Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

July 5, 1970

Clermont-Ferrand, France

Smiles here, but the reigning Formula 1 champion Jackie Stewart and Motor Sport’s continental correspondent Denis Jenkinson were embroiled in a bitter war of words at this time over the issue of driver safety. Stewart’s close friend Jochen Rindt won this race en route to the 1970 F1 title but would be dead within two months.

 

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

2021 Aston Martin Vantage GTE

Sold by RM Sotheby’s, £190,850

Why buy one Aston Martin Vantage race car when you can have three? That’s what the owner of this V8-engined GTE car did, and then put the entire trio up for sale having barely driven any of them. This particular Aston was built from scratch onto a spare unraced chassis that was completed with rebuilt AMR parts to create the very last of the seven GTEs made. It’s 4.5-litre engine was rated at more than 500bhp but had clocked zero hours since it was finished. On the button and ready to go, it was eligible for some of the most prestigious events of this season’s historic racing programme.

1926 Ford Model T restored roadster

 

Anglia Car Auctions

1926 Ford Model T

Sold by Anglia Car Auctions, £7668

A Model T still on the road at 100 years old. This looked almost as good as new, having been comprehensively restored in 2023. It left the production line on February 11, 1926.

1970 Husqvarna 360 Sportsman motorcycle

 

Manor Park Classics

1970 Husqvarna 360 Sportsman

Sold by Manor Park Classics, £3540

This bike was mint – and sold less than a week after an identical model originally owned by Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas author Hunter S Thompson fetched £27,500 with auctioneer Bring a Trailer.

2006 Ferrari F430 Challenge race car

 

Collecting Cars

2006 Ferrari F430 Challenge

Sold by Collecting Cars, £61,777

With good examples of the 360 Challenge now fetching £200,000-plus, its successor looks like excellent value. This was track-only but fitted with everything necessary for it to be road registered.

2024 BAC Mono Saudia Williams edition

 

Collecting Cars

2024 BAC Mono Saudia Williams

Sold by Collecting Cars, £144,102

The BAC Mono is as close as it gets to a road-going grand prix car – and long-standing F1 fans will know this one’s paint job was based on the 1980 Williams FW07 which Alan Jones drove to title victory.

1994 Range Rover LSE 4.2 V8 with low mileage

 

Anglia Car Auctions

1994 Range Rover LSE 4.2 V8

Sold by Anglia Car Auctions, £119,880

One of the most remarkable Land Rover discoveries of the century, this Range Rover had covered a mere 756 miles. Its original owner died shortly after purchase, leaving his widow to store it away.

1998 Mini Paul Smith edition in blue

 

The Market

1998 Mini Paul Smith

Sold by The Market, £14,000

Only 300 of the 1800 Paul Smith Minis remained in the UK, most going to Japan. This home market rarity reflected his love for colour in flashes of acid green in the boot, glovebox and engine bay.

1987 Renault 5 Turbo Superproduction race car

 

Iconic Auctioneers

1987 Renault 5 Turbo ‘Superproduction’

Sold by Iconic Auctioneers, £331,875

Six ‘Superproduction’ factory-built Renault 5 Turbos were created to contest the 1987 French Supertourisme series – and this is the one driven by Érik Comas to clinch championship victory at Pau-Arnos.

Forthcoming sale highlights

Manor Park Classics, Runcorn, April 10
Manor Park Classics is seriously upping its motorcycle game, as evinced by this sale spanning a century of two-wheeled history. Among the older offerings is a beautifully restored example of BSA’s L28 350cc, famed for its off-road successes. In contrast, there’s also a 2013 Ducati 1199 Panigale with tricolore paint job – both of which are estimated at around the £7000 mark.

Mecum, Indianapolis, May 8-16
Yes, this is another of Mecum’s eight-day blockbusters at the Indiana State Fairgrounds (to which visitors may bring their own golf carts to ease travelling from A to B). Among thousands of lots will be vehicles of every type – including number one of 25 anniversary Gone Again replicas of the ‘Eleanor’ Mustang featured in the 2000 re-make of Gone in 60 Seconds.

Bonhams, Reno, Nevada, June 13
Taking place at Reno’s National Automobile Museum, this auction will be diverse, to say the least. If green motoring’s your thing, bid for a Capitol steam prototype Chariot from 1902 – or, if you really love to burn fossil fuel, put your hand up for the Flying Caduceus from 1960. It was the first jet-powered car to top 300mph (its speedo went up to 700mph).

RM Sotheby’s, Woodcote Park, Surrey, July 8
The RAC’s inaugural concours event held last year at its ‘country seat’ in Surrey has become an annual fixture. No such gathering is complete without a dedicated car auction, which is why RM Sotheby’s has been signed-up to do the honours, with a 1922 Bentley tourer and a 1930 Lagonda 3-Litre being among the lots for this first Woodcote sale.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

Suzuki made dozens of RG500 race bikes between 1974 and 1980, and it’s not unusual to hear the claim that “this one was ridden by Barry Sheene”.

Rear view of the RG500 XR14 showing its twin exhaust outlets, Fabergé-branded tail section and red, white and yellow racing livery.

1. The bike tips the scales at just 135kg – making for the equivalent of 666hp per tonne…

In reality, genuine Sheene-raced RG500s are few and far between. And none is quite so special as this one, which is set to lead Bonhams’ annual Spring Stafford Sale at the end of April.

Close-up of the Suzuki RG500 XR14's square-four two-stroke engine, showing carburettors, drive chain and period racing components.

2. Engine is a 495cc, two-stroke, ‘square four’

Why? Because it’s the actual bike on which Sheene took pole position at Silverstone on August 14, 1977, on the way to winning his second 500cc World Championship in succession (he also won the Formula 750 title in 1973).

Barry Sheene cornering hard on the number 7 Suzuki RG500 XR14 (frame 1201) at the Race of the Year, Mallory Park, 9 October 1977. Credit: Kelsey Media.

3. The ‘French seven’ on the fairing signifies only one rider…

Bearing frame number 1201, the RG500 XR14 is one of only two bikes on which he contested that year’s championship, with the other still being in the ownership of the Sheene family.

Close-up of the RG500 XR14's clutch assembly and carburettors, highlighting the bike's intricate factory racing mechanicals.

4. At a screaming 11,000rpm, the RG500 makes 90hp

The late and much lamented racer (he died in 2003, aged 52) dominated the 500cc class in ’77, winning six of the 11 rounds outright and finishing second and sixth in two others to accrue a total of 107 championship points, 27 more than next-placed rider, Steve Baker.

Barry Sheene in full flight on the number 7 Suzuki RG500 XR14, wearing his iconic red leathers and gold-detailed helmet during his 1977 championship-winning season. Credit: Kelsey Media.

5. Maximum speed is 180mph

From 1980 to ’87, the bike was in the ownership of Peter Agg, the Trojan F1 boss and respected collector who ran the Suzuki race team for several years – and recruited Sheene to it in 1973. Agg sold 1201 to the current owner in around 1987, since when it has been lost to public view.

Close-up of the Texaco Heron Team Suzuki sponsor decal on the RG500 XR14's fairing.

6. The bike’s Heron Suzuki livery is instantly recognisable

“Machines of this calibre and importance rarely come onto the market,” said Bonhams motorcycle guru Ben Walker. “Let alone one raced by the late, great Barry Sheene in one of his championship-winning years.”

We wholeheartedly agree.

1977 Suzuki RG500
On sale with Bonhams, The Spring Stafford Sale, Stafford, April 26. Estimate: £160,000-£200,000. bonhams.com

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

Any time you move into a new house, chances are the previous owner has left it full of junk worthy only of a trip to the dump. Not so for Roger Andreason, the engineer, racing driver, entrepreneur and one-time boss of Chevron Cars who, on taking over a new home in the 1970s, discovered this MG Magnette had been left behind in the garage.

Engine bay of 1956 MG Magnette race car showing rebuilt inline engine and racing components

1.8-litre engine

Jeff Bloxham

A regular road-going Magnette when Andreason inherited it, he soon put his considerable talent as a race engineer to good use by converting it for the track so he could compete as an early member of the Classic Saloon Car Club founded in 1974.

Naming it Emma, he raced the car for two seasons in the pre-1957 class with such good results that he fell in love with Magnettes and built three more into competition cars – respectively Bumble, Mr Pip and the third a name that can no longer be used in print.

Classic saloon cars racing past packed grandstands at Goodwood, with Dunlop-branded pit buildings visible in the background.

A regular on track in recent years

JF Classics

Each was liveried brown and cream, with Emma winning the pre-1957 championship before being sold to fellow racer David Burrows who repainted it red – and subsequently re-sold it back to Andreason, who eventually put it back on the road as a daily driver.

As well as getting him from A to B, the car’s road legal status also enabled Andreason to delve into the world of historic rallying, during which time Emma completed multiple editions of the classic Monte Carlo.

Race-prepared MG interior showing a Momo steering wheel, wood veneer dashboard, aftermarket rev counter and a Marshall fire extinguisher.

Clean inside and out

JF Classics

He finally parted with the car when he was forced to hand it over as part of a divorce settlement, after which it ended up in France before being acquired by historic motor sport impresario Julius Thurgood who – somewhat confusingly – repainted Emma in the Bumble livery it still wears today (but which was never applied to the actual Bumble…)

Thurgood helped to put the car well and truly on the historic racing map with several outings at the Goodwood Revival, including an 11th place finish in the 2012 St Mary’s Trophy race and a 16th in 2014.

A car's window covered in Monte Carlo Challenge rally plaques from multiple years, alongside a Brooklands departure sticker.

No stranger to Monte Carlo

JF Classics

Current owner Mike Lamplough has competed in the car for the past six years, mostly in the Historic Racing Drivers Club series and FISCAR invitation class, racking up a highly respectable ninth place in the Sopwith Cup race at the 2022 Revival along the way.

Lamplough, who has been moved to sell the Bumble/Emma Magnette for medical reasons, is offering the car with a recently renewed Goodwood Technical Declaration, a spare engine block and an assortment of other useful parts.

Repainted and rewired not long ago, it also benefits from a rebuilt 1840cc motor which produced a healthy 128bhp at 5250rpm at its last dyno test.

Offered in turnkey condition and ready to race, the surprisingly competitive Magnette offers a quick, easy and relatively affordable entry into historic saloon racing – and could feasibly see its new owner on the Goodwood circuit at this year’s Revival.

1956 MG Magnette “Bumble” racing at Goodwood Revival with another classic saloon car ahead

Brown and cream livery

JF Classics

If you haven’t already seen Emma perform in real life, there’s some exciting in-car footage of it at goodwood.com.

1956 MG Magnette
On sale with Mike Lamplough, Trowbridge, Wiltshire. Asking price: £27,500. Tel: 01299 556683

DEALER NEWS

 

Doyle’s Mini – professionally restored

Better known for Capris and Escort RS2000s, The Professionals, on ITV from 1977-83, has a link to this 1965 Austin Mini Cooper S, inset, right. Its first owner was actor Martin shaw aka Doyle – the car’s custodian for 20 years. It’s recently had a complete nut-and-bolt restoration, which would have impressed Cowley. It’s on offer for £54,995 at jf classics in Grimsby.

  A restored Austin Cooper Mini in pale blue with a white roof, displayed in a classic car specialist showroom.

New car sales in February were the best since 2004, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders – with a rise of 7.2% over 2025. More than 90,000 cars were registered. Petrol cars made up 46.5% of that figure, with EVs on 24.2%.

Following the merger of Daimler and Benz in 1926, the Mercedes-benz 680 S was its first design. This 1927 Sindelfingen Sports Tourer, left, was owned from 1947-52 by US cartoonist Charles Addams, creator of the Addams Family. He raced the car too, winning an SCCA event at Littlehampton in 1951. It’s on sale with fiskens in London, £POA.

A vintage Mercedes-Benz tourer in cream with red wire wheels, featuring characteristic external exhaust pipes and an open coachbuilt body.

Renault group says it is moving into “high gear” with its futuready strategy, which will see 36 new Renault, Dacia and Alpine models launched between now and 2030 – with Alpine gunning for Porsche, including a petrol version of its new A110.

It sounds like a scene from Terminator, but humanoid robots are now being used by BMW in its Leipzig plant. The bipedal ‘physical AI’ beings are a pilot project with Hexagon Robotics. Initial tasks will involve battery manufacturing and component production. Thus far there has been no mention of tea-making. LG

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

RM Sotheby’s

One of the biggest names in the business. Expect rarities in the Magnus Walker sale and records to be broken at Monterey.
Magnus Walker: The Outlaw Collection, Mar 18-25, Online
Monaco auction, Apr 25, Monaco
The Tegernsee Auction, Jul 4, Gmund am Tegernsee, Germany
Woodcote Park, Jul 8, Epsom
Monterey, Aug 14-15, California

Broad Arrow Auctions

It may be a new player (founded in 2021) but Broad Arrow has fast made a reputation for selling fine collector cars at top events.
The Porsche Air|Water Auction, Apr 25, Costa Mesa, California
Global Icons: Spring Online Auction, May 11-18, Online with In-Person Preview at Museo Alfa Romeo, Italy
The Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este Auction, May 16-17, Villa Erba, Italy
The Quail Auction, Aug 13-14, Carmel, California

Iconic Auctioneers

Closer to home, Iconic sales are great for both road and race machinery.
The Classic Sale at the Classic Car and Restoration Show, Mar 21-22, NEC, Birmingham
The Iconic Sale at Supercar Fest, May 16-17, Sywell, Northampton
The Iconic Sale at the BRDC Classic – Competition & Collectors’ Cars, Jul 24-25, Silverstone, northants
The Classic Sale at CarFest 2026, Aug 29-30, Silverstone, northants

Mecum Auctions

Vibrant events and busy sales floors are the order of the day for this US-based firm.
Glendale, Mar 17-21, State Farm Stadium, Arizona
Houston, Apr 9-11, NRG Center, Houston, Texas
Indy, May 8-16, Indiana State Fairgrounds, Indianapolis
Monterey, 13-15 Aug, Del monte golf course, monterey, california
Las Vegas, Nov 12-14, las vegas convention center, las vegas

Ayrton Senna’s Toleman TG184 Formula 1 car

Senna’s 1984 Toleman set for Sotheby’s, Monaco

Artcurial

Having already held two big events this year, Artcurial will stage a major sale at the Le Mans Classic Legend.

Le Mans Classic, Jul 3, Circuit des 24 Heures, Le Mans, France

Bonhams

An enviable line-up of sales awaits one of the oldest and best-respected houses.
Goodwood Members’ meeting, Apr 19, Goodwood, chichester
Monaco, Apr 24, Fairmont Hotel
Miami, May 3, Miami International Autodrome
National Automobile Museum, Jun 13, RENO, NEVADA
The Bonmont Sale, Jun 21, Chéserex, Switzerland
The Laguna Seca Auction, Aug 13, Laguna Seca, california
Goodwood Revival, Sep 19, Goodwood, chichester

Gooding Christie’s

Not as numerous, but these events feature some of the best of the best automobiles.
Pebble Beach, Aug 14-15, pebble beach, california
Rétromobile New York, Nov 19-20, New York

Barratt-Jackson

Get booking your transatlantic flights for these unmissable Stateside sales.
Palm Beach, Apr 16-18, South Florida Fairgrounds, west palm beach, florida
Columbus, Jun 25-27, ohio expo center, columbus, ohio
Las Vegas, Sep 10–12, Las Vegas Convention Center, Las Vegas

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

There is simply no finer gathering of classic road and race cars Stateside than the Rolex Monterey Motorsports Reunion, and it’s an event steeped with its own interesting history.

In November 1950, the inaugural Pebble Beach Road Race took place, with competitors facing a twisting 1.8-mile Tarmac and gravel course around the Del Monte Forest. Phil Hill won the first-ever Del Monte Trophy in his Jaguar XK120. Road racing around Del Monte lasted only six years before the event was halted following the death of Ernie McAfee after his Ferrari hit a tree. The sport needed somewhere to call home, and this proved the genesis of a track carved out of a dry lake nearby, called Laguna Seca.

The 2.2-mile circuit is one of America’s best-loved venues, and the Rolex Monterey Motorsports Reunion stands as its flagship historic event, tracing its roots back to 1974. It’s come a long way since those early days and now regularly features over 500 cars exclusively invited to compete each season. As well as the cream of the crop of classic grand prix, sports, touring and Indycars,
the 2026 running will shine a light on Japanese icons with legendary cars from Toyota, Mazda, Nissan, Honda and more… expect more than a smattering of Group C beauties!

IndyCar racing through circuit corner

There’s a packed racing programme with 13 different grids and some standout entries. A highlight of last year was the Unser Family Cup race for International Race of Champions (IROC) cars, which more than lived up to its name with Trans-Am star Tomy Drissi taking glory in his 2006 Pontiac Firebird, ahead of four-time IndyCar champion Dario Franchitti and NASCAR legends Kurt Busch and Jeff Gordon. Zak Brown was 12th, with a chap called Jenson Button being an early retirement after qualifying third.

If you fancy something more current, Laguna also plays host to America’s big-hitters, including both IMSA and IndyCar. IMSA hosts its fourth round (May 1-3) with a 2hr 40min thrash involving the latest Hypercars and GTs.

