Monday May 20, 2013

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F1 test driver Maria de Villota loses right eye, critical but stable after crash


FILE - In this Thursday, March 15, 2012 file photo, Marussia test driver Maria de Villota of Spain poses for a photo ahead of the Australian Formula One Grand Prix at Albert Park in Melbourne, Australia. Formula One test driver Maria De Villota has been seriously injured after her racing car collided with a team support truck at an airfield in southern England, Tuesday July 3, 2012. (AP Photo/Rob Griffith, file)

LONDON - Formula One test driver Maria de Villota lost her right eye in a crash during a testing session, and remains hospitalized in Britain with her team members describing her condition as critical, but stable.

The 32-year-old Spaniard suffered serious injuries to her head and face after colliding with a team vehicle at the end of one of her straight-line test runs at Duxford Airfield in Cambridgeshire, north of London. She underwent a lengthy procedure by neurological and plastic surgery teams, her team said, adding that de Villota was in the operating theatre from Tuesday afternoon until Wednesday morning.

"We are grateful for the medical attention that Maria has been receiving," John Booth, Marussia team principal. "However, it is with great sadness that I must report that, due to the injuries she sustained, Maria has lost her right eye."

De Villota was testing the team's racing car for the first time Tuesday after joining Marussia in March. She is the sport's first full-time female driver since Italy's Giovanna Amati raced with the Brabham team in 1992.

She was taken to Addenbrooke's Hospital after the accident with what an emergency team's spokesman described as life-threatening injuries.

Her head apparently took much of the impact from the collision with the Marussia team truck, which was used to transport the racing car to the airfield for a week of testing ahead of the British Grand Prix at Silverstone Sunday.

It was still unclear why the car suddenly accelerated, and hit the truck as De Villota slowed down at the end of the run.

Booth said the investigation of the accident is ongoing.

"We have embarked on a very comprehensive analysis of what happened," Booth said.

Marussia F1, formerly known as Virgin Racing, is yet to score a point in this season's Formula One championship.


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