Parting shot Aguri Suzuki loses his seat

November 7, 1993 Adelaide, Australia

Larking about in the driver photocall for the final race of F1’s 1993 championship, as Footwork driver Aguri Suzuki hits the deck after misjudging his seat – or was there some skulduggery going on thanks to Benetton’s rising star Michael Schumacher? The timing was somewhat ironic as Suzuki lost his Footwork seat for 1994.

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Parting shot Aguri Suzuki loses his seat

1976 Ford Escort RS1800
Sold by Historics Auctioneers, £276,848

If anyone had suggested 20 years ago that a Mk2 Ford Escort would sell for more than a quarter of a million pounds, they would have been laughed out of court. Times have changed and the RS1800 has become one of the most collectible fast Fords of all. Just 109 were made to homologate the car for international rallying, with Ari Vatanen using one to win the 1981 WRC championship. This example represented a once-in-a-lifetime chance to buy an RS1800 that began life as a press car before being sold in 1977 to the family which consigned it. Just 24,186 miles on the clock, and pristine and original.


carimage

2010 Morgan 4/4 ‘The Hornsleth No1’
Sold by Bonhams, £10,925

Easy to spot in the multi-storey, this was the first of 10 4/4s painted by Danish artist Kristian Hornsleth in a bid to funk-up Morgan’s image. This car appeared on a float in the 2010 Lord Mayor’s Show.


bc28c7a6-105b-4faa-ad5a-d1ae8f1f93b1

2012 McLaren MP4-12C
Sold by Bonhams Cars Online, £68,000  

As the purest and first of McLaren’s 21st century road cars, the MP4-12C must be considered a ‘classic’ – so this one, with 13,000 miles on the clock, is a bargain. New price was £100,000 more.


2457-1

1985 CitroËn CX 25 GTi Turbo
Sold by WB & Sons, £12,500 

It might be 40 years old, but this excellent example of a CX looks more futuristic today than when it left the showroom. Being a GTi Turbo, it combined the CX’s famed comfort with 130mph performance.


2023 Mercedes-AMG One

2023 Mercedes-AMG One
Sold by Bonhams, £2.5m 

Despite enduring the painful seven-year gestation period that the hybrid F1-engined One demanded the vendor of this example covered a mere 100 miles before selling it on… seemingly with no profit.


Indian-Bike

1928 Indian ‘Grass Tracker’
Sold by Iconic auctioneers, £9200

This 1000cc Indian – built from parts in the 1970s by marque enthusiast Alf Tindell – remains a formidable competitor and was sold with trophies from past wins achieved by Tindell’s son, Graham.


17828-0

1970 Jaguar E-Type
Sold by Historics auctioneers, £19,448

The 2+2 coupé may be among the least-loved of E-types but this ready-to-go example was a steal. One owner for 28 years, a Getrag five-speed conversion and full service history back to the ’70s.


2007-Creation-CA07-LMP1_1349411

2007 Creation CA07 LMP1
Sold by RM Sotheby’s, £410,000

One of only three CA07 LMP1 chassis constructed by Oxfordshire-based Creation Autosportif, this car competed at Le Mans in both 2008 and 2009, finishing 24th overall on both occasions. It has since proved its mettle in the Masters Endurance Legends and WEC championship support races.


Forthcoming sale highlights

  • Bonhams, Goodwood, September 13
    This year’s Revival sale could see impressive prices. Among the stars will be one of the two factory-approved Aston Martin DB4 GT Zagato Sanction III cars built by leading marque restorer RS Williams. Made in 1998 using two spare bodyshells from the Zagato factory, they followed the four Sanction II cars of ’91. This one is tipped to fetch up to £1m.
  • Bonhams, Los Angeles, September 20-21
    If beautifully built American hotrods from the 1940s, ’50s and ’60s are your thing, the sale of the Robert Richardson Collection is a must. A Mercury Eight Custom ‘Sled’ and a 1948 Ford ‘Woody’ station wagon demonstrate the diversity of offerings, which also includes well-preserved tin-plate toy cars, restored ‘tether’ racers and classic children’s ride-ons.
  • Artcurial, Poitiers, France, September 28
    This collection of the late Jean-Pierre Nylin comprises 50 cars which he kept available for public viewing at a museum at his Château de Vernon home. Highlights include a 1926 Lancia Lambda (£60,000-£85,000), a 1958 Facel Vega (£70,000-£100,000) and a 1997 Chrysler Viper V10 (£35,000-£50,000). Lots from other owners will also feature.
  • RM Sotheby’s, Munich, Germany, October 18
    RM Sotheby’s heads back to Munich to stage its fourth successive sale at Motorworld, the giant classic car service centre, museum, event space and car storage facility opened in 2021 after a build said to have cost £85m. Look out for an exquisite Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud II with drophead bodywork by HJ Mulliner. It is expected to realise £250,000.
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Parting shot Aguri Suzuki loses his seat

The Sea Lion automotive name might have been nabbed by modern-day electric vehicle maker BYD but, back in 2012, it was aptly used on the remarkable creation you see pictured here – which was once fantastically described as ‘the world’s fastest amphibious car’.

The Sea Lion is just one of the 275 lots of cars and motorcycles and 1000 lots of automobilia being dispersed from the estate of the late Larry Klairmont, a decorated WWII marine who went on to make his fortune in property cleaning and real estate.

The supercharged Mazda 1.3 rotary engine is mid-mounted

The supercharged Mazda 1.3 rotary engine is mid-mounted

Mecum auctions

Sidepods carry cargo and double as flotation devices

Sidepods carry cargo and double as flotation devices

Mecum auctions

Front wheels retract into arches

Front wheels retract into arches

Mecum auctions

The Sea Lion has a single seat and a joystick controller for use on the water, a steering wheel for the road

The Sea Lion has a single seat and a joystick controller for use on the water, a steering wheel for the road

Mecum auctions

Clearly a fan of the unusual, his collection also includes a 1990 Pulse Litestar Autocycle (think: jet-fighter cockpit on wheels), a Pebble Beach concours-winning Rolls-Royce Phantom III with aerodynamic bodywork and a 1956 Continental bubble top custom car with a Perspex canopy roof.

But the Sea Lion is probably the most far-out vehicle of all, being made from CNC milled, TiG-welded aluminium and with front wheels that are hydraulically drawn into the arches to reduce drag in the water.

Body is made from stainless steel and CNC-machined aluminium, TiG welded to form a sealed monocoque

Body is made from stainless steel and CNC-machined aluminium, TiG welded to form a sealed monocoque

Mecum auctions

A modified Berkeley jet drive propels the Sea Lion through the water at up to 60mph

A modified Berkeley jet drive propels the Sea Lion through the water at up to 60mph

Mecum auctions

The car also features retractable sidepods for both storage and flotation and a supercharged 1.3-litre Mazda rotary engine that connects to a jet drive for amphibious use, with the car/boat being driven by a joystick when on the water. Described by Mecum Auctions as a prototype, it was designed and built by Californian boffin Mark Witt and has a claimed top speed of 180mph on land and 60mph on the water. Witt offered it for sale in 2012 through specialist car dealer Fantasy Junction, when it had a price tag of £160,000 – and its voyage began.

It gives a whole new meaning to the idea of a car that handles like a boat.

Looking to make a splash? Then this is the vessel for you

Looking to make a splash? Then this is the vessel for you

Mecum auctions

2012 Sea Lion prototype
On sale with Mecum Auctions, Chicago, September 20. No reserve. mecum.com

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Parting shot Aguri Suzuki loses his seat

There can be few more genteel supercar showrooms than the one situated in the Orangery at Tollerton Hall, the magnificent Nottinghamshire stately home owned by entrepreneur and avid car collector Ian Kershaw.

In business since 2017 and co-owned by Kershaw and manager Gary Tolson, Kaaimans has established a well-deserved reputation for stocking and selling some of the best and most interesting modern and classic collector cars on the market. Which probably explains why the 2016 Aston Martin Vulcan pictured here is not the first but the sixth example of the 24 cars built to have passed through the Orangery doors.

Recaro seats

Recaro seats

Kaaimans

Launched at the erstwhile Geneva Motor Show in 2015, the Vulcan drew gasps from punters and industry figures alike when the wraps came off, with its spectacular lines penned by Aston design boss Marek Reichman, carbon-fibre bodywork and monstrous 7-litre, V12 engine.

Despite lacking any form of forced induction, the Vulcan’s lump can churn out more than 800bhp, a figure that can be adjusted down to either 675bhp or 500bhp from the cockpit, depending on the driver’s ability and thrill threshold.

7-litre V12 engine

7-litre V12 engine

Intended for track-only use, the Vulcan puts its mighty power down through a six-speed Xtrac sequential gearbox and carbon-fibre prop shaft, while stopping the beast is taken care of by giant, carbon-fibre brake discs gripped by six-piston calipers.

Although based on the road-going One-77 hypercar, the Vulcan’s weight was trimmed by 150kg to 1350kg, with its circuit-ready credentials being enhanced by fixed windows, built-in air jacks and a demountable, race-orientated steering wheel heavy with electronics.

racing steering wheel

Racing steering wheel

Kaaimans

A shameless plaything, the Vulcan was never intended to be driven on the road (although UK engineering firm RML Group did convert one car to be street legal) and doesn’t qualify for any existing race series – but, as a Top Trumps track day weapon it remains difficult to beat.

Originally costing £1.8m (or thrown in for free for the buyer of the £50m penthouse atop the Aston Martin Residences in Miami), Vulcan values have stood firm, and the one on offer here is possibly among the most desirable since it’s the penultimate example built. It is also the only one finished in Volcano Red Metallic, while the business-like interior is trimmed in a combination of black and Spicy Red leather.

Chassis 23 out of 24, as seen on TV

Chassis 23 out of 24, as seen on TV

Kaaimans

Another plus point (or not, depending on your view) is that this particular car was the one driven by Jeremy Clarkson in an episode of The Grand Tour in 2016 – and, if you’re the type of owner who likes to get down to the nitty-gritty in the pit garage, it’s also one of the few Vulcans to be fitted with the Castrol Nexcel quick-change oil pod. Although, since Kaaimans is offering the buyer the services of a full support team (which includes an engineer who worked on the Vulcan project) it’s probably easier to put your feet up in the luxury motorhome with a cup of tea and a biscuit while waiting for the next track session.

2016 Aston Martin Vulcan
On sale with Kaaimans International, Tollerton, Nottinghamshire, £POA. kaaimans.com


Max out with a signed open-top Citroën

  • Shape yourself and you might still get a few sunshine-soaked drives in 2025 in this recently refreshed 1968 Citroen DS21 Decapotable Ivanoff, inset, – which has a link to F1. Max Verstappen was its passenger in 2019 on a drivers’ parade at Spa, where he signed the glove compartment. It’s on sale with Motorvault in Loughborough for £155k.

  • Online car-buying platform Carwow has published its annual driver power survey, where thousands of new car owners share their thoughts on such things as reliability, interior space, safety features, value and driving experience. For the second year, Subaru is king of the makers; Tesla drops from the Top 10 to 11th; and MG sits last in 31st.
  • In the hands of Elio de Angelis this Lotus 87, below, started 10 GPs in 1981, with a highest-placed finish of fourth at Monza. It then became the sole 87 to be uprated to B specification for ’82, where it was raced by Elio in the South African GP (eighth). Chassis 87/3 is race-ready, with a rebuilt DFV and overhauled gearbox – and, of course, it has the best livery in F1 history. It’s at Wetherby’s speedmaster, £POA.

  • Society of Motor Manufacturers & Traders says that UK used-car sales are back to pre-pandemic levels. Four million units changed hands in the first half of ’25 Top seller? Ford Fiesta.
  • The highest price paid for a UK numberplate was smashed at Bonham’s Goodwood Festival of Speed auction in July. The late Rolls and Bentley dealer Jack Barclay’s JB 1 sold for £608,600, beating £518,480 paid in 2014 for 25 O. LG
Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Parting shot Aguri Suzuki loses his seat

When four-time World Superbike champion Carl Fogarty rode his 1995 title-winning Ducati 916 up the hill at Goodwood in July it marked three decades since one of British motorcycle racing’s most magical moments. Fogarty ruled the World Superbike series through much of the 1990s, taking a title double in 1994 and 1995 and again in 1998 and 1999. British fans got behind him like they got behind the England football team and found much more joy through that support.

Young Carl Fogarty, age 23, in 1988 on bike

A young Carl Fogarty, age 23, in 1988 – the year he became World TT Formula 1 champion

Getty Images

His annual homecoming at Brands Hatch attracted huge crowds, sometimes outdoing the Silverstone Formula 1 grand prix. In 1999 more than 120,000 showed up, the biggest-ever attendance at a British motorcycle meeting. Not even Barry Sheene attracted that many in his 1970s heyday.

Fogarty was a ferocious competitor who went racing on a mountain of self-belief and raging torrents of aggression. He was maniacal about winning and struggled to cope with defeat.

His years at the top were characterised by bitter feuds with rivals, including several team-mates. Funnily enough, Sheene had been the same, using the UK motorcycle press as a weapon against his enemies. Fans loved them both for it.

Carl Fogarty doing a wheelie

“I look back at some of the things I said and I think, ‘Why did I say all that?’” admits Fogarty, now 60. “Why didn’t I keep my mouth shut and let my riding do the talking? I always had a go at my rivals, putting them down, saying things like their bikes were better than they were and I was going to win the next race and I was the best. Now I think, ‘Why did you put yourself under so much pressure by saying stuff before the next race?’ But more times than not, it turned out all right and I still won.”

Brands Hatch was the highlight of the World Superbike season, fans thronging to the natural amphitheatre, turning it into a motor racing Wembley, screaming support, which Fogarty used as another weapon.

“Brands was always special and I loved the crowd. I remember when the garage door went up before a race, there’d be this huge roar and I’d milk it a bit. I’d be the last one to go out for the race, so after the sighting lap I’d be weaving my way through the grid to pole position and the crowd would be going mad. I’d be milking it, so that all the other riders knew I was the main man and this is my theatre, my playground.”

Carl Fogarty cornering

Carl Fogarty doing a wheelie

Getty Images

World Superbike has mostly been a British playground. Fogarty and current Yamaha WSBK rider Jonathan Rea stand fourth and first in the all-time superbike race-winners league, while Britain’s most successful MotoGP rider is 1960s legend Mike Hailwood, who has six Spaniards, Italians and Americans in front of him. Why is this? Why is Britian so strong in WSBK and so weak in MotoGP?

Primarily, financial reasons. Britain’s recession of the early 1980s had a catastrophic effect on the nation’s motorcycle racing scene. Bike shops went bust, sponsors disappeared and grids emptied, because few riders could afford the high-maintenance two-stroke grand-prix bikes that had ruled the sport since the 1970s.

Necessity is the mother of invention, so in 1985 a new, low-cost national championship was established using road-based superbikes. These motorcycles cost a fraction of the price of a GP two-stroke and were much cheaper to run. They were also heavier and more basic, but British riders soon learned how to get the most out of them, so when the World Superbike series was launched in 1988, they were already up to speed. Meanwhile, GP racing’s heartlands – Spain and Italy – stuck with GP bikes. That’s still the way it is, with British riders taking the superbike route, while continentals take the Moto2 and Moto3 road to MotoGP.

Carl Fogarty smiling

Foggy turned 60 in July

Fogarty’s career took off when Britain was at the crossroads between GP bikes and superbikes. Initially, he was determined to succeed as a GP rider, like Sheene, and he made his GP debut at Silverstone in 1986. Two weeks later everything changed.

“I had a big highside at Oulton Park – went up in the air, came down and my right leg was facing the other way. The femur came out the skin – it was a right mess. When I came out of hospital I couldn’t get comfortable on a 250, then I crashed again and the bone snapped again because it was infected. I had two years in the wilderness when I should’ve been away racing 250 GPs.”