Prototype race cars battling in endurance event

Perhaps the jewel in the crown though is the IndyCar finale in September. IndyCar is a juggernaut of US racing, and getting to see the victor parade the trophy is always a spectacle that draws tens of thousands of fans. weathertechraceway.com

IMSA Monterey SportsCar championship

May 1-3

Rolex Monterey Motorsports reunion

Aug 12-15

IndyCar Monterey Grand Prix

Sept 4-6

Classic cars at urban rally in Switzerland

Tour Auto, France

May 3-9

One of Peter Auto’s best-loved events, the Tour Auto, above, is a regularity road rally held around France that’s awash with performance favourites ranging from E-types and 911s to Ferrari 250s, and you’ll even spot the more humble Austin-Healey and Mini. If you love classic cars and great French cuisine, mark your calendar. peterauto.fr

Concours d’Elegance Suisse, Switzerland

Jun 19-21

An event with a notable history. Switzerland’s marquee Concours was actually founded way back in 1927 and held at prestigious locations around the country. Revived in 2016, the modern variant is now into its 11th year. Its home is the Château de Coppet on the shores of Lake Geneva – a wonderful setting for a gathering of 80-100 rare and collectors’ cars. concoursdelegancesuisse.com

Le Mans Classic Legends, France

JuL 2-5

A new era for a superb event. Relive Le Mans’ glory years from the 1970s up to the 2010s, with whale-tail Porsches and aero-heavy prototypes descending on the Circuit de la Sarthe for a full weekend of action. The original Le Mans Classic format celebrating the race’s formative and vintage years still exists, with the Classic Heritage returning next year. There are also supercar runs, parades, night sessions and live music. lemansclassic.com

Classic cars at urban rally in Switzerland

Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance, US

AUG 16

What is widely considered the world’s leading concours competition is celebrating its 75th anniversary and paying homage to the sports cars that featured in the early Pebble Beach Road Races. A special guest will be the 1927 Sunbeam 1000 HP, which Sir Henry Segrave took to a world record 203.79mph on Daytona Beach in 1927. It’ll stand out from the usual Ferrari crowd! pebblebeachconcours.net

Passione Engadina, Switzerland

Aug 21-24

Held in the shadow of Saint Moritz, Passione Engadina is preparing for its 15th edition this year with an ‘Italian Job’ theme – which is more a nod to the heights of Italian car design than the 1969 Michael Caine caper. It’s part car show, part concours, with a two-day regularity challenge at its heart. Pre-1986 classics are the main draw, but there’s also a celebration of up-and-coming ‘young timer’ future classics up to 2006 plus a smattering of modern supercars too – “at the sole discretion of the organiser”. passione-engadina.ch

Vintage race cars lining up at Spa Classic

Spa will once again echo to the sound of ageing engines this September

Techno Classica Salon, Germany

Sep 24-27

Despite its catchy title, this is no dance rave in a central European field. Techno Classica Salon, above, in Dortmund is instead a world fair for classic, vintage and prestige cars with a heap of content on offer. Staged across six halls and 50,000sq m of the Messe Dortmund exhibition centre, it’s one of the busiest classic car shows in the world with more than 1250 exhibitors. technoclassica.de

Spa 6 Hours, Belgium

Sep 25-27

A staple of the European classic racing calendar, the Spa 6 Hours is a living, breathing showcase of historic racing on one of the world’s great tracks. The 6 Hours itself is dedicated to Pre-1965 touring and GT cars and always features a huge entry. Then there’s support from classic Belcar (Belgian GTs), the Derek Bell Trophy Series (F1, F3, F5000 and Super Vee, 1967-84), Historic Formula Junior and a load more. spasixhours.com

Do it yourself

Watching is one thing, but getting stuck in with your own car is a game-changer

Porsche GT3 RS on Nürburgring track day

RSR Spa/Nürburg

RSR is the leading name for trackdays and car rental at Spa and the Nürburgring. Fancy gaining some mileage in your own vehicle? Check out their premium track days. Or if you’d rather not risk it, hire. rsrbooking.com

Vintage car on countryside rally route

Rally The Globe

Own a vintage or classic car and fancy an adventure? Rally the Globe offers events around the world that are easily accessible and meticulously planned. All skill levels are welcome. rallytheglobe.com

Classic cars parked outside Avalon Hotel

Bespoke Rallies

For those seeking thrills further afield, Bespoke Rallies can take you global. From South America to Madagascar, India and the Himalayas, events aren’t about speed but the experience. bespokerallies.com

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

Donington Historic Festival

(MAY 1-3)

There are few circuits in the country better for viewing than Donington Park, with its elevation changes and fast sweeps. Add in three days packed with eclectic historic content and you’re on to a winner. Featuring grids covering everything from pre-war sports cars right up to the new GT3 Legends category, the event has something for everyone. Highlights include the Gerry Marshall Trophy for pre-1983 tin-tops, classic F1 action from the Historic Grand Prix Cars Association and a mouthwatering field of sports cars from the 1950s and ’60s. There’s even the Generations Trophy, where families compete aboard MGBs. donington-park.co.uk

Colorful classic cars displayed at racetrack meet

They’ll be flying the flag at Brands Hatch for the Brands Britannia day in May

Goodwood Members’ Meeting

APR 18-19

Classic cars and blooming tulips signal the start of the historic racing season, and there are few places more glorious than Goodwood on a spring day. If you can get a ticket for the Members’ Meeting, go and experience all the wonders this place offers. goodwood.com

Brands Britannia, Brands Hatch

MAY 25

In need of a shot of patriotism? Back for its fourth running, Brands Britannia is crammed with all things British. Expect to see everything from Jaguars, Midgets and Minis to souped-up saloons being thrown around the Indy circuit. Add a showcase of classic cars, clubs and live music and it’s more homegrown than a Greggs sausage roll. brandshatch.co.uk

NASCAR burnout at Goodwood Festival of Speed

Masters Historic Festival/Brands Hatch 100

MAY 30-31

The Kent circuit hits a milestone anniversary. Back in 1926 Brands Hatch first opened as a grass and gravel track. While it didn’t switch to Tarmac until 1950, it’s still fitting to celebrate the birth of one of Europe’s best-loved circuits. Masters knows how to put on a show, especially on the lesser-used Grand Prix layout. For the 20th running of the event there’s a feast of on-track action featuring classic F1, touring, sports and GT cars alongside a plethora of off-track activities. brandshatch.co.uk

Wilton House Concours des Légends

JUN 19-21

Something different for your diary. Wilton House is a stunning 16th-century stately home in Salisbury, and now the venue for an all-new event which aims to tell the stories of some legendary classic cars and the people who built them. Expect high-end classics, plus special guest speakers (Richard Attwood and Stefan Johansson are already confirmed), art exhibitions and a literary festival with talks and book signings. Dore & Rees has three auction sales planned, so it’s worth investing more than a day. concoursdeslegendes.co.uk

Goodwood Festival of Speed

JUL 9-12

This is an event like no other, above. It’s part motor show, part exhibition, part high-speed hillclimb. Each year hundreds of thousands of people flock to the Goodwood Estate to see the great and good of global motoring and motor sport on full display. From new car launches, to meet and greets, supercar displays and demos, and those full-blooded timed runs up the hill that feature everything from classics to Formula 1 via tuned monsters. Look out for those three 1966 Le Mans Ford GT40s. goodwood.com

Shelsley Walsh Classic Nostalgia

JUL 18-19

Part of the draw of Shelsley’s flagship event is the sheer breadth of it. One moment you’re craning your neck towards a high-revving Surtees TS19, the next a thundering NASCAR is smoking its way past at speed, followed by a WRC Subaru at lurid angles. It offers a bit of everything for the motor racing aficionado. Prodrive will be a partner this year celebrating the 25th anniversary of Richard Burns’ WRC title. As such, David Lapworth will be demonstrating the Safari Rally-winning Impreza. classicnostalgia.co.uk

Vintage Formula cars racing at historic event

Castle Combe has a busy schedule in ’26, with its operating company celebrating its 50th anniversary

Wiltshire’s classic gem

Britain is blessed with a thriving club racing scene, aided by several excellent venues that provide an ideal stage for grassroots competition; Castle Combe is an example.

First opened in 1950 on a former World War II airfield, it stands as one of Britain’s oldest race venues and every year puts on an impressive schedule of events.

Combe has long been home to some of the country’s most popular single-circuit series – all operated by the Castle Combe Racing Club. Its Saloon, Hot Hatch and GT categories provide great entertainment, but the star is its Formula Ford Championship which gives wheel-to-wheel thrills. Such is the challenging nature of the track – the run up to Quarry Corner is called Avon Rise for a reason – it promotes close competition. The first rounds of each are on Howard’s Day (April 6), named in honour of the late circuit owner Howard Strawford.

The Historic Sports Car Club celebrates its 60th anniversary with a showpiece event (August 8-9), while the Autumn Classic (September 12-13) has emerged as a flagship meet, attracting grids from a number of clubs such as Motor Racing Legends, Ferrari Owners’ Club and Historic Racing Drivers’ Club. This year it marks 50 years of the track’s operating company so expect to see a host of cars and displays linking back to the track’s rich history. castlecombecircuit.co.uk

KEY CASTLE COMBE EVENTS
APR 6 HOWARD’S DAY
AUG 8-9 HSCC 60th SUMMER HISTORIC FESTIVAL
SEP 12-13 AUTUMN CLASSIC
OCT 3 CHAMPIONS CORONATION RACEDAY

BRDC Classic

JUL 24-26

Silverstone’s historic showpiece may have undergone a host of name changes – from Silverstone Classic to Silverstone Festival, and now the reimagined BRDC Classic – but this is a truly standout event at the home of British motor sport. With Carfest taking the traditional August slot, the BRDC Classic is now in July. Top-tier attractions include the new GP Icons and Endurance Icons fields. GP Icons brings together the cream of historic 3-litre F1 cars from the 1960s to the ’80s for an ear-splitting DFV chorus, while Endurance showcases sports and GTs from 1995-2012, meaning precision LMP1s and 2s and GTs from the big-engine era before turbos took over. With grids from Motor Racing Legends, the HSCC and more, plus a huge trade and exhibitor area, displays, Q&As and a Silverstone Auctions event, it’s set to be one of the summer’s biggest attractions. silverstone.co.uk

VSCC Prescott Hill Climb

AUG 1-2

The jewel in the crown of the Vintage Sports-Car Club calendar, above, this has been going since 1938 and attracts a bumper entry and some seriously close competition. A 1031m blast up twisting roads is at the heart of the Vintage Prescott weekend, which also features club displays and trade stands. The atmosphere is always superb, especially when cheering on an underdog doing its best to keep up with the rapid specials. vscc.co.uk

Driver racing vintage red car on country road

Oulton Park Gold Cup

AUG 29-31

What began as a non-championship Formula 1 showcase in 1954 has blossomed into a full-blown celebration of historic motor sport. Run by the Historic Sports Car Club, the event is a three-day programme including the Derek Bell Trophy for F5000 and F2 cars and the popular Guards Trophy for sports and GT racers of the 1960s. Keep an eye open for the Historic Formula Ford 1600 grid too. They may not be the fastest but they create superb racing around Oulton’s turns. There’s also a celebration of Brabham and the 60th anniversary of Can-Am, plus auctions and displays. oultonpark.co.uk

Salon Privé

SEP 2-6

Fancy a bit of glitz and glamour? You won’t find much better than Salon Privé, which takes place in the grounds of Blenheim Palace. Some of the finest classic cars from around the world gather for the concours competition, and it’s awash with collectors, restorers and manufacturers. salonpriveconcours.com

Knockhill Rewind Classic Festival

SEP 5-6

Attention motorcycle fans: Knockhill’s celebration of all things two-wheeled (well, three if you include sidecars) returns and promises a heap of thrills north of the border. As well as being a rather picturesque setting, the Fife track is also a supremely challenging one, so it’s a great stage to see rare and classic bikes pushed to their limits, and with a few special guests, including UK stunt champion Jonny Davies. knockhill.com

Classic and modern cars at indoor exhibition

See upwards of 3000 cars at the NEC…

Goodwood Revival

SEP 18-20

Think Disneyland, if Walt had a passion for motor sport. The Revival is a portal back to a golden age – specifically 1948-1966 but often stretching into the ’70s too – when racing was pure glamour with fashion to match. Don your finest tweeds and get lost in hundreds of displays, trade stands and activities. In fact, it can be easy to forget there’s a world-class race meeting going on, featuring perhaps the finest historic grids ever assembled and festooned with star drivers. It’s just a wonderful thing – with more overtakes in a weekend than an entire season of F1. goodwood.com

Classic Motor Show

NOV 13-15

A show which grows in stature and popularity every year (more than 72,000 visitors in 2025 attests to that), the Classic Motor Show is a must-visit. Held across seven of Birmingham NEC’s cavernous halls, it comprises over 310 club stands and in excess of 3000 classic and vintage cars to drool over – which adds up to millions of pounds worth of automotive rarities. There are special guests too – still to be confirmed for 2026; last year there were appearances from Richard Hammond, Mike Brewer and Tiff Needell. There’s also a chance to get acquainted with your dream classic thanks to passenger rides, and perhaps even invest in one through the live Iconic Auctioneers sales – last year a rare Ford RS200 S, one of just 20 made, was sold for £382,500. necclassicmotorshow.com

Historic and modern F1 cars on banked track

Brooklands is planning displays of GP cars on the concrete banking spanning the past 100 years of racing

Brooklands Grand Prix Centenary

AUG 8

“A brighter scene than Brooklands on August 7th, 1926, would be hard to imagine; sunshine, dresses, sumptuous cars, grass, trees, advertisements, and lastly the little green and blue projectiles themselves, such is the picture retained in the mind, of this great event.” So reported Motor Sport on the first grand prix to be run in Britain (purists note: not the first British Grand Prix) and we will be reporting again from the Surrey track come August. To mark the centenary of that nine-car race (just three finished) Brooklands Museum is throwing a huge party featuring 100 grand prix cars from the 1920s right up to modern F1 machines, live demo runs on the next-door circuit at Mercedes-Benz World plus displays along the famous concrete banking and finishing straight. Organisers tell us they hope for a family friendly atmosphere – much like the original race – with live music, driver interviews and hospitality. Tickets are on sale now and cost £39.95 for adults and £19.95 for children 4-17. Children under four go free. brooklandsmuseum.com

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

There are a small number of racing drivers whose stories only truly reveal themselves, or even make sense, when you stop thinking about lap times and start thinking about geography: terrain, climate, temperature and distance. Heikki Kovalainen’s life can be understood best when you begin not with his sole Formula 1 grand prix victory in Hungary in 2008, but with the frozen wastelands of eastern Finland, where the silence can feel as heavy as the snow, and where a young car nut’s ambition to race or even rally must be self-generated because there is so little around to feed it.

“I grew up in Suomussalmi, in the east of Finland, near the Russian border,” he tells me in January, speaking via Teams, sitting in his cosy-looking kitchen in the house that he shares with his English wife Catherine and their two-year-old son Emil. He’s in Ruka, just 50 miles south of the Arctic Circle, which makes it “a 90-minute drive north of Suomussalmi”. So do you live in Lapland, I ask him? “Ruka is technically not quite in Lapland, no, although some people classify it as in Lapland. But it’s been cold here recently. It was –30˚C last week, but it’s warmer today: –25˚C.”

Young Kovalainen races a Ward Racing kart, number 29, on track.

By 2000, Heikki Kovalainen was well-known in Scandi karting – and able to find sponsorship

Jacky Foulatier/DPPI

That last sentence says a lot. Neither Ruka, where he lives, nor Suomussalmi, where he was born and raised, sits on the familiar Finnish motor sport conveyor belt that runs through the south of the country. “Yes, it’s an unusual place for a racing driver to come from,” Heikki confirms. “All the other Finnish F1 drivers, and most of the Finnish rally drivers as well, come from the south of the country, in or around Helsinki. Where I come from, it’s more winter sports – ice hockey, cross-country skiing, tobogganing, ice fishing, that sort of stuff.”

Even so, motor sport arrived early in young Heikki’s life. “My father [Seppo] was doing a bit of rallying when I was young,” he says, “and almost as soon as I was able to walk I started watching him.”

Heikki’s motor sport initiation is not therefore the typical story of a child glued to a television, watching Ayrton Senna or Michael Schumacher. No, his is a story of sub-zero mornings, snowy boots and practical involvement: “Soon I started cleaning his rally cars. That’s where my passion for rallying first came from, because rallying was my first experience of motor sport.”

“Dad never bought the best kit. We did good deals. I wasn’t particularly successful at first”

That distinction matters. Rallying teaches different lessons from racing, especially in territories where the winter mercury rarely approaches the zero mark: hardiness, obviously, but also patience, mechanical sympathy and the understanding that speed is contextual rather than absolute. It also instils humility. “I’d often spend early mornings at the service parks,” Heikki remembers, “where everyone had to work hard on their own cars, in the cold, in the dark.” It was all normal to him: snow, ice, tools and effort.

Kovalainen drives the Opodo-sponsored number 23 car during a GP2 race.

Racing with Fortec in the F3 Korea Super Prix, 2001

Sutton Images

His initial competitive experience came not through careful planning but via pure chance. “My first time in a kart was when I was six,” he recalls. “A family friend was visiting us from the south of Finland, he had a kart in the back of his van, and he let me have a go in it. That’s how I ended up going in a racing direction rather than rallying. Before that, I wasn’t even following F1.”

Yet if the racing seed was planted early, the soil was not especially fertile, for the Kovalainens were resolutely ordinary. “We were a normal family,” Heikki says when I ask him about finances. “My dad ran a property maintenance business with his brother. It was a small firm that put food on our table, but nothing more than that. I had to do my bit during the school holidays. In summer I was cutting grass and in winter clearing snow.”

His mother, Sisko, worked even harder. “She ran a weather station from our house,” Heikki explains, “and, because the technology wasn’t what it is today, she had to read and report all the data every three hours, day and night, 365 days a year.”

Money was tight, and karting inevitably required sacrifice, but the Kovalainens managed. Their nearest kart track was a two-hour drive away in Oulu, western Finland, near the coast of the Gulf of Bothnia, the northern part of the Baltic Sea. “We started to go there a few times a month, just for me to practise a little bit at first, initially with borrowed karts. It wasn’t until I was 10 that I got a kart of my own. Then we went to Oulu more often, to compete in local events. After that we started to go south, to where there was more karting, and we began to enter better-quality kart races. We had a little van, we put our kart in the back of it, and we slept in that van as well.”

Their equipment was far from state-of-the-art. “Dad never bought the best kit,” Heikki says. “Instead we always tried to do good deals.” His results reflected that pragmatism. “I wasn’t particularly successful at first,” he admits, smiling sheepishly. But, together, father and son kept plugging away, but there was trouble ahead.

Kovalainen stands on the Oulton Park podium after a British F3 Championship race victory.

A win in British F3, centre, in 2002 at Oulton Park

LAT

“In the summer of 1997, when I was 15, we drove to Gothenburg in Sweden to compete in the Scandinavian Karting Championship. Someone spun ahead of me, I couldn’t avoid him, we made heavy contact, my kart rolled, and the impact broke my left leg. My left femur was totally smashed. I was taken to the Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg [which, if you are interested, is the third-largest hospital in Europe], I had an operation there, I was put on a medical flight to Oulu, and eventually I got home. It was a setback, but my passion never died, and once I’d recovered we continued.”

Momentum began to build properly between 1998 and 2000, thanks in no small part to Heikki’s unique and unexpected selling proposition. “The one good thing about living in such a remote part of Finland was that, because competing in motor sport was so unusual there, I began to attract a bit of local interest. As a result I was able to win sponsorship more easily than the other Finnish guys of my age who were living in the south, where motor sport was more popular and there was therefore more competition for local sponsorship. We began to gather together a few sponsors, particularly Timo Hulkkonen, who was a rally driver and a businessman. I contacted him, I went to see him, I told him my story – that I wanted to go all the way, that I wanted to become a professional racing driver, that I wanted to race in F1 – and he bought it.”

Better results began to follow, and in 2000 “my karting career kind of hit the pinnacle”, as Heikki puts it. “I finished third in the Formula Super A World Championship in Portugal, I won the Nordic Championship and the Paris-Bercy Elf Masters. That led to Bruno Michel [arguably junior racing’s most influential impresario] contacting me, and he offered me a place on Renault’s young driver programme.”

From there, Kovalainen’s progress quickly became steeper. He won races in Formula Renault UK, British Formula 3 and World Series by Nissan, competing for Fortec, Gabord and Pons. For the latter team, in 2004, he became World Series by Nissan champion, as a result of six race wins. “Next, in 2005, came GP2, with Arden,” he relates, warming to the subject. “The championship was between me and Nico [Rosberg], who was racing for ART. Most people said that ART was going to be the team to beat, but we got going well, and soon we started winning, too.”

