Rank 35 celebrates Stirling Moss as Formula One's supreme nearly-man — the British driver who won sixteen Grands Prix across HWM, Maserati, Vanwall, Cooper, Lotus, and Porsche without ever securing the world championship his peers insisted he deserved. Moss finished runner-up four consecutive years from 1955 to 1958; the 1958 season's one-point loss to Mike Hawthorn, after Moss won four races to Hawthorn's one, remains the sport's most debated title outcome. His 1961 campaign with Lotus and Porsche came after the Goodwood crash that would end his racing career the following year; the blue-orange Lotus 18 on this plate captures the front-engine-to-rear-engine transition Moss navigated with aristocratic courage. Mille Miglia victory in 1957, the 1960 Monaco Grand Prix in a mid-engined Lotus against faster Ferraris, and sports-car dominance at Sebring and the Nürburgring made Moss a complete racer whose absence from the champions' list only sharpens his legend. Wallimilist renders the Lotus 18 three-quarter, orange-goggled portrait, and monumental STIRLING MOSS typography exactly as the master PNG dictates — NEVER CHAMPION kicker, FRONT-ENGINE band, and curator copy on Britain's racing knight.