“I ended up winning a world championship I hadn’t really planned on doing. It was bizarre”

Fogarty’s career was saved by superbikes, not because he was skint but because he could no longer fit on a 250. His sponsor, a slot-machine millionaire, bought him a Honda RC30, a homologation special made for the World Superbike series.

“When I finally got on a superbike in ’88, I thought, ‘Oh my God, I’m comfortable on a bike again!’ I took to the RC30 like a duck to water because I felt comfortable. And I was only riding at 80%, because I couldn’t afford to crash and break the leg again. My doctors had told me I shouldn’t be racing, that I should be thinking about retiring.”

Fogarty didn’t have the budget to contest the inaugural 1988 WSBK series, which raced as far afield as Japan and Australasia, so he had to make do with the lower-level TT Formula 1 series, which mostly used lethal street circuits – the Isle of Man TT, Belfast’s Dundrod and Vila Real in Portugal. He won the title, ahead of TT legend Joey Dunlop.

Carl Fogarty talking

Foggy was on the same bike at the Goodwood Festival of Speed in July

“I ended up winning a world championship I hadn’t really planned on doing. It was bizarre. But I knew I wanted to be a short circuit world champion.”

Fogarty began his push towards winning the World Superbike title in 1992. He got some backing to buy a Ducati 888 V-twin and financed his campaign by squeezing in well-paid rides between WSBK rounds with Yamaha at the TT and with Kawasaki in the World Endurance Championship. He won five of the six endurance rounds, including the Le Mans 24 Hours, securing another title he hadn’t aimed to win.

“I had my mojo back for 1999. Everything was right in my head and the bike was better”

His speed on the 888 was the turning point. Ducati signed him as an official WSBK rider for 1993 and he was away, only narrowly losing the world title to American factory Kawasaki rider Scott Russell. The following year Ducati launched its seminal 916 V-twin.

“The 916 was nervous and twitchy, like a 500 GP bike. I came from 250 GP bikes, so I always carried lots of corner speed, but I couldn’t do that with the 916. After the first few rounds we lengthened the swingarm and that was it.”

Carl Forgarty at Brands Hatch in 1995, riding a Ducati 916

Victory at Brands Hatch in 1995, riding a Ducati 916.

Getty Images

Fogarty dominated the rest of the season. The next year was even better – he won more than half the races, including double victories at Brands Hatch and Donington Park. Foggy fever was at full force by then, which is why Britain had two WSBK rounds.

And then he went and quit Ducati. The Bologna brand’s bikes were missiles, but its race team was troubled by politics and lackadaisical organisation. More importantly, Ducati’s 1996 financial offer didn’t impress him so when Honda offered to double the number, he went there.

Honda’s RC45 V4 superbike had never won the title and it didn’t with Fogarty. He took several race wins on the bike but soon realised he had made a mistake – he found the Japanese team too organised! “Like being back at school!” so he returned to Ducati for 1997.

Fogarty’s last two championships – 1998 and 1999 – were arguably his greatest, because the quality of riders and bikes had never been so good.

In 1998 the title went down to the season finale at Sugo, Japan.

1999, Fogarty Brands Hatch

By 1999, Fogarty was sharp, supremely focused and at his best – here at his beloved Brands Hatch. He romped to the world title

Alamy Stock Photo

“My head wasn’t in a great place that year – I was struggling with back and knee injuries, so I wasn’t riding good. And I kept making wrong tyre choices because I wasn’t doing my homework in practice, doing long enough runs. The last two or three rounds I really got my head into gear, worked hard, thought about it and won the championship. I had my mojo back for 1999. Everything was right in my head and the bike was better. I thought, ‘I’m going to come out of the blocks and show them how fast I am. I’m absolutely going to wipe the floor with them.’”

And that’s what he did. His season points tally was 489, 128 more than the runner-up’s – US rider Colin Edwards.

The 2000 championship might have been more of the same. Instead it was the end of his career. He crashed heavily at Phillip Island, Australia, in round two.

Carl Fogarty 1992 Isle of Man Senior TT Yamaha

Foggy’s heart belongs to the Isle of Man TT where he broke the lap record in ’92.

Archives A. Herl

“I woke up in the helicopter, in and out of consciousness. I’d smacked my head and done a shoulder again. I knew pretty soon that I wasn’t going to come back. I saw specialists who said I might get 75% of shoulder movement back, plus there was nerve damage, so the decision was made for me. I remember feeling so relieved. I felt like the weight of the world had been taken off my shoulders. I didn’t have to go out to be number one any more. I didn’t have go out to prove to the fans and the media and myself that I was the best. I wanted to enjoy myself. I wanted to see my old mates and have a few drinks.”

Although Fogarty enjoyed a great deal of success in WSBK, his first thoughts when he looks back are of a circuit that has a visceral effect on racers.

“The bike was falling apart around me. None of the clocks were working, the screen was broken”

“My best racing memories are from the TT, always will be. All my childhood memories are from the TT. I went every year watching Dad [George] racing. I remember my first TT, getting up for early morning practice and going around the course, thinking, ‘This is just mad!’ Down Bray Hill, flying towards Ballacraine, through the Glen Helen section, onto the Cronk-y-Voddy straight, through the village Kirk Michael, over a bridge at Ballaugh, into a little town called Ramsey and up over the mountain…

“I’ve got goosebumps!” he laughs. “They say the closest you’ve been to death is when you feel most alive and that’s what you experience at the TT.”

Carl Fogarty headshot

Still focused, Carl will be running a team in ’26

Fogarty won three TTs, one in 1989, two in 1990, but his most famous island ride came in 1992, when he battled for Senior victory with Steve Hislop. Fogarty rode a Yamaha superbike. Hislop Norton’s super-fast but evil-handling rotary. Their duel is rated as the best in the TT’s history, Fogarty pushing into the danger zone, establishing a new lap record which stood until 1999.

Even Hislop, an 11-times TT winner and one of the event’s all-time greats, was worried they were asking for it.

“I was riding the bike beyond its limits at 180mph,” he wrote in his autobiography Hizzy. “At that speed instinct takes over and for the first time in my life I started thinking that victory wasn’t as important as living. That soon passed and I got my head down.”

Fogarty started the sixth and final lap of the 37.73-mile course 6sec down, but typically refused to give in.

“I was hanging in there, pushing really hard. But the bike was falling apart around me. None of the clocks were working, the temperature gauge was gone, the screen was broken and there was brake fluid and oil on the inside of the screen. On lap five at Ramsey the exhaust went. The noise was horrendous. I couldn’t wait to get off the thing. I had a bad headache, so I thought, ‘The faster I go, the quicker I can get off it.’

“I pulled a few seconds back on the last lap and when I crossed the finish line it was announced that I’d broken the lap record. We lost the race by 4sec but it was an amazing race, it really was.”

Next year Fogarty returns to racing, running a Ducati team in the British Superbike championship. “Because I was  a little bit bored.”

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Parting shot Aguri Suzuki loses his seat

Ah, 1985: heart of the decade of Cold War superpowers and Dayglo socks. The year of Marty McFly and Back to the Future – “You made a time machine – out of a DeLorean?” Dodgy Sylvester Stallone action hero sequels Rambo: First Blood Part II and Rocky IV. A James Bond movie too far for dear old Roger Moore and his Duran Duran-soundtracked A View to a Kill. Jennifer Rush’s ultimate pop ballad The Power of Love selling 7” vinyl by the million (1.2 million to be precise), as Dire Straits earnt Money for Nothing on Brothers in Arms compact discs (unscratchable and unbreakable, apparently). Meanwhile, there was No Jacket Required for Phil Collins, Madonna was properly getting into her groove… and Bob Geldof shouted at us on the telly from Wembley: “People are dying NOW! So give me the money!”

Then there was Formula 1, in its own little bubble. Alain Prost and Marlboro McLaren-TAGs in their pomp. A new superstar in black and gold. And the same old blinkered moral vacuum of insisting on racing in Apartheid-ridden South Africa. Happy days…


Prost removes the monkey

He’d come half a point away in 1984. Now, finally, after missed opportunities at Renault and that narrowest of defeats to Niki Lauda, he’d broken the hoodoo: France, the original home of grand prix racing, had its first Formula 1 world champion.

Alain Prost was a clear head better than Lauda in 1985. In fact, in the McLaren-TAG MP4/2B he was comfortably the class act of the grid, securing the championship at the European Grand Prix at Brands Hatch with two rounds still to spare.

Then again, even though he won five of the 16 races (three more than anyone else managed) this was no walkover. After Prost won the opener in Rio, Ferrari’s consistent Michele Alboreto led the points until August. Victory at the Österreichring pulled Prost level, then a run of two podiums and a win at Monza sent him clear. A less than optimal fourth at Brands finished the job. But he deserved the first of his four titles.

Senna's black magic Renault

Ayrton Senna’s second win of ’85 came at Spa… there should have been more

Senna’s black magic

We knew he was special, from that first year at Toleman. Now he was John Player Special… and in Ayrton Senna’s second start in Lotus’s black and gold he romped to a famous first win in atrocious rain at Estoril – arguably the best of his eventual 41. If only the Renault-powered 97T had been more reliable in 1985, Prost might have had a serious problem from his nemesis-in-waiting. Seven pole positions and another for team-mate Elio De Angelis showed Lotus had the speed, but just one other win for Senna at Spa and an inherited victory for the Roman at Imola tells the full story. Senna came six laps from victory at the British GP until an engine problem set in. Clearly, the sophomore was already champion material. He just needed to be in the right team.

Michele Alboreto on the podium 1985

Michele Alboreto led the driver standings after victory in Canada.

Alboreto: what might have been

No Italian champion since Alberto Ascari. Amazing that it still remains so even now. For a chunk of 1985, Michele Alboreto threatened to end the national drought after three seconds in the first four races and a Ferrari 1-2 in Canada, where he led new team-mate Stefan Johansson. Another scuffed win, after contact with Keke Rosberg’s Williams, followed at the Nürburgring. But after a distant third to Prost and Senna in Austria, Alboreto only scored once more in the final six races as the wheels fell off the Ferrari challenge. It was the closest classy Alboreto would ever get to an F1 world title.

Keke Rosberg Silverstone in 1985

‘Flying Finn’ Keke Rosberg flew around Silverstone in qualifying.

Getty Images

Rosberg’s sensational 160mph pole

In a break in the weather, F1’s first Flying Finn set out in his Honda-powered Williams FW10 – and smoked it: a 1min 5.967sec around Silverstone flat-out, breaking the magic 160mph mark for an unforgettable F1 first. Just as well he caught the slide at Woodcote, caused by a deflating Goodyear… But Keke Rosberg wasn’t done. Despite others failing to match him, he insisted on one final go, high on the moment – and against his usual better judgement. The result? 1min 5.591sec – 160.925mph. One of the greatest laps in F1 history, and a record only beaten 17 years later, by Juan Pablo Montoya – fittingly in a Williams – in qualifying at Monza.

Niki Lauda on the Podium Dutch GP

A final win for Niki Lauda in the Dutch GP

Goodbye, Niki

Knowing when you’re done: it’s a crucial thing if you want to walk away with dignity. Niki Lauda had already stopped once, but it happened far too early, in September 1979. What turned out to a break fuelled a second wind, fully vindicated by that third world title. But now less than a year later Niki knew: this time it really was over.

He called it early, at the Austrian GP, part-way through a season during which his ‘affection’ for McLaren chief Ron Dennis was running on fumes. At 36, there was nothing left to prove – and Prost was now not only quicker, he’d also learnt all his tricks: about building a team around him, about maximising performance when it counted (on race day when the points are dished out). How lovely that a 25th and final victory should fall next time out, at Zandvoort, with a closing Prost just 0.2sec behind him.

Brabham’s F1, Nelson Piquet, Paul Ricard

Brabham’s last F1 win, Nelson Piquet, Paul Ricard.

Getty Images

Piquet’s final Brabham hurrah

Bernie Ecclestone was becoming distracted by the bigger picture, and for Gordon Murray the returns of BMW’s potent turbos were beginning to diminish. Then there were Pirelli tyres, bolted on in the wake of Michelin’s withdrawal from F1 at the end of 1984. Only on certain occasions were they up to the job as two-time champ Nelson Piquet found himself sliding into uncomfortable also-ran territory. Except on a sweltering day at Paul Ricard. There was one final day in the sun for Piquet in a blue and white Brabham. The Italian rubber came into its own in the French GP and from an unpromising fifth on the grid Piquet led after 10 laps. The rest didn’t see him for the remainder of the afternoon.

Teo Fabi at the Nürburgring.

Toleman’s sole pole position was earnt by Teo Fabi at the Nürburgring.

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Fabi’s surprise pole

After the Senna-instigated highs of 1984, Toleman couldn’t finish a race this time around. Already bought up by sponsor Benetton, the team was on the cusp of a defining regeneration. But still, Rory Byrne loved his Hart-powered TG185 – once a Pirelli tyre supply was finally secured to bring it alive from Monaco on. Teo Fabi was back after his previous (miserable) stint at the team, pole at the 1983 Indy 500 and a promising run at Brabham – and the team loved him too. Especially at the Nürburgring where a fastest time on the Friday became a shock pole position when rain arrived on the Saturday.

But the Italian should never have taken the start. In a crash on the Saturday he’d head-butted the steering wheel and in his engineering debrief didn’t believe he was on pole. At his behest, the team kept his concussion quiet. Perhaps it’s no wonder Fabi fluffed the start.

New York city

So good they named it twice, but New York still couldn’t get its own grand prix

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No New York GP – again

It was considered as some sort of grail for Bernie Ecclestone. But for at least the third time of asking, a proposed grand prix in New York failed to materialise. We’re still waiting. Instead, John Webb – a contender for F1’s most forward-thinking and canny promoter – offered Brands Hatch for an autumn European GP. Bingo. Cue a landmark…

Brands Hatch 1985

Alain Prost’s fourth at Brands Hatch was enough for the title, but the race belonged to “lucky” Nigel Mansell,

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Mansell’s breakthrough

Humiliated by Peter Warr at Lotus – “he’ll never win a GP as long as I have a hole in my arse” etc – prickly, sensitive Nigel Mansell desperately needed this fresh start. He’d only landed the Williams drive after Derek Warwick had listened to journalist friends (what do they know?!) and stayed at Renault for another year. Rosberg wasn’t too impressed when he was told his new team-mate was Mansell, having been warned of histrionics by Lotus team-mate De Angelis. In fact, the pair operated in harmony in their single year together, as Williams began to hone its turbocharged partnership with the rising force of Honda.

Nigel Mansell laughs 1985

Brands Hatch was enough for the title, but the race belonged to “lucky” Nigel Mansell

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As we’ve said, Rosberg’s Silverstone heroics stand tall in the memory, but he also won in Detroit and took pole at Paul Ricard, where he snatched a late second place from a slowing Prost. Meanwhile, Mansell injured a wrist in a crash in Motown and didn’t make the start in France after suffering concussion from a practice prang. But by season’s end, he really began to fire on all cylinders. At Brands, Mansell claimed an early lead and took his chance as if he was born to it – at the 72nd time of asking since his F1 debut in 1980. Then immediately he followed it up with pole and another victory at Kyalami. The ‘real’ Mansell was uncorked – even if forever after Warr insisted on belligerently dismissing him as “lucky”.

Thirty-one grand prix wins? That’s an awful lot of luck.

Rosberg heading for a win at Adelaide 1985

Rosberg heading for a win at Adelaide during the season’s finale.

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Hello, Adelaide

The final sign-off for 1985 was a welcome first: the debut world championship Australian GP, held around the Victoria Park racecourse in delightful Adelaide. As you might have read earlier this year (Streets ahead, April 2025 issue), Ecclestone needed some convincing. “You must be the only person in Australia who doesn’t know I’m not interested in holding a race anywhere but Sydney,” he told Vern Schuppan. But one of Bernie’s strengths was a willingness to be proved wrong. When he changed his mind, it was a good decision. Adelaide’s street race became a much-loved F1 season finale venue for the next 11 years.

