thumb|right|Lombardi driving a [[March 751 Formula One car in practice for the 1975 Dutch Grand Prix|alt=Lombardi's March 751 Formula One car in practice for the 1975 Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort]]

thumb|right|Lombardi at the [[1975 Race of Champions driving a March 751|alt=Lombardi at the 1975 Race of Champions at Brands Hatch, driving a March 751]]

thumb|right|Lombardi's [[Lancia Stratos competing in the 1976 24 Hours of Le Mans|alt=Lombardi's Lancia Stratos competing in the 1976 24 Hours of Le Mans]]

Maria Grazia "Lella" Lombardi (26 March 1941 – 3 March 1992) was an Italian racing driver who participated in 17 Formula One World Championship Grands Prix from 1974 to 1976. Lombardi was the second female driver to qualify for Formula One, after Maria Teresa de Filippis, and is the only female driver who finished within the points in Formula One, having scored half a point in the 1975 Spanish Grand Prix. Lombardi was also the first woman to qualify and compete in the Race of Champions at Brands Hatch, and raced in sports cars. She won the 1979 6 Hours of Pergusa, the 1979 6 Hours of Vallelunga and the 1981 6 Hours of Mugello, and finished 2nd in her class at the 1976 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Lombardi's story has impacted generations of racers. Her experience has shaped the involvement of women in racing and how people perceive women in the racing industry.

Early life

Lombardi was born in Frugarolo, a small town in Piedmont Italy on 26 March 1941. She was the youngest child of three; her father was a butcher, who gave Lella her first job as a delivery driver for the family's shop. At first, Lombardi’s father initially found her passion for racing hard to accept, but he embraced it once she finished runner-up in a 1968 race.

Career

Early career

After a brief experience with karting as a child, Lombardi bought her first car in 1965, which she raced in the Formula Monza series. She moved on to Formula Three in 1968, and in 1970 won the Italian Formula 850 series. In 1974, Lombardi was signed to drive the Shellsport-Luxembourg Lola in Formula 5000 and finished fourth. The car was sponsored by Radio Luxembourg broadcasting on 208 meters mediumwave, which inspired the selection of 208 as Lombardi's Formula One racing number. That winter, she met an Italian nobleman, Count Vittorio Zanon, who sponsored her entrance into Formula One. Lombardi also successfully performed at other races, including the German Grand Prix at the Nürburgring, where she finished seventh. At the United States Grand Prix at Watkins Glen, Lombardi had a one-off drive for Williams. However, she was prevented from starting the race

In 1976, Lombardi was confirmed at March Engineering alongside Brambilla and Stuck. She finished 14th at the Brazilian Grand Prix that year, and subsequently, the team decided to replace her with Ronnie Peterson. Then, Lombardi briefly moved to RAM Racing, her best result being 12th at the Austrian Grand Prix.

Sports cars

Lombardi later raced in sports cars. In 1979, she won the 6 Hours of Pergusa and the 6 Hours of Vallelunga; She competed four times at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, where she finished 20th overall (and second in the GTP class) in 1976 in a Lancia Stratos Turbo. third at the Imola 250 kilometers, 1977; second at Wunstorf, 1979; second at the Monza 1,000 kilometers, 1981; second at the 6 Hours of Pergusa, 1981; and third at the Donington 500 kilometers, 1981.

Lombardi also raced in the Firecracker 400 NASCAR race at the Daytona International Speedway in 1977. There were two other female drivers in the field: American Janet Guthrie and Belgian Christine Beckers. Lombardi finished 31st.

Lombardi retired from racing in 1988. In 1989, she founded her own racing team, Lombardi Autosport.

Personal life and death

Journalist Phil Pash reported that though Lombardi viewed racing as a masculine sport, she succeeded regardless because of her 'competitive spirit.' Lombardi died of breast cancer in Milan on 3 March 1992.

