Here are the answers to the non-Championship quiz:
1. What other driver proved to be a nemesis to Michael Andretti's short lived F1 career having over 3 collisions with the American?
Karl Wendlinger
2. What 3 other young drivers were being considered by the Ferrari team when Enzo Ferrari surprised all by hiring Gilles Villeneuve in 1978?
Patrick Tambay, Eddie Cheever, and Ricardo Patrese
3. With what team did Gilles Villeneuve begin his F1 career?
McLaren
4. How many different engines did McLaren use between its Honda years and the current Mercedes era? Name them for 2 extra points.
Three (Ford, Peugeot, & Lamborghini)
5. Which former F1 regular used to be referred to as the "super sub"?
Jean-Pierre Jarier
6. What cocky World Champion was sponsored by a condom manufacturer?
Alan Jones and Durex (1976)
7. Who was the first driver to have a "personal" sponsor? Name the product for 2 more points.
Jody Scheckter (Brooklyn Bubble Gum)
8. What driver is credited with introducing race safety features like the removable steering wheel and fuel cut-off switches?
Jackie Stewart
9. Who said, "If you don't hold onto your heart at Spa, it will come out of your throat."?
Martin Brundle
10. Which former F1 race track was described as "The road for automobile driving and exercises" and consisted of 2 almost perfectly straight lanes which ran along railroad tracks?
Avus, Berlin, Germany
gkaytaz wins!!!
gkaytaz scored 5.5 (I awarded a half point for naming the Surtees team for question #6)
Southernman scored 3.5
jacfan scored 2
There were no more answers submitted by any other posters.
I'm impressed that two of you got question#10 correct. I think that was the hardest one. All of you got question #8. Good job, everyone!
As for question #5, Roberto Moreno was called the "super sub" in the CART World Series. "Jumper" Jarier was called super sub in Formula 1. In 1978, he stood in for the late Ronnie Peterson (hardly to be considered subbing!) and nearly winning the Canadian GP. There were many other stints that earned him this nickname.
Many drivers have been associated with personal sponsors (Senna and Nacional, Schumacher and Dekra, Didier Pironi and Haribo, Mansell and Hugo Boss, Keke Rosberg and ICI Chemical), but the first driver to use his driving suit as a walking billboard was Jody Schekter when he did a deal with the Brooklyn Bubble Gum Company for $1mil in 1976. Around the same time, Niki Lauda became associated with the Italian diary company Parmalat and was influential in their title sponsoring of the Brabham team beginning in 1978. His hat deal wasn't made until 1985. Nice job, jacfan for thinking of Lauda.
