Life is inherently dangerous. Step into an intersection while checking your Twitter feed, dangerous. Ride that bike race with thousands of other amateurs and a 15 percent grade downhill, dangerous. Hit the boxing ring with a semi-pro, dangerous. But some people aren’t simply prone to running into inadvertent danger; they seek it out. They want the thrill that goes hand in hand with danger, and often those seeking this risky thrill are drawn to motorsports.
At the speeds many racing competitions run, there’s injury and death lurking at every corner. Enter a turn too fast, lose control of the vehicle at high speed, get fatigued at the wheel, have a mechanical failure, or just get taken out by another driver, and things turn tragic quickly. And, over the years, many drivers have fallen, including greats like Ayrton Senna, Antonio Ascari, Dale Earnhardt, Bruce McLaren and Jo Siffert. And just because racing technology and safety have come a long way doesn’t mean the risk has been diminished. The following races have, over time, proved to be most dangerous of all, and not just because of speed. Each is fraught with its own cocktail of risk, but racers continue to seek them out, for the thrill of victory, despite the tragic consequences of defeat.
Dakar Rally

If you thought your cross-country road trip in a rickety station wagon was risky, then the nearly 6,000-mile Dakar Rally over dirt, sand and rocks is like a one-way ticket to the pearly gates. The Dakar Rally (formerly the Paris-Dakar Rally, which began in 1978) has not only killed 49 race participants, but also numerous spectators, members of the media and emergency response crews.
Specially outfitted SUVs, motorcycles and trucks attempt to scale the difficult terrain, and since there’s no actual track, the unknown dangers are myriad. Non-race vehicles get hit, as do livestock and bystanders; a high proportion of deaths are in the motorcycle category, where single riders crash and either die immediately or days later even after medical care.
Memorable Tragedy: In 2005, Febrizio Meoni of Italy crashed his KTM motorcycle during the 11th stage of the rally and broke his neck. His heart failed while waiting for medical attention, and the team was unable to revive him.