Sabine Schmitz: Former racing driver and Top Gear presenter dies aged 51
 
Sabine Schmitz, pictured in January 2020Former Top Gear presenter Sabine Schmitz - famous for being the only woman to win the Nurburgring 24 Hours - has died aged 51.
Schmitz said last year that she had been diagnosed with cancer in 2017.
Schmitz  had become synonymous with the Nurburgring Nordschleife, the 14-mile  circuit in Germany that is renowned as the toughest in the world.
She won the 24-hour touring car race at the track twice, in 1996 and 1997, driving a BMW M3.
She became known as the "Queen of the Nurburgring" and estimated she had driven around the track more than 20,000 times.
Schmitz  later gained acclaim for an appearance on Top Gear in 2004 in which she  drove a van around the track, and subsequently became a presenter on the show alongside Chris Evans in 2016.
This  Sunday's episode of Top Gear will be dedicated to Schmitz, with Clare  Pizey, executive producer, saying: "Sabine was a beloved member of the  Top Gear family and presenting team since 2016, having first appeared on  the show in 2004, and everyone who had the pleasure of working with her  on the team is in shock at this news.
"Sabine  radiated positivity, always wore her cheeky smile no matter how hard  things got - and was a force of nature for women drivers in the motoring  world.
"Like  everyone else who knew her, we will truly miss her - Sabine really was  one of a kind. Our thoughts are with her partner Klaus, who was always  by her side and who we welcomed to Dunsfold many times, and her family  in Germany."
Top  Gear presenter Chris Harris said Schmitz was a "wonderful, powerful,  hilarious person" while the show's former presenter Jeremy Clarkson paid  tribute by tweeting she was "such a sunny person and so full of beans".
Formula 1 said Schmitz was "a force of nature" who inspired "a new generation of motorsport enthusiasts".