That first grand prix was won by Rosberg, a fitting sign-off for the 1982 world champion’s time at Williams – and what turned out to be his last F1 victory. He’d long decided on a move to replace Lauda at McLaren for what turned out to be his final F1 season. But that meant he walked away from the 1986 FW11 – Nelson Piquet’s gain.

The world title might have been decided early and in Prost’s favour, but Williams had won the final three grands prix of the year. As Jennifer Rush belted out her overwrought ballad at the top of the UK singles chart that winter, an F1 powershift was in full swing.

Andrea de Cesaris crash Austria 11985

Andrea de Cesaris walked away from a stupendous crash in Austria

‘De Crasheris’ lives up to the nickname

Poor old Andrea de Cesaris. He was never taken entirely seriously by us Brits. Yet the Italian survived across 16 seasons, from his debut at the end of 1980 with Alfa Romeo, on to McLaren, back to Alfa, to Ligier, Minardi, Brabham, Rial, Scuderia Italia, Jordan, Tyrrell, Jordan again and finally Sauber in 1994. All of it buoyed by Marlboro money – and a remarkable ability to bounce back from anything. Speaking of which, the barrel-rolling, cartwheeling shunt for Ligier at the Österreichring in the summer of 1985 is one from which he was truly lucky to escape. Covered in mud, he gingerly – and perhaps a touch sheepishly – strolled away from a monster of a shunt. No safety cars back then, of course, and no hint of a red flag. And why should there be? He was fine!


Gérard Larrousse 1985

Gérard Larrousse ran the Renault F1 factory team but the French wouldn’t be back for the following season

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What we don’t love about F1 in 1985

  • Fuel efficiency racing: McLaren’s Bosch electronics were a key aspect of the MP4/2B’s superiority in 1985. But throttling bombastic turbos in favour of fuel efficiency wasn’t exactly inspiring stuff. Was this Formula 1 or sports car racing?
  • Ferrari’s form droop from mid-season: How the team lost its way from late summer into autumn was a major downer. From Alboreto’s Nürburgring victory in August 1985, Ferrari wouldn’t win again for another 15 months. Thank goodness for John Barnard.

    Alfa Romeo in Benetton Brands

    Alfa Romeo, here in Benetton colours at Brands, bowed out of F1 after ’85.

  • So long, Renault and Alfa Romeo: Team chief Gérard Larrousse out; a change at the top of the parent company; worrying bigger-picture financial losses; and a disastrous decline in form. The fall of the Renault works team sure sounds familiar today. At least back then faith remained in its famous Viry-Châtillon engine division. Alfa Romeo also pulled the plug on its F1 team at the end of 1985 – although few would miss an entity that amounted to an embarrassment to the Quadrifoglio’s glorious past heritage.
  • Racing under Apartheid in South Africa: Hindsight’s a wonder and all that. But Formula 1 sticking by its commitment to Kyalami represented an endorsement of one of history’s most putrid political regimes. It’s a shameful smudge that won’t rub out. Renault and Ligier at least saved face by missing the final South African GP until 1992, by which time hated Apartheid had been abolished.

Next month: Why we love sports cars in 1985
Watch out for more details about our end of year dinner!

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Parting shot Aguri Suzuki loses his seat

The French expression mon brave – literally ‘my brave’ – more accurately equates to the English phrase ‘my good fellow’. However, both the literal meaning and the common usage apply to Éric René Boullier, who was born in Laval, near Le Mans, France, in November 1973, for he is both a nice chap and a man of remarkable audacity, as you will find out if you read on.

“I was born into a normal, decent, middle-class family,” he says, speaking via Teams from his holiday home in Marrakech, which ancient fortified city he loves, for his wife Tamara is from Morocco. “Laval was and is a nice town – not big, not small – and its medieval centre was and is very pretty. My parents weren’t into racing at all. Then, one Sunday, when I was nine years old, we were invited to lunch at the house of some family friends – lovely people with whom I’m still in contact now –and in the middle of their living room was a remote-control racing car that they’d built themselves. I was captivated, and what fascinated me most was the engineering more than the driving actually.

Éric Boullier, left, on GP2 duty in 2007 with Super Nova’s David Sears

Éric Boullier, left, on GP2 duty in 2007 with Super Nova’s David Sears

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“So I begged my dad to buy me a remote-control racing car and I started competing. I finished second in my first race, with a car that I’d prepared myself, then I began to win occasionally, first in local contests then in regional tournaments. At that time I had no idea that I might one day work in motor sport – that would have seemed like a crazy fantasy to me back then – but, as I went on in school, it became clear that I was good at science and maths. So, after I’d passed my bac [baccalauréat, a national exam taken by French pupils at the end of their secondary education], I studied physics at university [the Institut Polytechnique des Sciences Avancées, in the Parisian suburb of Ivry-sur-Seine]. I’d like to have been able to study automotive or motor sport engineering, as you could then and still can in the UK, but that wasn’t available in France at that time, so I focused on aviation technology and space science, which I realised were relatively similar to automotive and motor sport engineering.

“By this time I’d worked out what I wanted to do with my professional life and motor sport was going to be at the centre of it. So I did whatever I could to get relevant internships. I managed to get myself a chance to be a gofer for the Porsche team at Le Mans, when I was still in my teens, which was awesome, then I started to do a bit of data engineering work with them, and that was followed by my first proper job, even though I was still a student, with Peugeot Sport, who were successful in sports car racing back then.

“After that I sorted out an internship with DAMS [Driot Arnoux Motor Sport], for which role I was interviewed by Jean-Paul Driot himself – in English. Driot seemed to like me, but he said my English was rubbish, which it was in those days, so, to help me improve my language skills, he put me in charge of foreign suppliers. But in fact it was DAMS’ British design-engineer Rob Arnott, a great guy, who taught me English. He and I used to have a few beers in the evenings, because he was living in the UK but staying at a hotel near the DAMS factory in France during the week, and, hanging out with him, something suddenly began to click and, well, I gradually became more and more confident in English. So I owe Rob a lot actually.”

Derek Hill was DAMS’ F3000 driver in 2001.

Derek Hill was DAMS’ F3000 driver in 2001.

Boullier did well at DAMS and his progress, despite his having no one and nothing other than his own ambition to propel him, was impressive. Something about the young man – his chummy yet dogged determination perhaps – made influential people like him. Most twentysomething French lads with a love of motor sport would have been well satisfied to have landed the opportunity to develop a career with DAMS – and Boullier looks back fondly on those days – but he wanted more. So it was that, in 1998, when he saw an ad for a Renault Sport position he applied for it, even though the job was ‘Formula 1 race engineer’ and he was still at university.

“I applied for this job because it’s my dream but I didn’t expect to get it”

“Renault Sport was supplying engines to Williams and Benetton in Formula 1 at that time [via Mecachrome and Playlife],” he remembers, chuckling. “I applied for the job on a whim. I certainly didn’t expect to get it. But, to my surprise, they asked me to go for an interview, then a second, then a third. And now I began to worry because I was being serially interviewed for an important F1 job even though I was still a student. Then they asked me to attend a fourth and final interview, which would be conducted by Denis Chevrier, a legend of French motor sport, and, to my astonishment, it went well. In fact he said, ‘I want to hire you, so I’m going to introduce you to the Benetton race engineers, and, if they like you too, you’ve got the job.’

leading from the front, 2009

Leading from the front, 2009

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“I didn’t know what to say, to be honest. I panicked. It was overwhelming. But I had to be honest with Denis. ‘I applied for this job because it’s my dream,’ I told him, ‘but I absolutely didn’t expect to get it. I don’t yet have a diploma – I’m still studying for it.’ So Denis checked with Renault’s HR people and they said, ‘No, if he doesn’t have a diploma, we can’t appoint him to that position.’ And that was that.

“So I carried on at DAMS, and I finished my internship there in July 1999. After that Driot gave me a full-time job as a data engineer – performance engineer in today’s terminology – in DAMS’ sports car racing operation. The car was a Lola-Judd, and our drivers were Éric Bernard, Emmanuel Collard, Christophe Tinseau and Jean-Marc Gounon. I also worked in Formula 3000 with Derek Hill, the son of the 1961 F1 world champion Phil Hill, and they were both great guys: real gentlemen in fact.

In 2002, Boullier saw success with Racing Engineering in the World Series by Nissan; Justin Wilson, pictured, would  finish the season fourth

In 2002, Boullier saw success with Racing Engineering in the World Series by Nissan; Justin Wilson, pictured, would finish the season fourth

“Then, in 2000, DAMS got the contract to run the Cadillac Le Mans team. I was a race engineer on the second car. We weren’t mega-successful but it was an awesome experience. The following year, 2001, we continued with Cadillac, but by this time Audi was dominating the Le Mans scene. Also, Driot was maybe beginning to lose interest, just a little, and he moved to the UK to focus on oil trading. As a result he began to delegate more and more at DAMS. Anyway, one day, while I was driving to work, I heard on the radio that Luc Besson [the famous French film-maker] was planning to make a movie about the popular French cartoon racing driver Michel Vaillant. I mentioned it to Driot, and he replied, ‘Let’s help them make it! Go to Paris and meet them!’

“So I did. I was still in my twenties and I had no experience of business or even of life outside motor racing. I was shaking inside when I sat down for that first meeting. It took me three or four months to convince those tough film executives to choose DAMS as a partner with whom they should make their movie, but in the end that’s what happened. We proposed that our 1999 Lola-Judd would be the model for the hero car and that the baddie car would be based on a Panoz, that aggressive-looking front-engined Le Mans racer, and Besson’s people loved it.

Jean-Paul Driot, left, is the D in DAMS, here with Boullier in Valencia for the GP2 European GP, ’08

Jean-Paul Driot, left, is the D in DAMS, here with Boullier in Valencia for the GP2 European GP, ’08

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“We had to build the cars ourselves, of course. I modelled the Lola-themed car on an older Lola, and I built the Panoz-themed car on an old Caterham 7 chassis. The two cars had to be capable of being filmed racing each other at more than 160kph [100mph], and they had to look super-cool, but, even so, we built them both on a total budget of $500,000 [£335,000 at that time], which was pretty tricky to do. It was a complex cinematic operation, too. The Lola-Judd sequences were shot in the UK and the Panoz bits were done in the US. We also filmed at Le Mans in 2002. The film came out in 2003. I learned a hell of a lot – about business and life. The whole thing was an amazing experience for me.

“DAMS didn’t compete in any racing in 2002, but because of the movie we still made a small profit. That year I also worked for Racing Engineering, the Spanish team that had been founded by Alfonso de Orléans-Borbón in 1999. I ran a Dallara-Nissan for them in World Series by Nissan – and we won the 2002 team championship with Franck Montagny and Justin Wilson. So that was a busy year – and a good year – for me.

Boullier was a race engineer for the DAMS-run Cadillac team at Le Mans, 2000-01

Boullier was a race engineer for the DAMS-run Cadillac team at Le Mans, 2000-01

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“Driot was impressed and he asked me to return to DAMS for 2003. Better still, he asked me to be the team principal of his new Formula Renault V6 Eurocup team. Our driver was José Maria López. We were a small and young group – just 11 of us – and José Maria was 19 and I was still only 29. But we gelled well and we won the championship straight away. The next year, 2004, we ran Neel Jani, who was 20, and he finished fourth in the championship, but it was a tough year for us because we lacked sponsors and we were short of money therefore.

“For 2005 I was running DAMS’ new Formula Renault 3.5 Series programme, with Pastor Maldonado, Alx Danielsson and occasionally a few others, including Nicolas Prost. That was comparatively big-time, because the races were on the WTCC [World Touring Car Championship] programme and they were televised on Eurosport. I realised we needed sponsors and I began to work hard on getting them, which I’d never done before. We also ran A1 Grand Prix teams for not only France but also Switzerland and Mexico. Best of all, we entered GP2 that year, 2005, with López, whom I’d won with two years before, and Fairuz Fauzy. We won one GP2 race, in Barcelona, with López, then in 2007 we won two GP2 races, in Bahrain and at Spa, with Nicolas Lapierre. The following season, 2008, we won again, in Barcelona, with Kamui Kobayashi, and by 2009 we’d built up a successful and solvent operation. When Driot had asked me to return to DAMS for 2003, we had 11 staff. By 2009 there were 75, and we were running in four championships. We were doing more than 33 race weekends every year by 2005. It was very busy – but very good.”

DAMS was involved on three fronts in the A1 Grand Prix series from 2005-09.

DAMS was involved on three fronts in the A1 Grand Prix series from 2005-09.

Boullier was now in his mid-thirties and he had worked well with a lot of drivers, particularly young drivers, over the previous 15 years. Inevitably, some of them began to ask him to help them with their careers and so it was that he formalised that arrangement by joining forces with Gravity Sports Management, which was owned by Gérard López, the Luxembourgish-Spanish businessman who had co-founded the financial services firm Genii Capital with Eric Lux in 2008. It was a significant association for Boullier because it would pave the way for his entry to F1, for López and Lux were heavily involved with the Renault F1 team.

“Would you like to be team principal of the Renault F1 team?”

“In December 2009 Lux called me and asked me to go to the Enstone factory in the UK, where the Renault F1 team was based. ‘Come on December 27,’ he said. So I did. The 2009 season had been mega-difficult for the team because a big scandal about its fixing the 2008 Singapore Grand Prix had come out over the course of the 2009 Belgian Grand Prix weekend. I walked into Flavio Briatore’s old office, and there were López and Lux. ‘Would you like to be team principal of the Renault F1 team?’ López asked me.

“I was astonished. Here I was, still only 36, having never worked a single day in F1 in my entire life, and I was being invited to become the team principal of one of the biggest and most famous teams in F1. I hesitated. I was speechless in fact. To be honest I didn’t know what to say.

Filming the Lola hero car at Le Mans for Luc Besson’s 2003 motor racing  film Michel Vaillant – which used DAMS’ expertise

Filming the Lola hero car at Le Mans for Luc Besson’s 2003 motor racing film Michel Vaillant – which used DAMS’ expertise

“‘Yes or yes?’ said López, then he stared at me in silence. I looked at him, then at Lux, then back at López. Neither said a word.

“‘Can I say no?’ I finally replied.

“‘No,’ they both said, together.

“And that was that. ‘Come with us,’ they said – and they led me downstairs, where 600 people were standing waiting for me, and there and then they announced me to them all as their new boss.”

With no prior experience in F1, Boullier was drafted in as Renault’s principal in 2010 – a season of mixed fortunes for the team

With no prior experience in F1, Boullier was drafted in as Renault’s principal in 2010 – a season of mixed fortunes for the team

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Not surprisingly, Boullier was as nervous as he was excited. Who wouldn’t be, having been sprung into such a big and challenging job so abruptly and, it has to be said, so bizarrely? He flew home to Paris for a few days, but he was back at Enstone, as Renault’s new and somewhat wet-behind-the-ears team principal, on January 2. “They booked me a room at the Feathers Hotel in nearby Woodstock [Oxfordshire],” he recalls. “When I got there, on the evening of New Year’s Day, I thought it looked like something out of Harry Potter. The next morning I woke up, I looked out of the window, and I saw 30cm of snow. My PA was supposed to be picking me up but she called me to say that she’d be late because of the terrible weather. Eventually she arrived, in a company Clio. She asked me to drive it to the factory, because of the snow, so I got into the driver’s seat and she sat beside me. At one point on the journey there was a long downhill descent. At the bottom of the hill I could see four cars that had crashed into one another. The four drivers were all waving at me, trying to get me to stop. But there was no grip so I had to put the Clio into the ditch so as to avoid a shunt. When we got out, we found that the four drivers were all Renault F1 employees. So that was a dramatic start.

“Petrov was a decent driver, but he wasn’t on the same level as Kubica”

“Our drivers were Robert Kubica and Vitaly Petrov. Vitaly was a decent driver, but he wasn’t on the same level as Robert. Robert was as good as it gets. Of all the drivers I’ve worked with, I’d place him up there with Kimi Räikkönen and Fernando Alonso. Robert was superfast, he made very few mistakes, he had excellent racecraft, and he was really good at motivating the people around him.”

