Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

June 7, 1970
Spa-FRANCORCHAMPS, Belgium

By F1’s Round 4 at Spa in 1970, Jack Brabham was at the top of the standings with eventual title winner Jochen Rindt trailing by six points in third. Race victor was BRM’s Pedro Rodríguez; the next time a Mexican won a world championship GP was Sergio Pérez at Sakhir in 2020. Rindt didn’t finish; but he’d win the next four outings.

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Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

2002 Nissan Skyline Gt-r Crs by Nismo

Sold by Broad Arrow, £403,700

Broad Arrow’s auction at the Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este on the shores of Lake Como might have been a great place to sell a Ferrari, Maserati or Lamborghini but, as it turned out, it was also an ideal setting to grab a bargain Nissan Skyline GT-R. Five examples were offered in what was described as the ‘ultimate collection’ of its type, but all sold for below expectations – not least this likely unique car (from the final year of R34 GT-R production) which had been built to Clubman Race Spec by Nissan’s NISMO division. Since undergoing the conversion in 2022, the 2.8-litre car had covered 200 miles.


Mini Cooper S Monte Carlo tribute replica

Manor Park Classics

1960 Mini Cooper S ‘evocation’

Sold by Manor Park Classics, £12,362

This left the Longbridge line as an 850 saloon but was later transformed into a tribute to Paddy Hopkirk’s 1964 Monte Carlo Rally winner, complete with 1071cc Cooper S engine and twin fuel tanks.


Mercedes-Benz 600 Pullman limousine at auction

Bonhams

1970 Mercedes-benz 600 Pullman

Sold by Bonhams, £91,600

Not ideal for today’s traffic-clogged cities, this 20ft 600 Pullman was one of 124 six-door models built and had been in the same ownership for 48 years. When new, it could transport VIPs at up to 125mph.


Low-mileage Lotus Carlton performance saloon

Iconic Auctioneers

1993 Lotus Carlton

Sold by Iconic auctioneers, £109,125

It’s not only fast Fords that have seen price gains of late – it’s fast Vauxhalls, too. This meticulously maintained example of the 176mph travelling salesman’s delight had covered just 21,114 miles.


Tomb Raider edition Land Rover Defender replica

Historics

2001 Land Rover Defender Tomb Raider

Sold by Historics, £18,876

This was one of 250 factory-built replicas of the Defender seen in the 2001 Lara Croft film Tomb Raider. It retained all of its extras, including snorkel, roof rack and external rollcage.


Ayrton Senna-signed Moët & Chandon champagne bottle

Bonhams

Moet & Chandon Champagne Bottle

Sold by Bonhams, £15,360

Empty bottles don’t get recycled when they carry the name of Ayrton Senna. This one was signed by the Brazilian F1 legend in 1991 and was sold here alongside others autographed by Michael Schumacher (£3072) and Fernando Alonso (£1152).


Barn-find Lotus Elan Series 4 SE coupé

Iconic Auctioneers

1970 Lotus Elan Series 4 Se Coupé

Sold by Iconic auctioneers, £23,063

Showing just 16,141 miles, this Elan was bought by its now deceased owner in 1998 before spending 28 years locked in a dusty barn. Knocking-off some of the grime revealed a well-preserved car.


Forthcoming Sale Highlights

H&H, Solihull, West Midlands, July 22
This annual sale of two-wheelers at the National Motorcycle Museum has become an internationally recognised hunting ground for the rare and unusual – as well as a mecca for fans of Vespas and Lambrettas. Oddities include a 1972 Kawasaki S2 – fitted with a 415cc, five-cylinder two-stroke engine created by famed engineer Allen Millyard.

Mecum, Nashville, Tennessee, September 23-26
If you’re a fan of NASCAR and country music, this new Mecum fixture is a must. Held on Nashville’s Superspeedway circuit, it will include no fewer than 10 NASCAR racers (all with interesting provenance) as well as a range of lots spanning everything from a 2026 Aston Valhalla to a 1931 Ford Model A Woody that competed in the 1992 Great American Race.

Broad Arrow, Newport, Rhode Island, October 2
Broad Arrow complements its flagship California sale at Quail Lodge (August 13-14) with this new auction on the East Coast which sees it become the official auction partner of the Audrain Newport Concours and Motor Week. Inaugurated in 2019, the event is based around the Audrain Auto Museum and aims to celebrate the region’s rich motoring heritage.

Gooding Christie’s, New York, November 19-22
The ongoing success of the hugely popular Rétromobile old car show in Paris has led to the creation of a matching event in New York. Rétromobile New York debuts and will run for four days at the Javits Center, a vast convention and exhibition building spanning six entire blocks. The exact format and timing of the Gooding Christie’s auction is yet to be confirmed.

Bernie Ecclestone's former Riley Imp roadster

Bonhams

1935 Riley Imp

Sold by Bonhams, £62,500

Described as being in “survivor condition”, this sporting, 1100cc Imp was owned by Bernie Ecclestone from 1994 until the F1 impresario staged a sell-off of his classic collection at RM Sotheby’s in 2007, where it fetched £67,100 – more or less what it sold for this time.

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Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

Eddie Jordan Racing rear wing on Brundle's Ralt RT3

1. Car is ‘on the button’ and will be sold with a host of new spares, including three nose cones and rear wing components

When talk turns to Ayrton Senna’s rivals, most people think of the Brazilian’s on-track battles with Frenchman Alain Prost. But wind the clock back a little further to 1983 and memories of equally intense competition between Senna and Britain’s own Martin Brundle might come flooding back.

Sieger-liveried Ralt RT3 raced by Martin Brundle in 1983

2. Sieger Gas Detection colours replicate the car’s 1983 season livery

In that year, the pair were on the same grid for the British Formula 3 championship, each in a Ralt chassis with Toyota power.

Toyota engine bay of Brundle's 1983 Ralt RT3

3. Two-litre, twin-cam Toyota engine develops around 165bhp at 6000rpm

In the first half of the 20-race season, Senna dominated with an astounding nine victories in the first nine races – before crashing out at Silverstone in round 10. The incident seemed to rattle his nerve while simultaneously giving Brundle such a psychological boost that, by the final round at Thruxton, he was leading the championship by one point.

Cockpit and gearlever of Brundle's 1983 Ralt RT3

4. No paddles in here – just a manual, five-speed, Hewland gearbox

In the end, Senna won through – but the intense contests that led to him finally lifting the trophy have been judged by some as being among the most exciting in single-seater racing, Formula 1 included.

Driver's view from the cockpit of Brundle's Ralt RT3

5. Maximum speed 165mph

So interest is likely to be high when the actual Ralt RT3 that took Brundle within a hair’s breadth of championship victory (and led to his promotion to the Tyrrell F1 team) comes under the hammer at this Iconic auction being held during the BRDC Classic at Silverstone.

Cockpit control lever inside Brundle's 1983 Ralt RT3

6. Chassis was designed by Brabham co-founder Ron Tauranac as an aluminium monocoque with a weight-reducing honeycomb structure

Found in Sweden some years ago and subsequently returned to the UK, the car has been meticulously restored and returned to the same blue and yellow Sieger livery it wore when Brundle campaigned it for Eddie Jordan Racing. He last drove it during the Eddie Jordan tribute at the weekend of the 2025 British Grand Prix.

Rear view of Brundle's Eddie Jordan Racing Ralt RT3

The car was reunited with Martin Brundle at Silverstone in ’25

Iconic Auctioneers

1983 RALT RT3/83
On sale with Iconic, Silverstone, July 24.
Estimate: £40,000-£50,000. iconicauctioneers.com

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

The most famous Lamborghini Countach in the world is probably the 25th Anniversary white model that Leonardo DiCaprio wrecked during his character Jordan Belfort’s chaotic, drug-crazed drive home from his country club in the 2013 Martin Scorsese movie The Wolf of Wall Street.

That car was sold in all its broken glory for £840,000 by Bonhams in 2023 (complete with a Belfort costume and a director’s chair and clapboard signed by Scorsese), with its undamaged, but less-celebrated, screen double Countach fetching £1m at RM Sotheby’s only a fortnight later.

Which makes the remarkably well-preserved anniversary Countach on sale with Girardo & Co seem like a bargain – not least since it’s almost certainly among the lowest mileage survivors of the 667 examples built, and possibly the most original.

Lamborghini Countach cockpit with automatic gear selector

Gearbox not stiff

Girardo & Co

Launched in 1988 to mark a quarter of a century since Ferruccio Lamborghini founded his eponymous, Ferrari-baiting marque, the Anniversary cars were designed with the input of a young Horacio Pagani (who had been hired as the firm’s head of composites) and 1977 World Rally champ Sandro Munari (who helped to design, tweak and tune the suspension).

Pagani was responsible for the plethora of strakes, scoops and skirts – all of which were functional features – while the improved suspension made for a better-appointed, more-comfortable and more-forgiving car than the Countach QV from which the Anniversary model was derived. It is, in other words, Lamborghini’s ‘peak Countach’.

Lamborghini Countach V12 engine compartment

5.2-litre V12

Girardo & Co

This one was sold in the summer of 1990 by Portman Lamborghini, once the sole marque concessionaire in the UK, which operated from a showroom in George Street, Mayfair, and offered a tax-friendly export service – which could explain why the car was swiftly shipped to Japan.

It remained there for 25 years before being brought back to Europe in 2015 and, by the time it came into the hands of its current, third owner it had clocked-up a mere 671km – which is just over 400 miles.

Rear three-quarter view of red Lamborghini Countach

Best condition Countach that Girardo & Co has seen

Girardo & co

Such minimal use can prove to be a double-edged sword, especially with Italian supercars, but Girardo & Co says this one was subjected to a thorough, £18,000 mechanical refurb in 2018, despite having been carefully stored throughout its sedentary life.

It has also received a £2500 major service within the past few weeks and is now up, running and ready for the summer with what Girardo describes as “impressive shove” from the mighty, responsive 5.2-litre, V12 engine, a “positive” manual gearbox and “fantastic” air-conditioning.

Lamborghini Countach instrument cluster and speedometer

1791km covered

Girardo & Co

One of 600 left-hand-drive examples, its Rosso paintwork and Nero leather interior are not far off being factory fresh – and the car even retains its original spare wheel and tool roll, complete with replacement auxiliary belts, scissor jack and gleaming spanners. Which might be enough to get you out of trouble in the event of a simple puncture – but would have been no help to Jordan Belfort whatsoever.


1990 Lamborghini Countach 25th Anniversary
On sale with Girardo & Co, Oxfordshire. Asking: £575,000. girardo.com

Dealer News

Racer that ended Onyx’s F1 adventure

 

Blue Subaru Impreza 22B parked outdoors

Onyx co-founder MIKE EARLE’s biggest regret was leaving the race team in 1990; he thought it could have ‘done’ a Jordan. He’d departed by the time this 1990 MONTEVERDI ONYX ORE-2above, was on track in F1. It raced in eight GPs with JJ LEHTO and GREGOR FOITEK, the latter taking it to seventh in the Monaco Grand Prix. It’s on sale, £POA, at WILLIAM I’ANSON in the Cotswolds.

Used car dealers deserves more respect, according to AA president EDMUND KING, who was speaking on YouTube channel THE LOGBOOK. “They have a real role to play in road safety,” he said, “explaining features and in giving credibility and trust.”

Just one of 16 for the UK market (440 were made in total), this RHD 1999 SUBARU IMPREZA 22Babove, was built to celebrate Subaru’s 40th anniversary, while giving itself a timely slap on the back for a trio of WRC manufacturers’ titles. AUTO TORQUE in Aylesbury say it has just 23,500 miles on the clock and its Sonic Blue paintwork is spotless. It’s on sale for £325,000.

Monteverdi Formula race car studio view

This year, PORSCHE is celebrating 75 years in the UK. It was at the Earls Court Motor Show in 1951 that its 356 was showcased, with the first right-hand-drive 911 arriving in 1965. As part of its anniversary it brought together ‘75 driven women’ at Suffolk’s WILDERNESS RESERVE for a Woodland Fire Feast and a Cayenne, Cocktails & Canapés night.

Previously only available for BENTLEY buyers, now all can visit the marque’s CW1 HOUSE visitor experience in Crewe. “It offers a truly immersive experience of our brand,” says Wayne Bruce, director of visitor experience and heritage. Entry from £20.

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Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

Max Verstappen didn’t win the Nürburgring 24 Hours. But he did something that the combined might of Mercedes, Ferrari, BMW, Aston Martin, Lamborghini and, yes, even Porsche, has failed to achieve. He made us tune in to GT racing.

GT racing has had great grids for a decade or so now. The cars are recognisable, they look great in full flight and the racing is close. Yet it has still never fully cut through to achieve wider recognition. Turns out what it needed was Formula 1’s most singular talent taking on endurance racing’s most singular challenge.

It benefited all. Verstappen, whether in the air or on the grass, proved he’s a total racing nut and we loved him for having a go. The event sold out for the first time ever as 230,000 fans descended on this corner of the Eifel region, and everyone, from headline sponsors to local biergartens, profited.

Porsche 911 GT3 Manthey shown in full side profile.

Lessons learned on track have reached the road

Porsche

But among all this hype and hyperbole, there was a nagging problem. The issue is this: most manufacturers present don’t seem to believe that racing improves the breed. Lamborghini has been involved in GT3 racing for a decade; Aston Martin and Ferrari for double that; BMW and Mercedes have both been there for 15 years. They’re all racing modified but instantly recognisable road cars. And yet none of them has allowed their race car to influence road car development.

Fans surround the Red Bull liveried Porsche GT3 after Nürburgring race.

Max’s Mercedes, Nürburgring 24 Hours ’26

Red Bull Content Pool

All apart from one. On the grid, the biggest rival for Verstappen’s No3 Winward Mercedes shared with Jules Gounon, Dani Juncadella and Lucas Auer was the No911 Manthey Porsche 911 GT3 R. Painted in traditional lurid ‘Grello’ fluoro, the Manthey-run Porsches are a fixture at the N24. In fact no team has won the Nürburgring 24 Hours more – seven times. And Porsche is the only marque that uses its Manthey-run race cars to influence its road car development.

Which brings us to the machine we have here, the revised 992.2 911 GT3 with Manthey Kit. This is a £56,000 option. For that you get a badge on the console, illuminated carbon door sills and LED puddle lights. Not even joking. But then there’s the stuff that actually makes it go faster, which focuses on two areas: suspension and aerodynamics. And boy does Manthey know what it’s doing there.

“This car puts its arms around your shoulder and leads you on”

But first a bit of history. Manthey Racing was founded in 1996. Having started with 911s in the Porsche Supercup – and taking victory in both the drivers’ and teams’ championships every year from 1997 to 2000 – it went on to win FIA WEC championships and six Le Mans class victories. In 2013 Porsche took a controlling stake – effectively making Manthey its in-house race team.

Porsche 911 GT3 race car leads at the Nürburgring.

Manthey No911 didn’t finish this year’s N24

Porsche has long prided itself on how fast its road cars, as well as its race cars, go around the Nürburgring. However, the GT2 RS had lost its crown to the AMG GT Black Series in 2020. So the one place it could turn was to the company that knew more about making 911s faster around a track than anyone else on the planet.

Porsche went back to the Nürburgring with a GT2 RS modified by Manthey and knocked 4sec off its own lap time, reclaiming the production car lap record. But what went into achieving that might help explain why Porsche allows racing to influence road cars, and why Manthey is held in such high regard. Because this was not some free-for-all project where the sky was the limit. In order to still qualify as a road car and not force Porsche to go through a lengthy and costly re-homologation, the car had to fit the exact same template as the existing GT2 RS. It couldn’t be lighter, it couldn’t be more powerful, it couldn’t use more fuel and it couldn’t have more aero drag. And any new components also had to survive the exact same durability and quality tests as the ones they were replacing, allowing them to be warrantied for up to 15 years.

Close-up of the Weissach badge on a Porsche front grille.

Grille nod to Porsche’s Development Centre

So successful was the project that Porsche, even if it doesn’t admit it, now has two separate Nürburgring lap times. One set by the factory car, another by the same car modified by Manthey. Its Cayman GT4 RS, 911 GT3 RS and most recently the electric Taycan Turbo GT have all had their lap times improved (in the case of the latter, by more than 12sec) and crowns regained.

This revised 992.2 911 GT3 is the latest to get the Manthey treatment. So how does it differ from the ’standard’ version?

Weissach bucket seats inside the Porsche 911 GT3 Manthey.

Strap in – the Manthey Kit makes the 911 GT3 6sec a lap faster on the Nürburgring

The first surprise is that while the front springs are 20% stiffer, the rears are 7% softer. The adaptive dampers are replaced with a set of four-way adjustable passive shocks built by KW to Manthey’s specifications. But it’s the aero that contains the trickery. Because while you’re thinking it’s all about downforce, the first thing to note is that it’s actually 7% cleaner through the air. Then yes, it also develops significantly more downforce. This chiefly comes from air passing under, not over, the car.

Porsche 911 GT3 Manthey cornering on a race circuit.

Better cornering speed

A deeper splitter protrudes 12mm further and curls slightly upwards, pulling air down and into the underfloor which has been entirely redesigned to twist, turn and use the air as effectively as possible. Some of the vanes are up to 150cm long, providing corridors for the air to pass along before it’s diffused back into the atmosphere, having contributed to a total downforce figure of 540kg at 177mph. But all the eye sees is the disc rear wheel covers and the bigger rear wing end plates, the former helping to clean airflow down the flanks, the latter turning the air inwards to glue it to the car over the engine cover’s ducktail.

Obviously you’re paying for the intricacies of development and engineering here – and you haven’t stopped paying yet, as Manthey offers further options. You can have sets of their bespoke brake pads (£1275 for the fronts, £1175 for the rears) for the carbon ceramic discs, and for £9160 this car features Manthey’s lightweight aluminium wheels, which save 6kg over Porsche’s equivalents. A further £12,000 buys you a purely cosmetic carbon pack that replaces the regular bonnet vents and engine cover.

Manthey rear wing mounted on the Porsche 911 GT3.

Revised Manthey-marked carbon rear wing

“A race team making a road car smoother and faster. This could catch on”

Don’t bother doing an equation between cost and lap time improvement because it doesn’t make for pretty reading. Instead we can marvel in the knowledge that the Nürburgring lap time improved from the standard car’s 6min 56.29sec to 6min 52.98sec. But that wasn’t enough for Manthey, so in mid-April with better weather conditions, it went back and driver Ayhancan Güven lopped another 2sec off that.

Impressive. However, this is a road car – it can’t be just about track speed. But let’s start there – or more specifically at Thruxton, home to a wide selection of ballsy high-speed corners. The downforce isn’t what I notice. That’s always hard to spot until it goes away. It’s usually the moment the trouble begins.

