Home NET WORTH Bernie Ecclestone Net Worth 2022, Age, Wife, Children, Height, Family, Parents, House

Bernie Ecclestone Net Worth 2022, Age, Wife, Children, Height, Family, Parents, House

Bernie Ecclestone

Read the complete write-up of Bernie Ecclestone net worth, age, wife, children, height, family, parents, salary, Formula One as well as other information you need to know.

Introduction

Bernie Ecclestone is a British business magnate. He is the former chief executive of the Formula One Group, which manages Formula One motor racing and controls the commercial rights to the sport, and part-owns Delta Topco, the previous ultimate parent company of the Formula One Group. As such, he was commonly described in journalism as the ‘F1 Supremo’. Ecclestone entered two Grand Prix races as a driver, during the 1958 season, but failed to qualify for either of them. Later he became manager of drivers Stuart Lewis-Evans and Jochen Rindt.

Ecclestone bought the Brabham team in 1972, which he ran for 15 years. As a team owner, he became a member of the Formula One Constructors Association. His control of the sport, which grew from his pioneering the sale of television rights in the late 1970s, was chiefly financial, but under the terms of the Concorde Agreement, he and his companies also managed the administration, setup, and logistics of each Formula One Grand Prix, making him one of the richest men in the United Kingdom.

On 23 January 2017, it was announced that Ecclestone had been replaced by Chase Carey as chief executive of the Formula One Group. Ecclestone was appointed as chairman emeritus and acted as an adviser to the board. Ecclestone and business partner Flavio Briatore also owned the English football club Queens Park Rangers between 2007 and 2011. Ecclestone was removed from his position as chief executive of Formula One Group on 23 January 2017, following its takeover by Liberty Media in 2016.

Early life

NameBernie Ecclestone
Net Worth$3 billion
Salary$100 million
OccupationBusinessman
Age91 years
Height1.68m
Bernie Ecclestone net worth 2022

Bernard Charles Ecclestone was born on October 28, 1930 (age 91 years) in St Peter, South Elmham, a hamlet three miles south of Bungay, Suffolk, United Kingdom. He was the son of Sidney Ecclestone, a fisherman, whose family had moved from Kent in the early 20th century to work in Norwich’s painting industry, and his wife Bertha.

Ecclestone attended primary school in Wissett before the family moved to Danson Road, Bexleyheath, South East London, in 1938. He was not evacuated to the countryside during the Second World War and remained with his family. He left Dartford West Central Secondary School at the age of 16 to work as an assistant in the chemical laboratory at the local gasworks testing gas purity. He also studied chemistry at Woolwich Polytechnic and pursued his hobby of motorcycles.

Motorsports career

Bernie Ecclestone went into business trading in spare parts for motorcycles immediately after the end of World War II, and formed the Compton & Ecclestone motorcycle dealership with Fred Compton. His first racing experience came in 1949 in the 500cc Formula 3 Series, acquiring a Cooper Mk V in 1951. He drove only a limited number of races, mainly at his local circuit, Brands Hatch, but achieved a number of good placings and an occasional win. He initially retired from racing following several accidents at Brands Hatch, intending to focus on his business interests.

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Ecclestone temporarily left racing after his accident to make a number of eventually lucrative investments in property and loan financing and to manage the Weekend Car Auctions firm. He returned to racing in 1957 as manager of driver Stuart Lewis-Evans and purchased two chassis from the disbanded Connaught Formula One team. Ecclestone even tried, unsuccessfully, to qualify a car himself at Monaco in 1958, although this has since been described as “not a serious attempt”.

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He also entered the British Grand Prix, but the car was raced by Jack Fairman. He continued to manage Lewis-Evans when he moved to the Vanwall team; Salvadori moved on to manage the Cooper team. Lewis-Evans suffered severe burns when his engine exploded at the 1958 Moroccan Grand Prix and died six days later; Ecclestone was shocked and once again retired from racing. His friendship with Salvadori led to his becoming manager of driver Jochen Rindt and a partial owner of Rindt’s 1970 Lotus Formula 2 team, whose other driver was Graham Hill. Rindt, on his way to the 1970 World Championship, died in a crash at the Monza circuit, though he was awarded the championship posthumously.