Indeed they did: Kovalainen won for Arden at Imola, Nürburgring, Magny-Cours, Istanbul and Monza, after which, with two rounds remaining, he headed the championship standings, four points ahead of Rosberg, 99 points to 95. Because GP2 was an F1 support series – as is its successor, Formula 2, today – we F1 insiders were able to watch the battle between the two young guns at close quarters. Rosberg, the son of 1982 F1 world champion Keke, was clearly quick and obviously clever, and we knew that his father had supported him with not only hard-won expertise but also significant funding. By contrast, we regarded Kovalainen as the boy from the sticks who had worked his way up by the sweat of his brow.

The championship went all the way to the final round, in Bahrain. “In the end Nico took the title,” says Heikki, shrugging. “I was a bit sad not to win it, but it was a good year all the same, because I’d pushed Nico hard and everyone in F1 knew that Nico was Keke’s son, and there was money behind him; and the Renault guys were happy with what I’d done.”

In 2006 he raced not at all – but only because in those days F1 outfits had dedicated test teams and required full-time test drivers. Ferrari had Luca Badoer, McLaren had Pedro de la Rosa, Williams had Alex Wurz, Honda had Anthony Davidson, Red Bull had Robert Doornbos and Michael Ammermüller, BMWSauber had Robert Kubica and Sebastian Vettel, and Renault had Kovalainen: a posse of A-listers. “I was present at pretty much all the tests,” he says, “and I took care of most of the tyre-testing work. I did about 30,000km [more than 18,000 miles] of testing in Renault’s F1 car that year – quite a bit more in total than the team’s two race drivers, Fernando [Alonso] and Giancarlo [Fisichella], and I learned everything.

2004 World Series by Nissan champ

2004 World Series by Nissan champ, having finished second in ’03

Francois Flamand/DPPI

“In the middle of that year, 2006, there was a Jerez test, and I wasn’t supposed to know that it was a try-out to see whether I’d be ready to race in F1 in 2007. Luckily, one of my engineers secretly let me know, so I focused harder than I would in a normal test, and the result was that, when Fernando left for McLaren at the end of that year, I was selected to be Giancarlo’s team-mate.”

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Then came the 2007 Australian Grand Prix, Kovalainen’s F1 debut, and a brutal awakening. “I hadn’t felt that good during the winter,” Heikki says, frowning. “Physically, I was struggling a bit. On Friday it was wet, and I did OK. Then, on Saturday, qualifying was a disaster.” He is being unfair on himself. Fisichella qualified sixth, Kovalainen 13th. Yes, he was the slower of the two, but, lest we forget, Giancarlo had driven 176 grands prix, and had won three, whereas Heikki was doing everything for the very first time.

“Well, OK, but the race was even worse,” says Heikki, reluctant to accept mitigating factors, and it is true that he spun at Turn 2, the Jones Chicane, on lap 40; he ran wide more than once in the first two-thirds of the race; and he ended up 10th, a lap behind the leaders. “Flavio Briatore wasn’t happy,” Kovalainen mumbles ruefully. That is undoubtedly true. A notoriously hard taskmaster, after the race the Renault team principal told us reporters that his rookie’s performance had been “rubbish”. To add injury to insult, Fisichella had driven well to finish fifth, and the other rookie in the race, Lewis Hamilton, had shown himself to be a megastar in the making. Salvation came not from confrontation but from the wisdom and composure of an old hand, Renault’s engineering director Pat Symonds. “I had a long chat with Pat afterwards,” Heikki says, “and he was very calm. That was important, because he gave me direction again.”

Kovalainen drives a Red Bull-liveried car during the 2003 World Series by Nissan.

Arden’s Kovalainen was GP2 runner-up in 2005

Eric Vargiolu

Improvement duly followed. Kovalainen scored points in Sepang and Barcelona, and a breakthrough came in Montreal. Despite a 10-place grid penalty caused by an unscheduled engine change, which resulted in his starting the race from P19, he drove hard and well to fourth place at the flag. Again, however, Hamilton hogged the limelight, scoring his maiden grand prix win in only his sixth F1 start. “That fourth place was a great relief,” says Heikki. “Then, the very next weekend, at Indy, I finished fifth.”

From the British Grand Prix onwards, points became routine. He was seventh at Silverstone, eighth at Nürburgring, eighth again at Hungaroring, sixth in Istanbul, seventh at Monza, eighth at Spa, and – his first F1 podium – second at Fuji.

“In Japan I remember that I had massive jet lag,” he recalls, “and I had trouble sleeping throughout the weekend. I qualified 12th, on race day it was raining really heavily as we drove to the grid, and I was struggling to keep the car straight even on the formation lap. So I said to my race engineer, Adam [Carter], ‘Look, it feels really bad, but I’ll try my best and we’ll see what happens.’ Honestly, the car was terrible. The race started behind the safety car, and I actually started to feel sick because we spent so long braking and accelerating and weaving to keep the brakes and tyres warm. Then, after 20-odd laps of that [19 actually], we eventually got going, and I realised that, OK, my car didn’t feel great, but everyone else was also struggling, and I could keep up with the cars around me.

Kovalainen, Alonso and Fisichella pose with the Renault F1 car at a launch event.

By 2006, Kovalainen, left, was a full-time F1 test driver at Renault – here with eventual title winner Fernando Alonso and his team-mate Giancarlo Fisichella

Grand Prix Photo

“Then, little by little, I began to overtake a few of them, there were some accidents ahead of me, and I started moving up the order. In the end I found myself in second place, between Lewis’s McLaren and Kimi’s [Räikkönen] Ferrari. I couldn’t keep up with Lewis, but I could stay ahead of Kimi, and second is where I finished. It felt good to be standing on the podium with them, but to be honest my strongest emotion was relief.”

Briatore had already left the circuit. “He thought we weren’t going to achieve a mega result, so off he went. But he called me later and said, ‘Yeah, OK, well done.’”

Flavio, in Heikki’s telling, was complex. “He wasn’t a great coach,” he says, slowly and carefully, “but he was a highly influential person and you’d always want him on your side. He was my manager at the time, not only my team boss, and he was doing good deals for me. I fell out with him eventually, we parted, and that was a mistake. I shouldn’t have left his management. I mean, I wouldn’t go out to dinner with him, and I wouldn’t hang out with him or play poker with him like Giancarlo would. But he looked after his drivers well, and he was very good mates with Bernie [Ecclestone], so it probably would have been better for me to stay with him.”

“It felt good to be on the podium with Lewis and Kimi, but my strongest emotion was relief”

The move to McLaren for the 2008 season came via a little-known plot twist. First there was interest from Toyota, then an offer, and that was the route that Kovalainen and Briatore, wearing his manager’s hat, were minded to take. Then, in late November, by which time the Toyota deal was inching its way towards contractual ink, a McLaren proposal arrived. “I called [Toyota’s] John Howett myself,” Heikki remembers, “and I said, ‘Look, there’s a seat for me at McLaren, and I think I have to go for it.’” Howett, famously mild-mannered, reluctantly but politely accepted the change of plan. Once again Kovalainen would be inheriting a seat vacated by Alonso.

“McLaren felt different from Renault straight away,” says Heikki. “It was more formal and less emotional, but I could feel that the team was a bit broken after what had happened with Alonso [and the damaging Spygate saga of 2007]. McLaren needed a team player and I thought that would suit me. I remember thinking, ‘This is going to be a great match.’ Also I immediately liked the McLaren bosses – Ron [Dennis] and Martin [Whitmarsh] – and I felt comfortable with their style, which was less emotional than Flavio’s.”

Kovalainen races his ING Renault F1 car during the 2007 Canadian Grand Prix.

In 2007, the Finn was given a Renault F1 seat. After a sluggish start results picked up with a fourth place in the Canadian GP; a podium was just three months away

LAT

And Lewis, I ask? “I wasn’t afraid of him,” Heikki says quickly and confidently. “In fact I thought I could challenge him.” In qualifying, he sometimes did. “On one lap, yeah, I was able to push him pretty hard, but race days were trickier. He was always very good at looking after his tyres, he was brilliant on slow and medium-speed corners, and he could brake later than me and get the car turned better than me even when he’d braked later.” He pauses, looks up, smiles, then adds: “I guess that’s the difference between a genius and someone who’s not quite so genius.”

“The reality is that, although it was my best ever result, it wasn’t my best ever performance”

That year, 2008, Hamilton became F1 world champion; Kovalainen finished seventh. Lewis bagged 10 podium finishes, Heikki three. The arithmetic is clear. “Lewis and Fernando are the best drivers I’ve been able to compare relevant data with, no question about it. It would be hard to say which was better, because both of them were brilliant. When I was at McLaren with Lewis, I always had to really stretch myself to match him or even get near him. I was never comfortable. It was always that way around – you know, that I was chasing him. He was almost never chasing me. And, even then, if I managed to really stretch myself, often he managed to stretch himself a bit more, and stay ahead of me. Just occasionally I was able to match him. But I have to admit, over a long season, when you’re really stretching yourself all the time, unless you’re one of the really special drivers – a Hamilton or an Alonso – at some point you run out of energy because it drains you to have to operate over your limit all the time. And 2009 was a textbook example of that, because our car wasn’t great and I just couldn’t stretch myself like Lewis could. That season is the biggest regret of my career. I should have done better.”

Heikki’s modesty is admirable, but I will not let him gloss over the highlight of his career: Hungary 2008. “Ah, yes, well, Lewis and Felipe [Massa, of Ferrari] were faster than me that weekend,” he begins – and, again, I am struck by his diffidence. “But Lewis had a puncture, so he was out of the game. Then, three laps from the end, I went past a car on the main straight with a blown engine – and, when I looked, I thought, ‘That looks like a Ferrari.’ Then Steve [Hallam, a senior McLaren engineer] came on the radio and said, ‘You’re leading the race.’ I was like, ‘Wow! Now it’s looking pretty good.’ I won, and it was the day that I’d been dreaming of all my life, ever since I was a little kid, but somehow it didn’t feel like I’d always hoped it would. The reality is that, although it was my best ever result, it wasn’t my best ever performance. There’s no getting away from that.”

Kovalainen celebrates arms aloft on the Budapest podium after winning the 2008 Hungarian Grand Prix.

Elation after an F1 win in the 2008 Hungarian GP, when driving for McLaren – his sole victory

Gilles Levent/DPPI

By the end of 2009, Dennis and Whitmarsh were ready to hire a driver who they felt would be able to support Hamilton with stouter results. I was working for McLaren at the time, as its communications and PR director, and I was aware of their plans before Kovalainen was. Towards the end of the season, I remember having a coffee with him in the McLaren paddock hospitality unit, and our conversation was poignant in the extreme. It became clear to me that he thought he would be racing for us in 2010. I knew that he would not be. Nervously, wondering whether I was doing the right thing, but acutely conscious that his unawareness would scupper his efforts to find an alternative race seat, I broke the news to him. “Yeah, I remember that well,” he says 17 years later. “That was disappointing. You’d kind of expect to hear news like that from the people who’d made the decision. Oh well.”

He found an F1 seat for 2010 – Lotus Racing, which became Team Lotus in 2011 and Caterham F1 Team in 2012. It was the same team, based first in Hingham, Norfolk, then in Leafield, Oxfordshire, and, although its cars were reliable, they were never competitive. In Kovalainen’s three seasons there his best result was 12th at Suzuka in 2010. “I should have made a move,” says Heikki, “and I had a chance to do so. In Valencia in 2010 Éric Boullier offered me a drive for Renault, the Enstone team that I already knew well, for 2011. But, because I’d just gone through a court case to exit Flavio Briatore’s management company, and because I had a contract with Tony Fernandes [the head honcho at Team Lotus], I couldn’t face the pressure of trying to get out of my contract. That was another mistake. OK, I was never going to be as good as Lewis or Fernando, or Senna or Schumacher, but I think I could have had a longer and better career without some of the bad decisions I made along the way. But that’s what F1 is like, isn’t it? It’s a tough business. I think 2011 would have been the right time to jump ship back into a better car, at Renault, and I might have been able to get some good results and extend my F1 career. As I say, it was a mistake.” It was indeed. A Renault driver scored a podium finish in each of the first two grands prix of the 2011 season, Vitaly Petrov in Australia and Nick Heidfeld in Malaysia. Kovalainen’s results in those two races were DNF and 15th.

Kovalainen's McLaren-Mercedes speeds through the 2008 Hungarian Grand Prix.

Heikki would go on to finish 2008 in seventh position in the standings, the same as in ’07; McLaren team-mate Lewis Hamilton was champion

Grand Prix Photo

Then there is the strange tale of Heikki’s Cambodian property empire. “Well, it’s a strange story,” he says, laughing at my use of the word ‘empire’, which as you will see was ironic. “I was at an Amber Lounge fashion event in Monaco in 2010, sitting next to Tony, my boss. There was a charity auction for the Elton John AIDS Foundation, and one of the items was a pledge to fund the building of some houses in Cambodia, at €1000 each. Little houses for families to live in, to avert poverty, a good idea. Suddenly, Tony tapped me on the shoulder and said, ‘Go on, bid. Buy 300 of them. I’ll pay you back.’ And I was like, ‘Er, no, maybe not.’ But he said, ‘Yeah, go on, go for it, I’ll pay you back.’ Well, he was my boss, I had no reason to doubt that he’d pay me back, so I raised my hand and bid for 300 pledges. No one else bid for them, so I bought them for €300,000. I had to give my bank details there and then, and the money left my account the Monday after the grand prix.

“I assumed that at some point Tony would pay me back – but, as the weeks went by, he didn’t, and I was thinking, ‘Well, I don’t really want to nag him for the money, and, if he doesn’t pay me back after all, at least I’ve done something good.’ And, 16 years later, he never has paid me back. Whenever I tell the story to my mates, they always say that I should insist on getting the money back, and of course they’ve got a point. But, at the same time, Tony managed the team well, I spent three seasons racing for it, it’s all in the past now, and at least hopefully I helped some poor people in Cambodia. Oh and a few years later I met Elton John, in Abu Dhabi, when Catherine and I went to a concert of his there, and we met him backstage. I’ve always liked his music, and I’ve always thought he was a good person, so it was great to meet him and spend time with him.”

Kovalainen steers the Lotus Racing F1 car at the 2010 Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka.

From McLaren, the next stop for Heikki was Lotus, but he’d never trouble Formula 1’s top 10 again

Thierry Bovy/DPPI

The story is a microcosm of what Heikki is like: warm, trusting, modest and generous, but above all gentle. He is that rare thing: not only a gentleman but also a gentle man. But perhaps he has been too forgiving of Fernandes. Certainly, every other F1 driver I know would have made stout efforts to be reimbursed, especially as those three seasons with Fernandes’ team were so unsuccessful.

“I admit I missed being in a competitive car,” is how Kovalainen puts it now. He would not have to miss it for long. “In the autumn of 2014 I got a message from Toyota Japan, out of the blue, inviting me to test a Lexus Super GT car. I didn’t really know that much about Super GT at the time, but I thought I might as well do the test, which was at Suzuka, a circuit I love. They told me it wasn’t a shootout, but Nicolas Lapierre was there, and a few other guys too, and I was thinking, ‘OK, maybe it’s not a shootout, but all these guys are here with me, so I’m going to treat it like a shootout.’ Anyway, the test went well, I was quickest, and I felt very good about it.”

Kovalainen and Tony Fernandes sit together at the 2010 Monaco Amber Lounge event.

Lotus principal Tony Fernandes, left, with Heikki at an Amber Lounge show; credit cards accepted

Sutton Images

He got the gig. The next year, 2015, the racing went every bit as well as the testing had, and the following year, 2016, Kovalainen became Super GT champion, taking the title with a fine victory in the last round, at Motegi. He raced in Super GT for five more seasons after that, 2017 to 2021, winning four more races. “I really enjoyed it,” he says, grinning broadly. “I realised how much I’d been missing fighting for poles, and battling for wins, and now I was doing that again. It was great. Also, we raced on some fantastic circuits, and there were a lot of fans at all the races, so it was a great atmosphere.”

“I couldn’t face the pressure of trying to get out of my contract. That was another mistake”

In 2022 he continued to compete for Toyota Japan – albeit in rallying, his first love. “I really enjoyed that too, and I still do,” he says. “I won the Japanese Rally Championship in 2022, 2023 and 2025, and, although I’m 44, so I know I’m not going to get any faster now, I still love competition, I still enjoy doing well, and, in 2026, I’m planning to rally in Italy, with the support of some Japanese companies. So it’s all good.”

Now seems like the right time to ask a more difficult question: “You say it’s all good, Heikki, but there’s one thing I should mention that’s surely not been all good, and that’s your heart disease.”

CV

Born: 19/10/1981 Suomussalmi, Finland
1991 Begins karting in Finland.
2000 Wins Nordic Championship.
2001 Competes in Formula Renault UK with Fortec; 4th, with two wins.
2002 Full season in British F3 with Fortec; 3rd, with five victories.
2003-04 World Series by Nissan; second in ’03, champion in ’04.
2005 Moves to GP2; runner-up to Nico Rosberg, 120 points to 105.
2005-06 Test driver at Renault F1.
2007 First F1 season, with Renault; 2nd in Japanese GP, ends season 7th.
2008 Joins McLaren; earns only F1 win, at the Hungarian GP, ends season 7th.
2010 Shifts to Lotus; best result 12th.
2015-21 To Super GT in Japan. Takes GT500 title with Lexus in 2016; race victories continue until 2020.
2022-25 Wins Japanese Rally Championship in ’22, ’23 and ’25.

He pauses, then he embarks on a lengthy technical description of his condition that I know from my own experience of heart disease bespeaks extensive exposure to cardiologists and a number of cardiac operations. We end up having a long conversation on the subject: I guess you could call it a heart-to-heart. I will not share it all for two reasons: first, it is personal to us both; and second, Motor Sport is not The Lancet. Suffice it to say that Heikki was diagnosed with a significantly dilated ascending aorta; he had open-heart surgery in March 2024, in Tampere University Hospital, Finland; and you will be pleased to hear that it was a complete success. “I’m just thankful that my heart is beating well again, that I can take exercise, that I can do rallies, and that I can be happy.”

A shift to the Far East to race in Super GT

A shift to the Far East to race in Super GT reinvigorated Kovalainen, who in 2016 was GT500 winner with Kohei Hirate

LAT

And that is where Heikki leaves me: not with a celebration of his racing or rallying successes, nor regret that he did not achieve more, but with gratitude. From the icy wilderness of Suomussalmi to the central plinth of an F1 podium in Budapest, from a Hungarian Grand Prix win to a cardiac operating theatre back in his native Finland, he has travelled a road that few would choose and fewer still could navigate with such quiet dignity. He was never a megastar. He has never pretended to be one. But he was, and he still is, something rarer: a good man who made the most of his opportunities, accepted his limits, and faced and continues to face adversity with courage worn lightly.