The 2010 Renault F1 car, the R30, was not a great one, and, although Petrov managed a few minor placings here and there, he struggled with it for much of the season. Kubica drove it brilliantly all year, delivering three podium finishes, and he scored points more often than not.

Kubica leads Ferrari’s Felipe Massa in the 2010 Monaco GP.

Kubica leads Ferrari’s Felipe Massa in the 2010 Monaco GP.

Grand Prix Photo

In 2011 López’s and Lux’s company, Genii Capital, became the team’s new owner, relegating Renault to engine-supplier status, and its name was changed to Lotus.

Both drivers were retained and pre-season testing went well, Kubica topping the time sheets in the new-for-2011 R31 on February 2, which was the last day of the pre-season Valencia test. But three days later he had a big shunt in a Skoda Fabia during the Ronde di Andora rally, leaving him with multiple fractures to his right shoulder, right elbow, right hand and right leg. He had a number of operations and although the indications were that he would make a reasonable recovery in time, it was equally clear that he was not going to be racing again in F1 any time soon. In fact he would finally return to F1 nine years later, as a Williams driver, but never again would he be the unstoppable force he had once been.

“I had no idea that Robert was doing that damn rally,” says Boullier, still disquieted by the memory, even after the passage of 14 years. “His manager, Daniele Morelli, called me on the Sunday morning: ‘Big drama, Éric.’ Well, it was. It really was. Robert was in a coma, and at one point we though he might die.

Lotus win in Abu Dhabi, 2012

Lotus win in Abu Dhabi, 2012

“Thank God he didn’t. But he never raced for us again. As a replacement we hired Nick Heidfeld, who was a logical choice, but he wasn’t on Robert’s level, and the truth was that we’d lost one of our prime assets.” Petrov and Heidfeld started the season well, bagging a brace of third places in Melbourne (Petrov) and Sepang (Heidfeld), but neither of them shone in the next few races and, after the Hungarian GP in July, Heidfeld was dropped, to be replaced for the remainder of the season by Bruno Senna, who, truth be told, performed less well than Heidfeld or Petrov.

“We knew we now had to make changes, and we did,” Boullier says, scratching his chin. “Kimi had been out of F1 for two years, doing a bit of rallying, but he wanted to come back to F1, and we thought he’d be worth taking a chance on. Yes, I figured that he might be a bit rusty at first, but he was still only 32 and he’d been absolutely brilliant in his prime. Alongside him I brought in one of my Gravity [Sports Management] drivers, Romain Grosjean, who was young [25] and superfast, especially over one lap. I thought Romain’s quali pace would keep Kimi digging deep, and it worked.” It did indeed. In 2012 Räikkönen won in Abu Dhabi, he was second in Bahrain, Valencia and Budapest and he was third in Barcelona, Nürburgring and Spa. He ended up third in the F1 drivers’ world championship, beaten by only Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull) and Fernando Alonso (Ferrari). Grosjean drove well, too, bagging podium finishes in Bahrain, Montreal and Budapest.

Robert Kubica, here testing in Valencia in 2011, was a rare talent.

Robert Kubica, here testing in Valencia in 2011, was a rare talent.

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Räikkönen kicked off the following season, 2013, with a fine win in Melbourne and drove superbly all year, finishing second six times (China, Bahrain, Spain, Germany, Hungary and Korea) and third once (Singapore), while Grosjean stood on five podiums (Bahrain, Germany, Korea, Japan and India).

In 2014 Ron Dennis contacted Boullier to ask him whether he would like to become McLaren’s F1 team principal. A deal was quickly done and Éric was soon on his way from Enstone to Woking.

In 2014 Boullier was hired by Ron Dennis as McLaren’s racing director; he’d spend four years in Woking

In 2014 Boullier was hired by Ron Dennis as McLaren’s racing director; he’d spend four years in Woking

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The season started well – Kevin Magnussen finished a fine second on his F1 debut in Melbourne – but thereafter results were disappointing. The drivers, Magnussen and Jenson Button, were not really the problem, but Dennis thought they were, as Boullier recalls: “Early in the season Ron had asked me who my ideal driver line-up would be. I answered, ‘Vettel and Alonso.’ Ron then said, ‘OK, you get Alonso and I’ll get Vettel.’”

Boullier succeeded, but Dennis did not. However, Alonso’s four seasons at McLaren delivered almost nothing. “The McLaren-Honda marriage just didn’t work,” Boullier admits now. “Our chassis weren’t mega in those seasons and Honda’s power units were sometimes poor. On top of that, there was war at board level. Ron and Mansour [Ojjeh] were at daggers drawn, the Bahrainis were taking Mansour’s side, and I, plus Jonathan Neale, Jost Capito and Zak Brown, were in a difficult position. And our engineers didn’t understand or therefore manage well the consequences of F1 going to the hybrid era. I tried my best but by the middle of 2018 it was over, and I announced my resignation.

“It’s probably the first time I’ve ever apologised to a Frenchman”

“It’s a frustrating memory. I remember arriving back in Woking from a visit to Honda’s F1 headquarters in Japan some time in 2014 and asking Ron, ‘How is it possible that Honda will be ready to compete with Mercedes and the others as early as next year, when they’re clearly still so far behind?’ Ron replied, ‘Don’t worry.’ Later, I revisited the Honda plant and I called Ron from there. ‘Come here and see for yourself,’ I said to him. But, again, he assured me that it would all work out OK. But it couldn’t, and it didn’t. They just weren’t ready. They’d begun work on their F1 project at the end of 2012. Ferrari and Renault had started in 2010, and Mercedes had started in 2009. The Honda guys were miles behind. When we went testing at Jerez in February 2015 and we were terrible – slow and unreliable – Ron called me and said, ‘You were right and I was wrong. This is probably the first time I’ve ever apologised to a Frenchman.’

“We had two great drivers in 2015 and 2016: Alonso and Button, world champions both of them. They were upset by our underperformance – understandably. As a result it was difficult to manage them. Jenson was more of a gentleman about it. He moaned behind closed doors but Fernando went public about his frustration. We all remember his ‘GP2 engine’ comment on the radio [Suzuka, 2015], his deckchair stunt [Interlagos the same year], all that. It was a stressful time.

Fernando Alonso deckchair strop, São Paulo, 2015

Fernando Alonso deckchair strop, São Paulo, 2015

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“But I’m pleased that McLaren is back to its very best now. It was me who introduced Zak to Mansour and [Sheikh] Mohammed [Bin Essa Al Khalifa], our two main board members, and it was me who hired Andrea Stella from Ferrari, so I’m glad that Zak and Andrea are both doing so well now, as I say.”

Boullier became managing director of the French Grand Prix association in 2019, a position that came to an end when France lost its F1 race after the 2022 event. Since then he has been multitasking on a number of projects, some of which he can discuss and some of which he cannot. “I’ve been working on a plan to bring a grand prix to Tangiers, in Morocco,” he says. “That could be awesome.”

Boullier is founder of Circle

Boullier is founder of Circle

The F1 World Championship sorely requires a grand prix in Africa, and it has visited Morocco before, although the country has hosted only one F1 event of world championship status, in 1958, a race won by Stirling Moss and marred by the fiery and ultimately fatal accident that befell his Vanwall team-mate Stuart Lewis-Evans.

In 2019 Boullier founded Circle, a start-up company whose small but mustard-keen workforce have designed, patented and will soon begin to manufacture a tiny four-wheeled electric vehicle for hire in cities. “It’s a fantastic project,” says Éric, suddenly enthusiastic again, having struggled to smile during his description of his time at McLaren. “The business model is similar to the scooters and bikes that you hire in many cities nowadays, via an app, but our product is a proper little car, powered by batteries that you charge outside the car. So when one battery is flat, you swap it with a new battery that already has charge, and there are six batteries in each car, so you never have to be delayed while your battery is being charged, as you do with conventional full-size EVs. Our car is now fully homologated for the EU, it’ll do 90kph [56mph], and we’ll put it into production next year. We have orders from all over Europe.”

Boullier, MD of the French Grand Prix organisation, in 2022

Boullier, MD of the French Grand Prix organisation, in 2022

Will we ever see Boullier in F1 again?

“Well, why not?” he replies. “Actually, I’ve had some interesting discussions recently…”


Born: 09/11/1973, Laval, France

  • 1998 Almost hired by Renault Sport.
  • 1999 Graduates from Paris’s Institut Polytechnique des Sciences Avancées; begins internship with DAMS, then given full-time job as a data engineer.
  • 2000-01 Race engineer for DAMS-run Cadillac team in the Le Mans 24 Hours (2001 as the works team).
  • 2002-03 DAMS involved with Luc Besson’s motor racing film Michel Vaillant.
  • 2002 No racing with DAMS so works with Racing Engineering for the World Series by Nissan; wins teams’ title.
  • 2003-04 Becomes principal of the DAMS-run Formula Renault Eurocup team.
  • 2005 Runs DAMS’ Formula Renault 3.5 and GP2 campaigns.
  • 2005-09 Involved with A1 Grand Prix teams for France, Switzerland and Mexico.
  • 2007-08 Wins for DAMS in GP2.
  • 2010-14 Renault F1 (later renamed Lotus F1) team principal.
  • 2014-18 Team principal at McLaren.
  • 2019-22 MD of French Grand Prix.
  • 2019- Circle city hire cars project.
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  • Lewis Hamilton’s dejected comments after qualifying and then the race at the Hungaroring – when he described his performances as “useless” and that Ferrari probably needs “a new driver” – have inevitably led to conjecture about his future plans beyond this season.
  • Both Sepang and Istanbul are keen to be reinstated onto the F1 calendar. Turkish Automobile Sports Federation president Eren Uclertopragi recently stated, “Unlike during the pandemic, we do not want to host a one-off replacement race; instead, we aim to secure a place on the calendar through a long-term contract.” The Turkish government is understood to have approved plans to underwrite the hosting fee. Meanwhile, Sepang International Circuit CEO Azhan Shafriman Hanif has said: “We let F1 go and now it is very hard to get it back. There is a waiting list to get back in and of course, the costs are very expensive. We were quoted $70m a race… A lot of people are queuing so it won’t be easy. But if we are really serious about it, then maybe we can start the conversation.”
  • Valtteri Bottas is understood to have turned down the opportunity of taking Franco Colapinto’s place at Alpine for the remainder of the season, further strengthening the belief that he has already reached an agreement to race with Cadillac for 2026.
  • Frédéric Vasseur’s contract as Scuderia Ferrari team principal was renewed on the eve of the Hungarian Grand Prix for a ‘multi-year’ duration.
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Ferrari reckoned the Hungaroring’s layout offered one of its best chances of being competitive in the remaining races after a dispiriting first half of the season in which it had scored not a single grand prix victory. Accordingly, there was a plan. One which involved running the car super-low to harvest the lap time gains resulting. In that way, the team reasoned, the qualifying position would be boosted – and around a circuit on which overtaking is difficult, that would be gold dust.

The matter of controlling the plank wear to ensure the car was still legal at the end of the race could be done through tyre pressures at the pitstops and how the driver managed the car. It was a bold strategy, especially given how Lewis Hamilton had been disqualified from the Chinese Grand Prix for excessive plank wear. But it received an unexpected boost in qualifying when gusting wind changing direction caught out the McLarens, opening the way for Charles Leclerc to set pole. The crosswinds had made the McLarens edgy on corner entry at places where the Ferrari’s understeer (from the greater rear grip of running so low) made it much more driveable.

Leclerc’s first stint of his two-stop race was scintillating as he pulled out a gap on Oscar Piastri’s McLaren. Things began to go awry on his second set of tyres. He remained ahead of Piastri but in contrast to the first stint was now holding the McLaren up. “I can feel what we discussed before the race,” Leclerc radioed. “We need to discuss this before we do it… we are going to lose this race with this thing. I’m now losing so much time.”

Although Ferrari was coy about it after the race, this was almost certainly a reference to running the second stint with higher tyre pressures than the first, so as to control the plank wear. Higher pressures will also increase the tyre temperatures. The combined effect of greater ride height and hotter rubber was hurting Leclerc’s pace.

In addition to higher pressures again at the second stop, Leclerc was instructed to use a deployment map which hurt the car’s end-of-straight speed – as this is where the car runs lowest and imposes the most wear on the plank. At this point, the Ferrari fell disastrously off even its second stint pace and Leclerc was passed by both Piastri and George Russell.

“This is so incredibly frustrating,” he radioed. “We’ve lost all competitiveness. I would have found a different way of managing those issues. It’s undriveable. It’s a miracle if we finish on the podium.”

After the race he was more diplomatic, saying, “I need to take back the words I said on the radio because it was an issue coming from the chassis.”

Regardless of how it was phrased, that was the essential story of the Ferrari’s wildly variable race pace.

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In the last race before Formula 1’s summer break, McLaren drivers Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri gave a definitive confirmation that the second half of the season is going to see them locked in battle for the world championship. McLaren’s seventh 1-2 of the season at a time when every team’s developments are now effectively switched off in favour of the new format 2026 cars looks to have locked-in its massive lead in the constructors’ championship and so now the contest is only about which of its drivers will prevail in the remaining 10 races.

But the way in which Norris beat Piastri around the Hungaroring was somewhat unusual. As was the fact that both had to concede pole to Charles Leclerc’s untypically fast Ferrari. That had come about as the wind changed direction and intensity between Q2 and Q3 – something which cost the McLarens around 0.5sec of performance but left the Ferrari relatively unaffected. In hindsight, that was an important clue in explaining how this race would pan out.

Charles Leclerc Hungary GP

Charles Leclerc leads from pole – his career 27th – with the two McLarens giving chase.

The expectation going in was that normal McLaren domination service would quickly be resumed in the race after Leclerc’s starring qualifying cameo. But that isn’t what happened at all – not in the first stint at least where Leclerc in the lead had genuinely great pace and actually edged away from the chasing Piastri. Norris meanwhile had dropped from third on the grid to fifth after Turn 2, with George Russell and Fernando Alonso taking advantage of his checked momentum into Turn 1 as he was forced to back off to avoid his team-mate. Norris quickly picked off Alonso’s Aston Martin but Russell’s Mercedes was faster at the end of the straights and proved impossible to pass. This looked set to doom Norris’s hopes of fighting Piastri as the lead two left the Mercedes well behind.

“Leclerc in the lead had genuinely great pace and he edged away”

Leclerc’s pace – which saw him pull out around 3sec over Piastri in that first stint – was only partly explained by how the following car invariably gives its front tyres a harder time here and how Piastri had quickly switched his focus on the race’s longer game by preserving his rubber. It was also about how outright fast the Ferrari was. Why was it so? Judging by the amount of underbody sparks it was throwing out when heavily fuelled, it was running very low. The performance benefits of running lower with these ground effect cars are enormous. But the concern then becomes plank wear, the very thing which caught Ferrari out in China earlier in the season.

Oscar Piastri’s pit stop Hungary

Oscar Piastri’s final stop was on lap 45; he’d soon pass Leclerc for second

Grand Prix Photo

Ferrari, figuring the long medium-speed bends of this track represented their best chance of being genuinely competitive in the remainder of the season, had opted to go aggressive on ride height (see panel, previous page) to boost its grid position, and then defend around a track on which overtaking is difficult. The pole had been an unexpected bonus as the understeer balance which the low rear ride height brought had by chance been exactly what was needed when the wind played its tricks in Q3.

“Leclerc’s pace fell off. Ferrari’s gamble on ride height had bust”

This was calculated to be a two-stop race because of the heavy rear tyre thermal degradation imposed by the track. As the first stops were approaching, and Piastri had a gap to drop into, McLaren brought him in to apply undercut pressure to Leclerc. Ferrari responded a lap later and Leclerc emerged still ahead. Russell had also pitted, leaving Lando Norris in the lead. His strong pace led his race engineer Will Joseph to ask what Norris thought about the idea of trying for a one-stop. With nothing to lose, Norris responded: “Yeah, why not.”