Porsche 911 GT3 Manthey cockpit with manual gearbox and Alcantara steering wheel.

The ride never feels too wild

Instead it’s a sense of calmness under pressure, of a car that’s clearly working hard but exudes competence and control. It’s not sharp or snatchy as it deals with the mid-corner surface changes through Noble and Goodwood. Speeds are way up over 100mph, yet although there is a bit of lateral shimmy, the movements are composed, almost languid, the steering writhing gently despite the loads. The impression is of a car travelling fast, but unhurriedly. It’s not busy or hectic, so as a driver you find yourself following its lead. It’s not edgy about what’s going on, so neither are you. This is a car that puts its arm round your shoulders and leads you on.

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Essentially there’s more give in the suspension than I expect. Very little travel, but what travel there is packs in a fantastic amount of damping, rounding the edges off every impact, filtering the signals and taking the sting out of Thruxton’s trickier sections. One of the smaller features you get with the Manthey Kit is braided steel brake hoses that are meant to provide more direct pedal feedback, but Porsche has always done fabulous brakes, so I can’t say I noticed. But again it was the smoothness of how it slowed, no weave or distraction, that impressed. So trail braking to the apex was more accurate and more rewarding, and after that the GT3’s powertrain gets to strut its stuff.

Say what you like about a car that ‘only’ has 500bhp, but never doubt its commitment. The 4-litre flat six is one of the hardest working motors around. It gives its all, singing round to 9000rpm, flicking PDK gearshifts through in a split second, wasting no energy. It might not put the same force through your spine as a turbocharged McLaren or Ferrari, but it’s as exciting to use, and has the responsiveness and soundtrack that no modern blown engine can match. It never feels like the weak link.

Porsche 911 GT3 Manthey slides through a circuit corner.

Time for the road and another surprise. The ride quality feels as impressive out here as on circuit. Again it’s more supple in its movements than the regular GT3, so the car has a real sense of flow. And passive dampers, don’t forget, where the standard car’s are adaptive. This means time spent under the car if you want to adjust them. However, there’s only a couple of clicks between Manthey’s recommended settings for Nürburgring and UK roads – which probably reflects badly on one or the other.

Porsche 911 GT3 Manthey in motion on a race circuit.

The 911 GT3 was already optimised for high downforce but the Manthey Kit goes further

It’s reminiscent of the lightweight, limited edition 911 S/T – a favourite 992 generation 911. Some will be confused by this Manthey Kit – it doesn’t give the car the locked down, attack mentality that makes the current GT3 RS so urgent and compelling. Ramping the dampers up would probably give it that, but the flow is preferable. You don’t often – possibly ever – feel the aero. But you feel the damping every single metre of the road. And it’s so good it makes you coo with admiration. Manthey is clever here – first and foremost it’s a parts business, so although they have to do a complete Porsche authorised kit for its lap to be eligible, you can go to them and select the bits you want – perhaps just the springs and dampers and leave it at that.

Rear quarter view of the Porsche 911 GT3 Manthey at sunset.

Porsche 911 (992.2) GT3 Manthey kit

• Coilover kit Aluminium four-way adjustable dampers

• Lightweight wheel set Brilliant Silver, black (satin-gloss) and Neodyme

• Braided brake line set For more direct pedal feedback and faster response

• Underbody fins Extended for a cleanly directed airflow to the rear diffuser

• Price £158,200 + £56,000 kit

A race team making a road car smoother and faster. This could catch on. Manthey performing the same service for Porsche as Verstappen has for GT3 racing. Incidentally, neither Verstappen nor Manthey finished the Nürburgring 24 Hours this year. But how’s this for irony? By racing an AMG GT, Max has probably done more to reposition Merc as a sporting road-car brand in one weekend than George Russell and Kimi Antonelli will do all year. But to what end? Merc’s connection between road and race is tenuous at best. At Porsche, it’s indelible.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

There are certain people in Formula 1 who arrive in the paddock through the front door, carrying with them polished CVs, silver-spoon assumptions, inherited contacts and accents that sound as though they were educated at Eton while simultaneously being dry-cleaned at Harrods. And then there is Otmar Szafnauer.

Otmar came from somewhere else entirely. Not merely geographically – although geographically too, emphatically so – but culturally, psychologically and existentially. F1 is and always has been a world built on improbable ambition, but even by its standards Szafnauer’s story feels almost fantastical: a little Romanian boy from a village without running water eventually becoming the leader of grand prix teams capable of giant-killing.

Nick Fry during his Honda Formula 1 team management days.

Otmar Szafnauer was hired by Honda in 2001, rising to vice-president of its Racing Development department –here at the 2002 Austrian GP

Sutton Images

“You’re absolutely right,” he says when I suggest that rural Romania is not the likeliest cradle for a future F1 team principal, “and, although I don’t know exactly how many team principals we’ve had in F1 history, I do know that there have been only two of us from Romania: me and Colin Kolles [who held that position for the Hispania F1 team in 2011 and 2012]. But hopefully that’s where the similarities between us end.”

The line lands exactly as intended: dry, sharp and mischievous. Those who know Szafnauer well understand that beneath the calm managerial exterior is a man with a highly developed sense of irony and a memory capable of storing every political slight, every organisational inefficiency, every engineering misstep and every dramatic absurdity that the sport has thrown at him.

But before all that there was Semlac (do not worry: I will explain). “I left Romania when I was eight,” he says, smiling expansively. “We lived in a house that didn’t have running water, but that didn’t really matter to me because I was just a kid. I didn’t have a television growing up either, but my cousin did, so, because Saturday morning was always cartoon time on TV in Romania – American cartoons – I’d go to my cousin’s house to watch them on Saturday mornings.”

“I went back to work for Ford on the Monday with two trophies”

Already, listening to him, one begins to understand something important about Szafnauer: his worldview was forged not in entitlement but in adaptation. He has spent his life solving problems because life itself initially presented one enormous logistical complication. “I was OK with what now seems like deprivation because it was all I knew. But for my parents life was hard, because there was oppression from the government, led by Nicolae Ceauşescu. You didn’t have normal freedoms or basic human rights, and you didn’t have the economic scope to prosper and make yourself and your family better off. But as an eight-year-old you don’t understand how difficult that kind of thing is, because you spend your days going to school then coming home and kicking a soccer ball around with your mates.”

There is no self-pity in any of this. Szafnauer narrates hardship the way an F1 engineer might discuss understeer: as a variable to be understood, managed and overcome. “We lived in a rural area, in a small village in the Semlac commune of western Romania. We grew our own vegetables and we kept our own chickens and pigs. People in our village didn’t need grocery stores, so as a kid I didn’t feel the economic plight that urban Romanians felt when the grocery stores in towns and cities had no food in them. Instead we went into our gardens and picked potatoes, cucumbers and tomatoes that we’d grown ourselves. Every fourth or fifth household had a cow, and as a four-year-old I remember, every night, having to walk over with our little jug to get fresh cow’s milk from the neighbours who lived a few doors down. It would be really, really dark because there were no outdoor lights. My dad used to say to me, ‘Don’t worry about walking in the dark, because the moon will walk with you.’ And it always did.”

That last sentence lingers. It is lyrical without trying to be. Little Otmar’s father could never have imagined that his son would one day spend his evenings negotiating multi-million-dollar contracts with megastar F1 drivers in suites in five-star Monte Carlo hotels, having spent the previous afternoons arguing about aerodynamic set-ups with expensively educated Englishmen who had studied for PhDs at Oxford and Cambridge. Yet it happened, for Szafnauer has uniquely traversed the unlikely journey between that moonlit Romanian alleyway and the Monaco paddock and pitwall.

The Ford Indigo V12 concept sports car in a studio setting.

Szafnauer’s Indycar for the road: the 1996 Ford Indigo concept car was powered by a 6-litre V12

Ford

How did it even begin? “I don’t know why – I’ll never know why – but a school in my village bought two go-karts, and they set up a little oval dirt track in the playground that the older kids would race around. I got to drive one of those go-karts when I was six years old, and that’s when it started. Also my dad, who worked for a railcar manufacturing company, was one of only two people in our village to have a car. Just Dad and the doctor had one – everyone else had a horse and cart. So, because we had a car and I was able to have a run in the school’s go-karts, I fell in love with all that.

“Then, when I was eight, we moved to Warren, Michigan, just outside Detroit. Now we had running water and a TV, and, when I was 10, my neighbour, also 10, told me that his dad [Jim Halloran] competed in Pro Stock NHRA drag races. My mate’s dad would bring his race car transporter home every once in a while – it would barely fit in their driveway – and that, too, was fascinating for me.”

Detroit in the early 1970s was effectively the Vatican of internal combustion and Szafnauer absorbed it all. “Every birthday I’d say to my parents, ‘I want a go-kart.’ But every birthday I got a soccer ball, a basketball, or a baseball glove instead. I never got a go-kart because they couldn’t afford one.” Again: no bitterness; merely fact.

“The most significant difference between Ford and Honda was that the Honda guys were racers”

A remarkable aspect of ambitious people is that delayed dreams tend to ferment rather than fade. Hard graft almost always plays its part, too, and Szafnauer eventually found his route into racing not through privilege but via financial discipline and determination. “I graduated from university with an engineering degree at the age of 21, and I started working for the Ford Motor Company when I was 22. I was still living at home. I was saving 95% of my net earnings and I duly saved enough to go to the Jim Russell Racing Drivers’ School at Laguna Seca in California. In 1989 I got my racing licence. I then did a couple of Formula Ford races, and a few Formula Mazda races as well, then I decided to buy a race car of my own so that I could race more consistently and more often.”

What followed were the classic requirements of grassroots motor sport: ingenuity, hustle and endless toil. “I was in luck because at that time there was a racing series in Canada for Formula Ford 2000 cars, which was called Esso Protec because it was sponsored by Esso Protec [engine oil], but it was disbanded. When it was disbanded all the guys who had been racing in it went to race somewhere else, so they all needed to sell their Esso Protec cars, and I bought a Reynard Esso Protec car from a guy in Montreal called Stéphane Proulx, a gay guy, very fast, who’d moved up to French Formula 3. Sadly he died of HIV/AIDS in 1993, aged just 27.”

Szafnauer pauses solemnly when mentioning Proulx. Motor sport careers are often littered with such ghosts. “Anyway,” he goes on finally, “I bought Stéphane’s Reynard, and my first two races in it were at a road course, Nelson Ledges, in Garrettsville, Ohio. It’s a great story actually.”

Honda RA106 Formula 1 car races during the 2006 season.

Future world champion Jenson Button earned his first F1 victory driving for Honda at the 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix

Grand Prix Photo

It really is. “I needed an SCCA [Sports Car Club of America] licence, for which you had to do two race weekends plus a lot of classroom work, so that they could teach you the rules, the flags, the racing etiquette, all that. After the first class I did at Nelson Ledges they had a 15-lap race, I won it, and I lapped the field. Afterwards the officials said, ‘You know what? We’re going to give you your SCCA licence after only one weekend, you don’t have to do the second weekend. There’s an SCCA regional race here tomorrow and you’re welcome to race in it.’ Well, I did, and I won that, too. So I went back to work for Ford on the Monday with two trophies in my bag, because I’d won two races.”

You can almost picture the young man’s grin – indeed, sitting in front of me, the middle-aged man is grinning now. “I thought to myself, ‘I’m going to be F1 world champion,’ but obviously that was naive. Anyway the next step was SCCA national races, and after that was USF2000. But the farther up I moved, the harder it became. First, the competition became much more intense. When I was racing USF2000, kids were coming over from the UK, boys who’d won in Formula Ford in the UK. I was in my mid or late-twenties, they were 17 or 18, and they’d been karting forever. So they were really good.

“And, second, there was a fresh car development in USF2000 every year. The Van Diemen was the dominant car, so, if you wanted to do well, you had to have a Van Diemen, and every year they developed and improved it. So my old Reynard got slower and slower relative to the Van Diemen every year. I was getting better, but my car was getting worse, and the result was that I was always in the midfield.”

What matters here – and it matters a lot – is not that Szafnauer did not become a racing star. What matters is what he learned by not becoming one. “That frustrating pattern continued to be the case every year until 1995, by which time I was in my early thirties, when I rented a Van Diemen for a race at Indianapolis Raceway Park the night before the Indy 500. I wanted to see how good I really was versus the handicap of my ageing equipment, so to speak. I qualified quite well, seventh out of 44, but in the race I crashed. I understeered into the wall. I didn’t hit it hard, but I hit it hard enough to the extent that I couldn’t afford the spares to fix it.” That, in a few unsentimental sentences, is privateer motor sport distilled to its purest essence.

Racing Point Formula 1 team prepares the car on the starting grid.

Szafnauer rates the management style of Force India chief Vijay Mallya, right, who would delegate, allowing the team to get on with racing

Grand Prix Photo

“I was annoyed with myself, so I drove home instead of staying to watch the Indy 500 the next day, which is what I’d been planning to do, and I missed seeing Jacques Villeneuve winning it in a Reynard. I’d like to have seen that actually.” Now comes a line that illustrates how he later became such an effective F1 operator: “That was it for me as far as racing cars was concerned. But, you know, I learned so much in those five years of owning, running and racing for my own little team, and the lessons I learned have been useful to me throughout my career ever since.”

Indeed they have – because F1, despite its opulence, is fundamentally a resource-allocation contest, and no one understands the allocation of resources quite like someone who once could not afford the spare parts to repair his own crashed race car.

Even so, Szafnauer’s route into F1 was delightfully improbable. “Here I was, racing in North America, in a Reynard, when Adrian Reynard decided to go IndyCar racing at the same time. So I called the Reynard offices in Indianapolis in an effort to buy spare parts for my Reynard race car, because I figured it would be cheaper than importing them from the UK, but they never answered my calls. I then ran into Adrian at an IndyCar race somewhere, and I said, ‘Adrian, I race a USF2000 Reynard. I want to buy spares from you, in North America, so that I don’t have to pay so much.’ And that’s really how our relationship started.

“But our relationship quickly developed further because I’d been tasked by Ford to come up with a few new concepts under the umbrella of sports and performance. My first concept was a hot version of the Ford Explorer, which Ford never pursued, but was ahead of its time, because almost every manufacturer sells sports and performance SUVs nowadays; and the second was an IndyCar for the road with an IndyCar-style carbon tub and IndyCar-style pushrod suspension.”

He is grinning again – and now, suddenly, I glimpse the engineer-dreamer within him. “We called it the Indigo, and it was fantastic. It had a stressed mid-mounted 6-litre V12 and a stressed sequential gearbox, and I’d lined up Reynard to build 150 of them per year. Ford never pursued that either though, sadly.”

Relationships matter in Formula 1 perhaps more than in any other sport – for although F1 is big, the paddock is small. Moreover, reputations travel at fibre-optic speed, and Szafnauer’s big break is an example of exactly that. “Not long afterwards, Adrian said to me, ‘Otmar, we’re starting an F1 team from scratch, called British American Racing [later truncated to BAR]. British American Tobacco are going to fund it, and we’re going to need to hire hundreds of people for it. Are you willing to leave Ford to come and work with us as our operations director?’ I said yes, and I quit Ford straight away.”

And just like that, the little boy from Semlac was in F1. “We did the deal in 1997, and I duly started in 1998 at British American Racing as operations director, based in Brackley, in the UK, readying the team for its debut in 1999.”

“We never had a lot of money at Force India. But we finished fourth in the constructors’ championship”

Those BAR years were risibly ambitious at first, then chaotic, then combustible and therefore quintessentially late-1990s F1 – yet, despite all that, Szafnauer successfully avoided most of the political crossfire. “I did that for a few years – difficult years because starting a new F1 team from scratch is always hard – but in 2000 we finished joint fourth in the F1 World Constructors’ Championship, tied on points with Benetton, which was encouraging. But, also in 2000, I was approached by Bobby Rahal, who was running the Jaguar F1 team, based in Milton Keynes, to be his number two, because he was trying to combine running the Jaguar F1 team with running his own IndyCar team and he was spending almost his whole life on long-haul flights, which was unsustainable. It seemed like a good move into a senior and stable position, so I said yes.”

But, F1 being F1, that apparently senior stability lasted approximately five minutes. “I handed in my notice at BAR in the usual way. Then, on the Friday before the Monday on which I was due to start at Jaguar, I got a phone call from a PA in Niki Lauda’s office saying, ‘Sorry, we’ve just fired Bobby so we don’t need you to work for us any more.’”

“So, although I’d signed a three-year contract with Jaguar, the only time I ever set foot in what was going to be my office was to negotiate my way out of that contract, with as much compensation as I could persuade them to give me. It worked out OK.” That little coda – “It worked out OK” – is probably vintage Szafnauer understatement.

“Then, immediately after that, I was approached by Honda, because they’d already decided to buy BAR and they wanted someone on their side who knew how big car companies worked and also knew how BAR worked. Well, having worked for Ford and BAR, I fitted that bill perfectly. So just a week after I’d agreed my goodbye deal with Jaguar, I started work for Honda, again based in the UK.

“The most significant difference between Ford and Honda, to my mind at least, was that the Honda guys were out-and-out racers. They’d do absolutely anything for performance, and I really liked that.” He is grinning again, and I sense genuine admiration. “But fast-forward to now and Honda can’t do that in F1 because of the cost cap. But if they could, they still would.

Racing Point crew celebrate as Sergio Pérez crosses the finish line.

Victory for Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez at the 2020 Sakhir GP – Szafnauer’s favourite F1 moment

Sutton

“Back then they did though – and when they bought BAR, and they renamed it Honda Racing F1 Team, which competed in F1 between 2006 and 2008, they always did. We won the 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix, and by 2008 we had three wind tunnels running in tandem, two in the UK and one in Japan. Then the world was plunged into financial crisis at the end of 2008, Honda pulled out of F1, and the brilliant double-diffuser Honda car that we’d developed became the Brawn car that won the F1 World Championship with Jenson Button in 2009.”

Szafnauer did a good job at BAR and Honda, but if his reputation was forged anywhere, it was at Force India and later Racing Point. There, his skill set aligned perfectly with circumstance: limited resources, ambitious targets, endless political turbulence and a need for calm operational intelligence.

“Vijay Mallya, who owned Force India, had done a deal with [McLaren boss] Ron Dennis whereby Force India would pay McLaren for the use of McLaren technology – 32 days in the McLaren simulator, plus use of McLaren gearboxes, McLaren hydraulic systems, the McLaren rear impact substructure, two McLaren software packages [Morse and Marple], and McLaren’s manufacturing and assembly expert Simon Roberts on loan.