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Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

Red Sunbeam Tiger land speed record car on Ainsdale Beach, driven along wet sand during centenary re-enactment event.

 

Actuarius Art

One moved the Land Speed Record up to 152.33mph in 1926; the other took it supersonic to 763.035mph in 1997. One hundred years to the day since Sir Henry Segrave set his first of three new marks aboard his Sunbeam Tiger, Wing Commander Andy Green, the current LSR holder, was united with the 4-litre, supercharged V12 bolide on the very spot where it happened: Ainsdale Beach in Southport.

“Lancastrian seaside weather is not renowned for being kind in March”

Green’s drive, on Monday, March 16, was the culmination of a weekend of events to celebrate the centenary of Segrave’s achievement, all of which was organised by the Aintree Circuit Club.

Lancastrian seaside weather is not renowned for being particularly kind in March, but an estimated 2000 enthusiasts arrived for the re-enactment. First aboard the Tiger for a run down the beach was its owner, former Force India Formula 1 team chief and amateur racer Dr Vijay Mallya, clad in suitable period flying helmet and goggles. Green then climbed aboard, trumping Mallya in the sartorial stakes by sporting white cotton overalls, blue silk polka-dot scarf and period crash helmet.

grey

Segrave in white overalls a hundred years ago

“It must have been a massive handful to drive,” said Green from the cockpit of the Tiger to local news site Stand Up For Southport. “I’m driving at 30mph on the beach, and the back wheels are spinning and sliding around. What it must have been like to drive at 130, 140, 150mph, I can’t begin to imagine.

go

Green stuck to a more sedate 30mph in inclement conditions – and a good deal short of his 763mph speed record

“But just to have a tiny glimpse into the world of Henry Segrave and the Land Speed Record, and to see a piece of that heritage which, today, Britain still holds – we still have the world’s best motor sport engineers, and we owe that heritage back to the days of Henry Segrave and the expertise they developed then. To share a piece of that has been very, very special.”

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Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

If you were expecting fanfares, ceremonials or a parade of marching elephants – like Verdi’s epic Aida chorus – to celebrate Lancia’s return to rallying, you would have been disappointed. In fact, the only elephant in evidence was the famous elefantino on the HF logo that is synonymous with high performance (or ‘high fidelity’) Lancias: apparently chosen by Gianni Lancia because, once an elephant starts charging, you can never really stop it.

Instead, Lancia’s home on the Monte Carlo Rally – for the first time in 35 years – was a reasonably modest tent, with the only operatic flourish being a flame-thrower (actually a repurposed patio heater) to keep everyone warm in the near-subzero temperatures of the Gap service park.

Lancia Corse service tent with Ypsilon Rally2 being worked on at night rally service area

Lancia made its rally return in Monte Carlo – drivers for ’26 are Nikolay Gryazin, car pictured

Lancia

Those people in their new navy blue Lancia Corse HF jackets were a huge mix – including French engineers, a Russian driver competing under a Bulgarian flag, his co-driver from Kyrgyzstan, and yes, the occasional Italian too.

But what they all have in common is Stellantis: the international conglomerate that counts brands such as Peugeot, Citroën, Opel and now Lancia within its sporting portfolio. To name just a few.

Even though the Stellantis name never even existed before 2021, it inherited a vast legacy of motor sport and specifically rallying, mainly thanks to the exploits of Peugeot, and more recently, Citroën.

Lancia rally car at International Rally of Great Britain finish line with champagne celebration

Harry Källström, hands aloft, after winning the 1970 RAC Rally in a Fulvia HF

LAT Images

This very relevant know-how, allied to the storied history of Lancia, should make for a winning combination. That’s also down to people such as Didier Clément: Lancia Corse HF’s new team principal, best known as the engineer who guided Sébastien Loeb to an astonishing nine WRC titles in different flavours of Citroën.

Once Citroën withdrew from the top class as a factory team at the end of 2019, the focus shifted to customer competition using various iterations of the C3, with the ultimate evolution being the current Rally2 model. All that data has now been condensed into the hopes of a nation, as Lancia makes its long-awaited comeback.

HF Ypsilon Integrale car side with red elephant logo and racing stripes

HF – ‘high fidelity’, with elefantino

“It’s true that we have a bit of knowledge from the past!” jokes Clément modestly. “But this is really just the start of the journey with Lancia. Everything has gone well so far; we’ve got a big test programme planned throughout the year and we can already see areas to improve. Of course, the experience of the whole team is a very important part of that.”

“We have a bit of knowledge from the past! But this is really the start of the journey”

Hundreds of winning rally cars have been built over the years from the Peugeot and Citroën workshops near Versailles, and this is the practical heritage that the latest generation of Lancia is fortunate to be born into. But there’s no doubt that its parents speak French: the 2026 incarnation of Lancia’s Squadra Corse – first seen back in 1963 and founded by Cesare Fiorio to field the gorgeous Fulvia Coupé – has about as much in common with the Italian team that bowed out of the WRC at the end of 1991 as a paper plane does with Concorde. For a start, despite all the hype, there’s been no official confirmation yet that Lancia will be returning to the top Rally1 category – although the hope and expectation is there from every stakeholder in the sport.

Citroën World Rally Team driver and team member in branded gear at rally event

Lancia team principal Didier Clément, left, was formerly with Citroën during the Sébastien Loeb glory years in the WRC

François Flamand/DPPI

For now, Lancia is competing in the lesser Rally2 class: where the cars are a bit slower than the headlining category, but cost less than half the money to buy and run, making them much more appealing to customers. And compared to the extravagant WRC days of the past, when most teams had a fleet of helicopters and it wasn’t unheard of to go Safari testing for three months, modern motor sport has to pay its way. For that, economies of scale are important. Which is why there are inevitably some similarities and common philosophies between the Rally2 versions of the Lancia Ypsilon and Citroën C3.

Clément and the Stellantis technical team can’t after all ‘unlearn’ the knowledge they have gained from other cars over the years, and it makes absolute sense to share resources – just as the group also does with all its road cars.

Purists might hate how the Lancia Rally2 is built in Satory, near Versailles, but while there are some shared parts with the C3 (particularly when it comes to the engine and gearbox architecture) there are equally many points of difference.

At the heart of those are the diverse platforms that the two equivalent road cars are based on. The new Ypsilon uses the latest Stellantis CMP basis, whereas the C3 traces its lineage to what was originally the PSA Group’s PF1 platform dating from the early 2000s. A lot of evolution has happened since then, with the result that the newer car has a much lighter chassis and superior packaging – which translates into a distinct advantage on the stages.

Lancia rally car driven by Yohan Rossel racing through snowy forest at Monte Carlo Rally

Yohan Rossel

While the C3 and Ypsilon are quite similar to drive – both conforming to a tight framework of Rally2 regulations – the Lancia is said to feel more ‘alive’, with a sharper turn-in and improved dynamics, influenced by factors such as better base aerodynamics and optimal weight distribution.

“In Rally2 cars are a bit slower than the headlining category”

Moscow-born factory driver Nikolay Gryazin, who also has plenty of experience of the C3, points out: “There’s no one particular area where I would say the Ypsilon is strongest. It’s just very good in every aspect, very easy to drive, and that adds up to a really nice all-round package.”

Lancia rally car kicking up snow on mountain road during winter rally

 

Bastien Roux/DPPI

As Eugenio Franzetti, the director of Lancia Corse, explains: “What this car definitely isn’t is a reworked Citroën. There will always be people who like to say things like that, but it simply isn’t true. This car was independently designed by Stellantis Motorsport, built in Satory, and tested on our circuit at Balocco in Italy, as well as on real mountain roads. It’s a team effort.”

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This is the multinational spirit in which the Lancia squad has been created, and it has enjoyed unprecedented commercial success. When the two-wheel-drive Rally4 Ypsilon was announced in 2024, used for the Lancia Trofeo promotional series in Italy, 120 examples were immediately sold, leaving the championship massively oversubscribed.

At the end of last year, the Rally2 car was announced, with 30 orders immediately placed. And they are still coming, with the first customer cars being delivered throughout the opening quarter of this year.

Contemporary Lancia Integrale rally car under dramatic indoor lighting

 

Mklein, Lancia

Lancia Ypsilon Rally2 HF Integrale

Engine 1.6 litres turbocharged petrol, four cylinders
Chassis B segment Stellantis common platform
Power 287bhp
Transmission SADEV five-speed sequential gearbox, manual, 4WD
Suspension MacPherson struts on four corners, long-travel rally dampers
Weight 1230kg

“It’s been the sort of success that really shows how passionate people still are about Lancia and its huge history in the sport,” says Franzetti. “We always expected a strong reaction, but the sheer level of interest was maybe even beyond our expectations.”

“It’s good in every aspect, easy to drive, and that adds up to a really nice all-round package”

Lancia has also just announced a new Rally6 version of the Ypsilon – a grassroots, heavily production-based model – so now it’s just the very top of the pyramid still missing. That provides the most intriguing question mark of all, with the WRC rules completely changing next year: essentially moving away from production-based complete bodyshells to spaceframe chassis with bespoke bodywork.

Lancia rally car drifting on asphalt road with sponsor logos and driver names

The Ypsilon – popular with privateers

It’s almost a Group B philosophy, albeit with tighter controls, safety levels and some sort of equivalency formula to balance potentially different drivetrains. The idea is to open up the championship to as many different manufacturers (or tuners) as possible, by removing barriers to entry and cutting costs. Where Lancia fits into this exactly remains to be seen, but there’s an air of reserved optimism in the team.

The final decision, of course, will have to be signed off by a Stellantis board and it’s highly unlikely that they get too sentimental over memories of Markku Alén and Martini stripes (although there’s a nod to that illustrious heritage with the current livery).

Person in fur hat and Hurlingham coat outdoors in cold mountain setting

Ex-sporting boss Ninni Russo

For now, the plan is to compete in 2026’s WRC2 championship as a factory-entered team – the feeder series to the top that was won last year by Toyota’s Oliver Solberg before he was promoted to the Rally1 team and got off to a winning start in Monte Carlo.

The trajectory is clear, but a lot needs to happen before Lancia can even think about emulating a similar graduation. The team’s last overall WRC win (as a factory squad) was the 1991 RAC Rally with Juha Kankkunen, although the Delta continued to be run on a semi-works basis by Jolly Club for the next two years, with the final victory for the brand being Sanremo in 1992. That will be exactly 35 years ago next year, a nice round number that augurs well for those who like symmetry.

Lancia Delta Integrale with Martini Racing livery sliding on gravel rally stage with crowd watching

A last WRC win for the marque came at the 1992 Sanremo Rally

One man who has seen it all is Lancia’s legendary former sporting director Ninni Russo, who was there for the heyday, and has now witnessed the rebirth.

“At first I was sceptical – the return of Lancia to rallying is something that’s been talked about for years but never come to fruition,” he says. “But then people like Miki [Biasion] got involved, I started to believe, and now hats off to the team in Monte Carlo. If I had one wish, it would be for Lancia to be more Italian. If the team can capture the creativity and way of working that we once had – which might be impossible under the current corporate structure – then yes, everything is possible. Only time will tell.”

“We have a bit of knowledge from the past! But this is really the start of the journey”

 

Driver and co‑driver in racing suits focusing inside rally car cockpit

There were stage wins for Rossel, pictured, nearest, and Gryazin

Nikos Katikis

‘The car wasn’t the problem’

Lancia Corse HF personnel have their say on the WRC2 opener

Lancia Corse HF director Eugenio Franzetti explained that the team wanted to take “no risks” with the drivers for the Ypsilon’s debut, hence the choice of two Stellantis stalwarts: Yohan Rossel, who had won the WRC2 category in Monte for three years on the trot between 2023 and 2025, always in a Citroën; and Nikolay Gryazin, with 20 WRC2 podiums behind him.

So it was something of a shock when Rossel clipped a wall and broke the suspension of his Ypsilon on Thursday night’s first stage. Never mind… Gryazin won the stage and took the WRC2 lead – before he too clouted the rear of the car on the following stage, losing nearly a minute.

From there, it was always going to be an icy uphill struggle for both Lancias in Monte Carlo, but Gryazin managed to fight his way back into contention for the lead before going off again on Saturday.

Sunday was redemption. In tricky conditions, Rossel won all four stages in the WRC2 category, placing the Ypsilon in the top five overall on each occasion.

The end result was mastery of the ‘Super Sunday’ classification, and Lancia coming home from Monaco in the lead of the WRC2 manufacturers’ standings, having clinched eight out of a possible 17 stages in class. The final score was seven for Rossel and one for Gryazin, who finished ninth and sixth in class respectively.

Race car driver in Sparco suit and Bell helmet inside rally cockpit

On a chaotic outing in Monte Carlo’s snow

Nikos Katikis

“We expected to be quick, and in that respect we weren’t disappointed,” said Rossel, who suffered the ignominy of seeing his younger brother Léo win the WRC2 class overall in a Citroën C3. “It’s clear that the car wasn’t the problem this weekend.”

Gryazin echoed his sentiments, but added: “This was the most difficult Monte Carlo I’ve ever driven. With snow that was turning into slush, we were a passenger, but I’m happy we were able to fight back and challenge for the win. The speed was good.”

Monte, being as famously fickle as the roulette wheel in the casino, doesn’t mean too much – but judging from the overall pace of the Ypsilon, it will be a force to be reckoned with in WRC2. That might tip the Stellantis board into giving graduation to the top a green light.

Smiling person wearing Lancia Corse cap in sunlight

Now in his late sixties, Miki Biasion was Lancia’s finest in the Delta Integrale era

Trunk of memories

Lancia’s champion Miki Biasion on his love of the late Sandro Munari and an elephant rescue

The poster boy for Lancia’s return is Miki Biasion, 68, the most successful driver in the marque’s history with two world titles (1988 and ’89) and 17 rally wins (all but one with Lancia).

“For me, it’s very emotional, because Lancia has been my life, my story,” says Biasion, whose attachment to the brand means that he is also the owner of a rare Fulvia Safari HF, a car he cherishes as the only Italian ever to win the Safari (two years in succession in a Delta).

“I grew up watching Sandro Munari drive the Fulvia, with the sort of skill nobody else could match,” he adds. “It was then I knew I wanted to be a Lancia rally driver. If you’re a young Italian dreaming of becoming a racing driver, you want to drive for Ferrari. If you’re dreaming of becoming a rally driver, you want to drive for Lancia.”

Now that dream lives again – and not only for Italians.

Biasion was involved in the early development of the rally Ypsilon, although his feedback was more on a general level. “Most of the serious testing was done by the active drivers,” he says. “But I always felt a sense of duty to Lancia. To see the name come back is just wonderful.”

Because the elephant never forgets – and there’s a good reason why. In 1991, Biasion was accosted by a tribal chief during one Safari Rally recce. The man motioned to Biasion to come with him to a swamp, where a baby elephant had got trapped. Biasion and team-mate Jorge Recalde worked for hours to free the elephant with a recce vehicle, and gradually dragged it out.

One elefantino’s life was saved. And the other went on to conquer the world.

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Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

The 2026 Formula 1 rule changes are arguably the biggest in the history of grand prix racing, and certainly the most divisive. They undermine the fundamental tenets of the racing driver’s art in qualifying and reshape the wheel-to-wheel battles in what Fernando Alonso hyperbolically calls the “battery world championship”.

Mercedes driver celebrates with Qatar trophy plate.

George Russell gets the new F1 era underway with a win Down Under

The drivers do not approve, even more vociferously in private than in public, because the unintended consequences of the switch to a 50/50 split of electric and V6 power strikes at the heart of the racer’s raison d’être. There are benefits to the changes, notably the visibly more agile and responsive cars thanks to the reduction in weight and wheelbase. There’s also a nuanced debate to be had about the positive and negative impacts on the style of racing that has dominated fan discourse. To bring into sharp relief the key problem, just listen to Oscar Piastri’s description of his experience in Australian GP qualifying.

“It’s not quite as simple as who’s the bravest and who carries the most speed,” says Piastri, “because I got braver and braver through qualifying and it made me slower and slower down the straights.”

Red Bull driver exits damaged car after incident.

Verstappen is one of the most outspoken critics of the new regs

Grand Prix Photo, DPPI

Ayrton Senna or Michael Schumacher could only interpret this statement in terms of being too aggressive on entry and compromising your exit, mapping it to the technique trade-offs implicit in optimising laptime within the stubborn demands of the laws of physics and the limitations of the machinery. This has nothing to do with that. That the art of going faster through the totality of a corner, assembling the optimum compromise of braking, entry, mid-corner and exit speed to carry onto the straight – something that has always differentiated between the great and the merely good – might result in a time-sapping loss of power on a straight later in the lap in a car functioning as designed would be incomprehensible. Yet that’s the reality of F1 now.

“You just can’t drive naturally,” says Max Verstappen. “Basically, you have to be on throttle as little as possible everywhere to save the battery. Certain corners you have to approach differently so that when you exit you can save battery again. That has very little to do with racing.”

“Basically, you have to be on throttle as little as possible”

The argument that drivers have always had to adapt and manage resources sells the effect short. Comparisons with the efficiency challenges of driving that have always existed, or the limitations of rapidly evolving and fragile technology, are misleading. This is hardwired into regulations stipulating a 4MJ battery and that, by necessity, permit far more than that to be harvested on a lap – usually 8.5MJ, but this varies. To produce a remotely fast lap time, you must continually charge and discharge the battery pack, even on a qualifying lap. The MGU-k kicks out 350kW (469bhp), without which you have a power output roughly midway between F2 and F3 level. This is what forces a counterintuitive driving style where you must focus on maximising the harvesting and deployment, even when it’s to the detriment of old-fashioned notions such as corner speed. Even more bizarrely, as Verstappen alluded to, there are occasions where drivers make a small mid-corner mistake, get out of the throttle and actually make a net gain thanks to the extra energy harvested. That this is a factor in qualifying is terrible news for F1.

Ferrari's number 16 F1 car at speed, showing sponsors including Shell, HP, UniCredit and Ceva Logistics on its red livery.

Charles Leclerc believes F1 has lost excitement

Piastri’s Australian Grand Prix qualifying exemplifies this. Albert Park is a harvest-poor circuit, meaning there’s limited braking to charge the battery pack. This means a greater reliance on other ways of finding the required energy, meaning off and part-throttle harvesting and ’super clipping’, whereby the driver keeps the throttle pinned but the MGU-k is charging the battery and car speed drops. After exiting the Turn 6 right-hander, the cars blast through the flat-out Turns 7 and 8 kinks then down to the Turns 9/10 left-right sweeper, traditionally a glorious showcase of the astounding direction-change capabilities of F1 cars.