Piastri meanwhile was finding he could catch Leclerc much easier in the second stint than had been the case in the first. The Ferrari was not as quick on this set of tyres than the previous. But still there was no way for Piastri to pass. Aware by now that Norris was staying out and was likely one-stopping, he was losing valuable time stuck behind the Ferrari. The two-stop was a faster strategy in theory – so long as you were not delayed by a slower car as your one-stopping rival got clear air. “Could we one-stop from here?” Piastri asked his race engineer Tom Stallard. But he’d made that first stop too early for that now to be feasible. He was locked into the same two-stop as Leclerc.

McLaren Lando Norris,leads Piastri at Hungaryjpg

Less than a second separated the McLaren drivers at the finish, but Lando Norris, opposite, bagged maximum points.

Norris ran for an extra 12 laps over Piastri in his first stint, rejoining fourth but with less than a pitstop’s-worth of gap over the cars ahead, all of which had to stop again. He also had a nice gap of clear air and began setting one fastest lap after another, giving his engineer concern that he was pushing too hard, Joseph reminding him that he’d need to have tyre grip left late in the race as Leclerc and Piastri came at him on new tyres. But Norris was actually judging it perfectly.

Leclerc was not going to be a threat. After making his second stop, his pace fell off – enabling Piastri to breeze by and for Russell to further demote him. Ferrari’s gamble on ride height had bust, as they desperately tried to ensure plank wear remained legal.

Lando Norris wins Hungary

Once Piastri was by Leclerc, he was 12sec behind Norris with 25 laps to go on tyres 14 laps newer. The numbers said his tyres would be almost 1sec per lap quicker and he needed to catch Norris by only 0.5sec per lap. But there was another number which doomed his chances – the 1.4sec per lap difference in pace needed to make an overtake. He could catch him – and did – but was unable to pass as Norris placed himself perfectly. Piastri made a desperate late-braking passing attempt into Turn 1 with two laps to go but locked up.

So like that, Norris had used his lower initial position to tactical advantage as Piastri was thwarted by a quick-slow Ferrari. It brought Norris within nine points of Piastri’s world championship lead.

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I remember an early 1978 argument over the chassis of the RS10 and the use of the engine,” said Renault Formula 1 team driver Jean-Pierre Jabouille. “Whether to put a twin turbo in it and modify the chassis to a ground-effect car. I thought ground-effect was obvious because Lotus were doing it already. Some people in the aerodynamics department at Renault Sport thought we could achieve greater efficiency going out of the corners, but there were others who were against the twin turbo and the ground-effect system.

Renault’s July 1, 1979 Jean-Pierre Jabouille French GP

Renault’s perfect day – July 1, 1979, when French driver Jean-Pierre Jabouille won the French Grand Prix with an all-French car

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“I was in favour of a ground-effect car with twin turbos,” Jabouille added, “but some were not convinced. So we made a ground-effect car with a single turbo. I was certain that it wasn’t a good idea after I had run a race with a single turbo and ground-effect. I wanted a twin turbo with the ground-effect car.”

The idea of twin turbochargers dated at least to May 1978, when team chief Jean Sage and sponsor François Guiter were chatting in the Zolder, Belgium paddock with Porsche racer Rolf Stommelen before that country’s grand prix. “Why doesn’t Renault use twin turbos?” said the German driver. “It would considerably improve the response time.”

“The twin turbo and ground effect were super-efficient”

This was a timely tip by Stommelen, who had been racing Porsche’s Type 935/77 during the previous season, its first with twin KKK turbos. By virtue of its flat-opposed six-cylinder engine the 935 was well adapted to a separate complete system for each side, including dedicated wastegates. The direct effect was that two turbos were substantially smaller in diameter than one carrying the same total exhaust flow, hence had much less rotational inertia to overcome when speed changes were demanded. This was the pattern now followed by Renault, requiring a tear-up of the rear of newcomer Michel Têtu’s new RS10.

The result was a symmetrical, compact and aerodynamically effective arrangement of exhaust pipes, turbochargers, intercoolers and induction systems. They also had short inlet and exhaust tracts, now having a separate small plenum log for each bank of cylinders instead of the previous shared plenum. Individual exhaust pipes were kept far apart and came together only immediately before the turbine housing. In this way, the imparted exhaust-flow energy was exploited individually and to the full.

1970s, Renault garage

In the late 1970s, Renault was heading in its own direction.

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“The first comparative tests of the twin turbo in the car took place at Dijon,” wrote Roy Smith in his book Alpine & Renault: The Development of the Revolutionary Turbo F1 Car 1968 to 1979, “on a private track equipped with chicanes to demonstrate the differences between the two solutions of behaviour in acceleration and response time. Every possible version was tested and compared with the original single-turbo set-up. The twin-turbo versions provided results which clearly favoured this type of installation compared with the single-turbo version.” KKK’s 3070GD turbos were fitted, revving as high at 150,000rpm against the single charger’s maximum of 80,000.

With intermittent flow created by opening and closing the wastegates, each turbocharger was powered not only by the mean pressure built up before the turbine but also by regular pressure peaks which imparted additional thrust to the turbine. “Gradually,” summed up Jabouille, “it became clear that both the twin turbo and the ground effect were super-efficient. Though the new engine was no more powerful it was much less brutal. The throttle pick-up came in at 5500-6000rpm instead of 6500-7000.

Renault team boss Jean Sage 1979 French GP

Renault team boss Jean Sage, yellow jacket, at the end of the 1979 French GP

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“From that moment on René Arnoux” – who joined to drive the team’s second car – “and I were very soon winning races,” said Jabouille. He and Renault knew Arnoux well from their Formula 2 battles, in which the newcomer was champion in 1977. But the 1979 Monaco debut of the twin turbo was less than a success with one car out after a collision and the other not classified.

Before the next race at Dijon-Prenois the track hosted a tyre-test session, during which Renault subjected one car to a simulation of the 189-mile race. A speed trap was set up on its one long straight. “I’ll never forget it,” recalled an engineer who was watching its readout when a Renault swept by. “Suddenly it showed a speed 20mph faster than anything we’d seen before. The Renault was coming good. Soon we would all need turbos!”

René Arnoux on the podium in 1980

René Arnoux won two out of the first three GPs in 1980 driving Renault’s 1.5-litre V6 turbo RE20

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This was not a false dawn. In 1979 the V6 was running at 2.0 bar pressure on a 7.0:1 compression ratio. Approaching 11,000rpm it offered in excess of 600bhp, whereas the naturally aspirated cars were struggling to exceed 525bhp. In the French Grand Prix on 1 July Jabouille shattered the lap record to take pole position with Arnoux alongside in the front row. Making strategic use of his soft-compound Michelins, he took the lead on the 47th of 80 laps. Behind him Arnoux soon engaged the Ferrari of Gilles Villeneuve, who prevailed at the finish by a quarter of a second, taking third to Jabouille’s victory.

This was, as Niki Lauda put it, “a singular triumph for France since it happened to be the French Grand Prix at Dijon, won by an all-French car with a French driver at the wheel. The date to remember as the real beginning of the turbo era is July 1, 1979.” This was the high point of a season in which the team fashioned a scant eight finishes from 28 starts. Only two second places in Britain and America were otherwise of note.

“The 1979 French GP is the real beginning of the turbo era”

Having seen the potential of turbocharging at Dijon, rivals were arming themselves accordingly. The company with the lozenge badge had a head start that it needed to exploit. Hence it accorded great weight to the 1980 season, for which a much-modified car was built: the RE20.

“I thought winning the title in 1980 was realistic,” reflected engine designer François Castaing. “But I was having arguments in private with Gérard Larrousse [competition manager]. We already had Alain Prost under contract and we could have had him replace Jabouille for 1980. I was arguing that keeping Jean-Pierre was attaching a weight to our foot because he was not a potential champion in any sense. Larrousse was saying, ‘No, we have time to do that later.’” Castaing headed for the exit – a Renault job in America.

Jabouille’s in the 1980 Austrian GP

Jabouille’s second and final F1 win came in the 1980 Austrian GP – his first points finish since winning the 1979 French GP

Grand Prix Photo

Renault would continue as a top-level team without winning either the drivers’ or manufacturers’ championships. It would field Prost from 1981 to 1983, coming close to titles in the last two seasons but falling short through chronic unreliability. “We were alone,” mused Bernard Dudot –  technical director. “A new team with a new concept, new tyre technology from Michelin and doing everything ourselves. Only Ferrari was doing this and they had a big history.”

“The engine was always the main asset,” added aerodynamicist Jean-Claude Migeot. “We lacked a chassis culture. There were a lot of good people but we weren’t properly equipped. Renault in those days would never have committed to a moving-ground wind tunnel – and that’s what was required.”

Arnoux leads Alain Prost in the 1982 Italian GP

Arnoux leads Alain Prost in the 1982 Italian GP; Arnoux won the race driving the RE30B –Renault’s fourth victory of the campaign

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A heavy dependence on outside suppliers for crucial components was also an issue – especially when incoming inspection was not rigorous enough. It was difficult to convince their suppliers of the demanding nature of this new kind of French engine. Nor were internal priorities always in balance. “By 1980 the car was very competitive for qualifying, for one lap,” said Arnoux. “I won in Brazil and South Africa but after these races we had a lot of problems, breaking engines for different reasons.

“Some people in the team said, ‘Oh, we are not lucky,’” added Arnoux. “That was a very bad analysis. We were not lucky because we didn’t work in a good way. Maybe with less power but more reliability we had the possibility to win the championship. We had a very strong man who developed the engine [Dudot]. He’d call me and say, ‘We have more torque, we have found more power, this development is bringing an extra 20hp and so forth.’ I admit that I too said, ‘Oh, that’s very good, thank you.’ But maybe it was more important not to have 20 more horsepower but the reliability to finish.”

Bernard Dudot with Renault’s turbocharged F1 1970s

Bernard Dudot had been working on Renault’s turbocharged F1 project since the mid-1970s, becoming technical director in 1980

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A particular source of unreliability in the 1982 season was the servo motor controlling the Kugelfischer fuel-injection’s metering cam. Responding to a Renault-developed electronic microprocessor that sensed five engine parameters, it increased lap times by 2sec when it failed. Servomotor failures in the hot, high-vibration Formula 1 engine environment cost Renault two wins and the 1982 world championship. “In 1982 we lost about eight races for the sake of an electric motor that cost 100 francs,” confirmed Migeot. “That was because the electronics department was one man, doing everything from electric plugs to the sensors on the fuel injection and he couldn’t cope. The next year the pieces for the motor cost 100 times more. It was undervalued in all sorts of respects.”

“By 1980 the car was very competitive for qualifying”

New developments affecting and relating to the Renault’s turbocharging rolled out during the engine’s career. “The first electronic development was made in 1983 with Renix, a Renault subsidiary,” said Dudot. “It was not successful. Magneti Marelli was too much involved with Ferrari. Renault did not want to be involved with the same supplier as a direct competitor. This was an error. Two years later much progress had been made with the Marelli device: turbo lag, temperature control and piston reliability. Both Renix and Marelli-Weber were in Renault’s mix in 1984 when fuel consumption became an issue with new restrictive Formula 1 rules aimed at corralling the turbos.

Martin Brundle’s Tyrrell-Renault goes Estoril, 1986

Martin Brundle’s Tyrrell-Renault goes kaput at Estoril, ’86

Grand Prix Photo

At the start of the 1983 season the turbo V6 had larger KKK turbos, delivering 650bhp at 10,500rpm when under 2.2 bar plenum pressure in racing and more for qualifying. Intercoolers were now air/air, lighter and judged more efficient than air/water coolers. Jean-Pierre Boudy, who ran the engine research department, started using water injection after developing the system in his personal Renault 18. Water was delivered in proportion to the density of the incoming air. Cooling water was deployed externally as well with sprays on the intercoolers in qualifying, at first on one side and later on both.

A Renault innovation in 1983 introduced at Monaco aimed to restore some of the downforce lost by new rules requiring flat undersides. A full-width diffuser beneath the rear suspension had four piped exhausts, from the turbos and wastegates, playing across its underside to energise the emerging airflow and add their own impulse to the departing air. Although rivals protested that this somehow constituted a prohibited ‘moveable aerodynamic device’, FISA declared this pioneering ‘blown diffuser’ legal. It was soon copied.

Dudot and Sage in 1986 with Renault turbo engine

Dudot and Sage in ’86; by this point three F1 teams were using Renault power

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Butterflies at the forward-facing air inlets to the turbochargers provided throttle control, upstream from a Renault-developed device, the Dispositive Prerotation Variable or DPV. An invention of Boudy, it created an annular entry to the turbo’s compressor instead of the usual axial entry. Boudy placed a ring of variable-incidence vanes in the annular passage. The DPV’s control of the vanes varied their incidence from closed to open, either to provide a pre-swirl or to close completely so that the impeller would be in a semi-vacuum that would help maintain its speed until boost was again applied.

“The odds were always going to be stacked against them”

In 1984, the first season of a three-year contract, Renault fitted Garrett AiResearch turbochargers. “We needed special constructions,” explained Dudot. “It was difficult to get specialist turbos from KKK. We knew the possibility of development working with Garrett. Garrett was completely involved in the project and developed turbine wheels from special steels and a high-speed compressor wheel machined from solid in a special aluminium.”

Stefan Bellof, Nürburgring, 1985, Tyrrell – Ken Tyrrell

Stefan Bellof, Nürburgring, 1985, in a French-engined Tyrrell – Ken Tyrrell was critical of the turbo concept

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Packaging was completely new with the EF4 as well. With turbos now low at the sides of the V6, compressed air was delivered forward to the intercoolers on both sides and then upwards to the induction plenums. Complete with starter, clutch and turbos, the 1984 EF4 V6 was a 155kg package capable of producing 660-750bhp at 11,000rpm, depending on boost pressure. Its torque peak, reached at 8500rpm, was 354lb ft.

In 1985, the last for works Renault entries until the manufacturer bought the Benetton team in 2000, racing power was 810bhp while for qualifying 1200bhp could be rustled up. Comprehensively revised for the first time to add strength throughout, the 1985 V6 reverted to a longer stroke in search of a broader torque range and better cooling. Feeding inlet ports that now inclined more to the centre, a single plenum chamber replaced separate inlet logs.

A blown turbo for Elio De Angelis, Hockenheim, 1984

A blown turbo for Elio De Angelis, Hockenheim, 1984.

Getty Images

The Renix system now fed two fuel injectors per cylinder. It gave a five-position boost choice and a pushbutton for an overtaking spurt – to be used with caution.

Ligier and Lotus used Renault engines from 1984 to 1986 while the original customer and then scoffer, Ken Tyrrell, fitted them in 1985 and ’86. The EF4’s most successful 1984 customer was Lotus, whose drivers put their 95T on the podium six times. The V6 took Elio De Angelis and Lotus-Renault to third in the two world championships that year. Ayrton Senna scored four wins in Lotus-Renaults, his first – of 41 – was from pole in the Portuguese Grand Prix on April 21, 1985.

Ayrton Senna Lotus-Renault on pole at the 1986 San Marino GP

Ayrton Senna put his Lotus-Renault on pole at the 1986 San Marino GP

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The Renault F1 effort was a venture into the unknown that could only have been undertaken by a motivated ‘outsider’ to the F1 mainstream. Had Renault not taken the leap into the dark that was the 1½-litre alternative, it is certain that supercharging would have remained unexplored. None of the incumbents had any reason to attempt it. This would have denied turbocharging one of its most productive decades.

Niki Lauda, who had negotiated with Renault for a drive but was rejected as too costly, was critical of the company’s effort: “It can be argued that Renault’s over-zealous commitment to new engine technology may have crossed the demarcation line between day-to-day feasibility and downright wishful thinking. Renault engineers piled one idea on top of another. Taken in isolation each new idea may seem sensible enough. Taken together they tended to add up to an over-technical, excessively complex final product. The interplay of ideas and solutions was such that it became increasingly difficult to sort out certain basic problem areas.”

