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Former F1 racer Jochen Mass, winner of Le Mans and former Le Mans champion, has died at the age of 78

Jochen Mass died aged 78. He was the former Formula One driver who won the first grand prix where a woman finished in the top ten and also took part in the fatal 1982 accident of Canadian Gilles Villeneuve.

His family announced his death on Instagram Sunday, citing complications from an aneurism he suffered in February.

McLaren won the Spanish Grand Prix in 1975 at Barcelona's Montjuic Circuit. The race was cut short and half points were awarded when Rolf Stommelen, a compatriot from Belgium, crashed his Lola off the track killing four spectators.

Lella Lombardi from Italy, the last woman to compete in F1, came sixth and earned half a F1 point.

In 1982, during qualifying for the Belgian Grand Prix in Zolder, Mass's Ferrari collided with Villeneuve's Ferrari. Later that year, the German retired from Formula One.

Jacques, Villeneuve's 1997 world champion son, assured him that "our family never held you responsible. It was a racing accident."

Stefano Domenicali, the CEO of Formula One, said: "I'm deeply saddened by the news of my friend Jochen Mass's death."

"He lived an incredible life in the heart of Formula One and was a wonderful, loving person who loved life and Formula One."

Mass won the Le Mans 24 Hours in 1989 with Swiss-based Sauber. He raced in 114 grand prix and later had a career as a television broadcaster. (Reporting Alan Baldwin, Editing Pritha Sakar)

(source: Reuters)