Andlazz News: Bianchi seriously injured in Japan horror crash



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Suzuka (Japan) (AFP) - French driver Jules Bianchi underwent
emergency surgery on Sunday after sustaining a serious head injury in a
horror crash near the end of a rain-hit and controversial Japanese Grand
Prix.

Formula One's governing International Motoring
Federation (FIA) said the 25-year-old Marussia driver had been rushed to
hospital after suffering a "severe head injury" and had gone into
surgery.

Bianchi was taken to hospital by ambulance, still
unconscious, after colliding with a recovery vehicle which was
attempting to lift Adrian Sutil's Sauber away from danger after the
German himself had skidded into a wall on lap 42 at Suzuka.

The FIA said that Bianchi would continue to be monitored in intensive care following his operation.

"The
driver was removed from the car, taken to the circuit medical centre
and then by ambulance to Mie General Hospital," FIA press officer Matteo
Bonciani said in a statement.

"The CT scan shows that he has
suffered a severe head injury and he is currently undergoing surgery.
Following this he will be moved to intensive care where he will be
monitored."

The FIA added: "A recovery vehicle was despatched in order to
lift (Sutil's) car and take it to a place of safety behind the
guardrail. While this was being done the driver of car 17, Jules
Bianchi, lost control of his car, travelled across the run-off area and
hit the back of the tractor."

"Jules
is seriously injured," Bianchi's father Philippe told France 3
television. "He is undergoing surgery for a head injury and we will need
to wait 24 hours to know any more on his condition."
Bianchi, a member of Ferrari's young driver programme, is in his second season in Formula One.

He
scored a memorable ninth place in Monaco this year, giving the
back-of-the grid Marussia team their first points since their debut in
2010.
Championship leader
Lewis Hamilton won Sunday's race, which had been threatened by a typhoon
and began behind the safety car with drivers complaining over team
radios that they were unable to see through the spray.
Starting in second behind
Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg, Hamilton had radioed: "Tell Nico not to
do anything dramatic because I can't see him."
Sutil witnessed Bianchi's shunt after going out himself.
"I
had a spin and ended up in the wall," he said. "I stood up and they
tried to rescue the car. Jules was in the same area and lost the car.
Hopefully he is in good hands."
The
safety car and medical car were sent out and the race brought to a
premature halt, giving Hamilton his eighth victory of the season,
although the Briton's celebrations were muted as news of Bianchi's
accident filtered through.
- 'All concerned' -

"We're all very concerned about our colleague, Bianchi," said Hamilton.
"I
don't really know what to say. Obviously (the race) didn't finish the
way we would have hoped but really, my prayers are with him and his
family."
German Rosberg, who
finished second, said: "I'm not thinking about the race -- I'm thinking
about my colleague. I'm hoping for the best."
Williams
driver Felipe Massa, who was involved in a serious crash during
qualifying for the 2009 Hungarian Grand Prix, said: "We need to
understand what has happened with Jules. I'm very worried.
"I
was already screaming on the radio five laps before the safety car that
there was too much water on the track, but they took a bit too long and
it was dangerous. So we saw that there were some crashes at the end."
Reigning
world champion Sebastian Vettel, who was third on Sunday behind the
Mercedes duo of Hamilton and Rosberg, said results were irrelevant in
the light of Bianchi's crash.
"Everything
that happened with the racing on track is secondary today, one of us is
in a bad shape and we don’t yet know how he is," said the German Red
Bull star.
"Jules had a bad
accident and we hope to have some very good news, very soon. Not knowing
what’s going on feels terrible, I think all the drivers really feel
with him, as we know how difficult and slippery it was today; we hope
for the very best."
Formula
One has been relatively free of bad crashes in recent years following
safety-improving measures that were implemented in the wake of the last
fatality to hit the sport - that of former world champion Ayrton Senna
at the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix.
Marussia reserve driver Maria De Villota lost her right eye in a test crash in July 2012.
The 33-year-old Spaniard was found dead in a Seville hotel room in October 2013.
There was an out-pouring of sympathy for Bianchi from within the sport and outside.
"#CourageJulesBianchi..hoping
to read good news of your recovery soon," tweeted France's former
Wimbledon tennis champion Marion Bartoli.

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