“But after a year Simon decided to go back to McLaren, so now Vijay was looking for a replacement. He asked Bernie [Ecclestone], whom I’d got to know really well after I left Honda. I founded Soft Pauer, and in 2009 we developed the F1 app for the iPhone. Bernie recommended me to Vijay, Vijay went ahead and hired me, and my first race with Force India was Brazil 2009.

“Do you remember that I told you I’d learned a hell of a lot when I was running and racing for my own team back in the States? Well, one of the things I’d learned was how to make every cent count. We never had a lot of money at Force India, not compared with the big teams which in that era [2008-2018] were McLaren, Ferrari, Red Bull and Mercedes, just as they are now. But, even so, we finished fourth in the constructors’ championship in 2016 and 2017, and we’d have finished fourth again in 2018 had we not run out of money and entered administration [owing to large debts accumulated by the team’s owners].

Sergio Pérez celebrates victory on the Sakhir Grand Prix podium.

Sakhir in 2020 was Pérez’s first F1 win; more would follow after his move to Red Bull in ’21

Florent Gooden/Dppi Media

“It was a small team, but we were a great bunch with a fantastic esprit de corps. I look back on those 10 years at Force India and Racing Point [as the team was renamed in 2018] with a degree of pride – pride in the team. OK, we stumbled a bit when we went bankrupt in 2018, because Vijay got embroiled in legal and financial troubles in India, but until then we were probably the most efficiently successful F1 team on the grid, point for point, pound for pound.”

That phrase – “point for point, pound for pound” – captures the essence of the operation beautifully, and now Szafnauer leans back in his chair and says something genuinely insightful about leadership. “As an F1 team owner Vijay was hugely underrated. He loved racing, he went to most of the grands prix, but he hardly ever visited the factory. He knew how to delegate, which is the secret of good leadership and clever management, and he let us get on with the job. He was the absolute opposite of a micromanager. In that sense he was very like Dietrich Mateschitz, under whose ownership Red Bull was fantastically successful, but rather unlike Lawrence Stroll, under whose ownership Aston Martin has not yet proved to be quite so successful.” There speaks a man perfectly capable of delivering a velvet-gloved jab.

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But before the Aston Martin complications came the high point. “That race was and still is the highlight of my F1 career,” Szafnauer says of ‘Checo’ Pérez’s extraordinary victory in the 2020 Sakhir Grand Prix. “If you remember, that was the race in which George Russell replaced Lewis Hamilton at Mercedes because Lewis had Covid. OK, without that late left-rear puncture, George might well have won it, because he did a great super-sub job, but we were bang on the pace and we beat Red Bull, Ferrari, McLaren, Renault and the rest on merit, even though we had only 400 employees whereas all the big teams had more than 1200 by then.

“It was brilliant, just the most fantastic feeling. And, don’t forget, Checo was dead-last at one point, but he never gave up, he pushed all the way, and he came through to win.” Even now, six years on, Szafnauer’s recollection still carries emotional voltage.

Then came Aston Martin. “Lawrence had bought the team at the end of 2018 – because Vijay could no longer fund it whereas Lawrence definitely could – but it wasn’t renamed Aston Martin until 2021. Lawrence’s vision was: ‘If I can give these guys a bit more budget, we can grow and improve the team, and together we can take it up the F1 drivers’ and constructors’ championships from fourth to first.’

“At first it was working well. We hired good people, we grew and improved the team, but in the end Lawrence began to get more involved in areas that I thought were my responsibility.” What follows is Szafnauer at his most revealing: measured, logical, analytical and forensic. “Matters came to a head when I found out from [Red Bull team principal] Christian Horner that Lawrence had begun trying to hire Red Bull’s HR director [Heath Cade]. I said to Lawrence, ‘We already have a great HR director [Sarah Watson] – we don’t need to replace her.’

Szafnauer Pit Wall

There was frustration at Aston Martin in 2021, where Szafnauer found himself outmanoeuvred by Lawrence Stroll; he left for Alpine in ’22

LAT Images

“Well, Lawrence didn’t argue with me, but he instructed one of my direct reports [Robert Yeowart, chief financial officer] to approach Heath without my knowledge, and in the end Lawrence insisted that we hire Heath. Now, to be clear, when I met Heath, I could see that he was a strong candidate, but Sarah was also excellent and she didn’t need to be replaced, and the way the whole thing had been handled, behind my back, even though I was team principal and chief executive officer, felt all wrong.”

Then comes perhaps the most illuminating line in our entire interview. “An old baseball player once told me, ‘Managers manage, coaches coach, and players play.’ That’s so true, and it’s absolutely how things should be run – in baseball and in all sports, including F1.” There, distilled into one sentence, lies the essence of Szafnauer’s philosophy of leadership. “Yet that was no longer how Lawrence was allowing us to operate.”

“The way the whole thing had been handled, even though I was principal and CEO, felt wrong”

The arrival of a recently-retired-then-suddenly-unretired McLaren bigwig accelerated matters. “The issue came to a head when Lawrence hired Martin Whitmarsh as group CEO. When Martin arrived, he wrote me a couple of nice emails, saying stuff like, ‘I want to come in, I want to learn all about the team, alongside you, and after that I want to work collaboratively with you, to take the team forward together’ – all that sort of thing.

“That sounded good – obviously – but it wasn’t what actually happened because within a month he’d taken over the vast majority of my duties and responsibilities as CEO. In fact he’d taken over almost all my duties and responsibilities within the factory, leaving me left with more or less only the trackside part.

“Renault had begun to look to recruit me to become team principal of Alpine, which appeared to be a role in which once again I’d be able to control the destiny of an F1 team, as its leader, not merely as a guy who was coming along for the ride. So I left Aston Martin in January 2022, which I could do without a notice period because I felt they’d altered the terms of my contract without my consent, and I started work for Alpine straight away.”

An Alpine Formula 1 car in BWT colours on track during testing.

Alpine’s Fernando Alonso testing at Barcelona, in 2022; Renault expected instant success

Grand Prix Photo

At Alpine he inherited challenges both technical and cultural, however. “Our Renault power unit was 15kW [20bhp] down on those of our rivals, which was a serious problem, but, working with the good people there, and there were plenty of them, we began to make improvements to systems, to operations, to processes, to production efficiencies, all that, and those improvements began to accelerate our performance gains.”

Again, one notices Szafnauer’s recurring managerial themes: systems, operations, processes, efficiencies and people. “By the end of the 2022 season our chassis had become pretty good, and we finished fourth in the 2022 constructors’ championship with a power unit that was the worst on the grid, which was an encouraging start for me. I was enjoying it.”

But F1 team owners are not famous for their patience. “The following winter we continued to make changes, we began to see progress, and we started the season pretty well, but the Renault high-ups said they wanted to win the F1 World Championship more or less straight away, whereas I’d set a 100-race time frame on it, which I think was realistic and doable, but they didn’t like that, so that was that.” He was fired at mid-season, and most F1 pundits and commentators thought the decision truly bizarre.

And now? Well, now Formula 1 finds itself in an intriguing position. It is awash with money, swollen with car manufacturers, and crowded with executives who know the price of everything and the value of nothing, as the cliché goes. In such an environment, super-experienced F1 operators capable of building functioning racing organisations are surprisingly rare commodities – and Szafnauer knows it. “I’m 61,” he begins, frowning earnestly at first, then suddenly chuckling. “I’d like to work until I’m 65 or 66, so I’ve got about five more years. In those five-or-so more years, if I can help an F1 team make real progress, help it go from the back half of the grid to the front half, well, I’ve done it before and I could do it again.”

Frankly, looking around the current F1 grid, I reckon there are several team owners who should probably be listening carefully. But there is one final twist. “I’ve also done a lot of work preparing an entry route for a potential 12th F1 team. Any new F1 team would have to be backed by a big company and/or a car manufacturer, with deep pockets, just like the last new F1 team, Cadillac, was and is [backed by the leading sports investment vehicle TWG and the giant car company GM]. Whenever that big company and/or car manufacturer with deep pockets comes along, which it will, I’ll be in a great position to help them enter F1 because, as I say, I’ve done a lot of the preparatory work already.”

And that is the point. Otmar Szafnauer has spent a lifetime preparing. Preparing to leave Romania. Preparing to race. Preparing to build teams with too little money and too few people. Preparing to out-think richer opponents. Preparing for political turbulence. Preparing for the next opportunity. The moon, one suspects, is still walking with him.

Otmar Szafnauer walks through the Formula 1 paddock.

Formula 1 via Getty Images

CV

BORN: 13/08/1964, SEMLAC, ROMANIA

 1972 Family moves to Warren, Michigan.

 1986 Graduates with an engineering degree; to Ford as programmes manager.

 1991 Attends Jim Russell Racing Driver School; starts racing in Formula Ford.

 1993 Manager of Ford Racing in the US, overseeing lower-level categories.

 1998 Becomes operations director at new F1 team British American Racing; fourth in 2000 constructors’ standings.

 2001 Recruited by Honda Racing Developments; rises to vice-president.

 2008 Founder of Soft Pauer

 2009 To Force India as COO; 4th in F1 constructors’ championship in 2016 and ’17.

 2018 Team principal at Racing Point; victory for Sergio Pérez at 2020 Sakhir GP.

 2021 Retains role at Aston Martin.

 2022-23 Team principal at Alpine; 4th in F1 constructors’ championship in ’22.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

Toyota returned to the top step of the podium at the Le Mans 24 Hours after a three-year absence. Finally, the Japanese manufacturer triumphed against factory opposition, which was not the case as it mopped up in the dying days of LMP1 and first years of the Hypercar era. Win number six on the Circuit de la Sarthe has to be the most significant given that it beat seven other manufacturers rather than a smattering of privateers. Yet that’s not how Toyota saw it as it came home first and third in the World Endurance Championship blue riband on the second weekend of June.

BMW and Toyota Hypercars battle at Le Mans

BMW No15 of Kevin Magnussen, Raffaele Marciello and Dries Vanthoor. Right: mad dogs and marshals

Getty Images

A Le Mans win is a Le Mans win, insisted David Floury, technical director of the Cologne-based operation now known simply as Toyota Racing. “Any victory at Le Mans is an achievement because the race is something exceptional and because of the things you have to face,” he said in the run-up to this year’s event. Afterwards he invoked the adage that, “Le Mans chooses its winner” as Kamui Kobayashi, Nyck de Vries and Mike Conway took the laurels, with the second Toyota TR010 Hybrid Le Mans Hypercar coming home third.

Floury returned to the backstory of Toyota’s 2021 Le Mans triumph, when the team had to overcome a fuel filter problem that had gradually reduced the length of its stints from 13 to just three laps. It triumphed because it came up with a series of fixes that ensured it didn’t have to stop in the pits to change the offending items with the loss of 40-plus minutes. One involved asking the drivers to turn the fuel pump on-off under heavy braking multiple times every lap, the other developing new software on the hoof to get all four fuel pumps to run at once.

Le Mans track action and Ferrari pit engineers

Inter Europol Competition’s ORECA gunning for the LMP2 win. Right: where’s the speed? Ferrari’s pitwall

DPPI

The result was a 1-2 for Toyota in the first year of its current WEC contender, then known as the GR010. This time, Toyota had to be equally resourceful with the renamed and rebodied version of the car. There were problems to overcome on both cars, ones that might have stopped a lesser team in its tracks.

The winning Toyota was hit by a problem with one of the driveshaft torque sensors that monitor power delivery in real time for WEC organisers the FIA and the Automobile Club de l’Ouest. It struck as early as nine o’clock on Saturday night and explained why Kobayashi and his team-mates didn’t look like genuine contenders for victory until deep into the race. Resourcefulness by Toyota explained why it emerged as a potential winner.

Aston Martin Hypercar races as driver rests

Forty winks. Left: Aston Martin Valkyrie of Roman De Angelis, Alex Riberas and Marco Sørensen

DPPI

The glitch resulted in the car’s software going into default mode to ensure the hybrid powertrain stayed under the maximum power laid down by the Balance of Performance. This meant a decrease in power for the winning Toyota that, Floury pointed out, led to a significant reduction in straightline speed. It was as much as 5mph down on the sister car at one point during the race.

“A decrease in power for the winning Toyota led to a significant reduction in straightline speed.”

The malfunctioning of the torque sensor, a standard part mandated by the organisers, wasn’t entirely consistent. “At some point it decided to partially come back,” explained Floury. But the issue still required close monitoring and management.

“We identified some patterns that were triggering it to go into default and we were briefing the drivers not to go into those specific conditions,” added Floury. “We managed to survive with decent power for the remainder of the race, but it was a bit up and down. There were some periods where we were running normally, others when we were down on power.”

Le Mans 24 Hours field charges down start-finish straight

BMW M Team WRT No15 and Jota Cadillac No12 lead the field; neither would make the podium

DPPI

The other No8 Toyota led much of the first two-thirds of the race until it had a very different problem. When the wheels came off the car at a pitstop late in the 18th hour, it was noticed that there were metal filings on the inner surface of one of the rims. Something had been trying to machine its way through the left-front wheel.

Toyota’s investigations took it out into the pitlane. A rogue screw was found at the front of its pit stall. The next step was to identify exactly where it had come from. That involved examination of a spare corner, ready assembled and sitting in the back of the pits. It was traced to the brake cooling drum, and it turned out that, in fact, two screws had come loose.

Toyota Hypercar races beneath Goodyear bridge

The beginning of a new era… the Dunlop Bridge has undergone a name change; it’s now officially the Goodyear Bridge

DPPI

“Without the safety car, Toyota almost certainly wouldn’t have won Le Mans this year.”

The problem was fixed over the course of two pitstops. The first cost the car a minute, but the second took place under the safety car, which meant little except track position was lost. It was a stroke of luck for Toyota. A two-minute time loss would have put No8 out of the game.

Without the safety car, Toyota almost certainly wouldn’t have won Le Mans this year. It probably wouldn’t even have finished on the podium. The extra minute lost by No8 would have shuffled it down the order, while the winning No7 wouldn’t have made up the time lost not only to the sensor problem but also an early puncture after de Vries took over from starting driver Conway.

Toyota pit crew executes crucial race strategy

Clockwise top from left: Toyota’s No8 is in the pits in the 10th hour; 350,105 attended this year; Toyota’s technical director David Floury

Getty Images

Honours probably would have gone the way of BMW and the WRT-run M Hybrid V8 LMDh shared by René Rast, Robin Frijns and Sheldon van der Linde. It lost a 20sec lead with safety car number two after moving to the front when the BMW came alive in van der Linde’s hands on Sunday morning. Yet when push came to shove through the last hours of the race, the BMW didn’t quite have the pace of the winning Toyota. Frijns kept Kobayashi honest over the final stints rather than putting him under real pressure. He was trailing by 20 or so seconds until the Toyota driver eased off over the closing laps to win by 10.9sec. That was just 3sec fewer than the 13.8 by which Audi prevailed over Peugeot in their classic 2011 confrontation, making this the closest timed finish in Le Mans history.

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Any one of three manufacturers could have won Le Mans this year. Cadillac was the other genuine contender over the 94th running of the event, though it ended up with nothing better than fourth with the Jota-run V-Series.R LMDh shared by Will Stevens, Norman Nato and Louis Delétraz. The No12 car’s challenge faded after it had to make a so-called emergency pitstop during the eighth and final Full Course Yellow. When a virtual safety car is called, the pits are closed. Cars needing to stop are allowed to stop to take on 10 seconds’ worth of fuel to get them through the caution. The misfortune for Caddy was that No12 had to go through this procedure — stopping for a dash of fuel and then stopping again for a pitstop proper — three times over the course of the 24 hours.

The fourth-placed entry wasn’t the fastest of the American manufacturer’s cars at Le Mans this year. That honour fell to the sister Jota V-Series-R shared by Sébastien Bourdais, Jack Aitken and Earl Bamber. It mattered little that Aitken’s pole position had been scrubbed out for a procedural error in the pitlane – the car quickly emerged as a front-runner. It was very much in the mix until the race hit the halfway mark when a power steering issue brought it into the pits. The car would eventually be retired after two long stops to try to fix the problem.

Pit crew services GT car during race

On the double: the No74 Kessel Racing Ferrari 296 was a frontrunner in LMGT3

DPPI

“It mattered little that Aitken’s pole position had been scrubbed for an error in the pitlane.”

It was a “dagger to the heart,” said hometown hero Bourdais, who was racing at Le Mans for the 19th time. “For maybe a $2 piece, it came to a crushing end. We seemed to have a lot of pace, but I don’t know if we were quicker than the Toyota.”

What Bourdais should have said was whether he and his team-mates could have been quicker than the winning Toyota over the last quarter of the race. Over the first half of the event, the No38 was nip and tuck with the No8 Toyota. They were separated not by tenths or hundredths but by thousandths on the averages.

Hypercars race into Le Mans sunset

This was a year of reliability; just 13 of the 62 starters failed to reach the finish line, with the winning car covering 3225 miles – roughly the distance from London to Boston, Massachusetts

Andrea Lorenzina/DPPI

No one else was in the game at Le Mans this year. That included Ferrari, which was seeking a fourth straight victory with its 499P LMH. The Italian manufacturer and the AF Corse factory team tried mixing it up on tyre strategies, but to no avail. The best it could manage was fifth with the No51 entry shared by Antonio Giovinazzi, James Calado and Alessandro Pier Guidi on a day when it appeared to be hamstrung by the Balance of Performance, something that wasn’t in the public domain this year. The car lacked a little in acceleration and straightline speed, suggesting it was down on power to its strongest competitors. It also barely ran on the softest of the three compounds of Michelin slicks. That more than hinted that the 499P was running heavier than its rivals.

Toyota team lifts Le Mans winner's trophy

Toyota’s sixth win at Le Mans equals Bentley’s tally – who last won here in 2003

James Moy Photography

Ferrari’s lack of pace fuelled the idea that the organisers wanted an LMDh car to win Le Mans this year, yet it didn’t turn out that way. That it didn’t came down to Toyota’s ingenuity and the fortunes of war around the Circuit de la Sarthe.