During the 1971 season, Bernie Ecclestone was approached by Ron Tauranac, owner of the Brabham team, who was looking for a suitable business partner. Ecclestone made him an offer of £100,000 for the whole team, which Tauranac eventually accepted. The Australian stayed on as a designer and ran the factory. Colin Seeley was briefly brought in against Tauranac’s wishes to assist in design and management.

Ecclestone and Tauranac were both dominant personalities and Tauranac left Brabham early in the 1972 season. The team achieved little during 1972, as Ecclestone moulded the team to fit his vision of a Formula One team. He abandoned the highly successful customer car production business established by Jack Brabham and Tauranac – reasoning that to compete at the very front in Formula One you must concentrate all of your resources there. For the 1973 season, Ecclestone promoted Gordon Murray to chief designer. The young South African produced the triangular cross-section BT42, the first of a series of Ford-powered cars with which the Brabham team would take several victories in 1974 and 1975 with Carlos Reutemann and Carlos Pace.

Despite the increasing success of Murray’s nimble Ford-powered cars, Ecclestone signed a deal with Alfa Romeo to use its powerful but heavy flat-12 engine from the 1976 season. Although this was financially beneficial, the new BT45s were unreliable and the Alfa engines rendered them significantly overweight. The 1976 and 1977 seasons saw Brabham fall towards the back of the field again, before winning two races again in the 1978 season when Ecclestone signed the Austrian double world champion Niki Lauda, intrigued by Murray’s radical BT46 design.

The Brabham-Alfa era ended in 1979, the team’s first season with the up-and-coming young Brazilian Nelson Piquet when Alfa Romeo started testing its own Formula One car during that season. This prompted Ecclestone to revert to Cosworth DFV engines – a move Murray described as “like having a holiday”. Piquet formed a close and long-lasting relationship with Ecclestone and the team, losing the title after a narrow battle with Alan Jones in 1980 and eventually winning in 1981 and 1983.

In the summer of 1981 Brabham had tested a car powered by a BMW turbo engine, and 1982’s new BT50 was powered by BMW’s turbocharged four-cylinder M10. Brabham continued to run the Ford-powered BT49D in the early part of the season while reliability and driveability issues were sorted out by BMW and its technical partner Bosch. Ecclestone and BMW came close to splitting before the turbo car duly took its first win at the 1982 Canadian Grand Prix but the partnership took the first turbo-powered world championship in 1983.

The team continued to be competitive until 1985. At the end of the year, Piquet left after seven years. He was unhappy with the money that Ecclestone was willing to offer him and went to Williams where he would win his third championship. The following year, Murray, who since 1973 had designed cars that had scored 22 GP wins, left Brabham to join McLaren. Brabham continued under Ecclestone’s leadership to the end of the 1987 season, in which the team scored only eight points. BMW withdrew from Formula One after the 1987 season. Having bought the team from Ron Tauranac for approximately $120,000 at the end of 1971, Ecclestone eventually sold it for over US$5 million to a Swiss businessman, Joachim Luhti in 1988.

Formula One executive

Bernie Ecclestone formed the Formula One Constructors Association (FOCA) in 1974 with Frank Williams, Colin Chapman, Teddy Mayer, Ken Tyrrell, and Max Mosley in parallel to his activities as a team owner. He became increasingly involved with his roles at FISA and the FOCA in the 1970s, in particular with negotiating the sport’s television rights, in his decades-long advocacy for team control.

Ecclestone became chief executive of FOCA in 1978 with Mosley as his legal adviser; together, they negotiated a series of legal issues with the FIA and Jean-Marie Balestre, culminating in Ecclestone’s famous coup, his securing the right for FOCA to negotiate television contracts for the Grands Prix. For this purpose Ecclestone established Formula One Promotions and Administration, giving 47% of television revenues to teams, 30% to the FIA, and 23% to FOPA (i.e. Ecclestone himself); in return, FOPA put up the prize money – grand prix could literally be translated from French as “great prize”.

Television rights shuffled between Ecclestone’s companies, teams, and the FIA in the late 1990s, but Ecclestone emerged on top again in 1997 when he negotiated the fourth Concorde Agreement: in exchange for annual payments, he maintained the television rights. Also in 1978, Ecclestone hired Sid Watkins as the official Formula One medical doctor. Following the crash at the 1978 Italian Grand Prix, Watkins demanded that Ecclestone provide better safety measures, which were provided at the next race. This way, Formula One began to improve safety, decreasing the number of deaths and serious injuries over the decades.

