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Divina Galica

British skier and racing driver (born 1944)

Divina Galica

Summary

British skier and racing driver (born 1944)

FieldValue
nameDivina Galica
MBE
nationalityGBR British
birth_date
birth_placeBushey Heath, Hertfordshire, England, UK
years,
teamsnon-works Surtees, Hesketh
races3 (0 starts)
championships0
wins0
podiums0
points0
poles0
fastest_laps0
first_race1976 British Grand Prix
last_race1978 Brazilian Grand Prix
bf1_years19781980
bf1_races6
bf1_championships0
bf1_wins0
bf1_podiums1
bf1_points22
bf1_poles0
bf1_fastest_laps0

MBE Divina Mary Galica MBE (last name pronounced "Galitsa"; born 13 August 1944) is a British sportswoman. She competed in four Winter Olympics as a skier, captaining the British Women's Olympic Ski Team in 1968 and 1972. She also pursued a career in motorsport, entering three Formula One World Championship Grands Prix.

Skiing career

Galica was born in Bushey Heath, near Watford, Hertfordshire. Aged 19, she participated in her first Olympic games at Innsbruck in 1964, competing in downhill skiing and the slalom. She also participated in the next two winter Olympics, at Grenoble in 1968 and Sapporo in 1972. On both occasions, Galica was captain of the British Women's Olympic Ski Team, and finished in the top ten in the giant slalom. Aside from Olympic competition, she achieved two World Cup podium finishes in the downhill event, taking third place at both the Badgastein and Chamonix rounds in 1968. She also held the British women's downhill skiing speed record (at 125 mph). Following her subsequent driving career, Galica returned to skiing and once again represented Great Britain at the 1992 Winter Olympics, this time in the speed skiing event.

Driving career

Accepting an invitation to a celebrity auto race, Galica surprised everyone with her driving talent. She eventually took up motorsport as a second career, initially racing karts, moving into Formula Two and Formula One before finding success in sports cars and trucks. Her racing career has included stints in Formula Renault and Formula Vauxhall Lotus.

Galica was taken under the wings of John Webb and Nick Whiting, who entered her in the British Shellsport International Group 8 series in 1976, driving a Surtees TS16 Formula One car. After promising showings in this domestic series, Whiting decided to enter Galica for that year's British Grand Prix, using their Surtees. This appearance was notable as the first time in 13 years that a car had been entered for a World Championship Grand Prix using the supposedly unlucky number 13; so it also proved for Galica, as she failed to qualify for the race. The appearance meant she also joined a select band of seven Formula One drivers who have also competed in the Olympics.

BT37]] in a Historic Grand Prix at the [[Lime Rock Park]] circuit in 2009

For 1977, Whiting acquired a second-hand Surtees TS19 for Galica to use in the British series. The Whiting team lacked the technical expertise required to properly set the car up for each race, and Galica was often hindered by poorly adjusted machinery. Arch rival Tony Trimmer was also equipped with a Surtees TS19, but his engineering background and well-funded team meant that he was the class of the field at most venues. Whiting managed to secure sponsorship from Olympus Cameras part way through the season, as prior to this the whole team had been run on a budget of only £10,000 for the entire season. Despite this, Galica did manage to take third place at the Brands Hatch and second place at the Donington Park rounds, but with Trimmer winning both he took the Championship title.

Hesketh Racing's works driver Rupert Keegan had taken part in a couple of rounds of the British domestic series in 1977, and at the start of the 1978 Formula One season Hesketh offered Galica the opportunity to replace him in the team's Hesketh 308E car. She took the Olympus sponsorship with her (replacing Hesketh's previous Penthouse magazine sponsorship), but failed to qualify the 308E for either of the 1978 World Championship season's first two races. Following the second failure she returned to the British Shellsport Championship, now a fully Formula One series. Reunited with her TS19, Galica took second place at the Zandvoort round. However, in her absence Trimmer had upgraded to an ex-works McLaren M23 car, and with the ageing TS19 she stood little chance of being competitive. A second entry, later in the season, in her own M23 only produced a seventh-place finish.

Aside from a limited number of outings in single-seater cars, Galica switched her attention to the Thundersports S2000 sports car class, taking a number of top ten finishes, and truck racing. She also drove the No. 1 Celebrity car at Brands Hatch in the 1989 Honda CRX Challenge. She became a racing instructor with Skip Barber Racing Schools, rising to become senior vice president of Skip Barber Racing, managing both its driving school and racing series. In 2005, at the Mont-Tremblant weekend of the Skip Barber Race Series, Galica announced she was leaving Skip Barber to work for iRacing.com as a director in the company. Since 2018 (or earlier), she has been working for Bertil Roos Racing School as a driving instructor.

Racing record

Complete Shellsport International Series results

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

YearEntrantChassisEngine1234567891011121314Pos.PtsShellSport WhitingSurtees TS16Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V84th57ShellSport WhitingSurtees TS19Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V86th74March 742Ford BDX Swindon
1976MAL
7SNE
6OUL
RetBRH
NCTHR
4BRH
6MAL
4SNE
5BRH
9THR
7OUL
6BRH
13BRH
10
1977MAL
DNSSNE
2OUL
RetMAL
RetTHR
RetBRH
RetOUL
4MAL
3DON
2BRH
3THR
RetSNE
DNSBRH
6
BRH
Ret

Complete British Formula One Championship results

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

YearEntrantChassisEngine123456789101112131415Pos.PtsTeam OlympusSurtees TS19Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V814th19Melchester RacingMcLaren M23Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8Divina GalicaMarch 792Hart19th2Divina GalicaMarch 792Hart20th1
1978OULBRHSNEMALZAN
2DONTHROULMALBRH
THR
7SNE
1979ZOLOULBRH
RetMALSNETHRZANDON
5OULNOGMALBRHTHRSNESIL
1980OULBRHSILMALTHRMNZMALSNEBRHTHROUL
6SIL
9

Complete Formula One World Championship results

(key)

YearEntrantChassisEngine12345678910111213141516WDCPts.ShellSport WhitingSurtees TS16Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8NC0Olympus Cameras with HeskethHesketh 308EFord Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8NC0
1976BRARSAUSWESPBELMONSWEFRAGBR
DNQGERAUTNEDITACANUSAJPN
1978ARG
DNQBRA
DNQRSAUSWMONBELESPSWEFRAGBRGERAUTNEDITAUSACAN

Formula One non-championship results

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

YearEntrantChassisEngine1ShellSport WhitingSurtees TS19Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8Olympus Cameras with HeskethHesketh 308EFord Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8
1977ROC
12
1978INT
Ret

Complete European Formula Two Championship results

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

YearEntrantChassisEngine12345678910111213Pos.PtsArdmore RacingChevron B39Ford BDANC0Bob Salisbury RacingMarch 782BMWNC0Divina GalicaMarch 792HartNC0Wendy WoolsMarch 792HartNC0Divina Galica
SILTHRHOCNÜRVALPAUMUGROUNOGPERMISESTDON
15
THRHOCNÜRPAUMUGVALROUDONNOGPERMISHOC
DNQ
SIL
11HOCTHRNÜR
17VALMUGPAUHOCZANPERMISDON
11
THR
RetHOCNÜRVALPAU
SIL
RetZOLMUGZANPERMISHOC

References

  • (World Championship stats.)

References

  1. Divina Galicia. Lunchtime Today. 1975]
  2. Viva F1. "Formula One at the Olympics".
  3. Diepraam, 1999.
  4. (28 January 2015). "Honda CRX championship brands hatch round 10".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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