Le Mans 2026 final classification

HYPERCAR
1 TOYOTA RACING Mike Conway / Kamui Kobayashi / Nyck de Vries
7 Toyota GR010 Hybrid

2 BMW M TEAM WRT Robin Frijns / René Rast / Sheldon van der Linde
20 BMW M Hybrid V8

3 TOYOTA RACINGSébastien Buemi / Brendon Hartley / Ryo Hirakawa
8 Toyota GR010 Hybrid

4 CADILLAC HERTZ TEAM JOTA Louis Delétraz / Will Stevens / Norman Nato
12 Cadillac V-Series.R

5 FERRARI AF CORSE Alessandro Pier Guidi / James Calado / Antonio Giovinazzi
51 Ferrari 499P

LMP2
1 INTER EUROPOL COMPETITION Jakub Smiechowski / Tom Dillmann / Nick Yelloly
43 ORECA-Gibson 07

2 INTER EUROPOL COMPETITION Bijoy Garg / Reshad de Gerus / Nico Müller
343 ORECA-Gibson 07

3 FORESTIER RACING BY PANIS Louis Rousset / Esteban Masson / Oliver Gray
29 ORECA-Gibson 07

4 VECTOR SPORT Ryan Cullen / Vladislav Lomko / Pietro Fittipaldi 26
ORECA-Gibson 07

5 CLX MOTORSPORT Adrien Closmenil / Ian Aguilera / Theodor Jensen 37
ORECA-Gibson 07

LMGT3
1 TF SPORT Ben Keating / Jonny Edgar / Nicky Catsburg
33 Chevrolet Corvette Z06 GT3.R

2 AKKODIS ASP TEAM Tom Van Rompuy / Hadrien David / Jack Hawksworth
78 Lexus RC F GT3

3 HEART OF RACING TEAM Gray Newell / Eduardo Barrichello / Jonny Adam
23 Aston Martin Vantage AMR GT3

4 AKKODIS ASP TEAM Razvan Umbrarescu / Clemens Schmid / José María López
87 Lexus RC F GT3

5 VISTA AF CORSE François Hériau / Simon Mann / Alessio Rovera
21 Ferrari 296 GT3 Evo

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

Photography: Jayson Fong

All it took was a couple of yowls and one pull on a paddle and I was back. Back at Fiorano and in the hills above Maranello on the Ferrari test drivers’ time-honoured routes. Can it really be 14 years ago? It appears it can. I’d first gone in 1993, had visited plenty of times since, and many more thereafter but this one still stands out.

The launch of the F12. When, many years from now, the history of the internal combustion engine is written, and people ponder the identity of the very greatest cars it powered, I have no doubt this car will be in the conversation. What was so remarkable about it was that it left the sense that, up until that moment and for quite a long time, Ferrari had been holding something back with its front-engined, two-seat V12 supercars. Its arrival was like watching one of those videos where a former Olympic sprinter lines up for the parent’s race at their kid’s sports day. The poor person with the iPhone doesn’t know where to point it because there is one person already in a different postcode and then there’s everyone else wobbling and staggering along in their wake.

Ferrari F12 luggage compartment with leather trim

Room for a weekend bag

It didn’t just raise the standards of its class, it took Ferrari to a whole new level of excellence. I’d say its predecessor, the 599 GTB, had been in line or slightly ahead of expectations and was a quick and engaging car, helped in no small part by a star turn under the bonnet, the almost brand new F140 V12 engine in only slightly detuned from that in which it had made its debut in the very limited issue, carbon-fibre Enzo hypercar. As an aside, and astonishingly enough some 20 years later, this engine, albeit somewhat modified, serves to this day in the 12Cilindri. But in the 599 it had the same 6-litre capacity as the Enzo and an output of 612bhp, over 100bhp per litre from a naturally aspirated engine. Which was not bad 20 years ago.

Front view of the Ferrari F12 Berlinetta

Airchannelling Aero Bridge on the bonnet

And then came the F12, and at once not only was the 599 rendered instantly obsolete, so was everything else like it. Take that engine: bored out to 6.3 litres (actually 6262cc), power had risen to 730bhp, the single biggest leap for an internal combustion engine in a like-for-like replacement in the entire history of Ferrari, before or since. It was over 100bhp more powerful than the similarly configured, scarcely smaller V12 developed by BMW for the McLaren F1. It raised the point at which peak power was developed from the 599 GTB’s 7600rpm to 8250rpm and kept on spinning to 8700rpm before the limiter called time. When I got into this business in the late 1980s, the idea of any engine of this size spinning that fast even in a racing car seemed preposterous. Yet here it was, yelling its lungs out in a standard production road car.

Ferrari F12 Berlinetta rear badge detail

Berlinetta – a term made popular by Ferrari in the 1950s

Really the engine was just the headline, because if this were just a faster, restyled version of the 599 GTB, you’d not be reading these words now. It was anything but.

Perhaps the most interesting point to note about the F12 relative to its predecessor was that, in an era where it appeared nothing less than inevitable that each new car would be larger and heavier than the one it replaced, the F12 was both smaller and lighter.

And by smaller, I mean in every conventional measurement from length and height to width and wheelbase. Without sacrificing meaningful interior space – the F12 provides sumptuous accommodation for a pair of six footers and their luggage – the reduction in size brings benefits in all areas. Rather obviously it takes up less space, which as anyone who has been in a car of this kind and winced as they’ve tried to thread it through the gap between some trees and a lorry using more than its fair share of road will know, is a very welcome development. The shorter wheelbase, as well as the use of no fewer than a dozen aluminium alloys in its construction, is one reason the car’s structure is over 20% more torsionally rigid than that of the 599 GTB.

But the greatest gain, and overlooked when considering a car’s size, is that because there is less of it, it’s lighter too. Around 70kg lighter without having to resort to the usual smoke-and-mirrors tactics of making the infotainment and air-con systems no cost options so a car’s homologated weight can exclude their mass even though no one would ever specify a car without them. And a lighter car is not just a faster car, but a better handling and shorter stopping car too.

Some idea of the actual performance gain can be gleaned from times achieved at Ferrari’s famed Fiorano test track. It’s not a long lap – approximately the same distance round as Castle Combe as it happens, yet it circulated in 1min 23sec dead, a night-and-day 3.5sec faster than the 599 GTB. More surprising still, it was a full second quicker than the highly specialised, vastly expensive, limited edition, track-focused 599 GTO. Most surprising of all, it was the best part of two seconds quicker than the aforementioned all-carbon Enzo hypercar.

Ferrari F12 highlights including cockpit, rev counter and taillight

Clockwise from left: Its rev counter is central on the dashboard; there’s a 70kg weight reduction over the 599; the rear of the F12 is Ferrari’s reinterpretation of the Kamm tail; paddles around the steering wheel are Ferrari’s nod to Formula 1 racing

It makes the car sound like a wild thing, a near uncontrollable beast, but here comes Ferrari’s greatest achievement of all: if you didn’t mind the lack of connectivity relative to modern machines with CarPlay and so on and could stomach fuel consumption likely never to stray far from the teens, it would be a delight to use as your daily driver.

So join me aboard this immaculate, low-miles example. For me it’s been a decade at least since I was last here and yet the muscle memory kicks in immediately. When I drove these cars in period they made an indelible impression upon me, so I know already how it works, how to operate all the controls on the front (and back) of the steering wheel and even how to dial up the information I want on the two screens that flank the majestically large and beautiful 10,000rpm rev counter. It’s not the most modern or intuitive of set-ups, but nor does it scold you if you break a speed limit by a couple of miles per hour or dare take a line through a corner. It would probably object if you tried to drive off without putting on your seatbelt, but that’s as far as the nanny had been allowed to penetrate this generation of Ferrari.

“Press the red button and there are no histrionics; the big V12 whumps into life with a quick growl.”

Press the red button and there are no histrionics; the big V12 whumps into life with just a quick growl before settling down to a melodious idle. There is something about this particular Ferrari V12; over the years it’s had three different capacities (the current 12 Cilindri is a 6.5-litre) but I don’t think it was ever more smooth or sonorous than here.

The cabin is airy, spacious and luxuriously appointed. Visibility in all directions is excellent; it is these real-world qualities every bit as much as the raw power that provides the secret to the magic of this car. The rival Lamborghini Aventador is a fine looking and ferocious thing, but it is intimidating, hard to see out of and, unlike the Ferrari, not that comfortable thanks chiefly to its inadequate seats and firm ride. I’ve said it before but it feels as relevant here as anywhere: the amount of fun a car can provide is only half the equation. The true measure of that enjoyment is the entertainment it offers multiplied by the number of occasions on which it can be savoured. On exactly the right wide, open, deserted and dry roads an Aventador can be a formidable weapon, but how often do you find yourself in such optimal conditions? The F12’s ability to make you want to drive it almost regardless of circumstance is an absolutely fundamental facet of its appeal.

Ferrari F12 side profile in motion

Among the F12’s many strengths is the visibility on all sides from the driving position, and the cabin feels spacious, even for lofty types

The lanes are opening out now and the gauges are all starting to hit the right zones. It is a salutary lesson in suspension design that so long as you remember to press the ‘bumpy road’ button on the steering wheel, even a supercar like this can cope with the lamentable state of our surfaces with an educated and experienced approach to setting up an adaptive damping system.

“You have to work this motor, and work your brain to figure out how to get the most out of it.”

In the UK you never want anything firmer, so the secret is to turn the little ‘manettino’ control to ‘race’ for the sharpest throttle response and the quickest shifts, but use that magic button to maintain its ability to absorb the imperfections that bestrew your path.

So programmed, when the moment comes, you are ready. A couple of pulls on the left-hand paddle, try not to think about how much better it would be with black ball atop a steel shaft sprouting out of an exposed six-speed manual gearshift gate (Ferrari never made a manual F12), and let that sublime motor remind you why there are V12 engines.

Andrew Frankel driving the Ferrari F12 on the road

The sound from its 6.3-litre V12 as the revs increase is guaranteed to put a smile on your face

Ferrari V12s are not about instant gratification. They take time to build, adding layer after layer of musical and mechanical intensity with every passing 1000rpm, and with that 8700rpm redline, that’s a lot of layers. The thrust gathers at the same rate, the rate of acceleration increasing as the needle sweeps its way around the dials. So desirable is this trait that for its more modern, turbocharged cars Ferrari uses electronic control to manipulate the torque curves of its engines to mimic it. In the F12 you’ll need 6000rpm on the dial before peak torque and, therefore, maximum thrust finally arrives.

Related article

So you have to work this motor, and work your brain to figure how to get the most out of it. Exercising this much power on public roads is more about saintly restraint, but times come when the full majesty of what that motor can do is revealed. It is a screaming powerhouse with a voice to occupy the space between your ears so completely it will dominate the experience if you let it.

Which all by itself presents a delicious problem, because there is so much more to enjoy here, including the whipcrack gearshift and tireless ceramic brakes. But it’s the chassis that fascinates me most, specifically the way it provides so much traction despite having its engine at one end and two driven wheels at the other. Yes, the transaxle gearbox configuration deserves a lot of the credit for the fact that the F12 can deploy almost all its power almost all of the time if the road is dry, but a fabulously well-located and quite softly sprung rear axle plays its part too. I do remember F12s being something of a handful on tracks – not vicious but sufficiently reactive to keep you firmly on your toes – but today is not for playing such games.

Ferrari F12 naturally aspirated V12 engine

The F12 Berlinetta was in production until 2017, with around 5000 made. If you want one today you’re looking at upwards of £150,000

Today is for sitting back and savouring that sound and those responses and, above all, the way the F12 transforms itself from a snarling beast into a grand tourer par excellence the moment you decide to lift your foot and turn the little controller back from ‘race’ in the default ’sport’ mode.

Rear view of Ferrari F12 on country road

Ferrari F12

• Engine 6.3 litres F140 V12

• Chassis Aluminium space frame

• Power 730bhp

• Transmission 7-speed dual-clutch automatic gearbox

• Max Speed 211mph

• 0-60mph 3.1sec

• Weight 1520kg

The cars that have come since – the 812 Superfast and 12Cilindri – are fine machines but are simply variations of the F12 theme, seeking merely to augment and redress what the F12 put in place to begin with. And very sensible too: to date Ferrari has felt no need to mess with the essential formula for its flagship front-engine sports tourer and if you were to drive an F12 you’d understand why in an instant. It has been called the true successor to the 365 GTB/4 ‘Daytona’ and if I think of all the cars that have followed that genuine automotive icon, I can think of none more deserving of the title than this.


Ferrari Luce electric concept shown in studio

Ferrari’s all-electric Luce was designed with former Apple whizzes Sir Jony Ive and Marc Newson

Well… at least it’s red

Almost the opposite of Ferrari’s F12 is the new Luce EV

If a Martian fell to earth and asked what a Ferrari was, the car you’d describe would likely be a very beautiful two-seat coupé, powered by a howling V12 engine, just like the F12. It would not be an at-best rather anonymous looking four-door, five-seater powered by the same kind of motor that runs your refrigerator. Like the recently announced Luce.

Of course there was an extreme reaction as the tifosi threw up their hands in horror as one, and I understand that: I’ve only viewed pictures so will reserve judgement until I’ve seen it for real and on the move, but I’m not encouraged. It just doesn’t look like a Ferrari. And if it doesn’t look like one, sound like one and is not configured like one, what appeal is left for fans of the brand?

Possibly not much, but that is to miss its point. Its success will not be judged by how many Ferrari customers buy one, but by how many buy one who’d hitherto never have considered owning one before. Ferrari says some 80% of sales will go to customers new to the brand; if it’s right it could be a new dawn for Maranello. If not…

One more thing: the newsrooms fell on the fact that Ferrari shares tumbled when the car was announced, shedding over 8% of the company’s value almost at once. Less widely reported is the fact that since then they’ve been climbing steadily once more and, as I write, are almost back to where they were the day before the Luce was launched. And those who bought at the low will be among the most satisfied Ferrari customers of all.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

When Ford turned to Andy Rouse to spearhead its British Touring Car Championship ambitions in the 1990s, a return to the glory days of the RS500 seemed on the cards. It wasn’t to be, thanks to budget cuts, politics and sheer bad luck. But what it did take was two victories in the Super Touring category’s World Cup with Paul Radisich…

Rouse had started the Super Touring era with Toyotas, but that contract ran out at the end of 1992. “They moved to TOM’S,” he recalls. “Then Ford came to us with a late proposal to run the Mondeo in 1993.” Rouse would pilot one car, while the unproven New Zealander Radisich took the other slot. Radisich’s involvement came about via his friend Alan Gow, who was running the BTCC from Andy Rouse Engineering’s offices, and had worked for Rouse. “When the opportunity arose, it was like winning the lotto,” reckons Radisich.

Andy Rouse's Ford Mondeo awaits the BTCC race start

Andy Rouse’s Mondeo at Brands in ’93 – a landmark day for the team

LAT Images

The Mondeo would present Radisich with a new challenge – front-wheel drive; but that wasn’t the original plan, since Rouse had intended to run the rear-drive version. “The first RWD racing cars were too heavy so we convinced Ford to produce 30 lightweight bodies,” Rouse explains. “We changed to FWD, and with a Cosworth engine we became competitive – but it was already mid-season.”

Andy Rouse leads in the Ford Mondeo during BTCC action

Team Mondeo’s first race in 1993 BTCC was at Pembrey, midway through the season

LAT Images

The cars debuted at Pembrey, the eighth round of the 1993 BTCC. “That was the first time I’d raced a front-wheel-drive car,” says Radisich. “Other than the understeer and having to control your throttle, it wasn’t a big transition at all.”

Paul Radisich leads the Super Touring field at Monza

Paul Radisich’s Mondeo leads in the 1993 Touring Car Challenge at Monza; he’d win both races amid a packed field

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Radisich would take three wins over 1993, ending up third in the championship. A key part of this was his flamboyant approach to riding the kerbs: “With a sequential gearbox and front-wheel drive, I found it better to balance the car with left-foot braking. I also shortened the track down as much as I could. I’d utilise every bit of the outside of the track as much as the inside, and the car took it. I’d be black-flagged every lap today!”

The car needed to be strong because of its heavy V6. “You could use any engine from the manufacturer of the car you were racing – the Mazda V6 was used in the Ford Probe,” points out Rouse. “The Mondeo engines weren’t high-performance enough.”

Cosworth couldn’t start on engine development until later in the season, meaning Rouse’s team built two engines in-house. At its peak, the 1993 car was delivering a competitive 295bhp, but the extra cylinders would become a technical hindrance. “When all the other cars [typically four cylinders] were being redesigned with the engine pushed right back into the bulkhead for better weight distribution, we couldn’t do that,” says Rouse.

A shift from Dunlop rubber to Michelin also played a part in late-season success. “At Brands Hatch I asked Andy if we should try the Michelins and we were instantly three or four tenths quicker,” says Radisich. The decision to switch was taken overnight: “Brands Hatch was the first race I won for Ford, and the first win for the Mondeo.”

Paul Radisich's race seat inside the Ford Mondeo cockpit

Radisich’s 1993 World Cup-winning Mondeo drew attention at the 2026 Goodwood Members’ Meeting

Jayson Fong

Radisich was peaking in time for the 1993 FIA Touring Car Challenge, which brought 43 of the world’s best together at Monza for a two-race aggregate shot at international glory. It’s an event Rouse looks back on with pride. “We were not one of the highest-funded teams, and were up against factory Alfas and BMWs – we were as good if not better than them,” he opines.

While Rouse qualified ninth, Radisich landed pole: “I’d never been to Monza before. I loved the chicanes – and the car enjoyed them too. The tyres, car, weather, it all just came together in qualifying. We had a fast car, I was on the top of my game, and if you have those two things then you know you can do it.”

Andy Rouse's Ford Mondeo exits a BTCC circuit corner

Rouse was mainly among the midfield in 1994, but ‘Flying Kiwi’ Radisich was a podium regular – with two wins that season

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A huge section of the grid, including Rouse, were taken out in first-lap incidents. Radisich won the restarted race at a canter, despite carrying an injury. “I’d pulled a muscle in my forearm, and that was giving me grief more than anything else – but when I was out there it disappeared,” he states. The second race was much closer, with Nicola Larini’s Alfa Romeo just 0.6sec behind come the chequered flag. “Maybe I backed off on the last lap – I thought it was more than that,” laughs Radisich. “It was a tremendous race to win, and it put me on the map as a touring car driver.”

“I’d never been to Monza. I loved the chicanes – and the car did too”

The luck would turn over the winter of 1993-94. Despite the Blue Oval razzmatazz, and the expensive placement of Nigel Mansell in the car for the infamous TOCA Shootout, Ford’s financial commitment wasn’t where it needed to be. “Our 1994 engines were built by Cosworth’s road car department, not the racing side, so we took a step backwards – we had around 290bhp, but everyone else was past 300bhp,” reflects Rouse. “We had our own engine dyno, so we knew what we were getting from Cosworth.” Radisich’s positivity had evaporated by February, following a race in South Africa: “I called Andy and said we’re in a bit of strife – the Cavalier was so strong. Their tyre longevity was very good.”