At the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix, following Ayrton Senna’s fatal accident but while Senna was still alive, Ecclestone inadvertently misinformed Senna’s family that Senna had died. Ecclestone had used a walkie-talkie to ask Sid Watkins – who was at the crash scene – about Senna’s condition. Over the static of the walkie-talkie, Ecclestone misheard Watkins’ response of “His head” as “He’s dead”. Based on this, Ecclestone told Senna’s brother Leonardo, who was attending the race, that Senna had died. Senna in fact remained biologically alive for several more hours. This misunderstanding caused a rift in the hitherto friendly relations between Ecclestone and the Senna family; although Ecclestone travelled to Sâo Paulo at the time of Senna’s funeral, he did not attend the funeral itself, instead of watching it on television at his hotel.

Despite heart surgery and triple coronary bypass in 1999, Ecclestone remained as energetic as always in promoting his own business interests. In the late 1990s, he reduced his share in SLEC Holdings (owner of the various F1 managing firms) to 25%, though despite his minority share he retained complete control of the companies.

Bernie Ecclestone came under fire in October 2004 when he and British Racing Drivers’ Club president Jackie Stewart were unable to come to terms regarding the future British Grand Prix, causing the race to be dropped from the 2005 provisional season calendar. Negotiations with Ecclestone to keep the race in Formula One ended in the signing of a contract on 9 December to guarantee the continuation of the British Grand Prix for the following five years. In mid-November 2004, the three banks comprising Speed Investments, which owns a 75% share in SLEC, which in turn controls Formula One – Bayerische Landesbank, J.P. Morgan Chase, and Lehman Brothers – sued Ecclestone for more control over the sport, prompting speculation that Ecclestone might altogether lose the control he had maintained for more than 30 years.

A two-day hearing began on 23 November. After the proceedings ended the following day, Justice Andrew Park announced his intention to reserve ruling for several weeks. On 6 December 2004, Park read his verdict, stating that “In his judgment, it is clear that Speed’s contentions are correct and he should therefore make the declarations which it requests.” However, Ecclestone insisted that the verdict – seen almost universally as a legal blow to his control of Formula One – would mean “nothing at all”.

Bernie Ecclestone stated his intention to appeal against the decision. The following day, at a meeting of team bosses at Heathrow Airport in London, Ecclestone offered the teams a total of £260,000,000 over three years in return for the unanimous renewal of the Concorde Agreement, which expired in 2008. Two weeks later, Gerhard Gribkowsky, a board member of Bayerische Landesbank and the chairman of SLEC, said that the banks had no intention to remove Ecclestone from his position of control.

Ecclestone saw 14 of 20 cars pull out of the 2005 United States Grand Prix at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The seven teams which refused to participate, stating concern over the safety of their Michelin tyres, requested rule changes and/or a change to the track configuration. Despite a series of meetings between Ecclestone, Max Mosley, and the team principals, no compromise was reached by race time, and Ecclestone became an object of the public’s frustration at the resultant six-car race. Despite him not having caused the problem, fans and journalists blamed him for failing to take control and enforce a solution, given the position of power in which he had placed himself.

On 25 November 2005 CVC Capital Partners announced it was to purchase both the Ecclestone shares of the Formula One Group (25% of SLEC) and Bayerische Landesbank’s 48% share (held through Speed Investments). This left Alpha Prema owning 71.65% of the Formula One Group. Bernie Ecclestone used the proceeds of this sale to purchase a stake in this new company (the exact ratio of the CVC/Ecclestone shareholding is unknown). On 6 December Alpha Prema acquired JP Morgan’s share of SLEC to increase its ownership of Formula One to 86%; the remaining 14% was held by Lehman Brothers.

