Paul Frère
Paul Frère
B Skill 177th
Elo

27.653

Number of Races

11

Number of Wins

0

Number of Podiums

1

Peak Elo

27.653

Time Spent Driving

5h24m46.1s


Paul Frère (30 January 1917 – 23 February 2008) was a racing driver and journalist from Belgium. He participated in eleven World Championship Formula One Grands Prix debuting on 22 June 1952 and achieving one podium finish with a total of eleven championship points. He drove in several non-Championship Formula One races. He also won the 1960 24 Hours of Le Mans, driving for Ferrari with fellow Belgian teammate Olivier Gendebien.

Life

Frère was born at Le Havre in 1917. He drove for the Ferrari works team, with Peter Collins.After retiring from active racing in 1960, he worked as an automotive journalist based in Europe (he was the European Editor for Road & Track magazine). He had numerous acquaintances amongst vehicle design engineers, especially in Japan at Honda and Mazda and also worked as a consultant to automobile manufacturers. He also had the opportunity to test numerous road and racing cars as a journalist, one of the highlights being the Audi R8 which he tested and demonstrated during a break in the proceedings of the Test Day of the 2003 24 Hours of Le Mans. At the time he was 86 years old, making him the oldest racing driver to drive a then-current sportscar.Frère, along with Piero Taruffi and Denis Jenkinson, was one of the first writers to treat motor racing as a skill that could be analyzed, explained, and taught. His 1963 book, Sports Car and Competition Driving is still a standard reference in the field.
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Recent Events

f1-1952 Race at Circuit De Spa-Francorchamps
22 Jun 52 00:00 UTC
  • Position: 5th of 22
  • Points: 2
  • Skill Change: 0.265
  • Car: HWM-1952
  • Best Lap: 0s
  • Race Time: 0s