In the end it was Alfa Romeo, not Vauxhall, that would emerge with 1994 BTCC glory, though not without controversy, which would open the door to aerodynamics entering Super Touring. However, that year’s champion Gabriele Tarquini has said that the Alfa 155’s real advantage was its front differential – something pioneered on Rouse’s Toyota Carinas. “We were the first to use a viscous diff, which was one of the reasons it was so quick,” Rouse says. Research would continue, leading to ARE pioneering a ‘combination diff’ – essentially a plated and viscous front differential all in one: “We took the idea to Xtrac, but Ford wouldn’t pay for it, so all the other teams ended up with our combination diff.”

Paul Radisich battles a Vauxhall in BTCC competition

Cavalier of Jeff Allam vs Mondeo of Radisich at Brands Hatch, June 1994; Gabriele Tarquini would walk away from the weekend with two wins

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For Radisich, it was a frustrating season: “When it came to the crunch we had too many reliability issues.” Engineer Alan Strachan adds that any extra power found by Cosworth didn’t improve things. “The more power, the quicker the car wore its front tyres out,” he recalls.

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Twenty F1 drivers who took on the BTCC… with mixed success
BTCC News

Twenty F1 drivers who took on the BTCC… with mixed success

The elite world of Formula 1 might not appear to have much in common with the door-banging melees of the British Touring Car Championship, but there have been plenty of drivers — including world champions and race winners — who have bridged the two worlds

By Marcus Simmons

Development was always a challenge due to the budget, and Ford’s unwillingness to ‘do an Alfa’ and produce road cars for homologation. “We had people come over from NASCAR, tell us to do this or that, but we couldn’t – it wasn’t a production model,” says Strachan. In the end, Radisich had to settle for third in the championship, while Rouse bowed out as a driver at the end of the season.

Still, hopes were high going into the 1994 World Cup, this time at Donington Park. Now run as just one race, it attracted an enormous grid. “We were confident we could do a good job because we convinced Cosworth to supply us with the development engine prepared by the race department, which had 10bhp more,” says Rouse. Michelin came to the party with a brand-new tyre just for the World Cup, with Kevlar used in the sidewall. “The Vauxhalls and some of the Alfas struggled to get the tyres to work, but because we had a heavy engine they worked well – that’s why we won the race,” reckons Rouse.

Paul Radisich sits inside the Ford Mondeo race car

Radisich at Brands, 1994

Getty Images

Behind the wheel, what looked like a dominant victory after the restart was more fraught for Radisich – with 10 laps to go the gearbox started to freeze up. “I could change, but it was double the strength to shift – I thought I was going to break the stick, or pull the thing out of the tunnel,” he laughs. After a trying 1994, he was elated: “It was also the event where the Tourist Trophy was awarded – it was the icing on the cake. I do feel for John Cleland though. He got the jump on the first start, then there was a red flag – some days you can be lucky.”

“I called Andy and said we’re in a bit of strife – the Cavalier was so strong”

That red flag was a nightmare for the other side of the ARE garage. “Memories of the 1994 World Cup?” Strachan ponders. “Carnage. Robb Gravett in our test car got taken out early on.” As it turned out, that was by Philippe Gache in an ARE-supplied Mondeo…

In many ways this bruising encounter was a portent for what would come in 1995. After the aerodynamics dramas of 1994, the British series permitted aerodynamic aids. Given Ford’s vast empire of motor sport knowledge, you might have thought this would help the ARE team. “We convinced Ford to bring over an aerodynamicist from NASCAR,” Rouse remembers. “He didn’t know any more about aerodynamics than we did.”

Ford Mondeo race car door and cockpit detail

Most cars were in Radisich’s mirror

LAT/Sutton Images

Ford was unwilling to invest in much wind tunnel time, so Rouse decided to take his own route, which worked out better. But Cosworth had returned BTCC engine development to its road car division. “A lot of emphasis was put on the aero package and there was a lot of optimism that it would help us a lot – but it didn’t,” says Radisich.

“At the end of 1994, we were thinking that the engine’s weight was a bit of an issue, and 1995 continued to prove that,” adds Strachan. “I had looked at canting over the V6 engine to try and push it further back, to try to get more weight behind the wheels. Ford was adamant that it wanted to run the V6 and not a four-cylinder – that was the start of the slippery slope.”

Ford Mondeo surrounded by media before the Touring Car World Cup

Nigel Mansell in Mondeo ‘Red 5’

Jayson Fong

Kelvin Burt had joined the team after a one-off appearance at Silverstone in late 1994. That first experience was a shock to the system – like Radisich, it was the first time he’d raced an FWD car. “I thought there was something wrong with it – it was so unstable through fast corners,” Burt relates. “That’s not a slight on Andy’s car – all FWD touring cars were like that. You have to make it almost want to swap ends in the fast stuff if you want a neutral car in the slow corners. If you make it stick in the fast corners, you have massive understeer in all the medium and slow stuff. In the second half of the season I was more competitive; I had a few thirds and I had a win at Snetterton.”

Front wheel and brake of the Ford Mondeo BTCC car

Michelin tyres were the period choice

Jayson Fong

For Radisich, the season had started relatively well, with three podiums and a win at Silverstone, but during the second half of the season he finished in the points just once, and retired from four races. By this point, rumblings from Ford of Germany were becoming stronger. “It was a fraught time because Ford had developed a Mondeo themselves in Germany – in Cologne,” says Radisich. Schübel Engineering had helped Ford get into Germany’s Super Tourenwagen Cup. “Ford of Germany was against us because we were a private team funded in the UK, not Germany.”

Things were already in a dire state by the time the team got to Paul Ricard for the FIA World Touring Car Cup, but Burt remembers the test day. “Andy disconnected the rev limiter, so it was pulling 9000rpm down the back straight, and it was quickest through the speed traps,” he grins, adding that the V6 was really only good at the top end. “It started to work at 8000rpm – so when we went from 8000rpm to 9000rpm, it was good. Where you needed mid-range, it wasn’t as good as a four-cylinder.” According to Strachan, Cosworth had saved the best till last. “Cosworth brought a 370bhp engine in the back of an estate car,” he recalls. “Whoever was fastest in qualifying would get it.”

Interior of the Ford Mondeo Super Touring race car

Ford Mondeo SI

• Engine Cosworth 2-litre, 24V V6

• Drive Front-wheel drive

• Body Modified production bodyshell with seam-welded safety cage

• Power 295bhp

• Transmission Xtrac 6-speed sequential

• Suspension (front & rear) MacPherson struts

Weight 950kg

Come race week, it was Burt on top. “We thought we were in good standing, even with the limitations of tyre wear,” says Strachan, who engineered Burt’s car. “We’d been in the top five, and knew there was time in hand – and Kelvin got the engine.” Cue an aggrieved Radisich. “Paul tried to pull rank and get the engine,” remembers Burt. “Andy gave Paul a finger and then gave me the engine. It got shirty.” Radisich remembers it with a chuckle: “I was probably blowing fire, but Kelvin had qualified ahead – that was the reality.”

Ford Mondeo chases Volvo 850 during BTCC race action

Radisich gets close to Rickard Rydell’s Volvo at Silverstone in ’96

Getty Images

Strachan set about changing the engine, then headed to the bar with a Michelin staffer. “He told me he had been removing all the serial numbers and details from the tyres that had been fitted,” he says of their chat. “He said the stencil on the tyres used for race day was smaller than the ones for qualifying and testing. He said they had run out of the large stencils, so they only had smaller ones left to mark the compounds. I never thought much more of it. The BMWs had tyres with large identification stencils, and all the Fords and other Michelin runners seemed to have tyres with the smaller stencils.”

“It was a fraught time – Ford had developed a Mondeo in Cologne”

What Strachan found out a year later was that Michelin did not have enough World Cup tyres to supply everyone: “Michelin decided that BMW had a better chance of beating the Audis on their Dunlops. We were left with whatever remained – standard tyres. We couldn’t understand where the pace had gone.” The Audis went on to dominate and Burt was the first of the non-Audi/BMW runners in sixth place in the first race, before fading to 13th in the second. Radisich had a DNF in the first race; 17th in the second.

Ford Mondeo dashboard and steering wheel detail

Ford badge but it wasn’t committed

LAT Images

Rouse believed that ARE had the Ford contract for 1996, and was experimenting with a four-cylinder engine. In the end, the deal went to West Surrey Racing using Reynard-prepared cars from a Schübel shell. Burt, meanwhile, joined TWR’s Volvo effort for 1996. “I’d had a tip-off from someone within Ford that it was going to change and if I’d got alternatives, I’d be wise to choose one,” he explains. “I didn’t get it right either – I could have gone to Audi.”

Fuel cell installation in the Ford Mondeo race car boot

15-gallon tank

LAT Images

While 1996 was a disaster for Radisich and team-mate Steve Robertson, Strachan believes that ARE could have cracked the Mondeo problem. “I wish Andy had gone, ‘I’ll build a four-wheel-drive, four-cylinder car,’” he says. “We needed Ford to do a short run of engines with a special cylinder head because the valve and port sizes were too small in the Mondeo four-cylinder engine,” reckons Rouse. “Ford weren’t fully committed, so we were always struggling to develop a car.”

Front view of the Ford Mondeo Super Touring race car

Radisich would race Mondeos in the BTCC from 1993-98, first with Rouse and then with West Surrey Racing before switching to an MSD Peugeot 406

Jayson Fong

Nevertheless, Rouse looks back on the time with fondness: “It was good business for us – we built a lot of cars and we won two World Cups.”

“To win the first World Cup as the dark horse was amazing,” reflects Radisich. “To do it again the second year in a car that wasn’t as strong as it was in 1993 was probably the most rewarding. It was everything you could want from a driving experience – everything just worked so well.”

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Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

Winging over the scrub-clad dunes, it looked like a space invader executing a terrifying attack on a remote outpost. We had never even imagined such an otherworldly apparition. Yet here it was, leaping over the skyline to strafe our raceway with fire in its belly and conquest in its heart.

Not all of us fled screaming. But even at that moment I believe we all knew: upon us had come a seismic Revolution in Racing.

Vintage Can-Am race car speeds past spectators on a historic circuit.

‘space invader’ – Chaparral’s astonishing ‘winged white wonder’ speeds low over the Bridgehampton sand dunes in 1966. A truly revolutionary racing machine, Jim Hall’s 2E introduced driver-adjustable aerofoils front and rear, automatic-clutch transmissions, left-foot braking and hip-mounted radiators – concepts seen in today’s F1. It’s still ‘the quintessential Can-Am car’

That happened to me in 1966. It changed my life. I had ridden my Triumph motorcycle out to the far end of New York’s Long Island to Bridgehampton, a fast, swooping hilltop road course. Here would be my first opportunity to see a breathtaking new racing series called Can-Am.

“It would be anybody’s first chance to see a ‘winged white wonder’”

It also would be anybody’s first chance to see a startlingly innovative, ‘winged white wonder’ from Texas – the Chaparral 2E.

Can-Am sports cars race beneath Chevron bridge before packed spectators.

Dan Gurney in his Lola-Ford T70 (No30) paces the pack on his way to winning Bridgehampton’s 1966 Can-Am — by a thrilling 0.2sec from Chris Amon’s McLaren-Chevy M1B (No4) after 200 miles. But after all six races the inaugural series champion will be John Surtees; his Lola-Chevy (No7) starts in the middle here.

Riding home that night, my helmet still filled with the roar of huge V8 engines and my mind’s eye replaying jaw-dropping action between the Chaparral and three dozen Lolas, McLarens and other big, sleek, scary-fast machines, I knew that my view had been forever cemented as to what motor racing should be: step-back-in-fear awesome.

Can-Am’s official name was Canadian-American Challenge Cup Series. To create it, sports car organising bodies in both nations pulled together what had been a catch-all collection of regional events across North America into a single professional drivers’ championship.

White Can-Am race car crests hill overlooking coastal circuit and ocean.

Jim Hall’s Chaparral 2E became the 2G by 1968, actually being the two-year-old alloy chassis hot-rodded with a big aluminum Chevy and massive rear tyres – note the wide ‘truck fenders’ added on. The Chaparral led five glorious laps of this Bridgehampton race ahead of both McLarens before fuel injector trouble

Thanks to a maker of automobile polishes, which put up eye-popping prize money and an attention-grabbing ‘Floatile’ trophy, this ‘Johnson Wax Can-Am’ is said to be the first sponsored motor sports series in history.

To further boost credibility, J-wax brought in retired driving maestro Stirling Moss as ‘Can-Am commissioner’. The future Sir Stirling worked hard at the job.

Mechanics assemble a Can-Am race car inside a busy workshop garage.

Chaparral’s makeshift Las Vegas headquarters the night before the 1967 Stardust race. Note the vertical struts carrying the rear wing’s download directly into the 2G’s rear wheel hubs. Bypassing the springs lets them remain nice and supple over the bumps. Jim Hall at the right thinks up his next innovation; chief timer/scorer Sandy Hall catches up on her reading

The new, continent-wide programme attracted more attention than the earlier regional format. Increased spectator enthusiasm brought in more interest from the media and therefore from sponsors, which in turn drew in more competitors with strong, new cars.

Very strong. Not only did Can-Am catch the acquisitive eyes of North American road racers, their oval track colleagues in IndyCar came flocking for the prize money too.

Can-Am field climbs Laguna Seca hillside before packed grandstands.

Pace lap for Laguna Seca’s 1972 race illustrates how Can-Am’s colour had suddenly gone from McLaren papaya to Porsche white/red/black. After five straight years of Kiwi domination, Stuttgart changed everything by harnessing turbochargers for road racing. Traditionally minded fans rued the intrusion of big-automaker budgets, but super-power did align with the series’ original push-the-limits spirit

Beyond that, the upstart series schedule was cleverly designed to attract overseas competitors. The six rounds of that inaugural season filled gaps around the trio of North American grands prix in Canada, the US and Mexico. For European F1 stars used to then-unimpressive European pay scales, the idea of driving for dollars on their off weekends was irresistible.

It so happened that Great Britain also had developed its own breed of locally made chassis with imported American V8 horsepower, and local fans more used to small engines loved these ‘big bangers’. UK constructors like Lola and McLaren eagerly took on the North American challenge too.

Lola Can-Am racer leads McLaren through Laguna Seca corner.

His foot hard into 750-something bhp, Jackie Stewart powerslides his 8.1-litre Lola T260 out of Laguna Seca’s hairpin ahead of Denny Hulme’s similarly powered McLaren M8D. The ‘Flying Scotsman’ managed to win twice in this 10-round 1971 season, but Hulme’s team-mate, ‘Champagne’ Peter Revson, was America’s first champ

For race fans looking back from today, when practically everything about a competition device is designed to a rulebook, it may be hard to grasp how uniquely unregulated these cars were. Can-Am rules were both few and liberal.

As long as the vehicles could loosely be described as ’sports cars’, with bodywork covering the wheels, cockpit doors and two seats, and providing that rudimentary safety regulations of the day were honoured, builders were free to let their imaginations run completely wild.

Three Can-Am race cars sweep through Laguna Seca's Corkscrew corner.

Kiwis can fly! A trio of McLaren’s winged, all-conquering M8Bs of 1969 plunge down Laguna Seca’s iconic Corkscrew. Usually just ‘The Bruce & Denny Show’, here the team added a third New Zealand driver, former McLaren man Chris Amon. This season ‘Christopher Racer’ had been driving a Ferrari, but after its experimental V12 failed in practice his old mates offered him their seldom-used spare Chevy-powered car. That’s the No3 ahead here, but about to be lapped by ‘Boss Bruce’ (No4) and ‘The Bear’ (No5). Why a spare car? Redundancy was not common in those days, but 1969 was the old Can-Am’s longest season at 11 races and McLaren figured they should prepare for trouble. Sound thinking. It’s part of why the solid little team won all 11 races that year. The perfect season

The only limitation on engine size was a minimum. Anything smaller than 2.5 litres was not allowed. Otherwise, drop in the biggest engine you could find. More than one engine, if you pleased.

“The upstart series schedule was designed to attract overseas competitors”

Also ungoverned were the sizes of wheels and tyres; dimensions and configuration of chassis and bodywork; aerodynamic shapes and appendages; construction materials; fuel capacity; overall vehicle weight… Can-Am was practically a free formula. Any crazy innovation was welcome.

Such hot rod-style design freedom is scarcely believable today, but it seemed appropriate to the psychedelic 1960s. It was a decade rife with revolution, that time of flower children flocking to Haight-Ashbury and astronauts going for the moon. Auto racing’s 1960s opened with mid-engine cars changing the very shape of the sport and continued with ever-larger engines — and ever-bolder aerodynamics and ever-wider tyres — shattering all previous concepts of performance limits.

Chaparral 2J fan car prepared on the Can-Am starting grid.

The ‘Fan Car’ – Texas legend Jim Hall ended his Can-Am run the way he began it… with something stunning. In 1970, Chaparral’s 2J generated downforce not with wings, but through two extractor fans – powered by a second engine! Sliding skirts around the lower perimeter sealed in the low interior pressure, making this a gigantic suction cup. It was all too much for officialdom. They banned the car. Jim Hall walked away

“The only limitation on engine size was a minimum – 2.5 litres”

In dizzying succession we saw Carroll Shelby’s wild and woolly Cobras, Ford Motor Company’s open, epic assault on Le Mans, and Jim Hall’s clandestine collaboration with General Motors on his enthrallingly innovative Chaparrals.

Motor sport, long regarded as an obscure pursuit of the borderline lawless, was achieving social respectability. At a period of intoxicatingly rapid growth, free-formula racing seemed perfectly natural, and Can-Am gave full expression to that heady spirit of liberty.

Can-Am field streams beneath Castrol bridge at Laguna Seca race start.

Penske’s Porsche ‘Turbo-Panzers’ roll off the grid at the 1972 Laguna Seca race. Built at enormous cost by a major maker, these ultra-powerful 12-cylinder machines outclassed everything before them; by season’s end, the twin-turbo 917/10K reportedly produced nearly 1200bhp, while big-block V8s struggled to exceed 750 reliably. Game over. The once-dominant McLarens won two rounds on reliability, not speed. Champion George Follmer (No7) leads injury-plagued team-mate Mark Donohue

My long-ago weekend at the dear old ‘Bridge’, a mere memory now, resulted in a new direction for me. I had been keen on racing, and was developing a modest side-hustle in taking pictures and writing stories about various events, but such sporadic assignments couldn’t bring in enough income to walk away from my boring but steady regular job.

Lola T70 leads McLaren Can-Am car through desert circuit.

The heyday: in 1967, numerous small teams could bring competitive cars with off-the-shelf, sometimes even home-built chassis and hot-rodded production-car engines. That’s how John Surtees, No7 Lola, won the ’66 championship as well as this ’67-season ending race at Las Vegas – in the same year-old car. But by then it was too late to overcome what Bruce McLaren had accomplished with his newer M6A, No4

Can-Am changed that equation. Suddenly, North America had something going on that interested my British client. So I packed my parachute and jumped. And landed in something so satisfying that I’ve been doing it ever since.

