Motorsport mourns loss of rally champion

The world of motorsport is mourning the death of former world rally champion Colin McRae, after he was killed in a helicopter…

The world of motorsport is mourning the death of former world rally champion Colin McRae, after he was killed in a helicopter crash on Saturday.

"He was a great character outside the car and a tremendous driver inside the car," his former co-driver Nicky Grist said. "He had so much commitment and oozed talent.

"If it had an engine and wheels, he would get in it and drive it to the maximum. When it came to cars, Colin had that little something extra special." Grist was McRae's co-driver when he became the first British world rally champion in 1995 while driving for the Subaru team. McRae was also runner-up in a Subaru in 1996 and 1997 and narrowly missed the title for Ford in 2001.

He won 25 times in the World Rally Championship from 146 starts and picked up 477 individual stage victories.

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"I was privileged to have Colin in our team driving for Ford at a time when he was at the peak of his powers," Ford's Rally Team director Malcolm Wilson said.

"He achieved one of his greatest victories with us when he won the legendary Safari Rally in Kenya in 1999 on only our third event with a brand new Focus WRC.

"Since retiring as a full-time driver in the WRC, Colin has done much for the sport at grass roots level and his tragic death is a huge loss to British sport in general."

David Richards, who was in charge of the Subaru rally team when McRae won the title in 1995, said McRae was a "legend" of the sport. "He was competitive and extreme in everything he did, but also so much fun," he told reporters at the weekend.

"There was never a moment when he didn't try 100 per cent. It's ironic that he walked away from so many accidents only for this to happen."

Richards himself had a narrow escape on Sunday, when the helicopter he and his wife were travelling in from the Belgium Grand Prix crash-landed near London. They were both physically unharmed, suffering nothing more than shock.

Italian MotoGp rider Valentino Rossi, winner in Portugal on Sunday, took time out to remember McRae. "He was always my favourite driver, I followed him a lot and went to see him in Monte Carlo and San Remo . . . everyone is very sad, he was the most spectacular [ driver] and drove at 100 per cent," Rossi said.

McRae's father Jimmy - who was five-times British rally champion and a frequent participant in the Circuit of Ireland - spoke of his grief at losing his son. "It's very ironic, really, when you consider the dangerous life that Colin did have in his career as a rally driver, to lose his life here 50 yards from the front door of his house and not only that, he had our grandson Johnny with him."

"It's just so sad we've lost Johnny because, even at his early age, he was beginning to show signs of wanting to do what I did and what his dad did."

The family are now focusing on discovering what caused the accident. The 39-year-old died along with his five-year-old son, Johnny, when the helicopter he was flying in crashed into a forest near his home in Lanark, Scotland. A six-year-old friend of McRae's son and a friend of Colin McRae were also killed, police confirmed.