On 21 March 2006, the EU competition authorities approved the transaction subject to CVC selling Dorna, which controls the rights to MotoGP. CVC announced the completion of the transaction on 28 March. CVC acquired Lehman Brothers’ share at the end of March 2006. On 21 July 2007, Ecclestone announced in the media that he would be open to discussing the purchase of Arsenal Football Club. As a close friend to the former director of Arsenal David Dein, it was believed that the current board of the north London–based football club would prefer to sell to a British party, after American-based investment company KSE headed by Stan Kroenke was thought to be preparing a £650 million takeover bid for Arsenal Holdings plc.

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The revenue sharing with the various teams, the Concorde Agreement, expired on the last day of 2007, and the contract with the FIA expired on the last day of 2012. After the loss of Silverstone as the venue for the British Grand Prix in 2008, Ecclestone came under fire from several high-profile names for his handling of Formula One’s revenues. Damon Hill blamed Formula One Management as a key factor in the loss of the event: “There’s always been the question of the FOM fee, and ultimately that is the deciding factor. To quote Bernie, he once said: ‘You can have anything you like, as long as you pay too much for it,’ but we can’t pay too much for something … The problem is money goes out and away. There’s a question whether that money even returns to Formula One.” Flavio Briatore also criticized FOM: “Nowadays Ecclestone takes 50% of all revenues, but we are supposed to be able to reduce our costs by 50%”.

Other activities

Bernie Ecclestone’s International Sportsworld Communicators signed a 14-year agreement with the FIA for the exclusive broadcasting rights for 18 FIA championships in 1996. In 1999, the European Commission investigated FIA, ISC and FOA for abusing their dominant position and restricting competition. As a result, in early 2000 the ISC and FIA made a new agreement to reduce the number of rights packages to two, the World Rally and Regional Rally Championships. In April 2000 Ecclestone sold ISC to a group led by David Richards.

Ecclestone made American headlines on June 17, 2005, with his reply to a question about Danica Patrick’s fourth-place finish at the Indianapolis 500, during an interview with Indianapolis television station WRTV: “She did a good job, didn’t she? Super. Didn’t think she’d be able to make it like that. You know, I’ve got one of these wonderful ideas that women should be all dressed in white like all the other domestic appliances.” Following Patrick’s 2008 victory at Twin Ring Motegi, Ecclestone personally sent her a congratulatory letter. On 7 January 2010, it was announced that Ecclestone had, together with Genii Capital, submitted a bid for Swedish car brand Saab Automobile.

Queens Park Rangers

On 3 September 2007, it was announced that Ecclestone and Flavio Briatore had bought Queens Park Rangers (QPR) Football Club. In December 2007, they were joined as co-owners by businessman Lakshmi Mittal, the fifth richest person in the world, who bought 20% of the club. On 17 December 2010, it was announced that Ecclestone had purchased the majority of shares from Flavio Briatore becoming the majority shareholder with 62% of the shares. It was announced on 18 August 2011 that Ecclestone and Briatore had sold their entire shareholding in the club to Tony Fernandes, known for his ownership of the Caterham Formula 1 team.

Controversies

Bernie Ecclestone was involved in a political controversy over the British Labour Party’s policy on tobacco sponsorship in 1997. Labour had pledged to ban tobacco advertising in its manifesto ahead of its 1997 general election victory, supporting a proposed European Union Directive banning tobacco advertising and sponsorship. At this time all leading Formula One Teams carried significant branding from tobacco brands. The Labour Party’s stance on banning tobacco advertising was reinforced following the election by forceful statements from the Health Secretary Frank Dobson and Minister for Public Health Tessa Jowell.

Ecclestone appealed ‘over Jowell’s head’ to Jonathan Powell, Tony Blair’s chief of staff, who arranged a meeting with Blair. Ecclestone and Max Mosley, both Labour Party donors, met Blair on 16 October 1997, where Mosley argued: “Motor racing was a world-class industry which put Britain at the hi-tech edge. Deprived of tobacco money, Formula One would move abroad at the loss of 50,000 jobs, 150,000 part-time jobs and £900 million of exports.”

On 4 November the “fiercely anti-tobacco Jowell” argued in Brussels for an exemption for Formula One. Media attention initially focused on Labour bending its principles for a “glamour sport” and on the “false trail” of Jowell’s husband’s links to Benetton. On 6 November correspondents from three newspapers inquired whether Labour had received any donations from Ecclestone; he had donated £1 million in January 1997. On 11 November Labour promised to return the money on the advice of Sir Patrick Neill.