Jackie Oliver's Shadow Can-Am car waits in the paddock before practice.

The sad day… Shadow’s magnificent DN4-Chevy dominated the 1974 Can-Am, but the series was dying as rising costs and shrinking sponsorship pushed major teams out. Jackie Oliver clinched the title in only five races, whereupon Can-Am was euthanised after nine seasons. Here Oliver walks to his now-retired car at Watkins Glen, about to give US Grand Prix Formula 1 fans a nostalgic earful of the Can-Am thunder they would miss

Time has brought enormous change to the motor sports world as I used to know it. Fans today rightfully wonder if that old Can-Am they keep hearing about was really so great.

Chaparral 2E Can-Am race car with high rear wing on track.

Chaparral’s first Can-Am car, the revolutionary 2E of 1966, remains the most seminal design of the old anything-goes series. It was fast everywhere, and once achieved a 1-2 victory. Good times!

“Can-Am was a drivers’ championship, but it was all about the cars”

In a word, yes. In my opinion, anyway. And it’s all because of the incredible cars we used to see. “Can-Am is boring,” was a gripe I sometimes heard, but that came from people cooped up in press rooms. All they saw were cars whizzing by the window. Singly, most of the time.

Admittedly, the big fields tended to string out. Cars were very different in performance from each other, and drivers came in all levels of expertise and motivation. We sometimes did get stirring competition to enjoy, but honestly, it wasn’t usual.

Mark Donohue stands beside exposed Can-Am race car engine in pit lane.

Mark Donohue, America’s great engineer/driver who won in sports cars, endurance cars, Trans-Am cars and Indycars – all of which he personally worked on – was key in making Porsche’s ultra-complex twin-turbo 12 work properly on road courses. A testing crash handicapped his 1972 Can-Am campaign with this car, seen here at Riverside, but ‘Captain Nice’ would make up for it with a nearly perfect 1973

I wished the grinches would come out and walk the circuit with me, feeling the thunder in their bones and seeing the lurid antics of those overpowered machines heeling and heaving and sliding around the turns. True, Can-Am was officially a drivers’ championship, but it was really all about the cars. Those incredibly powerful, virtually unrestricted, rapidly evolving speed machines fascinated me. And they still do. I don’t see their like today.

American author and photographer Pete Lyons covered the Can-Am series for the British weekly magazine Autosport from 1966-72. His work resulted in three later books about the series. These and over a dozen other titles, along with his archive of in-period racing photos – some of which are reproduced here – are described at his website: petelyons.com

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

George Russell came into 2026 anticipating a coronation, the realisation of his lifelong dream to become world champion. He had the car, the experience and de facto leadership at Mercedes as it returned to the top in Formula 1. Instead, he’s facing the very real risk that he will be usurped by Kimi Antonelli without ever being crowned.

Despite the clamour to declare Russell a busted flush and Mercedes already Antonelli’s team, the battle hasn’t been won and lost yet. But through the early stages of the season Antonelli has looked increasingly assured, with his run of five consecutive early season grand prix victories a tale of increasing confidence that has left Russell questioning himself.

Mercedes Team Formation

Of all the intra-team tête-à-têtes in Formula 1, George Russell and Kimi Antonelli is the most potentially volatile

DPPI

As Russell pointed out in Monaco, Antonelli’s style can be well-suited to these cars and the demands of the tyres. He’s attacking, adept at feeling out what the car is doing and making constant tiny adjustments but rarely being imprecise while doing so. He commits to corners even when uncertain about the grip under him, confident in being able to deal with whatever the car throws at him. He is comfortable dancing on that limit, yet rarely drifts into over-aggression because there is subtlety to his aggression. Last year, there were times when his approach wasn’t refined enough, but the momentum during his rookie campaign was interrupted by Mercedes introducing a rear-axle upgrade that held back both drivers. Antonelli in particular struggled thanks to his more aggressive technique, which by his own estimate cost him three months. That’s partly why he appears to have taken such a giant leap forward this year.

“It remains to be seen how Antonelli stands up to the mental toil.”

Russell’s high-commitment smoothness tends towards a ‘don’t brake later, brake less’ approach, keeping the car stable, loading up the car progressively and carrying the speed into the corner. Get the entry right, mid-corner should ideally follow even though he has become increasingly at ease with making adjustments if needed, and then the exit will be strong. His corner-entry style can exert higher peak loads on the rear tyres, which is a key area where he has hinted Antonelli’s technique can have an advantage.

Russell can struggle in dry conditions when the grip is low and he needs to adapt to the constant microslides that Antonelli thrives with, as it can make the car feel more ‘floaty’. But as his dominant single-lap pace in Spain proved, sometimes minimising sliding can stop you overtaxing the tyres when temperatures are critical.

The trouble was, he didn’t carry that dominance into the race. That’s the big concern for Russell, who in Spain espoused a back-to-basics approach having admitted to “doing some copy-pasting” from Antonelli in terms of set-up. He set out to “trust in those instincts” that have served him so well throughout his career and not get too bogged down in the data, relying on the feedback he’s getting behind the wheel to drive his improvement. Whether he can do so remains to be seen.

Mercedes Driver Duo

It was widely thought that 2026 would be Russell’s championship-winning season

Grand Prix Photo

Antonelli is a driver who at just 19 still has significant potential to realise, and the fact that he’s operating at such a high level, in particular when it comes to race pace relative to Russell, suggests he has it in him to maintain his current level. However, there are tests to come and it remains to be seen how he stands up to the mental toll of a season-long championship campaign.

While there are question marks over how Russell reacts to what Antonelli is doing, there’s no doubt that the 28-year-old will do everything he can to undermine his team-mate’s seemingly inexorable rise and reassert himself. The combination of Russell’s calculating ruthlessness, which is twinned with the risk of paranoia over whether Mercedes is favouring his team-mate, and Antonelli’s determination to take the fight to him at every opportunity, makes this the most combustible of any pairing on the grid, with the world championship stakes acting as an accelerant. They have crossed swords on track multiple times already and if that continues there’s every chance of a collision that might prove to be an inflection point in intra-team relations.

It could be that Antonelli is on a trajectory to prevail, but Russell shouldn’t be underestimated and it’s almost inconceivable that there won’t be controversial flashpoints at some point.

Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc race side by side for Ferrari.

Wheel-to-wheel for the Ferrari pair

Andreacatalini/Ferrari

Charles Leclerc must have been convinced he’d seen off Lewis Hamilton. The seven-times world champion arrived at Maranello last year in a whirlwind of excitement that quickly collapsed into disappointment and self-doubt, while Leclerc held the Ferrari leading man status he first wrested from Sebastian Vettel in 2019-2020. He won’t have been foolish enough to write off Hamilton completely, but the battle seemed won.

The narrative has been turned on its head in the first half of 2026. Hamilton is revitalised, with questions no longer about whether he’ll see out his contract or whether age has blunted his skills, while Leclerc is doubted. There was a moment when Hamilton signalled his intent on the way to that famous first grand prix victory for Ferrari during the post-qualifying press conference, pointing out what he could do that his team-mate couldn’t in response to a question about how tricky the Ferrari was to drive in the context of Leclerc’s Q3 crash.

“I was braking very late into Turn 4, which had been visible [in the data], and I think Charles probably tried to carry a lot of speed into that corner, and unfortunately it didn’t work out for him.”

Matter-of-fact, but pointed. The contrast between this relaxed and confident Hamilton and last year’s forlorn figure, a man who at one stage declared himself “absolutely useless”, is stark. Confident as Leclerc would have been, this is the nagging fear at the back of his mind, that Hamilton in his second season at Ferrari, with the reset of the new regulations, still had it in him.

The cars are more to Hamilton’s liking, replacing the ground-effect cars that muted his ability to brake late and carry the speed into the corner in the way he wanted with more responsive machinery. With team principal Fred Vasseur’s support, he’s been allowed to switch from Brembo brake discs to Carbone Industrie versions that give him the immediate stopping power he demands. Add that to a burgeoning relationship with new race engineer Carlo Santi, officially temporary but increasingly likely to endure, and Hamilton appears to be somewhere close to his best. With a car that, certainly in Barcelona, gave him the rear-end stability he needs to attack the corners on the brakes, get the car rotated and know that it won’t step out on him, he’s fast. And as he showed in the race, consistently so.

Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc pose in Ferrari team shirts at Monaco.

How will Charles Leclerc cope with a resurgent Lewis Hamilton at Ferrari?

Andreacatalini/Ferrari

This leaves Leclerc struggling on two fronts. Firstly, there’s the psychological fight to reassert himself. This is his team, one he’s recently recommitted to, yet it’s Hamilton who is flirting with emerging as a world championship contender. The Spain qualifying crash that left him “very ashamed” was a consequence of overreaching, following just a week after tagging the Tabac wall on his final Q3 lap.

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Secondly, he must come to terms with a car that hasn’t always given him what he needs. Having tried the CI discs at Suzuka in April, he didn’t switch to them until Barcelona after struggling with the consistency of the Brembo product. He’s also complained about power unit regulations that militate against his livewire style, dancing on the limit of traction at the rear, given such high-wire acts don’t gel with energy regimes that reward consistency even in qualifying. Just as Hamilton did last year, Leclerc feels neutered as a driver.

It’s not decided yet. Leclerc has endured a difficult spell, but he remains one of the fastest drivers, if not the fastest, in F1 over a single lap.

“Lewis will stop at nothing to make himself the epicentre of Ferrari.”

What’s more, even when struggling with the brakes his underlying pace has, at times, been a little faster than Hamilton’s. The raw materials are there, but he must weather this storm at a time when Hamilton is exerting a growing gravitational pull.

Leclerc still holds all of the cards, but the question is whether he plays them correctly or loses himself by not knowing how to react to Hamilton’s growing influence in the team. Leclerc is stunningly fast, over one lap and race distances, having also developed into a canny tyre-manager when needed, but the stress over radio communications and doubts about his influence over the engineering side of the team highlight cracks for Hamilton to exploit.

The battle will be no-holds-barred on the circuit, but off-track it likely won’t be one of animosity, instead a far more subtle one as the veteran legend stops at nothing to make himself the epicentre of Ferrari. What happens won’t only make or break Hamilton’s Ferrari dream, but also Leclerc’s.

Two McLaren Formula 1 cars line up in the pit lane.

There have been podiums for Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris, below, in 2026, but the McLaren drivers aren’t challenging for wins

LAT/McLaren

The conflict between Norris and Piastri was one of the defining narratives of 2025, but not this year. With McLaren no longer a regular race-winning threat, Norris’s Miami sprint victory aside, the rivalry between the pair has been relegated to a sub-plot. Norris triumphed in 2025 without landing the killer blow, but hostilities are on hold as the pair strive to help McLaren back to title-chasing form.

Despite that, there are hints that Norris has achieved a new level after winning last year’s title. He has an unusual psychology for a world champion, talking in the past of ‘imposter syndrome’ and lacking the rock-solid, in some cases irrational, self-confidence that has characterised many of the greats. That’s not a criticism or a limitation, but it does mark him out as different. Piastri is a cooler head, F1’s resident iceman, so how profound the psychological toll of losing last year is remains hidden.

Last year, Norris faced a similar situation to the one Russell is in now, starting the season as clear favourite, then being put on the back foot by the less experienced Piastri. You can also draw parallels with Leclerc, with Norris crashing in qualifying in Saudi Arabia trying to emulate Piastri’s ability to carry speed into Turn 4. Yet Norris, after hitting rock bottom when an engine failure hit mid-season at Zandvoort, reset himself. He dug deep and hit back as Piastri admitted to overdriving in Baku, where he crashed in qualifying and on the first lap of the race after a jump start, then struggled on the late-season lower-grip tracks. There, like Russell, the need for constant adjustments blunted his ultra-committed-on-the-brakes approach while Norris, a sensitive driver who thrives when making those tiny adjustments based on steering feedback, excelled. This played out against a backdrop of suspicion about favouritism within the team thanks to the well-intentioned desire to use ‘Papaya rules’ to allow an even fight, but that often simply led to the impression that it was doing the opposite.

Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris speak during a McLaren media session.

LAT/McLaren

The underlying conflict remains but is dormant, and although there’s still no decisive victory Norris has been the more impressive McLaren driver in a season beset by reliability problems. That’s perhaps to be expected given these lower-downforce cars that move around more, but until McLaren has a more consistently competitive platform it is impossible to draw any definitive conclusions. This is a lull in hostilities, not the end of it, and once McLaren does get back to regular winning ways the fault lines of 2025 will become visible again and the battle for supremacy will be rejoined. In the meantime, their complementary skillsets as drivers are a valuable weapon for the team.

Two Red Bull Formula 1 cars run together on track.

Red Bull team-mates at Suzuka in March

Getty Images/Red Bull Content Pool

Max Verstappen is an irresistible force; being his team-mate is the poisoned chalice Isack Hadjar must drink from. The 21-year-old believes he can beat Verstappen, but even becoming the proverbial immovable object that can stand up to life alongside the four-times world champion would represent a win.

Hadjar hasn’t matched Verstappen so far, but has started well. He’s avoided the fate of Liam Lawson, absurdly relegated to Racing Bulls after just two races last year, and has performed at a level that has at least prevented rumours of his sacking. The trouble is, Verstappen seems impregnable. It’s often said Red Bull designs the car to suit Verstappen, but while there’s a kernel of truth in that, the chain of cause and effect is more complicated. Not only is Verstappen mentally robust, save for those occasions on track when red mist descends, but he also raises the ceiling of what Red Bull can do with its car.

“The question is whether Hadjar can thrive in these conditions.”

It’s well known he craves a responsive front end, and can tolerate more rear-end instability than probably any driver on the grid. That’s less a preference and more about a capacity to operate in a window that raises the laptime potential of the car. Every driver sits somewhere on the spectrum for ability to handle rear-end instability, and Verstappen, like Michael Schumacher in his heyday, is at the extreme end. When the car is front-limited, Verstappen’s advantage is eroded but he doesn’t go missing. The Red Bull becomes a hostile environment to most when it’s to his liking. Optimise the car around lesser drivers and they perform better, but you lose access to the greater heights Verstappen can reach. The question is whether Hadjar can thrive in these conditions.

Max Verstappen and Isack Hadjar in Red Bull Racing team suits.

Isack Hadjar is yet to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Max Verstappen

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The evidence so far is inconclusive. On the positive side, Hadjar is closer to Verstappen’s style than, say, Verstappen’s long-time Red Bull team-mate Sergio Pérez was. He can live with a reasonable amount of rear-end instability but has a slightly more aggressive style than Verstappen’s, late braking, hustling the car into the corner but at risk of inducing over-rotation and scrubbing speed if the rear steps out. The beauty of Verstappen’s driving is that there is a calmness amid the tumult, as he tends to brake slightly earlier and somehow float a car that to most would be on a terrifying knife-edge into the corner.

There’s no sign of fractiousness, but unless Verstappen is given something to worry about why would there be? Instead, Hadjar appears at war with himself, never more furious than when he makes a mistake. In the car, an error can be followed by his trademark ‘Isack smack’, striking the steering wheel repeatedly. Outside of the car, and even if a qualifying session or race has ostensibly gone well, he is prone to eviscerating himself. That can be a valuable weapon when it comes to self-improvement, but the 21-year-old would benefit from rounding off those sharper edges while retaining the brutal honesty that will allow him to improve.

Hadjar has passed his first test alongside Verstappen in that he hasn’t sunk without trace and, at times, has lived with him. Equally, he’s never done anything to suggest he can seriously trouble his team-mate. But then again, who could?

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

Mario Andretti leads Ronnie Peterson during Lotus's dominant 1978 season

Mario Andretti leads Ronnie Peterson in the 1978 Dutch GP

Grand Prix Photo

10. Mario Andretti + Ronnie Peterson 1978

Win rate: 57%
Win count: 6 + 2 out of 14 GPs
One drivers’ title
One constructors’ title

In the mid-70s, Mario Andretti had finally committed to what he’d started on his sensational pole-winning Formula 1 debut at Watkins Glen in 1968 by joining forces with Colin Chapman to properly crack Formula 1. He was a key component in the development of the ‘wing car’ Type 78 – and he wasn’t about to be derailed in his mission to become champion by a gifted and fast incoming team-mate. No matter how great he was as a bloke.

Ronnie Peterson and Mario Andretti during Lotus's 1978 title-winning season

Zandvoort was the final 1-2 for original Lotus

Sutton Images

Chapman had previous when it came to mismanaging quick team-mates. By coincidence, Ronnie Peterson had also been the unwitting ‘problem’ when he and Emerson Fittipaldi took points off each other and opened the door for Jackie Stewart’s third world crown in 1973. This time, history wouldn’t repeat. “I’d made my position clear to Colin,” said Andretti. “The agreement was if both cars were running at the front with no problem, then I was to win. Ronnie accepted that when he signed his contract.”

The season of the black and gold ‘train’ is recalled as one of domination, although it was nothing compared to much later one-sided Mercedes and Red Bull years. Between them, Andretti and Peterson claimed over half the races they competed in as team-mates, before Ronnie’s death in the wake of his Monza crash. It was there that Mario achieved his goal, with two races to spare.

Mika Häkkinen and David Coulthard launch McLaren's 1999 Formula 1 campaign

The second of Mika Häkkinen’s F1 titles came in 1999 – a golden era for McLaren, with David Coulthard a podium regular

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9. Mika Häkkinen + David Coulthard 1996-01

Win rate: 31%
Win count: 20 + 10 out of 98 GPs
Two drivers’ titles
One constructors’ title

Their win rate across six seasons was comparatively low. Keep in mind that in their first year paired together the still-fresh McLaren-Mercedes alliance wasn’t yet firing on all cylinders. But this double act makes our top 10 due to a few crucial points.

First, they were the spearhead of a new, German-powered age of Adrian Newey-shaped glory that pulled McLaren from its 1990s slump; second, Mika Häkkinen single-handedly provided blessed resistance to the incoming tide of Schumacher/Ferrari domination, claiming hard-fought back-to-back titles in 1998 and ’99; and third, their partnership was conducted harmoniously (at least in public) and at a high level of performance over a long period. This was a good, and at times great, era for McLaren.

Yes, Coulthard remains forever humble over his abilities and accepts his place in Häkkinen’s shadow. But he had his moments – one of his finest wins was Magny-Cours in 2000 – and beyond Häkkinen’s retirement in ’01 he continued to serve McLaren valiantly for three more seasons. As for Häkkinen, he was and remains one of F1’s most explosive talents, as the only driver Schumacher considered an equal.