1984, aluminium Renault’s cylinder blocks and Garrett turbos

By 1984, aluminium had replaced iron for Renault’s cylinder blocks and Garrett turbos and wastegates over those made by KKK

Motor Sport’s Mark Hughes judged that “this project was fantastically audacious. It brought together a young, inexperienced bunch of people, threw them into a technical programme previously uncharted, with huge pressures and potential rewards and with tools completely untested. There were always going to be fireworks – and the odds were always going to be stacked against them.”

Dudot had the last word. The V6 engine project, he said, “gave us the possibility of this expertise in the company. The five Renault world titles of the 1990s [with Williams and Benetton] were built on the school time of the turbo programme.”

Extracted from Power Unleashed by Karl Ludvigsen (Evro Publishing, £395).

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June 21 produced one of those ‘Is the glass half-empty or half-full?’ moments for IndyCar fans. The IndyCar Series formally confirmed a new car to replace the ancient Dallara chassis in use since 2012 is finally forthcoming – in 2028.

Álex Palou IndyCar car

Álex Palou is IndyCar’s star driver but his Dallara, used by all the grid since 2012, is slow, heavy and has a junior-formula feel

Taken in isolation, any fresh technology on the way is good news for a series that has been unable to regain the popularity it enjoyed 25-30 years ago before a destructive battle for control of the sport drove away fans, sponsors and manufacturers. But there’s also a strong sense that the appearance of a new Dallara spec car – built to essentially the same technical formula that has evolved over the past 15 years – could be too little, too late to revive a form of racing that veered off track and has been spinning its wheels in gravel since the turn of the century.

“There’s a strong sense that the appearance of a new Dallara spec car could be too little, too late”

Eighteen years have passed since two competing IndyCar championships were unified into a single entity, and this is the sixth season the IndyCar Series has been owned and operated by Penske Entertainment. Given Roger Penske’s success as a businessman and especially as a racer – a record 20 Indianapolis 500 victories alone – much was expected from the new leadership.

But Indy 500 excepted, IndyCar racing has fallen backwards during the Penske era into obscurity on the American sports landscape. Overtaken by Formula 1’s US momentum, IndyCar now ranks a distant fourth in popularity behind NASCAR’s B-level Xfinity Series, just within the racing genre. The paddock and what remains of the fan base is concerned to the point of alarm, and the July 31 announcement that Fox Corporation had acquired a one-third stake in Penske Entertainment only somewhat calmed the turbulent waters.

Dallara DW12 at launch, 2012

Dallara DW12 at launch, 2012.

To many, fast-tracking a new car is the most obvious way to demonstrate progress. “The time has come for a new chassis,” admitted IndyCar president J Douglas Boles. “We are pleased by what our engineers and Dallara have collaboratively designed and believe it will appeal to the fans and paddock while also upholding our standards of safety and enhancing IndyCar’s on-track competition well into the future.”

It’s been more than 20 years since the car was an exciting element of IndyCar racing. Modern era drivers talk in awe of the CART cars from the 1990s, when there was intense competition between engine, and even tyre manufacturers.

Committee behind the DW12 announced

In 2010, the committee behind the DW12 announced their concept.

“I remember what the CART car was like,” smiled Will Power, who arrived in America in 2005 for the last three years of that formula. “At a track like Long Beach, you could hardly go flat from corner to corner with the amount of power it had. I still miss those days because the cars were much more exciting and difficult to drive. Even by the time I came in, it was already watered down a bit, but I remember Gil de Ferran telling me he came into the pits after a couple of laps in his first test in an IRL car [in 2000] because it was so slow. He thought something was wrong with the engine. But no, that’s just the way it was.”

Designed by committee and built to a price, the Dallara IR12 was tail-heavy and overweight from the start. It took on the appearance of a traditional Indycar when the current body kit was grafted on in 2018, but since then, integration of a bulky aeroscreen as well as the addition of a mild hybrid system to the powertrain have ballooned the car’s weight up to nearly 1900lb (862kg).

Indy Hybrid Honda engine

a hybrid engine has increased the weight of an already cumbersome car

The 2028 brief calls for a new Dallara chassis and a slightly larger and more powerful 2.4-litre version of the current highly restricted 2.2-litre twin turbo V6. The car is expected to feature better integration of the aeroscreen and the hybrid system to reduce weight by 85-100lb (39-45kg). Limited public comments from Penske Entertainment executives suggest that as many components as possible will be carried over from the IR12 to reduce costs. A rendering shown to teams was said to resemble Dallara’s Formula 2 design.

Nothing groundbreaking, therefore, and it’s all shaping up to be a bit of a letdown when the car is revealed – likely in early 2026 with a two-year development plan that hopes to avoid the public teething troubles the IR12 went through when it was new.

“For a 1600lb car, 1000 to 1100bhp would be about right. It would make a better formula”

“The car definitely needs to step it up; it’s currently more of a junior category car and it’s quite a heavy thing,” said six-times IndyCar champion Scott Dixon. “When I first came into the sport [in 2001], I think a CART car was 12-15sec a lap faster than an Indy Lights, and now it’s more like 2-3sec. We had 1000bhp then and now we have not even 700bhp.”

Josef Newgarden is another IndyCar star who advocates a lighter, more powerful car.

“As a driver, I want a car that I can feel well, that I have complete control over,” he said. “We’ve gotten away from that over the years with more and more downforce and the way the tyres have changed. In my opinion, it’s gone away from feel and control. You’re more reliant on the pure speed and capability of the car rather than relying on both the car and the driver. The balance has shifted too much to rely purely on the car. A driver is still required to do the job, but most drivers prefer a 50/50 mix of the driver and car rather than it being mostly dependent on the car. For a 1600lb [726kg] car, 1000 to 1100bhp would be about right. What we’re asking for is not complex. It’s simple in a lot of ways, and it would make a much better formula.”

109th Indianapolis 500

Interest in the Indy 500 remains buoyant – this year was a sell-out.

Amber Pietz

For racing purists, the need for any form of newness to IndyCar racing’s technical package is critically important to maintain or grow interest. Yet the fact that the likes of Dixon, Newgarden, Pato O’Ward and Álex Palou are out there banging around in a chassis designed in 2010 that could be eligible for vintage racing is also arguably the least of IndyCar’s problems.

When Roger Penske acquired the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in late 2019 for an estimated £240-280m, it came as part of a package deal that included the IndyCar Series and IMS Productions, a long established and highly capable video production company. Over the past six years, Penske made a nine-figure investment into the Speedway, with tasteful (and often needed) updates and upgrades that modernised the historic venue without altering its unique character. As a result, the Indianapolis 500 is at a modern era peak, achieving a 300,000-strong sell-out this year for the first time since the celebration of the landmark 100th running in 2016.

The Speedway is personal for Penske. He started attending the Indianapolis 500 in 1951, and taking ownership of the venue and event that sparked his lifelong passion for auto racing is arguably the crowning achievement of his 65-year business career. But Penske’s ownership of the IndyCar Series forced him to create separation from his IndyCar team, and the fate of IndyCar events outside the Indy 500 seems to hold little of Penske’s interest. Yet it’s the rest of the calendar that urgently requires attention.

Roger Penske and Hulman & Co

IndyCar and Indianapolis Motor Speedway change of ownership in 2019, with Roger Penske, left, taking the reigns from Hulman & Co

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Lost in IMS tunnel vision, Penske and his management team fail to recognise the same ‘big picture’ issues that affected IndyCar racing in 1978 when he co-founded CART are still holding the sport back. In those days, the Indianapolis 500 was at the zenith of its popularity but the competing teams needed a strong overall series of races to keep the sport in the spotlight (and themselves in business) for all 12 months of the year instead of the near total focus on Indianapolis and the Month of May.

CART fulfilled that objective; its legacy in the history of IndyCar racing is how it successfully grew the Indy 500 and a handful of unsuccessful other races into a popular international championship that was gaining ground on F1 worldwide prior to the hostile creation of the IRL. Now IndyCar racing appears to be right back where it was in 1978, when the Indy 500 was cruising right along, but the USAC National Championship had no national traction and many of the competitors were functioning on life support. Sure, a new car is forthcoming in 2028. But it’s a sticking plaster for a burn victim. If IndyCar racing is to succeed and grow again, a rethink of the sport’s philosophy and its antiquated business and marketing model is needed. To paraphrase a well-meaning but toxic phrase from American politics, how do you make IndyCar great again?

The 2015-17 aero kits

The 2015-17 aero kits failed to resonate with fans.

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Even prior to Fox Corporation’s direct investment of a reported £97m, IndyCar was already counting on a new television package with all races broadcast on the free-to-air Fox network to bump up its popularity. But the Fox association has not delivered the anticipated ratings boost; the US TV audience for races outside the Indianapolis 500 has declined by 19% in 2025. IndyCar’s male-dominated audience is also the oldest among just about every sport in America. A 2023 media summary noted that 70% of its fans were 55 or older, including 45% over the age of 65. Fox Corp has the power and the platforms to make a difference. But its near-£100m investment is tiny in comparative terms; on the same day the 33% acquisition of Penske Entertainment was revealed, a 4.6% stake in the Aston Martin Formula 1 team sold for a reported £110m. With an ownership slice of the Speedway and IMS Productions, it’s a shrewd investment by Fox. It remains to be seen whether it was made purely to gain assets or out of a genuine commitment to growing IndyCar.

0ne of IndyCar racing’s fundamental problems is that decades of ‘Indy 500 über alles’ rhetoric created generations of ‘place fans’ who love and care only about the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the Indianapolis 500. The majority are not ‘race fans’ who attend other IndyCar events and follow the series all season long on television. The Speedway has created a Disney-like cult following; loyalists genuinely believe IMS is the most wonderful place on earth and pledge their total devotion to it. That’s been great for the Speedway, but harmful in the long-term to the sport. The Indy 500 should be promoted and prioritised with the respect and reverence it deserves, but not to the point where it trivialises every other event on the schedule.

1978 IndyCar race start

In ’78 IndyCar was in the doldrums – like today

When IndyCar racing was at its popular peak from 1985-95, the growing strength of the CART series didn’t weaken the Indy 500. But losing that connection with Indianapolis during the split certainly harmed the likes of Mid-Ohio and Milwaukee and led to the demise of historic IndyCar venues including Phoenix and Michigan. Except for the season-opener at St Petersburg and Long Beach, today’s ancillary races get little love or promotion from IndyCar, and Long Beach – billed as the series’ marquee road racing event – attracted barely half a million TV viewers this year. A new event set for March ’26 featuring a temporary course that winds around the Dallas Cowboys football stadium is expected to be an attention grabber.

IndyCar must also change the mindset that it can’t schedule races after Labor Day weekend (early September) to avoid going up against American football on television. No racing series can afford to disappear from public view for six or more months of the year, especially one that hasn’t offered anything substantively fresh in terms of its product for nearly a decade. This is where the association with Fox – which carries a full slate of NFL games every Sunday afternoon and evening from September to December – can pay off, with the opportunity to experiment with weeknight races on TV.

Fans up close at Gateway in ’2025

Fans up close at Gateway in ’25.

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In fact, the entire business model where IndyCar and its teams rely on television ratings to dictate sponsorship values needs a rethink. With content available in so many forms and formats, TV ratings have become a bygone measurement of a sport’s popularity. But then IndyCar also lags badly behind Formula 1 and NASCAR in terms of digital reach, social media and supplemental programming; its 100 Days to Indy mini-series, which is now in its third season, is a weak copycat of F1’s Drive To Survive and has had little impact.

IndyCar has its share of characters – the wildly popular O’Ward, California-cool Colton Herta, rising stars Kyle Kirkwood and Christian Lundgaard, competitive veterans Dixon and Power, not to mention Newgarden, the series villain, and the smiling assassin – four-time champion Palou. If Fox has the imagination and the commitment, it has the digital reach to make them household names.

Still, the roots of IndyCar’s stagnancy can be traced to the very focal point of the series: the car. Even when it was new in 2012, the Dallara IR12 was a couple of generations behind F1 technology. It’s a fossil now. The most current IR18/Aerokit/Hybrid iteration of the Dallara Indycar is humdrum when compared to the LMDh/Hypercars now competing in IMSA’s top class. NASCAR, which stubbornly championed 1940s technology until well into the 2000s, has a newer car than IndyCar.

Since the formation of the Indy Racing League as a cut-rate competitor to the CART series, a crippling emphasis has been placed on controlling costs and levelling the field rather than creating awe-inducing race cars. The evidence can be seen in a lack of track record speeds at many racetracks – most notably Indianapolis, where Arie Luyendyk set the benchmarks that still stand in a CART-specification Reynard in 1996. Current Indycars are 6sec a lap slower around Road America than when Dario Franchitti took pole position in 2000.

IndyCar Scott Dixon in 2001

Six-times IndyCar champ Scott Dixon in 2001 CART… his car was quicker back then

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Once an arena for open competition between chassis, engine and tyre manufacturers, IndyCar racing’s zeal to lower the cost of racing drove away innovation and created a stale, spec racing environment. The on-track action is close, but it’s an artificial closeness because, engine excepted, every car is exactly the same. Honda and Chevrolet can’t push the envelope because of conservative engine mileage requirements and series-mandated caps on the cost of engine leases. Teams are not permitted any avenue of development outside shocks and dampers – hardly the stuff that creates interest from casual fans.

“IndyCar lags behind Formula 1 and NASCAR in its digital reach ”

The costs to compete were certainly higher in the ’90s than they are now. But the CART teams had the sponsorship to afford it until the effects of the split really started to take hold. The IRL, and later CART/Champ Car, came to believe they had the responsibility to save the teams from themselves and ensure that the wealthy ‘have’ teams didn’t force out the less-capable ‘have-nots’. And that’s the ultimate legacy of the split: it cheapened IndyCar racing, to the point where it no longer feels special. That’s a major problem for a sport that once prided itself on speed, excellence and technical innovation.

“One can say the racing is close in IndyCar, which it is,” observed McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown. “But IndyCar racing once had enough diversity that while it was not Formula 1, everyone was still excited about each year’s new cars and new technology. There were Lolas, Reynards, Penskes, Marches and Eagles. Ford/Cosworth, Ilmor/Chevy, Honda and Toyota were constantly evolving their engines.

Long Beach GP Indycar

TV viewing figures for this year’s Long Beach GP were depressingly low

“IMSA has a new product, NASCAR has a new product, and Formula 1 has a brand new product every year,” Brown added. “But for the past dozen or more years there’s been no reminiscing about the new Indycars coming along. IndyCar also needs to get out of the mindset of quantity over quality. I often think fans show up for the top 15 cars and that cars from 20-27 are a little bit of noise.”

One of the maddening realities of IndyCar’s tech malaise is that even though the original DW12 iteration of the Dallara IR12 was an ugly duckling, the ICONIC (Innovative, Competitive, Open-wheel, New, Industry-relevant, Cost-Effective) Committee that plotted its initial design direction came up with a good concept. The idea was that engine and potentially outside manufacturers from the aerospace industry could develop their own body parts (wings, sidepods and engine cover) that would create differences in appearance and performance between cars based on a common safety cell.

IndyCar’s 2015-17 aero kit era was a flop, but IMSA has used the concept to perfection with LMDh. Manufacturers design their own bodywork for one of four homologated chassis, mating the powerplant format of their choice to a common bellhousing and hybrid components. A BMW with its 4-litre turbocharged V8 looks and sounds different than a naturally aspirated 5.5-litre Cadillac, though they both incorporate the same chassis and other key common components.