Legacy

Women have competed in motorsport (and Grand Prix racing in particular) since the birth of the sport. Some notable examples are Camille du Gast, Maria Antonietta Avanzo, Elisabeth Junek or Hellé Nice, all of them in the 1900-1940 period. Lombardi’s racing career has influenced the perceptions of subsequent generations of women in racing; she is credited with making Formula One accessible to women. Lombardi is considered a Formula One trailblazer, after which women have increasingly joined Formula One in many capacities aside from race driving, Lombardi is considered one of the reference points for women in racing; Lombardi and de Filippis are the only two women to have started in world championship Grands Prix races, with Lombardi the only one to have achieved a point-scoring finish.

Film

In 2020, the film "Beyond Driven" was made by directors Riyaana Hartley and Vincent Tran, providing essentially a dramatised documentary-style biographical account of Lombardi's life.

It features Patrizia Lombardi (Lella Lombardi's niece), Tatiana Calderon, Amna Al Qubaisi, Vicky Piria, Alice Powell, Giovanna Amati, Carmen Jorda, and Beitske Visser.

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Complete Shellsport International Series results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%"

|-

! Year

! Entrant

! Chassis

! Engine

! 1

! 2

! 3

! 4

! 5

! 6

! 7

! 8

! 9

! 10

! 11

! 12

! 13

!

! Pts

|-

| 1976

! Team P R Reilly

! Shadow DN1

! Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

| MAL

| SNE

|style="background:#CFCFFF;"| OUL<br/>

|style="background:#DFFFDF;"| BRH<br/>

| THR

| BRH

| MAL

| SNE

| BRH

| THR

| OUL

| BRH

| BRH

! 42nd

! 2

|}

Complete British Formula One Championship results

(key) (note: results shown in bold indicate pole position; results in italics indicate fastest lap)

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%"

|-

! Year

! Entrant

! Chassis

! Engine

! 1

! 2

! 3

! 4

! 5

! 6

! 7

! 8

! 9

! 10

! 11

! 12

! 13

! 14

! 15

!

! Pts

|-

| 1979

! Team Agostini

! Williams FW06

! Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8

| ZOL

| OUL

| BRH

|style="background:#cfcfff;"| MAL<br/>

| SNE

| THR

| ZAN

| DON

| OUL

| NOG

| MAL

| BRH

| THR

| SNE

| SIL

! NC

! 0

|}

NASCAR

(key) (<span style="font-size:85%">Bold&nbsp;– Pole position awarded by qualifying time. Italics&nbsp;– Pole position earned by points standings or practice time. *&nbsp;– Most laps led.</span>)

Winston Cup Series

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:75%"

|-

!colspan=45| NASCAR Winston Cup Series results

|-

! Year

! Team

! No.

! Make

! 1

! 2

! 3

! 4

! 5

! 6

! 7

! 8

! 9

! 10

! 11

! 12

! 13

! 14

! 15

! 16

! 17

! 18

! 19

! 20

! 21

! 22

! 23

! 24

! 25

! 26

! 27

! 28

! 29

! 30

!

! Pts

! Ref

|-

! 1977

! Charles Dean

! 05

! Chevy

| RSD

| DAY

| RCH

| CAR

| ATL

| NWS

| DAR

| BRI

| MAR

| TAL

| NSV

| DOV

| CLT

| RSD

| MCH

|style="background:#EFCFFF;"| DAY<br>

| NSV

| POC

| TAL

| MCH

| BRI

| DAR

| RCH

| DOV

| MAR

| NWS

| CLT

| CAR

| ATL

| ONT

! N/A

! 0

!

|}

Complete Deutsche Tourenwagen Meisterschaft results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

{| class="wikitable" border="1" style="text-align:center; font-size:85%;"

|-

! Year

! Team

! Car

! 1

! 2

! 3

! 4

! 5

! 6

! 7

! 8

! 9

! 10

! 11

! 12

! 13

! 14

! 15

!

! Pts

|-

| 1984

!

! Alfa Romeo Alfetta GTV6

| ZOL

| HOC

| AVU

| AVU

| MFA

| WUN

| NÜR

| NÜR

| NOR

| NÜR

| DIE

|style="background:#CFCFFF;"| HOC<br/>

|style="background:#CFCFFF;"| HOC<br/>

| ZOL

| NÜR

! NC

! 0

|}

See also

  • List of female Formula One drivers

References