Michael Schumacher and Rubens Barrichello celebrate Ferrari's dominant partnership

Rubens Barrichello was the Scuderia number two to Michael Schumacher

Clive Rose/Getty Images

8. Michael Schumacher + Rubens Barrichello 2000-05

Win rate: 56%
Win count: 49 + 9 out of 104 GPs
Five drivers’ titles
Five constructors’ titles

Clearly, there was a senior partner when it came to Ferrari’s greatest run of Formula 1 success. Michael Schumacher infamously held the upper hand over Rubens Barrichello in every regard during their six seasons together, including contractually – although the Brazilian emerged with his dignity intact and with a shelf full of trophies that included a few cups for victories he claimed on full merit.

As his interview with Motor Sport [Matt Bishop Meets, November 2025] emphasised once more, Barrichello accepted his position with good grace (if also through gritted teeth). Austria 2002 and Jean Todt’s scandalous order for him to hand victory to Schumacher at just the sixth of 17 races rammed home the full consequence of what Barrichello had agreed to when he sold his soul at the Maranello crossroads. It remains high among the most depressing days for long-time F1 watchers.

The win rate would have been higher – at 67% – had Barrichello split at the end of 2004. Instead, his final season in red, 2005, was ruined by Bridgestone’s miscalculation on what turned out to be a one-season-only ban on mid-race tactical tyre changes. The ignominy of Schumacher’s lone victory at Indianapolis was the only ‘highlight’ that year. It was an unequal partnership that had paid Ferrari its greatest dividends.

Damon Hill leads Jacques Villeneuve in the dominant Williams FW18

Damon Hill leads Jacques Villeneuve, Estoril, 1996

DPPI

7. Damon Hill + Jacques Villeneuve 1996

Win rate: 75%
Win count: 8 + 4 out of 16 GPs
One drivers’ title
One constructors’ title

A short and sweet partnership between a duo who shared a high level of mutual respect. In Adrian Newey and Patrick Head’s near-perfect Williams FW18, against opposition weakened by Michael Schumacher’s defection from Benetton to Ferrari, just look at those numbers. Only Schumacher’s genius and a freak Monaco GP that fell to Ligier and Olivier Panis thwarted a Rothmans white-and-blue wash.

Villeneuve was lucky, of course, to land from IndyCar into the best car on the grid, but he made the most of his golden chance.

Damon Hill and Jacques Villeneuve celebrate Williams' successful 1996 partnership

The pair ended ’96 first and second

Dppi

Meanwhile, Hill was introspectively focused on a potentially open goal. “I’d been soundly trounced by Michael the previous season and by the end it was pretty torrid,” he told Motor Sport. “So I re-set myself, dumped 1995 in the bin and went into ’96 with a completely fresh mind. I knew I had this one last big opportunity, nothing else worried me, and I really liked Jacques in many ways. He was a fresh face in the sport. He wasn’t tainted by F1.”

How Villeneuve almost embarrassed Hill first time out in Melbourne, then took Damon all the way to the final round, makes this one of the great rookie seasons. A shame then, that Williams made a wrong call, by sacking Hill for ’97 in favour of Heinz-Harald Frentzen. Villeneuve vs Schumacher was spicy as it was. Imagine the tingle had Hill remained in the mix to defend his title.

Jack Brabham leads Denny Hulme during the 1966 Dutch Grand Prix

Jack Brabham and Denny Hulme lead from the front in the 1966 Dutch GP

Grand Prix Photo

6. Jack Brabham + Denny Hulme 1966-67

Win rate: 40%
Win count: 6 + 2 out of 20 GPs

Two drivers’ titles
Two constructors’ titles

A chance encounter for Jack Brabham with an Oldsmobile engine block in Los Angeles triggered a mid-60s burst of glory for this undemonstrative, doughty pair. Fettled by Repco into a compact and frugal V8, then fitted to Ron Tauranac’s safe-as-houses spaceframe BT19, Brabham undercut Lotus, Ferrari and Cooper in Formula 1’s ‘Return to Power’ first 3-litre season – and turned back the clock.

Four in a row across the summer of 1966 – the French, British, Dutch and German Grands Prix – revived memories of Jack’s glorious 1960 season. Now the Old Man – all of 40 – became the first to win in a car bearing his own name, and then a three-time world champion. What a turn-up. He hadn’t won a single points-paying GP through the five years of 1.5-litre F1.

Jack Brabham and Denny Hulme discuss strategy before a Formula 1 race

Team talk, Nürburgring, ’66

GettyImages

His friend and Kiwi team-mate Denny Hulme ably stepped up when Dan Gurney left at just the wrong time to create his lovely Eagles. Then a year later, Denny surprised the boss by outscoring him. His first F1 win, in Monaco, was overshadowed by the horror of Lorenzo Bandini’s death. But Hulme won again later that summer at the Nürburgring, then shadowed Brabham in the Mexican finale to claim an unflustered crown.

The partnership was broken without rancour for ’68 when Hulme transferred to his mate and countryman Bruce McLaren’s team. Brabham’s green-and-gold mid-decade purple patch quickly faded. But talk about taking your chances when they crop up.

Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg begin their Mercedes team-mate partnership

New team-mates Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton before the 2013 Aussie GP

LAT/Sutton Images

5. Lewis Hamilton + Nico Rosberg 2013-16

Win rate: 69%
Win count: 32 + 22 out of 78 GPs
Three drivers’ titles
Three constructors’ titles

Check out those numbers… Nico Rosberg is another who too often is underrated. Fresh from seeing off a returning (and not quite as sharp) Michael Schumacher over three seasons, Keke’s lad welcomed his old karting buddy into the Mercedes fold for 2013. But this was only going to fall one way, surely.

Yes… but Rosberg proved more of a thorn to Lewis Hamilton than most would have predicted. And without him, Hamilton would already have been a record eight-time world champion by the time Michael Masi’s fast and loose reading of the FIA rule book diddled him out of the infamous 2021 crown.

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Paired for F1’s final season with V8 power, both were in the pound seats when Mercedes changed the game as the V6 turbo hybrid era dawned in 2014. The old friendship soon became strained as the stakes rose, Rosberg resorting to gamesmanship at Monaco and overt aggression at Spa to combat the irrepressible force of an all-time great.

He had no answer in 2015 as Hamilton’s career numbers continued to expand – which makes his 2016 achievement all the more impressive. Lewis won 10 races to Nico’s nine, but through guile, genuine speed and some bad luck for the three-time title winner, Rosberg held his nerve to join his old man as a world champion.

His decision to then immediately retire cured a worsening headache for team chief Toto Wolff, given the tattered state of the relationship between his two champions. Another example of bitter irony behind the soubriquet of ‘team-mate’.

Alain Prost and Niki Lauda during McLaren's successful partnership

Alain Prost and champion Niki Lauda in Rio for Round 1 of ’85

LAT Images

4. Niki Lauda + Alain Prost 1984-85

Win rate: 56%
Win count: 6 + 12 out of 32 GPs
Two drivers’ titles
Two constructors’ titles

We’ve previously voted these two as the ‘greatest’ team-mate rivals [The enemy within, January 2024) – another contentious term – and they score highly here too as the best of team-mates. That they famously got on so well again makes them a breath of fresh air, for a far more harmonious run of success compared to other examples on this list. Well, at least between the drivers, we mean. Ron Dennis’s declining relationships with both Niki Lauda and designer John Barnard eroded and shortened the lifespan of this iteration of the ultimate 1980s superteam.

Alain Prost leads Ayrton Senna during McLaren's dominant partnership

Austria, later in ’85 – and Prost is now McLaren’s leading driver

DPPI

This was a different Lauda to the peak version who led Ferrari through its mid-70s pomp. Ruffled at first by Prost’s arrival from RenaultJohn Watson, while quick, was so much easier to live with – Lauda’s famous pragmatism became his greatest strength. He quickly accepted that going toe-to-toe on pure speed was a waste of time, so focused on maximising his scoring potential. Rather than grind his teeth at the half-point defeat in 1984, magnanimous Prost proved forever grateful at the lessons he learned. They’d come in handy for another ‘big beast’ team-mate later in the decade.

In their second season together, there was no contest, although Lauda at least took a 25th and final GP win at Zandvoort. This time he walked away (as a driver) for good as Prost ripped the monkey from his back to become the champion he always was.

Juan Manuel Fangio leads Giuseppe Farina in an Alfa Romeo one-two

Juan Manuel Fangio followed by Alfa team-mate ‘Nino’ Farina, Silverstone, 1951

Getty Images

3. Juan Manuel Fangio + Giuseppe Farina 1950-51

Win rate: 77%
Win count: 6 + 4 out of 13 GPs
Two drivers’ world titles

In his book Fangio by Fangio, The Maestro admitted he was left “bitter” by the mechanical problems that allowed ‘Nino’ Farina – a man he referred to as his friend – to beat him to the inaugural world championship in 1950. “Some observers, in whispers, called attention to those repeated, too regular breakdowns, saying they happened too often to be mere chance,” he wrote. “I refused to listen to such guesswork.” Didn’t stop him pointing it out!

The pair were joined by pre-war grand prix ace Luigi Fagioli to form Alfa Romeo’s ‘three Fs’, and Fangio described the news of a world championship coming into being as “electrifying”. Then he “nearly had a stroke” when he opened a telegram from the great marque inviting him to join its team.

Juan Manuel Fangio and Stirling Moss with the Mercedes Formula 1 team

1950 BRDC International Trophy

Getty Images

Farina carried a reputation into battles. Fangio described him as “loco” in an interview with Nigel Roebuck. “I hated to drive with him in traffic on the way to a race… ay, ay, ay. Of course, he killed himself in a road accident.”

In Alfa’s second and final year with the glorious 158/159, Fangio had the rising force of Ferrari and Alberto Ascari to worry about more than Farina, but had enough to achieve the first of his eventual five titles. As he told Roebuck, “In sentimental terms the Alfetta was my favourite car, because it gave me the chance to be champion for the first time.”

Juan Manuel Fangio leads Stirling Moss in Mercedes Formula 1 cars

Fangio (No8) and Stirling Moss (No10) on their way to a 1-2 in the 1955 Dutch GP

Gilles Levent/DPPI

2. Juan Manuel Fangio + Stirling Moss 1955

Win rate: 83%
Win count: 4 + 1 out of 6 GPs
One drivers’ world title

Here’s a line-up that was a true partnership. But had it lasted beyond one season, had Mercedes-Benz raced into 1956 and beyond, how long would Stirling Moss have maintained his unquestioning deference to the driver he respected beyond all others?

The master-and-apprentice narrative was neatly framed within one near-perfect Formula 1 season. Only the Monaco Grand Prix escaped the silver train, when both Fangio and Moss dropped out to the benefit of Maurice Trintignant.

Juan Manuel Fangio and Stirling Moss celebrate a Mercedes one-two finish

1-2 was reversed at Aintree a month later

Gilles Levent/DPPI

Fangio recalled first meeting and being impressed by Moss at the Bari GP in 1951 (despite lapping his HWM twice). Five years later, Moss was “that tenacious British rival, one of the best I ever drove against”.

In a sports car, Moss already had Fangio’s measure. In F1… well, there was so little between them. Moss appeared content to follow in the Maestro’s wheel tracks that summer. “Fangio was my strongest reason for going to Mercedes,” Stirling would tell our own Rob Widdows in 2007. “I would have done anything for him, I had that much respect for the man. For me, it was the same sort of respect I had for my father, actually. I loved the man, in a different way from my father. But yes, I loved the man.”

Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost celebrate together after a McLaren one-two

Our top team-mates at the close of the 1988 season – a win Down Under for Prost, but the title was Ayrton Senna’s

Fairfax Media via Getty Images

1. Ayrton Senna + Alain Prost 1988-89

Win rate: 78%
Win count: 14 + 11 out of 32 GPs
Two drivers’ world titles
Two constructors’ world titles

All eyes were on Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost during their incendiary two years together at McLaren, and their own were focused solely on each other too.

Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost collide at the 1989 Japanese Grand Prix

Prost out in Japan 1989; Senna DSQ

LAT

In terms of titles it ended as a draw, before Prost felt compelled to leave for Ferrari. But there’s no doubting who had the upper hand in terms of race wins and, more emphatically, poles (13-2 in Senna’s favour, both seasons). Prost focused on finding speed when it counted most. “When he [Senna] impressed me was in qualifying sometimes,” Prost told Motor Sport in 2024 – before adding with iron defiance: “Never in race conditions – never. In race conditions, in the warm-up, most of the time I was quicker than him.”

 

Today, young Kimi Antonelli and George Russell have become the latest team-mates to be pitched into a battle for the world title. Already, there are signs of tension (see their edgy battle in Canada) and Toto Wolff might well be getting Hamilton/Rosberg flashbacks. As we’ve seen, it is possible for team-mates to be friends as well as rivals. But not often, and usually not for long.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

As ever the recent June magazine was full of interesting articles and I may be able to enlighten you regarding one or two. Andrew Frankel remarked on Stirling’s signature [If the cap fits] and as ‘The Boy’ became a friend following his presence at our Bahamas Speed Week Revival I can confirm that his signature was tiny, yet, as Sir Jackie remarked at Stirling’s memorial service in Westminster Abbey, always readable. JYS is the same showing respect to those who covet these items.

I can also add to the tale of Stirling’s old Herbert Johnson ‘bone dome’, having accompanied him to historic races over the years. A small box used to be produced at scrutineering containing this safety device, usually to the horror of the local well-meaning authorities. Following various discussions and the fear that Moss would not be allowed to race he would eventually produce a letter signed by no less a person than then FIA president Max Mosley authorising the use of this ’safety’ helmet.

Sandro Munari sits in a rally car before a historic competition start

Sandro Munari was no slouch in the 1986 historic Coppa delle Alpi; he roared past a Renault 8

Getty Images

While on this subject, at an early Goodwood Festival of Speed, Cedric Selzer’s Lotus 25 was shunted and brought back to the paddock on a trailer rather the worse for wear. A small group was surveying the damage when Stirling walked past, paused to look and said, “Hmph, in my day the wheels fell off a Lotus before the accident.” We miss you Stirling!

David McLaughlin, via email

Your Olivier Panis interview [Matt Bishop Meets…, June] brought back memories of that ’96 Monaco race. I was in charge of Damon Hill’s car that year and by mid-race all was looking fine with a good lead but that changed when Damon came on the radio saying that a warning light came up on the dash. Half a lap later the motor let go.

Close-up of Renault RS8 engine oil pressure release valve assembly

Bob Davis’s picture of the same spec motor called RS-8, not the actual one that blew up in Monaco…

Grand Prix Photo

Post-race when we took the undertray off we discovered the oil pressure release valve had unscrewed itself dumping all the oil! The Renault guys were mortified. From the next race onwards it was lock-wired and never had that problem again.

I was never lucky at Monaco and after 17 years trying the best result was a P3 with Ralf Schumacher.

Bob Davis, via email

I was amazed that you did not include the helmet of Graham Hill in your iconic list [If the cap fits, June].

Andrew Peet, via email

The news of the death of the great Sandro Munari takes me back 40 years to January 1986 when, along with my friend Hector Mackenzie-Wintle, I took part in the historic Coppa delle Alpi in Hector’s Renault 8 Gordini. Or, at least, I took part in some of it. The rally started in the Sestriere ski resort, at over 2000m altitude, and the first stage consisted of about 100km down to Torino.

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Not being a nocturnal person, the rally start at midnight saw me already well past my bedtime. It had been snowing quite heavily for at least the previous 24 hours, and it was bitterly cold, which did nothing to help my humour. Neither of us had any experience of serious winter conditions.

Anyway, our start at 12.06am saw us, or rather Hector, driving gingerly down the snow-covered mountain pass. Within only a few kilometres lights appeared behind us, followed by a Lancia Fulvia HF in full flight, and, by contrast, under complete control. It was being driven by the masterful Munari, who had started a minute behind us. Either because Hector thought he might emulate Munari or, more likely, because he had been unnerved by the experience, at the next hairpin he stuffed the Gord into the Armco.

We continued throughout the night and into the next day, with me becoming more and more weary and less and less interested in the goings-on. Sleep-deprivation is a real torture. Finally we arrived at yet another mountain pass, one on which snow chains were required. I could not have been more thankful to Hector who, in his preparations for the event, had inadvertently packed snow chains which weren’t suited to the Gord’s wheels. Thus ended, mercifully, my Coppa although I suspect Hector wished to continue. He was gracious enough never to complain about his useless co-driver.

To this day I admire and envy rally drivers, not just for their skill but also for their perseverance. Following our experience on the Coppa, what little skill I possess has been applied to events calling for none of the latter.

Tony Gomis, London
Ferrari 312B Formula 1 car races through a fast Monza corner

Rookie driver Clay Regazzoni’s win in the 1970 Italian GP was overshadowed by the death of Jochen Rindt in qualifying

William Curtindale

I searched through your excellent list of memories over the 75 years of Ferraris [75 reasons why we love… Ferrari, July] but found no mention of the amazing 1970 Italian GP win by Clay Regazzoni in the glorious 312B. His first for the team and himself in only his fifth race at the pinnacle of the sport. He repeated the feat in 1975 which fixed him firmly as a hero of the tifosi for ever.

Roger J Spurr, Dronfield, Derbyshire

Just finished reading the interesting article about the Christie C7 and its recreation [Close… and a cigar, July]. What a beast! However, I’m puzzled as to why the treaded tyres are fitted to the rear wheels when the car is front-wheel drive or is the idea to have more grip to improve oversteer?

Jon Jeffrey, Llandudno Junction
Racing drivers share a meal in the paddock during a race weekend

Where’s your red overalls, Gilles? The Canadian driver switched to white later at the ’79 French GP

DPPI

The front wheels are a different diameter to the rear (like the original). No company makes the right size non-skid tyre for the front – Ed

I have to question the caption for July’s Parting Shot. Up to Monaco 1979, Gilles Villeneuve wore red racing overalls. The first appearance of the white Simpson suit was at Dijon 1979, and thereafter, he always wore this colour of racing suit. If this picture was taken at Zolder, I would suggest it was in 1980. If 1979, it would have been taken after the Monaco race.

Andrew Scoley, Bracebridge Heath, Lincoln

Yes, Andrew, it’s Brazil in 1980, not Zolder ’79. Our error. Superb overalls knowledge – Ed

I am writing to compliment Marcus Simmons’ review of Robert Young’s book Special Brew [More with less, July]. Simmons notes that South African champion Syd van der Vyver worked on Stirling Moss’s Lotus 18 at Rob Walker’s Pippbrook Garage. According to Tony Cleverley (team mechanic), van der Vyver spent only a brief period there in June-July 1961, yet he and Alf Francis nearly came to blows. This tension arose after van der Vyver modified the suspension and installed smaller-diameter rear wheel cylinders to optimise braking balance. A month later, Moss went on to win the German GP in that very same Lotus.