Chevy PU gives 700bhp but drivers want more

Chevy PU gives 700bhp but drivers want more

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While long committed to a single chassis supplier model, IndyCar has been searching for support from an additional engine manufacturer since the Lotus programme came and went in 2012. But IndyCar can’t even be certain it will move into its new era in 2028 with the two incumbents. Chevrolet’s participation is thought to be safe, given Roger Penske’s stature in the Detroit business community and his ownership of Ilmor Engineering that designs and builds the Chevy engine. But for the past two years Honda has hinted it will end its 30-plus-year involvement in IndyCar that includes a six-year stint as its sole engine supplier from 2006-11. Honda has actually suggested it would support a single-spec engine produced by Ilmor if it would significantly reduce the costs of competing and attract other manufacturers.

Fixing IndyCar racing starts with recognising the severity of the problem. When Penske executives see a full house and improved TV ratings for the Indy 500, spurred on by the cheerleading local Indianapolis media, it’s easy for them to conclude all is well. A quick look at the TV numbers for Long Beach or the attendance at Iowa Speedway clearly demonstrate that IndyCar is in poor health.

IndyCar McLaren’s Pato O’Ward, Mid-Ohio

IndyCar has an abundance of driver talent – like Arrow McLaren’s Pato O’Ward, here at Mid-Ohio in July – but Penske needs a plan to build its audience

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“I think a lot of the powers that be don’t realise once you sink a product how long it takes to get it back,” commented Mario Andretti, a four-times IndyCar champion. “It’s so tragic that you have unprecedented talent lined up in the series, but nobody knows about it. If you take Scott Dixon somewhere, he won’t be recognised. When the cop stopped you and said, ‘Who do you think you are, Stirling Moss?’, all that is gone. I don’t hear, ‘Who do you think you are, Dario Franchitti?’ And these guys have won their share. They’ve won championships, they’ve won Indy. How do you explain that? Is there not an impact with the fans? What is it? I don’t know what the formula is.”

“A lot of the powers that be don’t realise once you sink a product how long it takes to get it back”

Prior to announcement of the Fox investment, many believed the easiest and best way to start solving IndyCar racing’s problems would be for Penske Entertainment to divest itself from ownership and management of the IndyCar Series – especially in the wake of Team Penske’s involvement in a pair of high-profile cheating scandals that resulted in the dismissal of three key managers. When Penske ownership was announced in 2019 IndyCar fans celebrated; they were terrified by the notion of an ‘outsider’ like Liberty Media taking control of their sport. Seeing Liberty’s success with F1, fans are now cheering the Fox ‘merger,’ believing it will create the kind of serious investment and nationwide effort needed to revive what was once America’s favourite form of open-wheel racing.

Hope springs eternal. The Indianapolis 500 will endure and it will likely continue to live up to its moniker as The Greatest Spectacle in Racing. It’s long been the only IndyCar race that mattered to many, but it’s in danger of becoming the only IndyCar race unless Penske Entertainment conjures up an exciting new car and Fox makes a serious financial and philosophical commitment to grow the sport outside of Indianapolis. That must start now, not in 2028.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Parting shot Aguri Suzuki loses his seat

Thirty years ago, in September 1995, David Coulthard scored the first of his eventual 13 grand prix wins at only his 21st attempt, and what turned out to be his only victory in a Williams. There could – should – have been more in the benchmark team of the decade. But after just one full season the Scot, then 24, walked away from arguably the best car he’d ever drive (the FW17 is certainly still his personal favourite), and turned his back on a chance to go head-to-head with Damon Hill for the 1996 world title. Who knows how that might have turned out?

Then again, Coulthard had good reason. In fact, you could argue he was left with little choice, as he switched to a McLaren team winless for two years and still with plenty of miles to go before it recovered its old world championship-contending form.

Today, at 54, ‘DC’ as he is universally known remains modest to a fault about his time in F1 and, from a perspective as one of motor racing’s best and most eloquent TV pundits, looks back with endearing honesty and wry amusement on most of his adventures. But that day at Estoril for the Portuguese GP on September 24, 1995, he not only left Hill in his dust but also beat Michael Schumacher’s equally Renault-powered Benetton from pole position on the same three-stop strategy, fully on merit. We’ve said it before about DC: if only he could have summoned such days more often.

David Coulthard

David Coulthard

Coulthard’s recollections of 1990s Williams are told through a prism of warm affection, but they also shed light on Frank Williams’ single-minded, often brutal approach to team management – and a fiercely independent spirit that ultimately contributed to the team’s undoing during the BMW-powered era the following decade. It’s a fall from which this grandee team has never fully recovered.

“Frank gave me my opportunity to be a test driver,” says DC. “But in the first year of testing [1993] I was never officially a tester, I was never paid. I’m not saying this to be disrespectful or ungrateful, but in those days you were the crash-test dummy. When they developed carbon-fibre suspension they’d put it on a rig, but the main rig was the test track and you went out until it failed. And it never fails at a hairpin at 80kph, it fails at 300kph on a straight… I think the reason why they didn’t make me official was because Renault or Elf wanted [Emmanuel] Collard or [Jean-Christophe ‘Jules’] Boullion. Frank didn’t want them. I tested wearing my own race suit and helmet, I didn’t even wear the official gear at that point. So I felt like I wasn’t fully invited to the party.”

How Coulthard was pitched headlong into a prime race seat, as a substitute for one of the greatest racing drivers in history, carries echoes of Jackie Oliver replacing Jim Clark at Lotus in 1968. DC was an official test driver for Williams in 1994, on a salary of £20,000, when Ayrton Senna was killed at Imola. He was called up for the Spanish GP, but the drive wasn’t his: he’d share it with Nigel Mansell, who returned from IndyCar for a quartet of (typically headline-grabbing) appearances, the last of which in Adelaide he won in the wake of Schumacher’s title-deciding professional foul on Hill.

“Money hadn’t crossed my mind. Frank said I’d get £5000 a race”

DC chuckles at his own naivety back then, but hindsight leaves him with questions. “When Frank told me I would be the race driver in Barcelona, I said, ‘Thank you very much, Mr Williams.’ He said, ‘Aren’t you going to ask how much you are being paid?’ It hadn’t crossed my mind. My motivation wasn’t money. He said I’d get £5000 per race.”

At his second race in Montréal he scored his first F1 points for fifth. “There was a tax in Canada that I had to pay: CAN$10,000, which was more than £5000. I asked Frank would he cover the difference – and he said no! So I effectively paid to do the 1994 Canadian GP! Now Nigel I believe was paid several hundred thousand pounds per race, so I did eight races and earned £40k, minus the tax in Canada. At the time it didn’t matter, but when I look back now I wonder why? It was just kind of weird.”

For 1995, Coulthard became a full-time Williams grand prix driver as Mansell made his ill-starred (and literally ill-fitting) move to McLaren. “I went to sign a two-year contract for 1995/96, but as the contract was coming out Frank said, ‘I’ve changed my mind, I only want to do a one-year deal.’ Frank was an amazing man, but sometimes he’d nitpick. So instead of signing for two years, we changed the contract in his office, I signed for 1995 and then went to Woking the same day and signed a two-year contract for 1996/97 with McLaren.”

After scoring his first podium in 1994, Coulthard excelled in ’95, with a win here at Estoril and regular top-three finishes

After scoring his first podium in 1994, Coulthard excelled in ’95, with a win here at Estoril and regular top-three finishes

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Can you blame him? Ron Dennis had been calling, making it clear he not only wanted Coulthard but could offer him a degree of security distinctly lacking in Frank’s attitude. DC would stay at McLaren for nine years.

During 1995, while Hill’s title aspirations against the superior Schumacher/Benetton combo floundered, DC performed consistently – for a rookie. Along with the Portuguese GP win, he scored seven other podiums, took five poles – four consecutively – and led 11 races. Sure, there were mistakes, including an embarrassing collision with the pitwall in his final drive for the team in Adelaide. But by then his future at McLaren was assured.

“David was undoubtedly a talented driver, but he did not seem to have the grit and determination of a Mansell or a Hill,” says Williams co-founder Patrick Head. “I remember being rather disappointed at Hockenheim after Damon went off at the end of the first lap [when a driveshaft failure locked his rear wheels] and DC could not keep up with Schumacher, when Damon had been dominant.”

Jacques Villeneuve, Indianapolis 500 winner and IndyCar champion in 1995, replaced Coulthard for 1996. Head recalls Frank Williams “submitting” to pressure from Bernie Ecclestone to take on Villeneuve, but that was only after Frank had failed to stop DC leaving.

“Frank Williams was an amazing man but sometimes he’d nitpick”

“When Frank wanted me to stay I couldn’t,” DC explains. “He challenged my McLaren contract and the only way to verify that he didn’t have the right to my services was to go to the Contract Recognition Board. Halfway through 1995 I walk in to the CRB’s Geneva office and sit on the McLaren side of the table with people I don’t know. On the other side is Frank with his lawyer. Williams had a multi-year technical contract with me, but not a multi-year race contract. The CRB decides McLaren’s contract is the dominant one. I then get in a plane with Frank and fly to the next GP. How weird is that? Frank said, ‘I’m not going to hold this against you, David, and I thoroughly enjoy being cross-examined by George Carman QC…’ I talk about this with the benefit of a University of Life education. Back then I was still the village boy clueless to the world of contracts.”

But Coulthard is also at pains to stress the other side of Frank Williams. To finance his climb to F1, Coulthard and his family had racked up personal debt, which he was determined to pay back as quickly as possible. “I owed £320,000 which was secured by my father against his [haulage] company, so in fairness to Frank, with a 1995 contract for £500,000, I asked him for an advance of £320k. He asked, ‘Why?’ I said, ‘That’s what I owe and I would like to go into 1995 debt-free. OK, I’ll have no money, but at least I can be focused on being a grand prix driver.’ He wrote the cheque.”

At the first Melbourne grand prix in 1996, Villeneuve made his sensational F1 debut, soon won races and became world champion in ’97. But Coulthard has no regrets over the path he chose, especially as Adrian Newey followed to lead Mercedes-powered McLaren back to the sharp end and Williams lost its works Renault V10s at the end of 1997 – its last title year. “I’d grown up at Williams, I’m a great believer in serving your apprenticeship, so I never felt disrespected,” says DC. “But at McLaren you were treated like a professional and you were expected to act like one.”

Did Coulthard’s call to sign that McLaren deal lose him his best shot at winning a world championship? Probably. But hindsight’s a wonder. At the time, and in his racing boots, few drivers would have chosen differently.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Parting shot Aguri Suzuki loses his seat

It had seemed just a temporary setback for Williams when its engine partner Renault withdrew from F1 at the end of 1997. Yes, it meant a couple of seasons as a customer team, but the link with BMW had already been made and in time that was surely going to become the new gold standard partnership. After all, Williams had bestridden the sport for two decades, often steamrollering the opposition with outrageous performance superiority regardless of which manufacturer’s engine was in the back of the cars. It had made world champions out of Alan Jones, Keke Rosberg, Nigel Mansell, Damon Hill and Jacques Villeneuve (as well as adding titles to the rosters of Nelson Piquet and Alain Prost). No team had ever been the fastest for so long.

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So the quiet ’98 and ’99 seasons as a temporary customer team seemed likely just to be a repeat of ’88, merely a punctuation between partners. Yes, they had lost the services of technical genius Adrian Newey and that did seem like a careless error of judgement on the part of Frank Williams and Patrick Head. But they’d been successful before he joined and BMW was on its way.

But despite BMW redefining the power limits of Formula 1 with its 2001 engine (after a promising but conservative start in 2000), there was to be no continuation of Williams’ golden lineage.

“Energy ran out. In hindsight, letting Newey go was a catastrophic error of judgement”

Oh, there were occasional bursts of speed (and even a faint title push in ’03) as the kindling of Williams’ magic reignited briefly. But the energy just ran out. In hindsight, not only was letting Newey go a catastrophic error of judgement but the structure and processes just did not keep up with the massive expansion of the teams in the 2000s. Keeping the plates spinning was more than Frank and Patrick could do, especially as there was no adequate succession plan. BMW left at the end of ’05 – Frank and Patrick having refused to sell them the team – and it gradually dwindled to almost nothing, a nomadic hostage to fortune, and hanging off the back of the grid by 2019, its absolute nadir.

BMW brought hope, but a failed deal to buy the team led to a divorce that set Williams back

BMW brought hope, but a failed deal to buy the team led to a divorce that set Williams back

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The spirit of Williams was very much like that of Frank himself – inspirational reactions to crisis its speciality more than structured planning and strategy. It was an opportunistic entity and it exploited such opportunities brilliantly well in the freewheeling entrepreneurial days of F1 expansion in the ’80s and ’90s. It swashed and occasionally buckled but was incredibly charismatic out there on the ledge redefining F1’s performance parameters through sheer audacity. With a team of engineers running along behind, tidying up the occasional mess as best they could.

“We are in the s**t, Patrick,” Frank once smiled mischievously at his partner, “and I want to know what you are going to do to get us out of it.” Often as not, Patrick Head would do so with only a few bruised egos of those around him as the price.

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Ralf Schumacher scored all the team’s points in the disappointing 1999 season in the Supetec powered FW21

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Innovation became especially intensified under Newey, but the place adapted to new technology on an ad hoc basis. Newey’s insistence on active ride for the ’92 FW14B was the basis for perhaps the biggest performance advantage any car has ever had over the field. Paddy Lowe was the engineer charged with making the system work and he later recalled that even then, at the height of the team’s blockbusting success, there were precious few foundations being laid down. “We prided ourselves on being more ingenious than McLaren whereas Ron Dennis prided himself on getting more sponsors and spending it on making the car quicker. That was the particular satisfaction of the ’92 season at Williams, doing a dominant car on a relative shoestring.”

Tempered joy at Barcelona 2012 as a garage fire halted celebrations of Maldonado’s shock win

Tempered joy at Barcelona 2012 as a garage fire halted celebrations of Maldonado’s shock win

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That was the team BMW joined, but perhaps it had been dazzled by what it assumed Williams was. The problem was that the automotive era of F1 was now getting into full swing, the size of the teams was growing exponentially and Williams was not structured in a way which allowed that expansion to be fully exploited. It remained a cottage industry team at its core even as the technology around it was being kept up to date and shoehorned in as best as could be managed. Team structures and processes quickly became beyond the control of Frank and Patrick alone and, besides, their energy was beginning to fade. Not unnaturally, after all those years and all the success. There was no coherent succession plan at the very time it was sorely needed.

Juan Pablo Montoya in 2004. Williams would win one grand prix that year, in Brazil, on its way to fourth in the constructors’ points

Juan Pablo Montoya in 2004. Williams would win one grand prix that year, in Brazil, on its way to fourth in the constructors’ points

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BMW’s resources could have refashioned the team into the sort of McLaren-rivalling cutting-edge entity which was now needed, but they felt they required full control of the team to do that. Frank and Patrick, fiercely proud of what they’d achieved together, were not up for surrendering it all to a corporate entity with which they had next to no rapport. What success the partnership had achieved had been despite the personal relationships between the two entities. So BMW, just like Newey before it, left to continue its own adventure.

“It was as if Frank and Patrick didn’t forgive Mark Webber for not being Alan Jones in the 1980s”

Williams’ decline went into freefall after BMW’s departure. In the customer team nomad days it ran Cosworths, Toyotas, Cosworths again, Renaults and finally Mercedes. There were occasional escapes from mid-grid mediocrity, but mere bursts rather than signposts. A few times Mark Webber transcended the team’s circumstances – a contender for victory in Monaco ’06 until traffic and subsequent engine failure brought the dream to an end – but he left disappointed not only in the team’s level but also in the lack of simpatico from Frank and Patrick. It was as if they didn’t forgive him for not being Alan Jones and for it not still being the 1980s. It was emblematic of where the team was, with no clear future vision and deteriorating results shrinking the income. Everything at the factory was beginning to creak as rivals ramped up faster methods of production, better simulation tools, better processes. There remained pockets of great skill and ingenuity but there was nothing to pull it all together. Individuals would go way above and beyond, only to burn themselves out without the organisation to support them.