On 17 November, Blair apologized for his government’s mishandling of the affair and stated “the decision to exempt Formula One from tobacco sponsorship was taken two weeks later. It was in response to fears that Britain might lose the industry overseas to Asian countries who were bidding for it.” In 2008, the year after Blair stepped down as Prime Minister, internal Downing Street memos revealed that in fact t he decision had been made at the time of the meeting, and not two weeks later as Blair stated in Parliament.

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In a Times interview published on 4 July 2009, Bernie Ecclestone said “terrible to say this I suppose, but apart from the fact that Hitler got taken away and persuaded to do things that I have no idea whether he wanted to do or not, he was – in the way that he could command a lot of people – able to get things done.” According to Ecclestone: “If you have a look at a democracy it hasn’t done a lot of good for many countries — including this one”, in reference to the United Kingdom. He also said that his friend of 40 years Max Mosley, the son of British fascist leader Oswald Mosley, “would do a super job” as Prime Minister and added, “I don’t think his background would be a problem.”

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Stephen Pollard, an editor of The Jewish Chronicle, said: “Mr Ecclestone is either an idiot or morally repulsive. Either he has no idea how stupid and offensive his views are or he does and deserves to be held in contempt by all decent people.” In a subsequent interview with The Jewish Chronicle, Ecclestone said that his comments were taken the wrong way, but apologized, saying, “I’m just sorry that I was an idiot. I sincerely, genuinely apologize.” However, when Ecclestone was later told by Associated Press that the World Jewish Congress had called for his resignation, he said: “It’s a pity they didn’t sort the banks out,” referring to the financial crisis of 2007–2010, and stated: “They have a lot of influence everywhere.”

In a 2012 trial against the former BayernLB chief risk officer Gerhard Gribkowsky, the public prosecutor accused Bernie Ecclestone of being a co-perpetrator in the case. Gribkowsky confessed to the charges of tax evasion, breach of trust and accepting bribes. In closing arguments at a Munich trial the public prosecutor told the court Ecclestone “hasn’t been blackmailed, he is a co-perpetrator in a bribery case”. According to the prosecutor and defendant, Ecclestone paid about $44 million to the former banker to get rid of the lender’s stake in Formula One.

Bernie Ecclestone told prosecutors he paid Gribkowsky because he blackmailed him by telling UK tax authorities about a family trust controlled by Ecclestone’s former wife. In November 2012 private equity firm Bluewaters Communications Holdings filed a £409m lawsuit against the 2005 sale of Formula One, alleging it was the sport’s rightful owner. In May 2013, Süddeutsche Zeitung reported that the Munich prosecutors’ office had charged Ecclestone with two counts of bribery after a two-year investigation into his relationship with Gribkowsky.

In July 2013, German prosecutors indicted Ecclestone for alleged bribery. The charge relates to a $44 million (£29m) payment to Gribkowsky. It was linked to the sale of a stake in Formula 1. Gribkowsky, the BayernLB bank executive, was found guilty of taking $44m in bribes and failing to pay tax on the money. On 14 January 2014, a court in Munich ruled that Ecclestone would indeed be tried on bribery charges in Germany, and on 5 August 2014, the same court ruled that Ecclestone could pay a £60m settlement, without admitting guilt, to end the trial.

In the weeks following the events of the murder of George Floyd, seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton, F1’s only mixed-race driver had launched his own commission to tackle racism and increase diversity, with Formula One launching a We Race As One initiative to fight global inequality. In an interview with CNN, Bernie Ecclestone initially praised Hamilton’s efforts but then questioned whether it would “do anything bad or good for Formula One”, before saying that “In a lot of cases, black people are more racist than what white people are.”

In response, Hamilton has countered Ecclestone, criticizing him on Instagram for being “ignorant and uneducated”, and that he has realized why nothing much has been done to address diversity and racism. Formula One Group also issued a statement, saying that they “completely disagree with Bernie Ecclestone’s comments that have no place in Formula 1 or society”, and had added that his title as a chairman emeritus had since expired in January 2020. Interviews conducted by a German prosecutor in the Gerhard Gribkowsky case showed that Ecclestone had been under investigation by the UK tax authorities for nine years and that he had avoided the payment of £1.2 billion through a legal tax avoidance scheme. HM Revenue and Customs agreed to conclude the matter in 2008 with a payment of £10 million.