“You use corners to charge the battery, not to make the lap time”

Comparing the pole position laps in Australia from 2025 and ’26, you can already see the difference on that straight. When Lando Norris topped out on his pole lap last year, this year George Russell had already slowed from a similar top speed having automatically switched to harvesting. As a result, he was travelling around 29mph slower at the point Norris braked. Russell didn’t even have to brake, with the speed reduction handled across a significant part of the straight partly by the super clipping slowing effect and partly by being off throttle. This still requires skill and precision, as well as adapting constantly, given the distance-based self-learning algorithms that manage much of the deployment and harvesting changes mean things vary lap to lap, but what comes next really stings.

Dark-liveried F1 car at full throttle.

Verstappen started from the rear of the grid in Australia

Florent Gooden/DPPI

Be brave, as Piastri put it, and carry the maximum speed in on the limit of adhesion and you will gain a little time initially, but then lose it in spades on the straight that follows. This year it was necessary to drive within the grip limit and delay throttle application in order to harvest. Turn 10 is still testing, because you want to carry the speed you can through it onto the exit, but Turn 9 is neutered. The same applies at Turn 12 in Bahrain, where Fernando Alonso made his infamous comment about the team chef being able to drive the car through the right-hander as drivers sit within the limit.

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“We used to fight for our life in Turn 12 in Bahrain, Turn 9 and 10 in Melbourne, sector 1 in Suzuka, 130R, Turn 8 in China,” says Alonso. “There were always certain corners in Formula 1 that were challenging the limits of physics going through these corners and the driver had to use all the skills and be brave in some of the moments as well. When you put new tyres on and you go through the corner at the speed that you’ve never been before in any of the free practices, that challenge is gone in a way. You use those corners to charge the battery, not any more to make the lap time.”

Melbourne is an extreme case, but the problem is universal. Not only is the driver forced, in fast corners, to drive within the car but also to reduce the risks throughout the lap. Consistency is critical in these cars, as tiny details can make massive differences to the deployment patterns over a lap. Often, those differences are a mystery to the drivers, sometimes beyond what they can reasonably be expected to detect. Ensuring gearshifts are at the exact right moment and that any lifting is perfectly timed both play a part, and are within the driver’s means to control. But even the level of lift and coast when you’re part-throttle harvesting must be executed with a precision beyond even a super-sensitive F1 driver.

Red Bull Racing team member in sponsor gear.

Max has referred to F1’s rules as “anti-racing”

Nurphoto Via Getty Images

“If you lift 30% or you lift 35%, you’re going to feel a difference of deployment,” says Red Bull’s Isack Hadjar. “You can’t control this with your leg, you don’t have that sensitivity, so it’s weird.”

There are also more extreme effects. A tiny moment when dancing on the ragged edge can have huge implications thanks to the impact on deployment. Charles Leclerc, F1’s modern Villeneuve given his capacity to produce spectacular on-the-limit qualifying laps even in modern high-downforce cars with vastly reduced tyre slip angles, believes such feats are no longer possible in contrasting his changing approach between sprint and main qualifying in China.

Complex F1 steering wheel with energy controls.

Harvest festival

Nurphoto via Getty Images

“It’s not a crazy lap, unfortunately. You can’t achieve that any more”

“They are very strange in qualifying,” he reckons. “In the past, one of my strengths was that come Q3, I was taking massive risks to get something out more. Now when you start doing that, you start confusing the engine side of things and you start losing a lot more than you gained, so consistency pays off more. Today, I felt like I found my rhythm from Q1 to Q3, which is a little bit less exciting inside the car for Q3 because you cannot push as much as you would want to. But at the end of the day it paid off, because I’m closer to the guys in front. But it’s not a crazy lap, unfortunately, because you can’t really achieve that any more.”

Blue F1 car sparks bottoming out.

Sparks fly for Alex Albon but it’s been a damp squib start

Florent Gooden/DPPI

Leclerc’s problem was a tiny moment exiting Turn 10. This required nothing more than a flash of corrective action and a quick feathering of the throttle to 95%. Traditionally, this might cost a fraction of a second, but its consequences are now measured in tenths. That’s because it changed the automated harvest and deployment strategy and cost significant time on the back straight, which followed another sequence of corners. As Nico Hülkenberg puts it, “Sometimes when you overspin [the wheels] somewhere, the system takes it away from you.” Through such a moment, you can end up deploying energy when you don’t want to and not harvesting when you should be. This also happens in racing situations and can lead to easy overtaking moves if you have a small moment.

Aston Martin car number 14 racing.

Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso reckons the challenge in F1 has vanished

Nurphoto via Getty Images

Such eccentric behaviour is a result not only of the deployment being out of the hands of the driver, save for the boost button that can override this, but also the rules dictating the behaviour of the power units. These arise for sound reasons, for example, safety and ensuring illegal traction control effects are not produced, but combine to create quirks. Leclerc’s focus on consistency is important because what the self-learning mechanisms benefit from is repeatability. The days when you might take that corner at full throttle on an all-out qualifying lap are gone, because that risks skewing the harvesting and deployment. Turn 5 in Australia is an example, as it teeters on the edge of being flat out, but what teams need is either to be consistently at full throttle or at least off it by a few per cent. This is problematic in dry conditions and threatens chaos in the wet.

Mechanics inspect exposed F1 power unit.

The 50/50 power split is too “Formula E” for some

Julien Delfosse/DPPI

It’s common for drivers in qualifying to have what they perceive as deployment glitches without knowing why. Some of these harvesting and deployment regs have existed for a long time, but it’s only now that the electric motor is so powerful that it has the ability to make or break a lap. Deployment has also overpowered chassis characteristics and set-up as a key dictator of lap time variations. This balance will shift rapidly as teams get on top of the quirks of these rules as far as they can, but the fundamental flaws will remain. This is why F1 is grappling with what changes can be made.

“After a couple of races, we will have to look if something should be done and what should be done to make sure we retain the entertainment and as well some of the DNA of driving Formula 1 cars,” says McLaren team principal Andrea Stella. “[This is] trying to exploit the grip rather than having to exploit the harvesting and deployment.”

McLaren crew push car in busy pit lane.

Oscar Piastri goes through the pain of being pushed off grid

Julien Delfosse/DPPI

This is the crux of the era of driving the power unit. In-race management is one thing, but when it comes to qualifying laps F1 has long traded on these being single, all-out laps where the virtuosity of a driver speaks loudest. While they have been, over the years, forced into an ever smaller box by the domination of aerodynamics and the narrow grip peaks of the tyres, drivers have still always been able to express themselves within those confines. Now, even Leclerc can’t, meaning virtuoso pole laps such as his brilliant Singapore 2019 effort will be a thing of the past. A rules set that incentivises a driver to step back from the limit in fast corners and not dance the tightrope of grip in slower ones is flawed.

There are changes under consideration, although eliminating them is likely impossible with this technology, meaning the art of grand prix racing is transformed, in qualifying irrefutably for the worse.

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Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

It has always taken a little more time than usual to get things done at Indianapolis. It is a city that operates at a deliberate pace. Do not go too fast. Do not go too slow. Just take your time and make sure you get there safely. Got it? The 1969 race would stand out as the first Indianapolis 500 to have all 33 cars start with the engines behind the drivers. It had taken nine years to accomplish what Formula 1 had done in only four.

Dan Gurney, one of the first to correctly forecast the changeover at Indianapolis, returned with his latest creation. With its aerodynamic look, it was state-of-the-art for late 1960s technology. The new car was designated the Eagle Mark 7, but was better known as the ‘Santa Ana’, which was the location in California of the All American Racers headquarters and shop. The car was designed by Tony Southgate following his successful work on the Mark 4.

The latest AAR creation was wedge-shaped and wider than any previous Eagle. A Gurney Weslake-Ford V8 powered Gurney’s car while team-mate Denis Hulme’s was propelled by a turbocharged DOHC Ford V8 unit. The AAR team entered a third new car as a back-up, powered by a turbocharged Ford. A fourth new Eagle, turbocharged and Ford-powered, was sold to Smokey Yunick for Joe Leonard.

Pit lane scene with dark blue No.42 “Olonite Eagle” and No.48 IndyCars, crew in matching navy shirts, grandstands and flags in background at major race event.

Parnelli Jones and Al Unser: Unser was scheduled to race this Lotus 56-alike VPJ-Ford but fate intervened and he wouldn’t make the start

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

After starting Indy’s rear-engine revolution in 1961, Jack Brabham – by now a three-time F1 world champion – returned as a first-time entrant in ’68, and for ’69 he ran a two-car effort, assigning one of the cars to himself, paired with American rookie driver Peter Revson.

“The All American Racers’ creation was wedge-shaped and wider than any previous Eagle”

The road-racing world was also well represented that May with the arrival of a new team entered by US Racing Inc. It is now better known as Team Penske and its driver, while designated a rookie, was the highly regarded Mark Donohue. After a very successful career as a driver, Roger Penske formed a team around Donohue and would become a major influence, making IndyCar racing more professional as the series began to get more support and involvement from Corporate America. Penske’s always tidy-looking crew and their immaculate four-wheel-drive Lola-Offenhauser T152 made them stand out in a positive way.

Pit lane scene with dark blue No.42 “Olonite Eagle” and No.48 IndyCars, crew in matching navy shirts, grandstands and flags in background at major race event.

Denny Hulme (No42) and Dan Gurney’s (No48) Olsonite-sponsored Eagles started the race on rows nine and four respectively

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

The 1969 500 would be Donohue’s first IndyCar start of the year, plus his first time on an oval track and only his fourth IndyCar event. Donohue & Co lived up to expectations and performed well right from the start of the month, never looking like a rookie driver or a rookie team.

Of course, being a rookie at Indy had its peculiarities, starting with the driver test. In Michael Argetsinger’s 2009 book Mark Donohue: Technical Excellence at Speed, Donohue was quoted: “To be a rookie again after almost 10 years racing is an interesting situation. But after practising and passing the driver’s test, I could see the point.” Donohue sailed through the phases of controlled runs to pass the test. The new Indy team of Penske was off to a good start.

Dark blue No.66 “Sunoco Special” IndyCar with Simoniz sponsor, rear wing and exposed exhausts, driver in helmet racing on paved track.

Despite 10 years racing, Mark Donohue was classed as a rookie, driving for Roger Penske

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

There was also a newly revised team at Indy in May – Vel’s Parnelli Jones Racing. After campaigning a Mongoose-Ford with George Snider and Joe Leonard under the name of Vel’s Racing Team the previous two seasons, it regrouped. The team had bought the assets from Reztloff Racing, who had assumed the mantle of the official Lola factory team. Top mechanic George Bignotti was part of the revision, as was its driver, rising star Al Unser.

“Unser went out joyriding on a trail bike. He had a mishap that left him with a broken ankle”

For 1969, the team had a choice of running a year-old Lola-Ford T150 or a new wedge-shaped, Ford-powered car that looked very much like the Lotus 56 but for obvious reasons was called the Parnelli. Selecting the Lola over the Parnelli, Unser became one of the month’s early contenders, posting speeds not far off the practice pace set by Mario Andretti and AJ Foyt.

Person in yellow jacket using crutches, right foot bandaged, standing outdoors near workshop.

Al Unser on crutches with a compound fracture to his left tibia

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

However, a freak accident gave the team and driver a major setback. After the opening day of qualifying was washed out, Unser and Parnelli Jones went out joyriding on their trail bikes in the infield. Trying to cross a ditch, Unser had a mishap that left him with a broken ankle and a seat on the sidelines for several weeks. More importantly, he would not be racing at the Indy 500 in 1969. Unser’s Lola-Ford was taken over by the very capable veteran Bud Tingelstad.

In Joe Scalzo’s 1971 book The Unbelievable Unsers, long-time team manager Jimmy Dilamarter remembered: “By the time I got to where Al was, they were loading him into an ambulance. What I found out later was Al had ridden into a ditch and when he tried to run up the other side at 10mph he lost balance. The bike had fallen on him. The gearlever had gone through his ankle and was sticking out the other side of his foot.

White No.72 race car with red stripes, elongated body and wheel covers, driver in open cockpit on track.

Al Miller and his No72 gas-turbine Jack Adams Airplane Special failed to qualify for the race

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

“That poor guy was all alone out there. Al had to pull that shifter out of his leg by himself. Then he had to get to his feet, restart his motorcycle and ride nearly a quarter of a mile to find someone to help him.”

With the United States Auto Club coming out with more new rules designed to make the turbine engine even more uncompetitive, its previous adherents – the Granatelli brothers and Team Lotus – needed a fresh direction. Lotus found it with a sleek new car, the Type 64 that featured four-wheel drive and the powerful turbocharged DOHC Ford V8. This would be the main thrust of the STP Lotus effort with four new cars and three assigned to an impressive driver line-up of two-time 500 pole winner Mario Andretti, 1966 500 winner Graham Hill and highly regarded F1 star Jochen Rindt, who was now Hill’s team-mate in Formula 1.

The pace car for 1969 was this convertible Chevrolet Camaro SS; it was the fourth time that Chevy had received the Indy 500 honour

The pace car for 1969 was this convertible Chevrolet Camaro SS; it was the fourth time that Chevy had received the Indy 500 honour

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

The Granatellis did not stop with the Lotus entries. There was the No40 Offenhauser-powered replica of the Type 56 wedge-shaped Lotus that the Granatellis had built themselves. There was the No 57 wedge-shaped Gerhardt-Offy. There was a futuristic-looking car originally assigned to Art Pollard notable not only by its aerodynamic shape but also by its Plymouth V8 engine. After determining that the aero package did not work, the car underwent some bodywork changes with the result that it would look more like a Type 56 Lotus, but without the turbine engine.

“Just as I pointed the car into the turn, I heard a ‘whirr-r-r’. It’s a sickening sound for a race driver”

 

The STP team had three other entries with no engines or chassis specified. There was also the new Brawner Hawk III that Andretti had used to win the April IndyCar event at Hanford, California. This car was part of the acquisition made by the Granatellis when they bought out Andretti, who had assumed ownership of the former Dean Van Lines team. Despite all the money and attention poured into new equipment by the Granatellis, few would have predicted which car would wind up beating them all.

Crew in white STP uniforms pushing bright red No.57 race car in busy pit lane with grandstands and spectators behind.

Carl Williams’ wedge-shaped Gerhard-Offenhauser Gasoline Treatment Special was out of the race by lap 50

Others stuck with cigar-shape tubs but even those designs had started to sprout nose wings and/or nose lip spoilers while also incorporating engine cover spoilers, as per the USAC regulations governing aerodynamic aids behind the cockpit. A good example was the new Coyote entered by Ansted-Thompson Racing. Team leader Foyt’s 1969 Coyote featured a slightly bulkier look to accommodate the turbocharged Ford engine, which was covered by what looked like three separate wings. But they were judged to be the ‘cover’ for the engine. Roger McCluskey and George Snider were Foyt’s team-mates, with McCluskey in a new Coyote (with no wing/engine cover) and Snider using a year-old and slightly revised Coyote.

For a significant part of the month, the Lotus of Andretti was the fastest car at the track. And why not? After all, Andretti, usually the fastest man at Indy in recent years, was now driving the much-feared Lotus-Ford combination. Only Foyt stayed close in speeds and although the latest Coyote was more of a traditional design, it at least had its own collection of aerodynamic aids. The daily duel for top speed at the track between Andretti and Foyt was one for the ages. For several days, ‘Happy Hour’ would feature a battle between the two. Back then, Happy Hour referred to the final 60 minutes of practice (ending at 6pm) and because the main grandstand shaded the front stretch during that time, the cooler pavement helped produce the quickest speeds of the day. Andretti and Foyt thrilled the fans with their daily battle for top speed with one recording a fast lap and the other going right out afterwards and topping it. Interestingly, the two seldom ran together.

Portrait of older man with gray hair, blue collared shirt under dark sweater, outdoors near building with signage.

The ever-smart Roger Penske was still a few years away from a first Indy 500 victory

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

With all the excitement centred on the Andretti-Foyt practice battle, it was suddenly qualifying weekend. Unfortunately for all concerned, Mother Nature refused to co-operate. By Wednesday, the focus was back on the oncoming qualification weekend and this time it was Foyt who threw down the gauntlet, posting the month’s quickest speed at 172.315mph.

 

As had been the case in previous practice days, it was now Andretti’s turn to go out in the STP Lotus-Ford and top him. Unfortunately, as Andretti built enough speed to make his first ‘flyer’ lap, the right-rear hub carrier collapsed and the wheel separated from the car, which then backed into the Turn 4 wall extremely hard. By the time it came to a halt, the new Lotus was a total wreck and Andretti, who had not yet adopted the new full-face helmet, was slightly burned on his upper lip and the tip of his nose.

Blue No.32 STP‑sponsored IndyCar with crew and driver posing in pit lane, grandstands full of spectators behind.

Brabham team, with Jack and Peter Revson – who’d finish fifth

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

“When I am preparing to run my first hot lap of a practice session, I follow a standard procedure. I stand on it down the back stretch, feel my way through Turn 3, then really cut loose in the short chute in order to get a good run out of Turn 4,” Andretti explained in his 1970 book What’s it Like out There?. “Going down the backstretch and through the third turn, everything sounded lovely. But I never got out of Turn 4.

“I felt intense heat. I thank the dear Lord that I wasn’t stunned by the impact”

“Just as I pointed the car into the fourth turn, I heard a ‘whirr-r-r’. It’s a sickening sound to a race driver. It means something is coming off the machine. At first I thought another U-joint had broken and torn the suspension. But as the car went around, I saw a wheel in the air and knew I was on a tricycle. The right rear of the car dug in and slammed into the wall backwards. All sorts of garbage started flying off the car. The moment the car hit the wall, I felt intense heat – fire! I thank the dear Lord that I wasn’t stunned by the impact. I covered my face with one hand and unsnapped the seatbelt with the other. By this time I could feel the heat through my uniform. That wasn’t too bad, but the heat around my face was almost unbearable.

Group of men with fire extinguishers around wrecked open‑wheel race car, burned and mangled rear components visible.

Andretti suffered facial burns after a crash in practice; his four-wheel-drive Lotus was wrecked

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

“I managed to jump out while the car was still moving. Pollard, who had been right behind me in an STP team car [the No57 Gerhardt-Offy] and did what must have been a brilliant job of getting through my mess without crashing, ran over to me. Right away, I asked Pollard: ‘What about my face?’ Art’s reply was a great relief. ‘It’s starting to blister so that’s a good sign. I would say first degree – second degree at the worst.’ I was amazed that I wasn’t even really shaken up. Of course, my face hurt badly, but there didn’t seem to be any bruises or sore spots.”

The failure was due to Colin Chapman’s penchant for cutting corners in attempts to make his cars as light as possible. With time running out, there was no way Lotus could rectify what clearly was a design flaw. And so Team Lotus, the once mighty force in IndyCar racing, withdrew from the 500, never to return.

Andretti, of course, had STP entries to choose from but not so surprisingly chose the already victorious Brawner Hawk III. By Friday, he quickly got the back-up Hawk up to speed although not quite as fast as he had been travelling in the Lotus. In a matter of a couple of days, it was a turn-around now in Foyt’s favour. With Al Unser sidelined and Andretti’s fastest car wrecked, it should have been smooth sailing for the three-time 500 winner. However, things do not always work out as planned, especially at Indianapolis.

