost Generation, a thrilling, forensic account of Pryce's career.

"The race marked another milestone for Tom: the only time a Welsh driver led a Grand Prix. He ran in the top three initially, as Ferrari's Clay Regazzoni led from Pace, but overtook the Brazilian on the 17th lap and went into the lead on the 19th when Regazzoni slid into the wall at Club Corner.

"He stayed there on lap 20, too. But on lap 21 he was the first to encounter an unexpected pool of rain at Becketts. This was deeply ironic, for he had a reputation as a genuine rainmaster. The Shadow twitched and slithered off into the catchfencing, and he was momentarily stunned as a pole struck his helmet. It was a sad end to a wonderful drive.

Pryce was one of many to crash that day as the heavens opened, but in the races that followed his stock rose with a podium place in Austria, a fourth in Germany and the following year in 1976, he claimed a third place in Brazil and some promising drives. Things were looking good for 1977, until tragedy struck.

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Pryce was killed aged just 27 in baffling and tragic circumstances in the 1977 South African Grand Prix, detailed in this Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ News video and elsewhere. As Grand Prix racing is now a safer and affluent world, it will forever be poorer for the absence of one of Wales' greatest and unassuming sportsmen many tipped as a future world champion.

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Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    Excellent read

  • Comment number 2.

    I have never heard Tom interviewed before. What a gentle and unassuming guy he was. I remember his death as if it were yesterday and it still shocks me. One of Wales' most unsung sporting heroes and certain to have gone on to greater things. No Welshman has ever come close to F1 since and I imagine never will. If Tom is to be our only F1 driver, what a fitting tribute that would be. Sadly missed. RIP Tom.

  • Comment number 3.

    Good article. I remember the tragedy reasonably well, mainly because of Tom being a sportsman and a Welshman and a rarity at being a Welshman at the top of formula 1.

    A legend cut short.

  • Comment number 4.

    Tom Pryce was an incredibly fast and able driver who certainly could have become world champion . There isn't that much mystery about his death however- and it certainly wasn't Tomm Pryce's fauly. A poorly-trained fire marshall, carrying a heavy extinguisher ran across the track straight into the path of Tom Pryce's car. The marshall was thrown up into the air - his body somersaulting several times before it hit the ground. The extinguisher he'd been carrying killed Tom Pryce instantly. The actual crash isn't seen in the video excerpts above but the full horror of the accident, one of the most gruesome ever witnessed seen in a Grand Prix, was filmed in colour by the international news film agency Visnews. It was shown only once by the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ and never saw the light of day again.

  • Comment number 5.

    Why am I not allowed to see the video in my area?I really like to see this...

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