Rear view of an early Firestone-backed racing car on a gravel drive

Are the treaded rear tyres of the front-wheel drive 1903 Christie C7 to help with oversteer?

LAT Images

Marius Matthee, Paarl, South Africa

I hate to be the one to say it, ‘but I think you’ll find’ the ‘Godzilla’ moniker for the Nissan Skyline/GT-Rs was first given to the R32 iteration, not R35 [Road Cars, July]. That makes the forthcoming R36 the great great grandson of Godzilla, not son.

Rob Gent, Spalding, Lincolnshire

I’ve just finished the June 2026 issue. As a long-time subscriber, I feel this is your best ever issue. So many good articles with excellent photography, particularly of the restored Lotus 49/R1. You spoil us!

Jorge Alvear, Via Email

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Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

Renault made three big mistakes with the Twingo, happily none of which applies to this fourth, new generation. The first was back in 1992 when it created the original and considered it such a niche product, likely to sell in small numbers in Europe, that there was no business case for building it in right-hand drive. Big error. The car’s design was touched by genius, as clever a piece of packaging as we’d seen since the original Mini in 1959. I was on Autocar at the time and we actually bought one from France and racked up vast mileages because everyone loved bombing about in it.

The second and third mistakes were to make the next two Twingos poor shadows of the original. These were made with right-hand drive but not many cared.

Is the fourth attempt any better, even though it is entirely and exclusively electric?

In almost tacit acknowledgment of how the intervening generations lost their way, the new Twingo shamelessly apes the styling of the original, the same way as does the Renault 5 of its forebear. It may be an unimaginative approach but, when the Fiat 500 and Mini have enjoyed transformative results using precisely the same strategy, it’s easy enough to see why its designers went that way. And it’s hard also to take offence when the result looks this good.

It’s great on the inside too, young and funky, with lots of fun design touches in much the same way as you’ll find in the Fiat Grande Panda – chunky controls and clear instrumentation. Like other Renault EVs, it too allows you to group the ADAS you wish to switch off within a single Perso control.

Renault Twingo E-Tech viewed from behind on winding road.

Use this as your urban drive and the meagre range of 163 miles – far less in winter – shouldn’t trouble you unduly

The Twingo is surprisingly spacious too for such a small car, highlighting one of the benefits of ’skateboard’ EV design. And although a strict four-seater, its rear seats slide fore and aft allowing you to trade rear leg room for boot space and vice-versa according to need. The boot is also much bigger than you’d think as it has a false floor, below which is almost the same amount of space again, albeit substantially occupied by charging cables, if you choose to take them with you.

But perhaps the single most important aspect of the Twingo which needs to be understood is that Renault has quite deliberately given it a very small battery. Its 27.5kWh capacity stands in stark contrast to the 40kWh of even the basic version of its Renault 5 sister despite using the same platform, let alone the 52kWh that is available for that car. What does this mean? On the negative side of the balance sheet, range is limited: 163 miles is claimed but on a cold, wet winter’s day on the motorway at 70mph I’d be surprised if you’d be much past 100 miles before starting to search for charging stations. It will also only charge at 50kW, half of what’s possible with the 5.

“It’s a quarter of a tonne lighter than a Renault 5 and that’s what you feel”

The positives, however, are substantial. Most obviously it means Renault can make and sell it affordably: in the likely event it qualifies for the government grant when sales start in the autumn, expect an entry level model to cost as little as £17,000. And even at 50kW, such a small battery doesn’t take long to charge. As persuasive to readers of this title will be that, at 1200kg, it is up to a quarter of a tonne lighter than a Renault 5 and when you drive it, that’s what you feel.

Another economy Renault has made is to swap the 5’s sophisticated fully independent rear suspension for a simple torsion beam axle: it costs less and frees up more boot space but I was worried it might wreck the ride and handling. But no: while it lacks the outstanding finesse of the 5 chassis, by the less-exacting standards of any other small EV, the Twingo rides well enough and is a delight to hoof through some tight turns: agile, adjustable and with an easily found and simply controlled limit of adhesion. With less than 80bhp on top it might sound like it must be unable to get out of its own way, but in fact it has strong torque and can be rowed along far more rapidly than you might expect.

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If you were to look around my shed and saw the cars there, ranging from an 1950s 2CV to a 1980s Land Rover and a 1990s Caterham, you might struggle to find a thread that connects them. I do not. Really I ask only one thing of any car, and that is to know what it is for, and like the Deuche, Landie and Seven, the Twingo knows not only what it is for, but also for whom. Renault’s decision to keep it simple, light and affordable, recognising it will be used in largely urban contexts or as a second car, has liberated it from constrains that blight so many other EVs: the weight, the expense, the size and the fact they’re no fun.

The Twingo is a joyous little car, as impressive today as was the original, perhaps even more so. Increasingly in the EV universe, it is cars like this, the 5 and Grande Panda which are by far the most appealing of them all. And this might just be the best of the lot of them.

Renault Twingo dashboard with digital display and infotainment screen.

Renault Twingo E-Tech Evolution

Price £17,000 (estimate, including £3750 government grant if eligible)

Engine Front electric motor, 27.5kWh battery

Power 79bhp

Torque 129lb ft

Weight 1200kg

Power to weight 66bhp per tonne

Transmission Single-speed, front-wheel drive

0-62mph 12.1sec

Top speed 81mph

Range 163 miles (WLTP)

Charging speed Up to 50kW

Verdict An outstanding small EV.


REVIEW

Blue Honda Prelude prototype drives on a countryside road.

Well, it looks the part…

On test: Honda Prelude, £39,595

The Prelude returns after a 25-year hiatus; 2 litres, four cylinders, generating power for EV drive; 181bhp and continuously variable transmission. The chassis is exceptional – grippy and balanced. The powertrain? You’ll find yourself wondering why you bothered. A missed opportunity.

Verdict: Powertrain no match for chassis.


COMING SOON

Red Electra X electric SUV drives along coastal road.

Lotus cuts range anxiety

Eletre takes the hybrid route with 2-litre engine

The Lotus Eletre SUV: the same EV car, re-engineered to turn it into a plug-in hybrid by replacing a chunk of its battery capacity with a 2-litre four-cylinder petrol engine, allowing you to replenish energy at a time and place of your choosing, not the car’s. The Emeya will follow suit.


INSIDER NEWS

Classic blue Citroën 2CV parked on grassy field.

Lordy, the 2CV is returning

Citroën to launch the car for cities, not fields

The original tin snail, the Citroën 2CV, is coming back. Sort of. Awful Ami aside, Citroën has been somewhat late to the party when it comes to recalling valuable assets in its back catalogue. It’s due in ’28 and, no surprises, will be an ultra-pared-back, EV city car with a price around £13,000 and a direct rival for the Twingo.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

What did you make of the Ferrari Luce? You will have seen the whole gamut of opinion on social media from apoplectic, spittle-flecked traditionalists to sharp-suited, sockless tech bros patronising all those who don’t understand where it’s coming from.

To say I’m not a fan of the exterior is putting it mildly (I loved the inside), but I’m not going to dwell upon it, first because I am in no better position to judge appearances than anyone else and, secondly, I’ve not actually seen it. Mere photographs are not enough. Even seeing the car in the flesh on a stand is not enough; I’ve changed my mind on such matters on sufficient occasions to know now only to judge a car’s looks once I’ve seen it in its natural habitat, which is on the road, and moving.

“In the next 18 months BYD will install over 300 of its new Flash chargers”

But I was entertained by the superhuman efforts of those who were invited to its Rome launch not to say anything about its appearance which might compromise their chances of being invited on the next Ferrari event while, at the same time, also not saying anything which might bring a torrent of opprobrium down on their head from their audiences too. A tricky balance to strike, you will agree. Some took the time-honoured approach of avoiding the issue altogether, posting a load of pictures and then asking the audience to comment. Others bent over backwards to appear to say something without saying anything much at all, observing that it will invite opinion, that it’ll spark heated debate, that it may not be for everyone and so on.

I did feel for them. A bit. It is not easy to be flown out to an iconic city, be put up in a presumably quite nice hotel, be liberally fed and watered, then be taken to the reveal and have to sit down to breakfast the following day with your hosts whose hospitality you have rewarded with some far from complimentary copy. I know, I’ve been there.

I once wrote a story in which I took Britain’s cheapest car, then a Dacia Sandero, and treated it to the kind of day out you’d usually only ever embark upon in something far more exciting. We went roaming over some of Wales’ best roads thinking that so long as the car is not actively unpleasant, there’s plenty of enjoyment to be had simply from being in such an environment. And so it proved.

A couple of weeks ago, I did a not dissimilar thing, this time in a Kia Picanto, if not Britain’s cheapest car, then certainly up there among its slowest. It served as a powerful reminder of my original point: at least half the fun is the road. Put it this way, teleport me to a Picanto in Snowdonia or a Porsche 911 GT3 trying to get into London from Heathrow at 8am on a Monday and I’ll take the Kia every time.

But there’s something else here too. This most humble of machines was actual, genuine, no-apologies-required fun. It was compact, light, chuckable and had a nice five-speed manual box and a fizzy little engine. While the road was clear, I truly had a ball. The only insurmountable problem is that the moment you chance across anything else, that’s kind of it: a 0-62mph time of 15.4sec means overtaking requires planning, nerve and no small degree of luck. And that’s no fun at all.

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The vast Chinese BYD concern (Build Your Dreams, if you’re interested) is about to revolutionise EV charging. Within the next 18 months it will install over 300 of its new Flash chargers, capable of delivering a 1500kW hit to your EV’s battery, about four times quicker than the fastest chargers currently available. It says it can charge its Denza Z9 GT from 10% to 70% in five minutes flat, and is equating its recharging rates as now being not in the least dissimilar to refuelling speeds for ICE cars.

But there’s a catch: no car on sale in the UK is able to receive anything like that rate of charge. The fastest, like Porsches, Audis, Hyundais, Kias and Lotus EVs, are all rated at around 350kW, so they won’t see much difference.

As ever with the Chinese, they are thinking long-term and the Denza Z9’s market debut in the autumn is just the start. What BYD is aiming to do is essentially what Tesla did at the start of the EV revolution, namely install a game-changing charging network that will be ready to receive the next generation of EVs able to take that level of power, rendering all pre-existing infrastructure obsolete. While for now it’s going to make little difference, in a few years you’re not going to want to charge anywhere else.

On that note, I took an Audi e-tron GT to Scotland for a short walking holiday and found the car a near perfect partner for such a trip: quiet, fast and always pleasant to drive. But the charging process was horrendous: not one charger I used all the way there or back delivered more than half its advertised speed. Plenty didn’t work at all, and at Tebay the queues were so long I had to crawl to the next services. On the way back just getting enough juice into the car added a minimum of 90 minutes to an already long journey. My EV-centric friend says I was unlucky, and my own worst enemy for not stopping to charge when recommended by the car. But should a car not do what I want it to do, rather than the other way around?

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

On Sunday, July 25, 1976, Barry Sheene won the Swedish Grand Prix at Anderstorp, crossing the finish line with both hands raised in V-for-victory salutes to celebrate securing his first MotoGP world championship.

I remember it well, even though I wasn’t there and even though I didn’t find out until a few days later, when that week’s Motor Cycle News hit the newsagents. Such was the life of a motorcycle racing fan 50 years ago.

I’d got my first bike only a few weeks earlier and was already falling under the spell. I recall sitting outside my dad’s house, basking in the heat of that long hot summer, engrossed in the report of Sheene’s triumph, unaware that motorcycles would become my life.

Like many in Britain, I’d got to know Sheene the previous year, watching the ITV documentary recounting the story of the 175mph Daytona crash that nearly claimed his life. The accident and his chipper attitude – he was chatting up the nurses even as his shattered body was wheeled into ER – made him a star.

Some already knew he would be famous, like the TV execs who had sent a film crew with him to Daytona. Motorcycle racing never usually attracts such attention – not then, not now – but Sheene oozed star quality.

“We’d go down to Tramp nightclub. We’d meet all the girls and rich people”

Most of that was natural, but not all. Sheene – who died from cancer in 2003 – knew he would get rich by winning world championships. He also knew he’d get richer by wooing race fans. And he knew he’d get richer still if he broke into the mainstream. And that’s exactly what he did.

Even before Sheene appeared in MotoGP, he could be seen in the pages of national newspapers and teen magazines.

“I began to get myself noticed when people realised that a motorcycle racer isn’t necessarily a mechanic with dirty fingernails but that he could be young, elegant and rich,” said Sheene after doing a deal with Mashe, a French jeans brand. “If I win a race, the specialist magazines tell the fans. If I model for a clothing firm, and my picture appears in the big dailies, millions who might never have heard of me become aware of Barry Sheene, motorcycle world champion.”

Sheene was a canny businessman who understood how cash works.

“In 1971, I borrowed some money to buy a Mercedes to travel to the circuits. Organisers don’t argue about start money if a bloke turns up in a posh car. On the other hand, a rider who turns up in a beaten-up banger of a van, with hands as grubby as a grease monkey, doesn’t stand an earthly.”

Sheene also knew where money lives.

“We’d go up to London, go down to Tramp nightclub,” remembers Steve Parrish, his friend and 1977 Suzuki team-mate (he finished fifth to Sheene’s first). “We’d meet all the girls and all the rich people – potential sponsors.”

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Sheene’s ostentation – whatever the reasons behind it – didn’t sit particularly well with everyone he mixed with.

“He has the taste for money but lacks the good taste to conceal it,” hissed one French journalist.

People shouldn’t have been surprised that Sheene sought fame and fortune, because he didn’t come from there. His dad, Frank, had raced at Brooklands before the Second World War and at the Isle of Man TT after it. He had a nice little job working as the maintenance engineer at the Royal College of Surgeons in Holborn, central London. With the job came a workshop, equipped with a lathe and assorted other machine tools.

Sheene senior took advantage of the facilities to become a well-known two-stroke tuner, while his son spent more time in the workshop than at school. Thus Barry’s interest lay in fettling machines, not riding them.

Sheene’s first summer on the grand prix trail was 1965, when he spun spanners for American Tony Goodman. “Tony and I would sleep in the back of his Ford Thames van and have a brew-up on a little Primus stove in the morning,” Sheene remembered.

Not long after they’d returned from Europe, Goodman contested Northern Ireland’s North West 200, where he crashed and was paralysed. Sheene was shocked by the news, which reinforced his belief that the slower side of the pitwall was the better side.

Inevitably, the temptation became too much. Frank had a deal with Francesc Bultó, founder of the Bultaco marque (and one of General Franco’s artillery officers in the Spanish Civil War), which equipped him with two Bultaco two-strokes each spring. It was up to Frank who raced them.

When the 1968 Bultacos arrived, dad asked 17-year-old Barry to run them in during a Wednesday practice day at Brands Hatch.

“When I pulled in at the end of the day I had to admit it was a pleasant way to spend an afternoon,” Sheene recalled. “Then reports came in that I was looking a bit sharp, a bit nifty, so amidst all the head-swelling and excitement we decided to have a stab at a race the next weekend.”

Sheene crashed out of his first race and finished third in his second later that day. He was on his way.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pedro Rodríguez wins at Spa as Brabham leads the 1970 F1 title race

Maserati fans might have clocked the fact that the Italian marque’s Trident logo is a century old. It made its inaugural appearance in 1926 when the Maserati brothers built the first cars to carry their name.

The idea for using the trident was inspired by the Neptune fountain in Bologna, where the first Masers were made. To mark the milestone, Maserati and timing partner Bianchet have created a limited-edition (100 examples) of the UltraFino Flying Tourbillon.

But this isn’t the first high-end Maserati watch. In 2005 it launched a collaboration with Audemars Piguet that began with a dual time, striking watch called the Millenary Maserati and was followed in 2006 by the more spectacular Millenary MC12 Tourbillon Chronograph made to complement the MC12 supercar. At the time, the watch cost an eye-watering £125,000, compared with the £412,000 for the car. Today, the respective values are £110,000 and, er, £4m.

Close-up view of the Bianchet UT01 movement showing skeletonised gears and rotor

In 2012, meanwhile, Maserati jumped into bed with fellow Italian-rooted brand Bulgari before Bianchet was brought on board as the official timekeeper of the Maserati MSG Racing Formula E team in 2024. As is typical of such collaborations, various details of the new UltraFino Flying Tourbillon have been inspired by those of a Maserati, in this case the MCPura that was unveiled last year.

According to Bianchet, the UltraFino’s case and bracelet “mirror the torsional stiffness of the MCPura’s carbon-fibre chassis” and the ever-revolving flying tourbillon cage, above, “evokes the beating heart of the Nettuno engine” (a 630bhp, twin-turbo V6).

The layout of the skeletonised, openwork dial recalls the pattern of the car’s ‘birdcage’ wheel design and is treated to a hint of the Ai Aqua Rainbow iridescent finish that creates a multicolour shimmer in sunlight.

With a sandwich construction case made from carbon fibre above and below a vulcanised rubber centre, and the extensive use of titanium for many of the 225 parts of the automatic movement, the watch head weighs just 36g. A full wind of the mainspring should keep it running for 60 hours when it’s not being worn.

Buyers may choose to have the individually numbered watches delivered on the titanium bracelet or a rubber strap in Bianchet’s interpretation of Maserati’s signature blue.

Bianchet UltraFino Maserati, £71,700 (approx). bianchet.com


Cartier Roadster LM automatic watch with blue dial and matching rubber strap

The original Roadster of 2002 represented a dramatic departure from Cartier’s traditional, more-understated watches that had been its signature for the best part of a century. It was big and chunky with a cushion case, a speedometer-like dial and a winding crown set into a base inspired by the bulging hubcaps of a 1950s Porsche 356. The first generation Roadster went out of production in 2012 but now there’s a more-refined line-up in a choice of large or small cases. This large steel version, above, is supplied with a matching bracelet and a rubber strap in blue.

Cartier Roadster, £8700. cartier.com


Singer Dual Track watch with green bezel, black dial and orange central hand

Singer Reimagined is the Geneva-based horological department of Californian Porsche restoration firm Singer Vehicle Design – famed for its rebuilt classic 911s. This latest timepiece features a unique movement that drives a constantly moving peripheral disc with 24-hour markings for an at-a-glance check of a second time zone in addition to the one displayed on the central dial. Choose from Horizon Red of Meridian Green, above, disc finishes. It’s water resistant to 100m and supplied on a black, perforated-rubber strap.

Singer Reimagined DualTrack, £21,300. singerreimagined.com