Bright red No.6 Formula One car with Ford logo, wide tires and exposed suspension, driver racing in open cockpit.

Foyt took pole with a speed of 170.568mph

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Foyt did get his second Indy pole, but at a slower-than-expected 170.568mph. Andretti, somewhat uplifted by Foyt’s loss of speed, qualified the Hawk in second position at 169.851mph with 1968 winner Bobby Unser filling out the front row at 169.653mph in the Bardahl-sponsored Leader Card entry, a four-wheel-drive Lola-Offenhauser T152.

Donohue was impressive in qualifying fourth, the best effort for a rookie since Andretti in 1965. He was elated after his qualifying run temporarily put him on row one. In the Argetsinger biography, he said: “I did it. I’m qualified, I’m on the front row. I know it won’t stand up, but for right now I’m on the front row.”

Red No.2 STP‑sponsored open‑wheel race car with Ford logo, driver in cockpit, followed by multiple cars on track.

Andretti switched to a Brawner Hawk III

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

The Team Lotus saga for that year was totally unexpected. For the first time since 1963 there would be no Lotus chassis competing in the Indianapolis 500. The downfall seemed to begin when Andretti’s team-mates, Hill and Rindt, arrived to take their first laps of the month at Indy. Andretti at least had the advantage of considerable test miles to overcome a lengthy list of problems with the car discovered in its earliest tests in the US. Hill had done shakedown runs on the Lotus test track at Hethel but the car ran there without any of its winged body pieces and the Hethel track in no way resembled the 2.5-mile superspeedway at Indianapolis or generated the speeds run at IMS.

Neither of the Team Lotus F1 drivers could find speed and both spun out without making contact with the wall. Rindt had the added embarrassment of spinning at under 100mph, but it is important to remember that Andretti had found the new car a handful in his first test. As qualifying approached, Hill and Rindt were nowhere near the speeds already posted by Andretti but, perhaps even more important, they were nowhere near a good enough speed to safely make the race. The rainy weather that washed out the opening weekend was definitely a godsend for the struggling Lotus drivers. In the long run, it proved to be a hidden blessing for Andretti as well.

Pit stop scene with No.4 race car, crew in yellow shirts servicing, driver in white suit nearby, grandstands full of spectators.

Lloyd Ruby, driving a Mongoose, had a pitlane disaster while refuelling

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Had the first weekend of qualifying not been cancelled due to rain, Andretti would have qualified the Lotus and possibly discovered its shortcomings in the race instead of practice. And those shortcomings most likely would have cost him what ended up being his only 500 win.

“To be honest, I was concerned about the car. But my main worry was actually the gearbox”

“To be honest, I was concerned about the car,” Andretti recalled for this author in a magazine interview. “But my main worry was actually the gearbox. It was a three-speed gearbox and it was mounted in front of the engine, almost directly under the seat in the cockpit. I thought that might be the car’s weak point.”

Close‑up of Mario Andretti in silver STP‑branded helmet, seated in race car cockpit, speaking with man in red jacket leaning beside.

Andretti – still sore with burns – with team owner and “Italian panda bear” Andy Granatelli

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Following the withdrawal of Team Lotus, the story took an interesting twist. There apparently was some legal dispute as to who actually owned the three remaining STP-sponsored Lotus 64s. In his 1996 book Team Lotus: The Indianapolis Years, former team manager Andrew Ferguson related the story of how the cars were secretly removed from IMS and temporarily hidden in garages in a nearby neighbourhood before they could be shipped back to England and out of any American legal jurisdiction. Ferguson left Lotus after 1969, but returned in 1976 to find the three Lotus 64 chassis still in their original packing crates from Indianapolis, unopened since their arrival at the Lotus factory seven years earlier.

With the fastest 500 field ever, pre-race speculation centred on which driver had the best chance to win. The Penske reputation was such that the rookie team and driver got an unusually high number of votes as pre-race favourites. Penske was supposedly on a three-year plan to win, but Donohue’s performance all month meant there was every reason to believe that the team might make it to Victory Lane well ahead of time.

Driver in race car wearing victory wreath, surrounded by crowd with reporters and officials, one person kissing driver’s cheek.

The Victory Lane kiss on the cheek from Granatelli; in his fifth start in the Indy 500, Andretti had won – but would never repeat the feat

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Andretti, perhaps by virtue of having a wider line entering Turn 1 over pole-winner Foyt, jumped into the lead and stayed there for the first five laps. An overheating problem had plagued the STP Hawk-Ford in practice and an attempt to add an extra radiator was denied by USAC. Clint Brawner came up with another less obvious idea to help cool the engine but it was still going to be up to Andretti to closely monitor the temperature gauge and keep the car from overheating too much. As Andretti eased back to cool the car, Foyt took the lead and stayed there for the next 47 laps before he and Andretti pitted on lap 52. That allowed Wally Dallenbach to lead for the first time in his 500 career and he stayed out in front until pitting on lap 59. Foyt reassumed the lead and kept it through to lap 78, when Lloyd Ruby, in his Mongoose-Offenhauser, passed for first place. Now Foyt was beginning to have turbocharger problems that would take him out of contention. Although he would finish eighth, he would be 18 laps behind the winner. It was now shaping up to be a race between Ruby and Andretti.

Andretti took over the lead on lap 87 and held it through to lap 102 when he pitted for a second time. Ruby briefly led, but pitted on lap 105, handing the lead back to Andretti. With Foyt out of contention and only Ruby to worry about, Andretti’s biggest source of concern (besides his engine temperature) suddenly dropped out in the way that only someone like Ruby could drop out. Given the signal to leave the pit, Ruby accelerated, but the fuel hose was still coupled to the tank and the forward movement of the red-and-yellow Wynn’s Special ripped a hole in the left-side tank, allowing fuel to gush out. Another possible 500 victory had slipped away from Ole Rube.

“The 1960s at Indy closed with a flourish with speeds 20mph faster than the start of the decade”

For the rest of the race, all Andretti had to do was keep an eye on the temperature gauge and not let the engine overheat. Gurney, who had started 10th, was nearly two laps behind when the chequered flag fell. Andretti recorded what incredibly would be his only Indianapolis 500 victory while Gurney finished runner-up for the second straight year.

In What’s it Like out There?, Andretti tried to put into words what it meant to have won the Indianapolis 500. “I’d like to tell you what I felt at the moment, but there is no way. Too many thoughts were battling their way through my mind. I took a safety lap, pulled into Victory Lane and made my biggest mistake… I forgot to duck and nearly got crushed by an Italian panda bear.”

The ‘bear’ was Andy Granatelli, who planted a much-photographed kiss on Andretti’s cheek. Granatelli and his brothers had poured their hearts and souls into their Indy 500 programmes that dated back to the 1940s. They had finished second, led laps and won poles, but had never won the race despite being in position to do so in 1966, ’67 and ’68. After a quick start to the month, the Lotus disaster seemed to put winning in 1969 out of reach. But now the Granatellis and Andretti were 500 winners. As Graham Hill had said, they “drank the milk”.

Bright red No.2 STP‑sponsored race car with gold wheels speeding on track, blurred crowd in background.

The lead would change seven times, with Andretti in front for more than half of the 200-lap race distance

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

A magneto failure required a stop that exceeded 10 minutes and took Donohue out of contention. Because Donohue had been so impressive all month and had run as high as third, he still earned the Rookie of the Year award, much to the chagrin of Revson – fifth in the Brabham – who vocally objected, pointing out that the highest rookie always got the award. But that was not the case. Only three years earlier, even winning the race was not enough in the minds of the voters to give the award to Graham Hill. They instead honoured sixth-placed Jackie Stewart.

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Donohue was quoted in the Argetsinger biography: “I didn’t vote on it. If it had gone the other way I would have understood.”

The 1960s at Indy closed with a flourish with speeds more than 20mph faster than was even thinkable at the start of the decade. The coming years were going to be very interesting indeed. It was no longer a matter of if they would go faster; it was a matter of how much faster they would go. And 1969 marked the beginning of the end of an era – that of the open-faced helmet.

Had he been wearing one of the new full-face helmets, the Bell Star, and one of the new Nomex balaclava head socks with it, Andretti might not have suffered those slight facial burns in his fiery practice accident. As a result of those, Mario skipped the post-pole qualifying photo shoot that annually involves the first row the day after Pole Day. Appropriately subbing for Mario was his twin brother Aldo.

With victory in the 53rd running of the 500, Andretti became the final driver to win the race while wearing an open-face helmet and goggles. And to think that 35 years had passed since Bill Cummings became the first 500 winner to even wear a helmet!

Book cover of It’s… A… New… Track Record! An Incredible ‘Decade’ of Speed at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway 1962–1972 by Rick Shaffer, featuring vintage Indy 500 race cars and drivers.

Extract taken from It’s… A… New… Track Record! An Incredible ‘Decade’ of Speed at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway 1962-1972 by Rick Shaffer, £70, Evro Publishing. ISBN 9781918070002

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

Barry Sheene’s nickname for me was ‘Moriarty’, James Hunt simply called me ‘Arm’ based on the initials I wrote under for this magazine and the sister publication Motoring News. As a founding director of the sports PR, marketing and personality management company CSS Promotions, I was closely involved with this duo of implausible mates. Although from contrasting backgrounds the pair were drawn together by circumstance, personality and a competitive common aim, be it winning on the race track or chasing what Stirling Moss referred to as ‘crumpet’.

But let’s go back – March 1973 to be exact and I was in my BOAC VC10 seat on the way home from the South African Grand Prix. I’d already finished the MN report telling of Jackie Stewart’s victory and I was contemplating a conversation I’d had with Mike Jacklin, then promotions manager of Johannesburg-based Lucky Strike but soon to join Philip Morris/Marlboro in a similar capacity, who was looking for promotional ideas.

My VC10 idea for Mike was a give-away promotional newspaper, the Marlboro Sports Special, as an insert to Motoring News to be distributed to grand prix crowds. Less than two months later, I’d handed in my notice at Standard House – but Mr Tee got the printing contract and the first Special was being distributed at the Spanish GP at Jarama.

Black-and-white billboard of a racing driver holding Texaco Havoline motor oil.

Hunt’s friendly visage was everywhere in the mid-70s – including this billboard at Monza on the weekend of the ’76 Italian Grand Prix

LAT Images

On the back of this, Ford marketing manager and BBC Wheelbase presenter Barrie Gill and I set up our own business with help from Michael (son of Wesley) Tee and soon we produced other similar publications, which is where James Hunt and his accountant brother stepped in. Could we manage James’s commercial affairs, diary, fan requests, etc? Of course we could. I’d known James since his Formula Ford days and we’d always had a good relationship. We inked a couple of lucrative deals on the back of his win in the Hesketh at the BRDC International Trophy meeting in ’74.

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Our business, CSS Promotions, had really taken off and we brokered deals with Marlboro UK for them to sponsor a portfolio of events, from the British Grands Prix for cars and bikes to a darts tournament at Wembley. By the mid-70s Barry was a big name and captain of the British team in the Marlboro Anglo-American Easter motorcycle series. “I hear you are doing a good job for James,” he said. “Will you take me on?” So, another client, later joined on our roster by boxer Alan Minter, cricketers Mike Brearley and Bob Willis, snooker star TerryGriffiths and others.

Fifty years ago if you were managing sports stars you had three primary aims: get their pictures on the front as well as the back pages of the newspapers, have them appear on TV show Parkinson, and on the back of it pull off a lucrative endorsement deal, preferably with an associated TV commercial.

Such was their profile after winning their 1976 world titles, we achieved those aims. James was in a humorous Texaco TV ad with comedians Morecambe & Wise, while Barry was in the Fabergé ’splash it all over’ adverts with boxer Henry Cooper. They both had slots on Parky’s show watched by 12 million viewers. Barry played a blinder for sponsor Marlboro. A couple of days before the show he asked if he could wear a team shirt. “No, of course not,” was my answer and he just said, “Don’t worry, Moriarty.” On the night he walks to the sofa, wearing lightweight white shirt and jeans. The shirt has a pocket. Strong TV lights and the clear outline of a packet of Marlboros is just visible. Actually in the pack were his favoured Gitanes!

We also got him on This is Your Life and the popular radio show Desert Island Discs. Meanwhile with James we pulled off an unlikely deal for him to be an ambassador for Vauxhall. Not bad for a guy who had won his title with a Ford-powered McLaren. Both of them were instantly recognised not only at the tracks but in the high street.

Of course, 1976 was a great year when they both won their world championships and it certainly gave me the chance to contrast and compare. A dozen years ago I conceived a film about them for ITV Sport (you can find it on YouTube) and although it wasn’t my choice the title of this documentary was When Playboys Ruled the World.

“They had slots on Parky’s show watched by 12 million viewers”

Were they playboys? They both knew how to party, have fun and enjoyed the many pleasures of life but actually I found them hugely professional, both as competitors but also as personalities. They were masters at handling fans and the media. They both had good looks, charm, chat and charisma.

I remember James coming to our motor racing flat in Baker Street to judge some newspaper competition or other and taking a long time to deliberate on the winner and taking it really seriously. Likewise, Barry was brilliant with the very down-market winners of a Co-op footwear competition.

Two racing drivers joking around while sharing cigarettes in a paddock area.

Smoking hot – our heroes in Fuji: Sheene died in 2003 aged 52; Hunt was 45 when he died in 1993

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James, having benefited no doubt from an excellent education at Wellington, wrote superbly well and for a year or so I transcribed his handwritten words for a column and didn’t have to even change an apostrophe. Barry preferred to dictate his columns. Such was Sheene’s Sun road test of a Morris Marina. I parked it next to his Rolls-Royce at Charlwood, his palatial home near Gatwick. When he saw it, his response was “I’m not even sitting in that piece of shit, Moriarty.” And he didn’t. Surprisingly Barry was the better linguist – speaking fluent Spanish, good French and workshop Japanese. Plus, he was an accomplished helicopter pilot.

But there was a difference. With Barry you knew what you would get at, say, a sponsor function. I knew what he would wear and that he would turn up five minutes late. With James it was a lottery. Perhaps the nadir was at the black-tie Park Lane Tarmac Award, which he’d won. Linda Patterson, who brilliantly ran our personality management division, had fully briefed James. On the day he was very late and arrived in sandals, jeans and a tie-dyed T-shirt. The Tarmac managing director considered it an affront and never sponsored the award again. Yet on other occasions he would arrive early, immaculately dressed and with an eloquent speech prepared.

Vintage photo of spectators watching a British Grand Prix, with handwritten note.

Andrew Marriott with ‘Baza’

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Their backgrounds were so different: James the public-school son of a stockbroker, while Barry’s father was a London hospital caretaker and his secondary school education was punctuated by truancy and cheekiness. Yet both were determined, astute, smart and quick-witted in equal measure. They came from different directions but were bonded by common desires and direction. For me it was a privilege to have worked with them.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

The broad-brushstrokes generalisation of 1976 is that this was the year when motor sport moved from the back pages of the newspapers to the front. But, in reality, it had merited only the briefest of mentions in the sports coverage, far below the football, cricket and rugby. It’s 50 years since James Hunt and Barry Sheene – champions at the pinnacle of four and two-wheeled racing respectively – smashed through a ceiling, their fame refracting upon the sport, putting it at the front and back of the popular press. It was the success, the love lives, high jinks and controversy that did it. Here’s how an incredible year unfolded.

James Hunt with McLaren crew in pit lane, 1976

James Hunt and Barry Sheene, championship-deciding Japanese GP, 1976

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December 10, 1975

Marlboro and McLaren confirm their signing of James Hunt to replace Emerson Fittipaldi. Hunt has also held talks with Lotus: “They seemed to be of the opinion that their drivers shouldn’t be paid. They didn’t even buy me lunch.” Hunt’s 40-a-day habit is no problem for Marlboro, but his refusal to sign a contract that stipulates blazer-wearing at official functions nearly scuppers the deal, until the company’s John Hogan – a friend of Hunt’s – says that he will not enforce this.

December 11, 1975

Hunt turns his first laps at the wheel of a McLaren M23 at Silverstone. Just a few, due to fog. Another test is similarly hampered. Hunt spends Christmas and New Year in Gstaad with his estranged wife Suzy and some friends. He then returns to his tax-exiled home in Spain, happy to leave Mrs H in Switzerland, where she meets Richard Burton…

Barry Sheene on classic motorcycle, 1976

Daily Mirror photo shoot, January 1976

January 16, 1976

Barry Sheene’s first big national story of the year appears in the Daily Mirror: “Barry Sheene, the Cockney genius of the superbike circuits, has had a rough old year, with several disastrous smashes. But with a new season ahead and a new Suzuki to ride, there’s only one thing for a whiz-kid to do: grin and bear it!” The 25-year-old, whose dad is a two-stroke engine specialist, has played a big part in the Suzuki RG500’s development, including months in Japan over the winter, which he describes as “the hardest of my life”.

January 24, 1976

Pole position at Interlagos on Hunt’s McLaren debut. He’s too tall for the cockpit, so on Friday night modifications are made, and he responds in style. The following day, a loose engine inlet trumpet slows him in the Brazilian Grand Prix, then a sticking throttle causes a spin into the fence, damaging the oil cooler and forcing him out.

February 24, 1976

Hunt takes to the track at Kyalami for the second day of pre-South African Grand Prix testing. Off track, he is having a ‘good time’ with a South African actress, before a quick pitstop at the hotel means a Portuguese ex-army lieutenant is hanging off his arm.

James Hunt with companion in paddock, 1976

Hunt with female company, Kyalami, ’76

LAT Images

March 6, 1976

Another pole for Hunt, but he drops to fourth at the start at Kyalami. After an early battle with Tyrrell’s Patrick Depailler and Vittorio Brambilla in a March 761, he sets off after the Ferrari of race leader Niki Lauda. The 312T slows late on with a left-rear puncture, but Lauda holds on to defeat Hunt and take his second win of the season. The Austrian is 12 points clear at the top of the driver standings.

March 7, 1976

Over in the US, Sheene contests the opening round of the Formula 750 world championship, the Daytona 200, on Suzuki’s ageing and uncompetitive 750cc triple. It’s exactly one year after he nearly died at Daytona when his 750’s rear tyre exploded at 175mph. American superbike star Steve McLaughlin remembers: “I visited Barry in hospital, and looking through the little window before I went in I could see him with both legs and one arm elevated, and he was with a nurse. He signalled to me with his free hand – ‘give me a couple more minutes’.” A year later he’s still in agony; he qualifies 13th, before his drive chain snaps in the race.

March 14, 1976

It’s the Race of Champions at Brands Hatch. Hunt, who arrives at the track with a Swedish model, emerges from the early battling on a slippery track in second place, but has to work hard to pass the surprising Surtees of Alan Jones for his first win for McLaren. “He really was driving magnificently,” says Hunt. “I was getting worried.”

