- Title: MOTOR RACING-BIANCHI F1 driver Bianchi dies 9 months after Suzuka crash
- Date: 18th July 2015
- Summary: SILVERSTONE, ENGLAND, UK (FILE - MARCH 2012) (REUTERS) ***WARNING CONTAINS FLASH PHOTOGRAPHY*** JULES BIANCHI FAR RIGHT WITH PAUL DI RESTA (FAR LEFT OF SCREEN), NICO HULKENBERG (CENTRE) / DRIVERS STANDING IN FRONT OF THEIR FORCE INDIA TEAM CAR FORCE INDIA DRIVERS SITTING DOWN, BIANCHI (FAR LEFT OF SCREEN) WITH PAUL DI RESTA, NICO HULKENBERG (RIGHT OF SCREEN WEARING CAP) (S
- Embargoed: 2nd August 2015 13:00
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- Topics: General
- Reuters ID: LVA72BGCGG1EOJS49D5DXIHLJPON
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- Story Text: French Formula One driver Jules Bianchi has died of critical head injuries sustained at last year's Japanese Grand Prix, his family said in a statement on Saturday (July 18). He was 25.
Bianchi had been in a coma since the accident at Suzuka last October. He passed away at a hospital in Nice, near his parents' home in the south of France.
"Jules fought right to the very end, as he always did, but today his battle came to an end," said the Bianchi family.
"The pain we feel is immense and indescribable."
Bianchi was the first driver since Brazilian triple world champion Ayrton Senna, at Italy's Imola circuit in May 1994, to die from injuries sustained during a grand prix weekend.
"We are devastated to lose Jules after such a hard-fought battle," his Manor F1 team Tweeted. "It was a privilege to have him race for our team."
The Frenchman suffered severe head injuries when, in wet conditions and fading light, his Marussia slammed into a recovery tractor while it was attempting to remove Adrian Sutil's crashed Sauber.
Television images of the Oct. 5 accident, which were not publicly broadcast but have since been posted on the internet, showed the Marussia's roll hoop had been entirely ripped off in the massive impact.
The race was stopped and the unconscious driver was extracted from the wrecked car and taken by road ambulance to the nearby hospital.
Bianchi, who was also contracted to Ferrari and was considered to have a bright future in the sport, was initially treated in the Mie General Medical Centre in Yokkaichi.
His parents and siblings flew out from France and were a constant presence at his bedside, hoping against hope for a miracle.
An International Automobile Federation (FIA) report said in December that the Frenchman had not slowed sufficiently under warning flags before crashing.
The report found that Bianchi's car hit the tractor at 126 kph and said medical services were not at fault in their handling of the aftermath.
His family praised medical staff in Nice and Mie Prefecture for their care over the last nine months and asked for privacy as they sought to come to terms with the loss. - Copyright Holder: FILE REUTERS (CAN SELL)
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