Andreas Nikolaus Lauda was an Austrian Formula One driver and aviation entrepreneur. He was a three-time F1 World Drivers’ Champion, winning in 1975, 1977 and 1984. He is the only driver in F1 history to have been champion for both Ferrari and McLaren, the sport’s two most successful constructors. He died in a car crash at the Nürburgring, Germany, in 2003, aged 83.
About Niki Lauda in brief

He has been described as one of the greatest F1 drivers of all time. He won the F1 Drivers’ Championship in 11 years; he picked up a fifth win at the last race at the Italian Grand Prix at Monza in 2005. He will also be remembered for his work as an ambassador for Bombardier Business Aircraft, which he founded in the 1980s and 1990s, and for his role in the creation of the Formula One Hall of Fame at the University of Texas at Austin. His son, Lothar, is also a Formula One racer and a former F1 driver. He currently works as a consultant and TV pundit in Germany for German broadcaster DMAX. He died in 2011 after a car burst into flames at the German Grand Prix. He suffered severe burns in the crash. He later died of a heart attack in his native Austria in 2012. He left the sport in 2013. He still lives in Vienna, Austria, with his wife and three children. He spent his last years in a retirement home in Austria. He now lives in Switzerland with his daughter and three grandchildren. He passed away in 2013, at the age of 80. He never had any children. His last F1 race was at the Austrian Grand Prix in 2007, aged 85. He retired from racing at the end of his career in 2011. He went on to become a successful aviation entrepreneur in the 1990s.
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