March 21, 1976

Sheene qualifies second for the Formula 750 round at San Carlos in Venezuela, but his conrod breaks in the race.

March 28, 1976

An early collision with Depailler at Long Beach puts Hunt out of the US GP West. He stands by the track for a few laps to wave his fist at the Frenchman, then, two hours later, livens up the post-race press conference with a tirade against the sheepish Frenchman. Meanwhile, a mechanic drives the McLaren, which is only cosmetically damaged, back to the pits.

April 4, 1976

It’s another Formula 750 event for Sheene. This time he finishes third at Imola.

April 11, 1976

A dominant win in the International Trophy at Silverstone for Hunt, after early pressure from Brambilla fades. He returns to Spain, and wife Suzy flies out to join him for coffee in Málaga. Here they realise that there is no prospect of reconciliation. Hunt goes to a Marbella nightclub, jumps fully clothed into a swimming pool, and gets into an altercation with the doorman when he tries to return.

Barry Sheene riding Suzuki number 7, 1976

Sheene had a horror accident in the 1975 Daytona 200

Sutton

April 16-19, 1976

After Hunt’s two wins in the UK’s non-championship F1 races, it’s Sheene’s turn to star at home over the Easter weekend. The Transatlantic is a series of match races between UK and US riders, with two races per round at Brands, Mallory Park and Oulton Park. “Grands prix are an utter financial disaster,” said Sheene, who lost money at every GP he contested. “Someone’s making a lot of money out of them and it’s definitely not the riders.” Not so away from the GP scene… “Barry was getting ten grand in brown paper envelopes at British meetings,” remembers his best mate and future team-mate Steve Parrish. At Brands on Good Friday, Sheene is second and third (he also wins the Motor Cycle News Superbike and ShellSport races). At Mallory on Easter Sunday, he takes a win and a third (plus ShellSport victory). At Oulton on Easter Monday, he has a third and a crash (plus another ShellSport triumph).

April 23, 1976

McLaren joins the pre-Spanish GP test at Jarama. Hunt is joint quickest with Depailler, who is preparing to give the six-wheeled Tyrrell P34 its debut.

April 25, 1976

It’s the first 500cc World Championship round, the French GP at Le Mans. Sheene wins from Yamaha rider Johnny Cecotto and Suzuki privateer Marco Lucchinelli. The start/finish is uphill, and GP starts are with dead engines, so Sheene – still recovering from his Daytona crash – requests a pusher, starting from the back of the grid. He is refused. This is the first race that new girlfriend Stephanie attends…

James Hunt celebrating Brands Hatch victory, 1976

F1 non-championship victory in April for Hunt – the BRDC International Trophy

April 28, 1976

…The Sun front page headline: Race ace stole my wife – Page 3 girl Stephanie in love triangle. McLean is married to fashion photographer Clive McLean. “Barry liked the women,” said American champion Gary Nixon, one of Sheene’s best mates. “He slept with 186 different chicks in one year, plus he lived with a good-looking one.”

May 2, 1976

Hunt passes Lauda shortly before half-distance to win the Spanish GP. He is parched after the race and is handed an orange juice. This is clumsily knocked out of his hands by a local, whom Hunt punches: “I felt awful about it afterwards and tried to find him to apologise.” Controversy erupts after the race, the first to be held to new regulations on car dimensions. The McLaren is measured at 216.8cm width when the maximum is 215cm. Hunt is excluded, and team boss Teddy Mayer fumes: “We feel we have been given a death sentence for a parking ticket.” Over at Salzburgring for the Austrian 500cc GP, reporters besiege Sheene for his response to The Sun story. Things are more serene on track, where he takes victory from Lucchinelli and twice-world-champion British veteran Phil Read.

Barry Sheene racing Suzuki RG500, 1976

Sheene representing the UK in the Transatlantic Trophy, Mallory Park

LAT

May 5, 1976

A tribunal of the Spanish federation rejects McLaren’s appeal. The team is not allowed to present its case, so now asks the RAC to take the matter to the FIA.

May 9, 1976

Sheene takes a win at Cadwell Park in the MCN Superbike championship.

May 16, 1976

Hunt’s Belgian GP weekend unravels after lapping Zolder quickest in the first qualifying session. He ends up third on the grid, collides with Jacques Laffite in the race, proves a roadblock to Jody Scheckter, and finally retires with a seized gearbox. Things are going rather better for Sheene at the Italian 500cc GP. He makes it three out of three with victory over Read at Mugello, although two riders lose their lives at the meeting.

Victorious driver celebrates crossing finish line before cheering crowd

A win for Hunt in Spain… eventually

DPPI

May 30, 1976

Another forgettable race for Hunt. Lack of grip plus gearbox problems restrict him to 14th on the grid for the Monaco GP. He spins down to last at Tabac on the eighth lap, before engine failure puts him out of his misery. The following day, Sheene is fourth at Brands in the MCN Superbike round, and second to Read in the King of Brands race.

June 4, 1976

Things look up for Hunt in a test at Swedish GP venue Anderstorp, where he is quickest from John Watson’s Penske. Stories also emerge that he is to tackle the Tour of Britain with popular bearded TV and radio presenter Noel Edmonds in a Vauxhall Magnum backed by BBC Radio 1.

James Hunt racing Vauxhall Magnum, Tour of Britain 1976

Hunt and Noel Edmonds were a Magnum force

Shutterstock

June 6, 1976

The non-championship 500cc race on the Chimay road course in Belgium, see Great Lost Circuits, pays very, very well. Sheene wins it from Read and Lucchinelli.

June 13, 1976

Testing proves to be a red herring. Hunt’s McLaren is uncompetitive at Anderstorp, but he battles oversteer to hold off Clay Regazzoni and Ronnie Peterson for a fine fifth. It is one of his best performances of the season, and the two points won will later prove crucial… Sheene takes another MCN Superbike triumph, this time at Mallory.

June 25, 1976

More testing for Hunt, this time at French GP venue Paul Ricard. He is second behind the Brabham of Carlos Pace, despite engine failure.

Barry Sheene smiling in Team Suzuki race suit, 1976

Sheene was first in five out of six 500cc grands prix

June 26, 1976

Sheene is back on 500cc world championship duty for the Dutch TT at Assen. All the leading runners have skipped the UK’s round a fortnight earlier – the infamous Isle of Man TT. Sheene wins again, from Suzuki privateers Pat Hennen and Wil Hartog. In the long, hot summer of 1976, it’s 37°C here.

July 4, 1976

McLaren has been all at sea since Hunt’s Spanish GP exclusion, after tweaks to the M23’s oil cooler, rear wing and wheelbase to make sure it conforms to the regulations. But aero changes in time for the French GP have the desired effect. Hunt claims pole at Paul Ricard. He is beaten away by Lauda but the Ferrari is soon trailing fluid, and retires on lap nine. Hunt wins from Depailler despite feeling sick – a malaise attributed to overdoing the pâté de foie gras on the Friday night. In Belgium, Sheene is second at Spa in the 500cc GP behind Suzuki team-mate John Williams. He makes his only good start of the year because the start/finish is downhill, and leads the race before he suffers fuel vaporisation in the heat.

July 5, 1976

Two wins in two days for Hunt! An FIA tribunal, comprising five international jurors including a major-general from the Finnish army, overturns his Spanish GP exclusion and substitutes a £1600 fine.

James Hunt with Miss U.S. Grand Prix West, 1976

Hunt gets to know the locals at the US Grand Prix West in 1976; his smile vanished in the race when Patrick Depailler pushed his car into the barrier

Alvis Upitis/Getty Images

July 9, 1976

Disaster for Hunt on the Tour of Britain… Stories include an unruly battle on the road with the non-competing Rolls-Royce of Lord Hesketh, V-signs brandished to cheery motorists waving at the Radio 1 Vauxhall, a crash into a tree on a Norfolk stage, and a run-in with the police for speeding. Hunt and Edmonds arrive for the Cadwell Park race with the fuzz on their tail, and quick-witted team-mate Jimmy McRae manoeuvres his Magnum to block in the constabulary. Edmonds implores Hunt to continue for the sake of his radio listeners, but the police’s insistence that the lights on the much-abused Vauxhall are repaired means they can’t get to the next stage on time, and withdraw.

July 11, 1976

Just two days after Hunt races the Magnum at Snetterton, Sheene is at the Norfolk track to win the ShellSport 500 round, but crashes out of the Race of Aces when the front brake pads fall out. He is treated in the ambulance, and badly battered. “I hurtled into the banking and went end over end – sheer luck prevented it from being a bloody major spill.”

First-corner chaos as F1 cars tangle at packed circuit

Clay Regazzoni spins at the start of the Brands Hatch ’76 British GP, and is hit by Hunt (No11)

LAT Images

July 13, 1976

After the chaos… Hunt appears at the Kent County Show to present the prizes for a children’s safety competition. He has been staying with his parents: “I realised I had been living my life up to the red line and I had drained myself completely.” He also performs an unexpectedly competent turn on the trumpet as part of the Grand Prix Night of the Stars at the Albert Hall.

July 18, 1976

Hunt is caught up with the spinning Ferraris at the first corner of the British GP at Brands Hatch, is pitched into the air and lands his McLaren with a hefty thump. Trigger-happy RAC officials red-flag the race, causing a massive rumpus as to whether Hunt will be allowed to take the restart. While beer cans and crisp packets rain down on the Brands track from the disgruntled and sunbaked crowd, McLaren’s mechanics work miracles to repair Hunt’s car. Poleman Lauda leads the restart for 44 laps, but the Ferrari’s gearbox has begun playing up and Hunt passes, pulling away to win by 42sec. Ferrari appeals the result, saying Hunt should not have taken the restart. Hunt doesn’t care; he’s celebrating with chums, who have brought plenty of beer. Sheene is here too to cheer his pal on.

James Hunt in racing gear talking at Brands Hatch

Sheene and girlfriend Stephanie McLean in support of Hunt at the British GP. Hunt won but would be disqualified

Mirrorpix via Getty Images

July 22, 1976

McLaren’s new M26 – raced just once in 1976, by Jochen Mass at Zandvoort – is tested by Hunt at Silverstone. His right thumb is in pain and, on his return to Spain, a specialist diagnoses torn ligaments from the Brands bump. Meanwhile, Mayer confirms an intriguing plan for Hunt to contest the Ontario 500 IndyCar race in early September in a second Cosworth DFX-powered M24 alongside McLaren team leader Johnny Rutherford.

July 25, 1976

Sheene wins the Swedish GP at Anderstorp from Jack Findlay and Chas Mortimer to secure the 500cc world title, and his entourage celebrates at a local hotel: “We drank our way through 30 bottles of champagne – and at Swedish prices of £14 a bottle [that’s around £95 in today’s money!].” There is no need for him to contest the final rounds in Finland, Czechoslovakia and Germany, which take place on the high-risk ImatraBrno and Nürburgring circuits.

Barry Sheene with fellow Suzuki rider, 1976

Sheene, Suzuki RG500 and a cigarette – with British racer Paul Smart; Barry’s sister Maggie married Smart

Grand Prix Photo

August 1, 1976

The day Lauda nearly dies, when fire engulfs his Ferrari after crashing out of the German GP at the Nürburgring. The subsequent red flag robs Hunt’s McLaren team-mate Mass – due to being the only driver to correctly choose slick tyres for the drying track, he was holding a huge lead. Hunt blitzes the restart to lead home the Tyrrell of Scheckter.

August 5, 1976

The day after RAC stewards reject his appeal over the British GP result, Enzo Ferrari withdraws his team from F1. He cites discontent over this, and the overturning of Hunt’s Spanish GP exclusion – the latter point has been roundly condemned, even in the British media. “Unless there is a return to the spirit of the sport’s law, I do not feel like going ahead,” grumbles the Old Man.

Classic Marlboro-liveried Formula One car on white background

Another win for Hunt, this time at Zandvoort, and the Brit moves to within two points of Lauda

August 8, 1976

Sheene is back at Brands for an MCN Superbike race, which he wins.

August 15, 1976

No Ferrari or Lauda at the Austrian GP, but the Österreichring race is a classic. Hunt damages a front fin when he takes to the mud at Hella-Licht avoiding Scheckter’s crash after the Tyrrell suffers suspension failure. He then tweaks the other while lapping Harald Ertl. But he finishes fourth, on the tail of Laffite and Gunnar Nilsson, as Watson steers his Penske to a popular win. Sheene is in action at Silverstone at the 750cc British GP meeting, where he is second to American Steve Baker: “It couldn’t be said Steve outrode me – his Yamaha was just far superior to my Suzuki.”

August 17, 1976

It is confirmed that Hunt will drive an Ecurie CanadaMarch in the Formula Atlantic race at the Trois-Rivières street circuit; the same date as the Ontario 500 he was slated to contest. His team-mate will be Canada’s most exciting young talent, Gilles Villeneuve.

James Hunt in Marlboro McLaren cockpit, 1976

Hunt, Jarama

Sutton

August 21, 1976

Suzy Hunt and Richard Burton are married in ArlingtonVirginia, two months after they received their respective divorces in Haiti from James, and Elizabeth Taylor.

“Grands prix are an utter financial disaster. Someone’s making money. It’s not the riders”

August 23, 1976

Enzo Ferrari U-turns on his decision to quit F1, and a single car will be run for Clay Regazzoni in the upcoming Dutch GP. He requests that the FIA re-examines the Spanish and British GP cases.

August 27, 1976

At the Earl’s Court Motorbike Show in London, Sheene collects a Suzuki GS750 road bike, the company’s first four-stroke. Two-strokes are being legislated off the road by emissions laws.

Barry Sheene on Suzuki RG500 in pit lane, 1976

Sheene at the Powerbike International, Brands Hatch, October – he has been 500cc world champion for three months

LAT Images

August 29, 1976

Zandvoort hosts another thriller of a GP. Hunt is third early on, but benefits when Watson runs wide at Tarzan while trying to pass Ronnie Peterson’s leading March. They each divebomb the Swede on lap 13, and Watson spends the next 35 tours stuck behind Hunt, whose McLaren is understeering due to a loose front brake scoop. Gearbox failure for Watson is but a temporary reprieve for Hunt, because he has Regazzoni and Mario Andretti breathing down his neck at the finish. It’s Hunt’s birthday, and his mum Sue, younger brother David and a cake are in attendance. All are involved in a drunken campfire singalong in the dunes well into the night. The following day, Sheene is third at Oulton in the latest MCN Superbike round.

September 5, 1976

On his first outing in FAtlantic, Hunt passes Patrick Tambay, Bobby Rahal and Brambilla (deranging his nose on the Italian’s car) to finish third at Trois-Rivières. The dominant winner is Villeneuve, and Hunt returns raving about the Québécois’s talents to Marlboro and McLaren… Sheene is at a rather different venue: the scary Scarborough parkland road course. He is fourth in the MCN Superbike round. A second successive win for Kawasaki rider Mick Grant means he closes on Sheene.

James Hunt racing at Fuji Japanese GP, 1976

Third place at Fuji was enough to land Hunt the world championship

September 12, 1976

Lauda’s miraculous return to the cockpit at Monza, but the Italian GP weekend is soured when scrutineers exclude Hunt, Mass and Watson from qualifying because their fuel exceeds the maximum octane rating. Each scrapes onto the grid due to others withdrawing. Hunt is up to 12th by lap 11 when he skates off at the second chicane while battling Tom Pryce’s Shadow and gets stuck in the sand. He is spat at and jeered by the crowd as he stalks back to the pits. Sheene is at Mallory for another MCN Superbike triumph; he’s second to Baker in the Race of the Year.

September 18, 1976

Hunt competes in the IROC race at the Michigan superspeedway. He takes pole among a field of identical Chevrolet Camaros, but a roughing-up from Johnny RutherfordDavid Pearson and Gordon Johncock causes him to crash out on lap eight: “To tell you the truth I was scared shitless.” The following day, Sheene scores maximum points at Cadwell in the latest MCN Superbike round.

James Hunt with IROC Camaro drivers, Michigan 1976

To Michigan for Hunt, third from left, for an IROC race in Chevrolet Camaros; he took pole position

September 24, 1976

McLaren is already testing at Mosport for the upcoming Canadian GP when news arrives that the FIA Court of Appeal has accepted Ferrari’s case and excluded Hunt from the Brands Hatch race, on the grounds that his car was being pushed by mechanics at the time of the red flag. Hunt is now 17 points behind Lauda with just three races left.

October 2, 1976

Hunt beats Peterson to pole for the Canadian GP. The McLaren man has gone “quite lunatic” since his Brands exclusion, in the words of team manager Alastair Caldwell, who is quoted in Gerald Donaldson’s James Hunt – The Biography (1995): “He proceeded to drink whatever was at hand and poke anything that would stand still or lie down long enough.” The night before the race, Hunt takes a shine to the singer of a band that is performing in the team’s motel. Between sets, he and the chanteuse ‘relax’ together in his room; while she performs, he is downing beer – till 2am.

Racing drivers chatting casually during flight, relaxed candid moment

Flight home from the Japanese GP

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October 3, 1976

Peterson wins the start, but Hunt shrugs off his hangover to pass him on lap nine. He then has a fired-up Depailler to fend off, the six-wheeled Tyrrell frequently right on the McLaren’s tail before a broken fuel pump sprays fuel in the Frenchman’s face. He plugs on to finish second behind Hunt, who is now just eight points behind the non-scoring Lauda.

October 10, 1976

After a test on the Wednesday, Hunt tops the only dry(ish) qualifying session at Watkins Glen to claim pole for the United States GP. Snow falls on Saturday night but the track is dry – if cold – for the race. Lauda, with whom Hunt has had a brief falling-out in Canada, is staying in an adjoining room. He wakes his old friend up at 7am while sporting full racegear and proclaims: “Today I win ze championship!” Scheckter beats Hunt away and the Tyrrell is in command. But Hunt reels the South African in and takes the lead on lap 37. Four laps later he gets boxed in behind a backmarker at the chicane and Scheckter is back in front. Hunt reclaims the advantage with 13 laps to go for victory. Lauda is third, but is now just three points ahead. McLaren sends an M23 straight to Fuji for testing prior to the Japanese GP; Ferrari is outraged, claiming this goes against a written agreement signed at Mosport.

Barry Sheene racing Suzuki in wet conditions, 1976

Sheene wrapped up the 500cc title with three races still to go

October 17, 1976

It’s a week before the Japanese GP, and Sheene is with Hunt in Tokyo, shortly after they have attended the International Motor Show at the Birmingham NEC together. To Hunt’s delight, their hotel is also used by British Airways flight crew, which means a new batch of stewardesses every day. “We had the same daft kind of mentality then,” said Sheene in the Donaldson biography. “We were both sportsmen and we both drank and smoked and chased women, went to places you shouldn’t go and did things you shouldn’t do.”

“Lauda wakes Hunt up at 7am in full racegear and proclaims: ‘Today I win ze championship!’”

