Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Juan Manuel Fangio (Spanish: [ˈxwan maˈnwel ˈfaŋxjo], Italian:; 24 June 1911 – 17 July 1995) was an Argentine racing driver, who competed in Formula One from 1950 to 1958.

  2. Juan Manuel Fangio. Many consider him to be the greatest driver of all time. In seven full Formula 1 seasons (he missed one recovering from a nearly fatal injury) he was World Champion five times (with four different teams) and runner-up twice.

  3. The Argentine driver was appraised and feared by his colleagues and adversaries alike. Juan Manuel Fangio was his own infallible manager – a bad habit, we’d say today – and although he always drove the best cars, winning five Formula One World Titles, Enzo Ferrari never took him into his heart.

  4. Juan Manuel Fangio (June 24, 1911 – July 17, 1995) was an Argentine driver who last drove for Maserati.

  5. Juan Manuel Fangio (born June 24, 1911, Balcarce, Argentina—died July 17, 1995, Buenos Aires) was an Argentine driver who dominated automobile-racing competition in the 1950s. Fangio began his Grand Prix career in 1948.

  6. halloffame.fia.com › driver-profile › 605Juan Manuel

    In the early years of Formula One the sport’s biggest star was Argentina’s Juan Manuel Fangio. He raced in only seven full seasons of Formula One, between 1950 to 1958, winning five titles and finishing runner-up twice.

  7. Nov 13, 2012 · Juan Manuel Fangio set records so immense that, in percentage terms, they will surely never be beaten. The Argentine competed in 51 Formula 1 grands prix, of which he won 24, set 28 pole...

  8. Apr 7, 2019 · David Tremayne relives arguably the greatest race of Juan Manuel Fangios career at the Nurburgring in 1957 – a drive so good it gave the legendary Argentinean insomnia…

  9. See all Juan Manuel Fangio wiki info & F1 stats profile: ️Check out the racing career of this great Argentine 5x champion who won 22 of 51 races he started

  10. Jun 24, 2023 · F1 Hall of Fame journalist David Tremayne explains why Argentine ace Juan Manuel Fangio is still such a titanic figure in a sport he retired from almost 50 years ago.