Bernie Ecclestone was arrested by Brazilian authorities on 25 May 2022 for illegally carrying a firearm while boarding a private plane to Switzerland. An undocumented LW Seecamp .32 gun was found in his luggage during an x-ray screening. Ecclestone acknowledged owning the gun but said he was unaware it was in his luggage at the time. He subsequently paid bail and was freed to travel to Switzerland.

Biography

In 2011 Faber and Faber published Tom Bower’s biography No Angel: The Secret Life of Bernie Ecclestone, which was written with Ecclestone’s cooperation. Bower has written exposé biographies of figures such as Robert Maxwell and Simon Cowell, leading commentators including Bryan Appleyard of the New Statesman to express surprise over Ecclestone’s co-operation. The book recounts an episode at the 1979 Argentine Grand Prix in which Colin Chapman offered Mario Andretti $1000 to push Ecclestone into a hotel swimming pool in Buenos Aires. A nervous Andretti approached Ecclestone and confessed the plot, to which Ecclestone replied: “Pay me half and you can”.

Crime victim

Bernie Ecclestone was a victim of theft in March 2005: two wheels were stolen from his car while it was parked outside his London home. The car, a brand new Mercedes-Benz CLS55 AMG, was said to be the first of its kind in Britain. On the evening of 24 November 2010, while returning to his apartment in his central London offices with his girlfriend Flosi, four men ambushed the pair and robbed them of jewellery, including diamond rings and a watch, with a total value of £200,000 (Ecclestone later said, “I see a figure of £200,000 mentioned but that is bollocks. They won’t be going far on what they took off us”). The image of Ecclestone’s bruised face was later used in an advertisement by Hublot, the makers of the stolen watch, with the slogan “See what people will do for a Hublot”.

House

Bernie Ecclestone sold one of his London residences in Kensington Palace Gardens in early 2004, never having lived in it, to Indian steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal for £57.1 million. At Grand Prix venues, Ecclestone used a grey mobile home, known as “Bernie’s bus”, as his headquarters. In 2005, Ecclestone sold his £9 million yacht Va Bene to his friend Eric Clapton. Terry Lovell published a biography of Ecclestone, Bernie’s Game: Inside the Formula One World of Bernie Ecclestone in March 2003 after legal issues had delayed its publication from its original date of November 2001.

Wife

Bernie Ecclestone is currently married to his third wife Fabiana Flosi since 2012. In April 2012, Ecclestone announced his engagement to then 35-year-old Fabiana Flosi, vice-president of marketing for the Brazilian Grand Prix; the couple married in August the same year. She is 46 years his junior. In April 2020, it was revealed the pair were expecting a son due weeks before Ecclestone’s 90th birthday. Ecclestone and his wife Fabiana Flosi announced the birth of Alexander Charles Ecclestone (Ace) on 1 July 2020.

Ecclestone has been married three times. With his first wife Ivy, he has a daughter, Deborah Ecclestone, through whom he is a great-grandfather. He has five grandchildren — two granddaughters and three grandsons. Ecclestone had a 17-year relationship with Tuana Tan, which ended in 1984 when Slavica Radić, later his second wife, became pregnant. Ecclestone was then married to Yugoslav-born former Armani model Radić for 23 years. The couple have two daughters, Tamara Ecclestone (born 1984) and Petra Ecclestone (born 1988). In 2008, his second wife Slavica Ecclestone filed for divorce. Slavica settled their divorce amicably with her receiving a reported $1 to 1.5 billion settlement. The divorce was granted on 11 March 2009.

Bernie Ecclestone net worth

How much is Bernie Ecclestone worth? Bernie Ecclestone net worth is estimated at around $3 billion. His main source of income is from his career as a businessman. Ecclestone salary and other career earnings are over $100 million annually. He is one of the richest and influential businessmen in the United Kingdom. However, Ecclestone turned down a knighthood in the early 2000s as he did not believe that he deserved it. In a 2019 interview, he stated that if he had brought some good to the country, he was glad, but he did not set out with this purpose in mind, so did not deserve recognition.

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