October 24, 1976

Heavy rain delays the start of the Japanese GP, for which Hunt has qualified second, one place behind the Lotus of Andretti; one ahead of Lauda. Hunt accesses his car by wooden planks laid by the McLaren mechanics across the track torrent: “I’m not going to race. I’m just going to drive around.” Lauda doesn’t even do that, pulling in to retire after two slow laps. An inspired Hunt splashes away in front but, after the rain stops and the track begins to dry, he is killing his tyres. Eleven laps to go: Depailler and Andretti pass him, but third is OK – with Lauda out, any place in the top four will suffice. Eight laps to go: one of Depailler’s six tyres bursts and Hunt is now second. Five laps to go: Hunt’s left-front shreds, but it’s just before the pit entry and he dives in for new rubber. Now he’s fifth. Penultimate lap: Regazzoni and Jones, each with tyre problems of their own, are simultaneously passed by the McLaren. Hunt is third. He’s done it.

October 26, 1976

Hunt arrives at Heathrow to a hero’s welcome. The flight from Tokyo has included a stopover in Anchorage and, apart from two hours of sleep, Hunt has been drinking and leading the party. JAL offers him first class but he wants to stay in economy with his friends – other than trips to the ‘posh’ bar.

James Hunt judging Miss World, 1976 ceremony

Hunt judging Miss World

October 30-31, 1976

Sheene wins the final rounds of the MCN Superbike and ShellSport 500 series at Brands to put both championships to bed, and add to his 500cc world title glory. He is fourth in the Powerbike International race.

November 7, 1976

Hunt appears at the Tribute to James meeting at Brands Hatch, with the magnanimous Lauda also joining in festivities – plus Sheene.

November/December 1976

The week after Tribute to James, Hunt’s appearance on the BBC’s popular Superstars programme is aired. He’s last in the 100m, but his runner-up performances in the cycling and 600m steeplechase propel him to third behind hurdler David Hemery and boxer John Conteh. It’s undocumented whether hellraising QPR midfielder and fellow contestant Stan Bowles is a drinking partner once the Aldershot track-and-field exertions are done… The rest of the year is a blur. As a favour to Lauda, Hunt goes to Austria to open the Jochen Rindt Show – an annual motor exhibition – in Linz. He arrives at the hoity-toity BRDC dinner with jeans, sandals, open-necked shirt and French model, and staggers into a touring car driver, smashing his gin glass and cutting his eyebrow; he then steps back and tramples on the spectacles belonging to the tin-top man’s lawyer. Hunt and Sheene attend the BBC’s Sports Personality of the Year; the new F1 champion is runner-up to Olympic figure skating gold medallist John Curry. And, naturally, Hunt is a judge of Miss World. Is Lando Norris taking notes?

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

Regarding the Formula 1 2026 rules and regulations: compare the likes of John Watson clinically slicing his way through from 22nd to victory in the 1983 Long Beach Grand Prix, above, the last lap wheel banging between Gilles Villeneuve and René Arnoux at Dijon or Nigel Mansell’s diving pass on Nelson Piquet into Stowe with the artificial boost overtakes we’ve so far witnessed this year and it’s enough to make one weep with frustration at how the ’sport’ is turning out.

As Max Verstappen quite rightly points out, those who are enjoying the current debacle do not understand motor sport.

And don’t get me started on qualifying. To hear the revs rise as drivers lift off on entry to fast corners to harvest energy is totally against everything that pure racing stands for.

Anyone who witnessed Keke Rosberg’s 160mph pole lap in the damp at Silverstone with a slow puncture must be beside themselves.

I just hope the FIA and F1 see sense. Meanwhile MotoGP beckons, as it has done for the past few decades. Real racers, real racing, lights to flag.

Jeremy Snook, Lambourn, Berkshire

Ferrari 250 GTO number 10 parked in sunlight

This ‘Bianco Speciale’ Ferrari 250 GTO was recently sold by auctioneers Mecum for £28.8m

LAT Images

Just received the February ’26 issue and have to say that it was glorious! Give my compliments to Owen Norris [Motor Sport’s art editor] and his team for this issue’s appearance. It’s really a treat for the eye on every page.

I noticed one point in Simon de Burton’s piece on the recently sold (here in the US) all-white Ferrari 250 GTO [Whiter shade of sale]. The notes state that the bodywork was designed by Giotto Bizzarrini. No question that he led that project (against much negativity from Enzo) but the body was actually designed internally at Ferrari by Bizzarini’s partner in that project Edmondo Casali. My source on this is Spanish journalist David Rodriguez who has a fantastic historic database of such details that occurred in Modena during that era. Since this design is one of the world’s great aesthetic/functional shapes the designer should get credit.

Peter Brock, via email

I was so interested in the February edition’s piece on the Thomson Road circuit [Great Lost Circuits] and Julian Nowell’s letter [about the track] in the March edition. I was but a ‘wee boy’ when I lived in Singapore between 1960–64 as my father was working in the MoD and my lifelong love of motor sport was defined by attending the events on offer. I was at the 1962, ’63 and ’64 grands prix on the Thomson Road circuit (which also hosted sprints on the infamous Snakes section of the track during the season).

For such a small country it was rich in motor sport events with the Gap Hill Climb (again on public roads), sprints at RAF Changi (now the international airport) and kart racing at Kallang Park. And across the Causeway on the mainland was Johor which also hosted its own “Grand Prix”!

My passion led me to competing for many years followed by my son who was considerably more talented behind the wheel than I! I attach some copies of programmes which may be of interest.

Keith Atkins via email

1963 Gap Hill Climb poster by Singapore Motor Club
1963 Johor Grand Prix poster with state crest
1963 Malaysia Grand Prix Singapore poster with motorcycle racers
1962 Malaysia Grand Prix Singapore poster with race car driver
Singapore was a hotbed of motor racing events in the 1960s – and our reader attended some.

I’m rather dismayed with current levels of F1 acrimony in interpretation of rulesets, and the number of protests and penalties at races for minor infractions. Some teams seem to rely on protest rather than get on with their development. Unnecessarily Red Bull seem to have ‘whinges’, and rather than fettle their own wings, would prefer to clip those of others.

Philip Clarke via email

Red Bull Racing driver in branded cap and suit

Max Verstappen has derided F1’s new rules – and Jeff Williams says Jenks would be in agreement

The front cover of the April issue of Motor Sport magazine [F1 2026: your guide to F1’s new era] had me worried and I was bang on – over 100 pages of boring Formula 1 analysis. Well somebody has to say it! I feel entitled to do so as a subscriber since the mid-60s.

For those of us who avidly followed F1 in the ’60s to the ’80s there are just so many things wrong with modern F1 and other top-rung motor sport championships.

In ‘our’ period, we loved the way F1 conducted itself:

• Drivers used to acknowledge the crowds with a simple wave of thanks, not a wiggle and dance on top of the car like an American football player or a US NASCAR winner.

• Drivers dressed and groomed properly like gentlemen, not like musical pop stars… Although there was the odd slob like dear old James Hunt.

• Drivers and cars followed simple identifiable colour schemes, not the multi-sponsor, weird US style where machines are liberally plastered with company logos, rendering the cars almost indistinguishable from one another.

• The cars were interesting and often beautiful to look at – unlike the modern F1 designs which look like a slightly odd combination of a snow shovel and an overdressed porcupine!

• The rules were simple and easy to follow – capacity, dimensions, minimum weight, and some necessary safety related regs, and we all understood them.

Lets go back to the old simple rules –before F1 and the rest totally crashes and burns from overregulation and overfunding.

Peter Pentz, Campton Hills, Illinois

Red Formula 1 car cornering with dust at track edge

Is this a Ferrari? Who knows – to some readers they all look the same these days…

Grand Prix Photo

I am not usually in agreement with Max Verstappen but I am with regard to the new regulations in Formula 1. I feel that the late, great Jenks would also deplore the fact that the drivers will not be racing all the time. The need to conserve tyres was not as bad as it encouraged good car design as well as driver ability. This new regulation is a step too far even though the same thing could be said about it.

Jeff Williams, via email

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No doubt Nicky Samengo Turner’s letter in the April edition [suggesting a random draw to determine starting position as with horse racing] will have enthusiasts spluttering with indignation. However the true purists will know that pre-war grids were sometimes decided by ballot, so not a new idea.

If the sport really wants to attract a wider audience just imagine the additional public interest if drivers had to draw lots, say on the drivers’ parade? If this idea were to be adopted qualifying could be held in the normal way but with points awarded.

Tony Elgood, Beckenham

Recently I asked an AI system to predict the WRC champion for this year, 2026. After pondering long and hard for almost 10 seconds it replied that, while it could not predict with certainty, the most likely contenders for champion would be Kalle Rovanperä and Ott Tänak. Well there we are. Keep up the good work.

Ed Goodhugh via email

1967 Motor Sport cover with Chaparral winged car

I’ve nearly finished reading the March mag and have to say how much I have enjoyed it – brilliant. I first bought Motor Sport in September 1967 when I first started work. I remember it well, seeing the mag on the newsagent’s shelf with a picture of the white, winged Chaparral, above, and from that date Motor Sport has been my go-to, when you need a bit of time on your own, after the major times in life that come your way. Once again thank you for a wonderful publication.

Chris Brightmore via email

Can all motor racing commentators stop using corner numbers – they do not mean anything.

All corners have names, please use them.

Brian Lewis, Derby


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Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

It is, on the one hand, just another mid-sized, mid-price electric SUV and, as such, perhaps not the strongest candidate for earning one of just 12 spaces for two-page reviews this title has to offer each year.

It also provides the benchmark for all BMWs from now on. And those are not my words; they belong instead to David George, CEO of BMW Group UK. The new platform upon which it sits and the tech it contains will underpin no fewer than – his words again – “Forty product launches between now and the end of next year.” No wonder the company calls it the Neue Klasse in direct reference to the BMW 1500 launched with the same name in 1961 and which saved the company in the most literal sense. Although no longer facing an existential threat, BMW sees this neue Neue Klasse as no less important.

Rear view of BMW iX3 50 driving on rural road

The claim is a range of up to 500 miles, which is fighting talk from BMW

In technical terms the iX3 is fairly extraordinary, probably the most notable stat being the 500-mile range claimed for it, a new record for a car sold in the UK when measured by the same WLTP method required of all cars sold in Europe. Now, of course, it won’t actually do that – when I first climbed aboard it claimed to have both a 100% charge and a range of 443 miles, but it is no less honest than any other EV out there and the issue lies with the mandated means of measuring, not the car being measured. But it should still go further on a charge than any other car on sale.

Handily its closest rival, the Mercedes-Benz GLC 400, is also brand new, similarly state of the art and the statistical comparison is interesting: the Mercedes has a smaller battery and a range some 60 miles short of the BMW’s, yet it weighs 165kg more and can charge at 320kW while the BMW will take a 400kW charge if you can find somewhere to provide it. I did find a load of comparative data between this new iX3 and its predecessor but I won’t trouble you with it because what was competitive four years ago is a joke today: a 280-mile range and charging speed of 135kW.

So it all stacks up on paper. In the flesh too the new design language is pleasing and a welcome relief from some of BMW’s more, er, courageous shapes of recent times. The interior is so spacious all 6ft 3in of me could sit behind myself, which makes me ponder the point of the yet larger iX5 that will doubtless sit on this platform in time.

There is, of course, an all-new operating system (with associated app) and I could doubtless fill every remaining page detailing its capabilities, but suffice to say there’s a broader than ever range of really useful features – it’ll show you a charging curve so you can disconnect when it starts to slow – and utterly pointless gimmicks, like the ability to see how many degrees of steering you are using. There’s the usual digital dash but, above it, a car-wide strip of displays which is largely configurable to show whatever information you want to see. It looks great.

I tried two cars with different steering wheel designs and didn’t like either – they’re too small, the diameter of their rims too large and filled with BMW’s usual squishy material. Also there are no paddles for adjusting the energy regeneration before you need to brake, which I thought a surprising omission for a BMW, even when in SUV form.

“Its smooth demeanour is too often upset by the quality of our roads”

And while yet quicker versions will become available, this one is plenty fast enough. Indeed I don’t really understand the modest 4.9sec 0-62mph time claimed; it’s not how it feels. It also handles pretty well for a car of this size and heft. It can feel a touch ponderous at low speeds, but get on a flowing road and it settles nicely into the apex and controls its body movements well. I’d criticise the lack of steering feel if I could think of another remotely similar car that had any.

But the ride needs improving. For all the technology oozing out of this car, its springs are metal and shaped into coils, and even on standard 20in rims its generally smooth demeanour is too often upset by the rapidly deteriorating quality of our roads. On the biggest 22in rims, comfort levels are never more than adequate, and at times rather less than that. It would be interesting to see what efforts, if any, were made to set this car up for UK roads. The good news is that an adaptive damping option (which was available even on the old iX3) is coming, but not until next year. Right now it feels like expecting an entirely passive system both to control this much high-and-heavy car while also providing impressive levels of comfort is placing too big a burden on its shoulders. Were it my money, I’d wait for the trick shockers.

Otherwise though, this is a fine car that broadly lives up to its ambitious billing. But the one I really want to drive is the next Neue Klasse down the line, the i3 or, put another way, the new 3 Series. Lower, lighter and more efficient as it’s bound to be, if you think this car has impressive numbers, it’s likely we ain’t seen nothing yet…

BMW iX3 50 xDrive M Sport

BMW

Squishy steering wheel

  • Price £60,250
  • Engine Front and rear electric motors, 108.7kWh
  • Power 469bhp
  • Torque 475lb ft
  • Weight 2295kg
  • Power to weight 204bhp per tonne
  • Transmission Single-speed, four-wheel drive
  • 0-62mph 6.9sec
  • Top speed 130mph
  • Range 500 miles (WLTP)
  • Charging speed Up to 400kW
  • Verdict Klasse act – and just the start.

Review

Red Audi S5 Avant driving at speed on rural road

Audi beats Beemer rival

Audi S5 Avant Edition 1 better than M340i
I’m sure it’s happened at some stage but I can’t remember when… Audi has taken on a directly comparable BMW and come out on top. When I jumped from an S5 Avant into a BMW M 340i, the Audi was not just faster and prettier, it was as good to drive and felt better built too.
Verdict: Comfortable, quiet and very quick.


Coming soon

Red Peugeot GTI concept car with sporty design

GTI spec for Peugeot 208

All-new EV hatchback to arrive in late ’26
Peugeot’s next GTI will also be its first all-electric GTI. The problem is that when driven as its makers would like, its range in the cold is barely 100 miles. It has to be more than entertaining: it has to be usable. Crack that without compromising the fun factor and Peugeot could have something.


Insider news

Land Rover Defender P400e charging with electric cable

New ‘pint-sized’ Defender

Electric model will be smaller than the 90

Three years ago Land Rover announced it was turning itself into a ‘house of brands’, so Range Rover, Defender and Discovery would no longer be mere model names. Next year, Defender launches a pint-sized, electric version. If the directors had their time again, would they still be committing to an EV-only approach for the car?

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Stewart and Jenkinson clash over safety as Rindt wins at Clermont-Ferrand

Regulars will remember that last month I wrote about the imminent demise of the Alfa Romeo Giulia and its 500bhp Quadrifoglio offshoot, and its forthcoming all electric replacement. I’d love to say the top brass in Milan heard my plaintive lament but clearly their decision to reverse ferret in the intervening four weeks had been rather longer in the planning. So now despite the presses falling silent at the Cassino plant where it was built and with the car therefore firmly in the ground, Alfa has decided to get its spades out and by the time you read this the Giulia will have been exhumed, resurrected and put back into production where it will stay until at least the end of 2027. And I expect you don’t need me to tell you why. Turns out that the formaggi grossi have twigged that take-up for the EV replacement was likely to be less than, er, electrifying so have kicked the car into the near distance, at least for the time being.

I’ve just spent a month using a Quadrifoglio as my daily and found it so charming I almost forgave its faults. Almost. It has a good engine, excellent chassis and superb looks. But so too does it have one of the worst operating systems I’ve encountered, the fuel consumption is ruinous, the seat heaters weedy, the digital radio reception dreadful and it doesn’t even have a clock. Yet here is a car of real character in an era where it’s becoming ever harder to find so I, for one, am glad it’ll be around for a little while longer after all.

I’ve been driving a thing called a Kia PV5 but I won’t dwell on this strange-looking but quite effective electric Korean people mover except to say this: I was driving along a narrow lane when a car came the other way. I slowed down to time it so that we passed at the opening to a field on the left where I could make a slight swerve and avoid all chance of contact or delay. Which I successfully did.

What I failed to see was the pothole where road turned to field into which the PV5’s nearside front wheel sank so far I briefly felt like a dinghy in the wind. There then came a colossal jolt as the wheel and tyre assembly thumped into and then out of the far side of the pothole, followed by an ominous scraping noise. I stopped at once, knowing the tyre and wheel would be ruined and that I’d be lucky to escape without suspension damage.

And damage there was, only not what I was expecting. All that had happened was that a plastic rubbing strip had become snagged on something, partially detached itself from the side of the car and was now dragging noisily but harmlessly along the ground. The wheel, tyre and suspension had escaped unscathed. A lucky break? I think not. Unlike so many other cars, the PV5 is not fitted with low-profile tyres. Indeed its tyres’ aspect ratio is fully 65% of their 215mm width, providing a tall, squishy sidewall perfectly adapted for serving up a plush ride and soaking up the worst our increasingly appalling roads can throw at us.

I wish more manufacturers would be so enlightened, but they won’t: vast rims with licorice sidewalls are what sells despite their deleterious effect on ride quality and susceptibility to damage. In short, we care too much about the image we think our cars project to be troubled by common sense.

“There came a colossal jolt as the wheel thumped into and then out of a pothole”

Driving the PV5 yielded another altogether different thought. It’s an MPV, a category of car until recently about as fashionable as a kipper tie. But now there are others on the market too, including the VW ID Buzz and Lexus LM. Other sorts of once traditional types of car seem to be making a comeback too. Ford, having killed the Fiesta, has decided it wants it back, so has paid Renault so it can re-body the 5 and call it Fiesta. Jaguar has decided to return to the market with a four-door grand tourer, while interest in estates seems to be growing too.

I think it a trend that’s going to continue. For years I have expressed bemusement at how many people choose to buy a crossover SUV when they don’t fit into any of the categories of people who really benefit from them, such as those with limited mobility or young families. I guess it’s all about style, and it being a more precious commodity than owning a car that’s cheaper, faster, more economical, less polluting, takes less effort to stop and has superior handling, like a conventional hatch or saloon.

But the EV revolution is changing the terms of reference. Not only does EV design make it easier to confer really distinctive styling on conventional car shapes, but the linear way EVs use energy (the faster you go the more you use) relative to ICE cars, which are at their thirstiest in town, means aero efficiency is already more important than it’s ever been before. And that plays towards lower, sleeker cars with smaller frontal areas. I don’t expect to be announcing the death of the crossover anytime soon but for those lamenting the demise of more traditional kinds of car, it is at least possible that reports of their death have been somewhat exaggerated. At least I hope so.