Maldonado’s Spanish success

Maldonado’s Spanish success

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After Patrick sold up, Frank would remain for several years until recognising that he needed to step down from direct control. In between times new technical bosses were brought in (Sam Michael, Mike Coughlan, Mark Gillan, Pat Symonds, Paddy Lowe) and invariably later fired, unable to change the culture. Some of those weren’t really personally equipped to make the wholesale changes necessary, but neither were they to blame. Any attempt at modernising was met with strong resistance by those whose talent and experience had contributed to the great years. Fierce pride and disdain for change ran through the team.

Sir Frank stood down as Williams’ team principal in 2013 (he died in 2021) and had been there to witness a final and unlikely bit of glory as Pastor Maldonado somehow scored victory in the 2012 Spanish Grand Prix. But it was an outlier. Sir Frank’s daughter Claire assumed part of his role, with business guidance from Group CEO Mike O’Driscoll. The latter rescued the team from financial oblivion. But the underlying problems remained.

Grove factory needed development.

Grove factory needed development

Processes and manufacturing fell behind

Processes and manufacturing fell behind

Williams

Toto Wolff had briefly been a shareholder of the team, a man with all the vision, financial, racing and leadership smarts to have modernised Williams. But he was recruited by Mercedes before he could begin doing that. But there was a nice consolation. Williams would receive Mercedes power units for the new hybrid formula taking effect from 2014. Such was the massive advantage conferred by that PU in the first couple of years, Williams enjoyed its best seasons in ages, finishing third in the 2014 and ’15 constructors’ championship – despite all the old limitations. But an idea of how it might be when engine performance converged (as it was about to) was evident when looking at the actual lap time gap between a Mercedes and a Williams-Mercedes (around 1.1sec in 2015).

Frank with daughter Claire in 2019

Frank with daughter Claire in 2019

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Between 2015 and ’19 all of the other teams inserted themselves into that gap. Even worse, the big formula change of 2017 exposed a serious limitation in Williams’ aero department. By 2018 the deficit to the front was 2.8sec, rising to 3.4sec the next year. “Our approach to aerodynamic development is many years behind,” said tech director Paddy Lowe in 2018, “and we can’t just switch it on like a light switch.”

It wasn’t only aero, though. It was almost everything else too. The team was essentially two decades behind and that fact had come home to roost.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Parting shot Aguri Suzuki loses his seat

Over the past 20 years, I’ve driven 34 different Formula 1 cars in total, including 14 world championship winners and one from every decade from the pre-war 1937 Aston Martin to Lewis Hamilton’s title-winning 2019 Mercedes. But the moments I savour feature Williams.

Karun Chandhok and Jonathan Williams, son of Frank, who has a real passion for racing history

Karun Chandhok and Jonathan Williams, son of Frank, who has a real passion for racing history

Jayson Fong – Form&Function Int'l

Back in 2016, my friend Jonathan Williams was looking to formalise the Heritage division, sitting within the F1 team carrying his family name. His father was never one for sentimentality and generally always looked forward, but Jonathan is a romantic F1 fan like me and we would spend hours reminiscing about stories from the 1980s and 1990s. So when he asked if I would get involved with Williams Heritage, the answer was easy.

My role primarily involves testing the cars that have been restored by the Heritage team, either for private clients or cars still owned by the team. There are obviously promotional and demonstration runs like Goodwood that pop up, but my favourite days are spent at a quiet track with the team and clients where we get to truly enjoy these cars as pure pieces of racing history. When Dorilton took over as the owner of the team and therefore also the owner of the Heritage car collection, I was a bit worried it wouldn’t embrace the history of the team. Fortunately, Dorilton has recognised the significance of the history of the team, not just to F1 but to the fanbase.

Karun Chandhok

Karun Chandhok & FW14B

Jayson Fong – Form&Function Int'l

The FW26 proved an assault on the senses, with huge power from the BMW V10

The FW26 proved an assault on the senses, with huge power from the BMW V10

Jayson Fong – Form&Function Int'l

The Heritage division is now led by former racing driver Jonathan Kennard and does an incredible job of building the cars exactly as they would have been in period. The car restoration process is overseen by Jim Barker, who has been at Williams for more than 30 years, and we have a team of mechanics and engineers who generally all worked on these cars in period.

The team has also created an excellent digital archive of all the run sheets, set-up sheets and engineering drawings from over the years so we can go back to them for reference as and when it’s needed to either rebuild or run a car. For example, just last week I was shaking down an FW11 from 1986 and we ran it with exactly the same set-up as Nigel Mansell had when he won at Brands Hatch in that car.

Handling Keke Rosberg’s FW08C at the 2018 Monaco Historique was a real thrill

Handling Keke Rosberg’s FW08C at the 2018 Monaco Historique was a real thrill

Jayson Fong – Form&Function Int'l

A special family moment with the Brabham BT26 that kick-started it all for Frank back in 1969

A special family moment with the Brabham BT26 that kick-started it all for Frank back in 1969

Jayson Fong – Form&Function Int'l

It would be easier to run the car if we replaced the original dashboard and electronics with modern systems, but that wouldn’t be right from a historical perspective. Somehow the brilliant engineers at Heritage can get the original active suspension working beautifully on a 1992 title-winning FW14B despite the software for that being written in-house and not even using something as modern as Windows!

The reason this is possible is really down to passion which runs deep within everyone involved at Heritage. This extends to our friends from the engine suppliers – Honda, Renault or BMW. Their faces light up when they hear and see the car come alive as it floods the memory bank of the glory days of the past. Every time I sit in the cockpit, blip the throttle and see that reaction, it reminds me why preserving the history and igniting interest is of fundamental importance to the world of Formula 1.

emulating Mansell aboard the FW14B

Emulating Mansell aboard the FW14B

Jayson Fong – Form&Function Int'l

Never raced, but a marvel regardless. The six-wheeled, four-wheel-drive FW08B is a rolling piece of history

Never raced, but a marvel regardless. The six-wheeled, four-wheel-drive FW08B is a rolling piece of history

Jayson Fong – Form&Function Int'l

FW14B

Back in 2017, we were celebrating the 40th anniversary of the team and an amazing opportunity presented itself for me to do a celebratory demonstration with the FW14B before the British Grand Prix. The late 1980s and early 1990s was the era when I fell in love with F1, so to drive the most iconic Williams from that era, at Silverstone, in front of the crowd was amazing. The images of Mansell sending the crowds into a frenzy and the voice of Murray Walker kept flashing through my head as I powered down Hangar Straight.

Over the years, I’ve been fortunate to spend time talking about the FW14B with Nigel, Patrick Head, Adrian Newey and Paddy Lowe, which has helped me understand and appreciate just how this icon was born.

Feeling the active suspension work is fascinating. You have to get used to the movement but it’s so beautifully balanced. The Renault V10 still produces over 700bhp in a car weighing just 580kg (with driver!). It feels sensational. The driveability was amazing and the sound took me straight back to being an eight-year-old.


FW08C

In 1983, Keke Rosberg delivered a masterclass in Monaco, powersliding to victory on slicks on a damp track. To celebrate 35 years since that win, we took the FW08C back to Monaco for the Historique weekend. I have raced at Monaco in four different categories, but driving something with a manual gearbox and from an era where you felt much more exposed in the cockpit was a very different experience.

The whole line of FW07s into FW08s are brilliant, user-friendly cars. The 08C was the shorter wheelbase car introduced for 1983 after the ground-effect skirts were banned as a part of the whole political war within F1 in that era. Williams didn’t really have a chance to fight for the title without a turbo engine that year, but the car is great fun to drive. Small, light and agile, the driveability of the Cosworth DFV allied to a brilliant gearbox is surprisingly easy to use and throw around. Driving it around Monaco was amazing.


FW26

In my opinion, 2004 was the peak of F1 performance. The cars were so powerful with over 950bhp (only a fraction less than today’s cars) weighed only 605kg (nearly 200kg less than now) with good downforce and a tyre war which made cornering speeds impressive.

I’ve driven the FW26 which won the final race of 2004 with Juan Pablo Montoya and it truly was an awe-inspiring experience. I do believe that when a driver goes from F2 or any other category to F1, those first few laps need to shock them into thinking ‘this is just terrifyingly awesome’. With the weight of the modern cars, the overall driving experience is a more benign one as the cars are fundamentally less agile. The first few laps I did in the FW26 at Silverstone were a brutal attack on my senses. The extraordinary noise of the BMW V10 engine revving to 19,500rpm is the cherry on top.


FW08B

One of the great things about F1 in the 1970s and 1980s was the freedom for creativity. Unlike today, teams had the ability to think outside the box, leading to innovations like ground effects, turbo engines as well as a mix of V8s, V10s and V12s, carbon fibre chassis, semi-auto gearboxes and active suspension.

There isn’t much that highlights this era of innovation more than the six-wheeled F1 cars. The Tyrrell, of course, was the first and achieved some success, but the unraced Williams FW08B would have completely transformed the sport had it been allowed to race. I love driving the six-wheeler, simply because it is just so different and is an incredible ‘what if’ story in the history of F1.

Obviously it has incredible traction because of the four-wheel drive system, all driven from the rear, and improved downforce as a result of a longer floor area, but the hidden benefit of reduced drag from smaller rear tyres is hugely significant. The first time I drove the car at Thruxton, we didn’t have the ride height set correctly and it was producing so much suction effect that the skirts dragged around the track and left two distinct lines all the way around the asphalt!

The only negative was the increased weight at the rear of the car, but I remember Patrick Head telling me that they already had plans to redesign the rear suspension and take a huge amount of weight out of the car if the programme continued. Alas, F1 politics got involved and the car never raced, so I feel very privileged to experience driving that unique piece of F1 history from time to time.


BT26

Not technically a Williams car, but in 2019, to celebrate Frank’s 50th year in F1, Jonathan worked with the team at the ROFGO Collection to restore the Brabham BT26 in which Piers Courage finished second in the Monaco Grand Prix. This was when Frank entered the car under the Frank Williams Racing Cars name.

The whole restoration was kept as a secret from Frank. We took the car to Silverstone and had it in the pits, looking fantastic, when Frank pulled up. As he came into the garage in his wheelchair, his face absolutely lit up, which was just wonderful to see. Frank had a reputation of not being particularly emotional but there was no doubt that his passion for racing ran deep and that moment where he remembered where it all started for him brought it to the fore.

It was a miserably wet day, but with all three of Frank’s children and his grandchildren watching, there was no way I was going to let the weather dampen the mood. It was an emotional and special day for the whole Williams family. Seeing the pride on their faces as they stood around Frank when I pulled into the pits is something I’ll never forget.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Parting shot Aguri Suzuki loses his seat

In August 2020 Dorilton Capital purchased Williams from the Williams family for a reported £152m. Its mission statement was to return Williams to the top, investing however much time and money it would take. Easy to say, and predictably it was greeted with a certain degree of ‘heard it all before’ cynicism. But five years on, it’s a vastly improved team from that of 2019, albeit still progressing towards the light after so many years in the darkness. Dorilton, as it promised, is standing firm behind its commitment to its investment, helped no doubt by the increase in value of F1 itself since the purchase and therefore all the franchise teams within.

James Vowles with Williams

James Vowles spent many successful years at Mercedes before switching to Williams in 2023. The team is responding with a turn in form, and has already scored more points this year than it had in the past three seasons combined

Williams is steadily being dragged into the 21st century but it’s a long haul. As Paddy Lowe observed all those years ago, there is no magic switch. It’s a matter of rebuilding from what two decades of underinvestment and resistance to change looks like.

“What that looked like,” says James Vowles, Williams team principal since January 2023, “was a certain infrastructure – and I don’t just mean physical buildings, but some of the tool systems were way out of date, just not invested in. Not to the right level. The bits that were there were stopgaps. They weren’t deep-invested solutions that provide you with 10 years of running. There were half the amount of autoclaves I was used to at Mercedes, for example. The clean room isn’t the right space for the people there to work as efficiently as possible. It’s very hard to get two individuals in the building to even look at each other in the eye, the way the building is laid out. It’s been formed ad hoc over time in a way which allowed certain people to work together as needed, but which closed them off to other departments, just reinforcing a singular approach rather than ‘we’re going to do this together’. The simulator is lovely and hand built. But very out of date.

Alex Albon off the ground in Williams

“In the make-up of an F1 team you have a couple of hundred designers, a couple of hundred in production and we are producing metallic parts for the car but mostly composite. But the way our building is laid out it’s mostly for metallic because that’s how the cars were 20-plus years ago, even when we had a carbon chassis. So it’s structured in the wrong way for a modern F1 car. The design office wasn’t built for the number of designers we have today. We’ve outgrown it. Nothing was – the canteen, the parking… nothing. But you can’t fixate on those problems without breaking something elsewhere. So if I take production, for example, inspection was a bottleneck. Nothing was going through inspection fast enough because the space wasn’t good enough, we didn’t have enough tool systems to deal with it. But if we’d just fixed that you’re going to break something else – the next stage downstream. This long sequential system where you can fix one bit but it just moves the problem, changes the critical path. Those were the negatives.”

“There was an amount of passion in Williams, a lovely spirit”

The positives were imbued in the team DNA. “There was an amount of passion in Williams, a lovely spirit. It was not me who created that. It was the excellent work of Frank and I can see it in the building – and that makes this easier than it would’ve been because it’s individuals who will give you their all.

“But the team was in survival mode, for various reasons. In part finance, which it had lacked for many years. It had been working hand-to-mouth in a very manual way. You did everything you could to get your part to the track but you worked as an individual to do that. It was passion-driven with no structure. When I joined it felt like home within a week or two and that’s the beauty of this place.

Alex Albon in Williams ahead of Hamilton Ferrari

The changes back at base are reflecting on the track. Alex Albon took a season-best fifth in Australia, Miami and Imola, and has scored in nine grands prix up to Hungary

Atlassian Williams Racing

“The biggest thing we’ve put in place was to get us pointing in the right way, using systems and processes rather than individuals wanting their bit to be at the track. We all want that but let’s do it in a priority order in a structured way, put some data around it to see if we are getting better or worse. No deep secrets, just a little bit of structure and that’s still ongoing because it takes time. It can feel uncomfortable making this change and at certain points it can slow you down.”

It did so in the winter of 2023-24 when Vowles and his then-new technical director Pat Fry instituted a revolution in car build simultaneous with a root-and-branch change of production control. Williams had been tracking stock, production and processes on Microsoft Excel when everyone had long-since developed sophisticated and personalised software which streamlined production, cut response times and reduced costs. That revolution coming at the same time as manufacturing the chassis in a totally different, more modern way (which saved around 14kg) while in the middle of a massive recruitment drive, caused some chaos and led to the ’24 car being late and overweight.

“You can build a £60m wind tunnel if you want, but you’ll take a hit”

“When you’re pushing new boundaries you’re going to trip and fall and that’s what happened at the end of ’23. We considerably changed quite a few of the routines and methods and put more work through the system. The chassis became more complex by a factor of 10 or 20 times. That ended up in a situation where we were relying on people going above and beyond to put us into a good state because the systems couldn’t keep up, exactly what we were trying to get away from.

“It taught me to make sure we do the steps and growth at the right rate. Don’t take monumental jumps without understanding what the impact will be.”

Williams Racing factory

A certain amount of change had been made by Dorilton’s original choice of management – team principal Jost Capito and his associated technical director François-Xavier Demaison. Previously united at VW Motorsport, they were recruited to Williams shortly after Dorilton took over but stayed for less than two years. Although that partnership proved ultimately less than harmonious, Demaison did initiate a major upgrade on the wind tunnel and CFD computing power. He was addressing what he saw as necessary long-term projects and building a road map of where the investment should be made, helping structure the team for the future.

Vowles is not dismissive of the work that was undertaken before he arrived. “Some of the investment was good,” he says. “Our machine shop is in a really good place, for example. The composites area wasn’t – because there were no systems and processes in place. I’m not apportioning any blame on previous people because they were limited by different aspects. There was a lot to fix. They were fixing the bits that were in front of them and they had made tangible gains. But if you don’t have proper systems/culture/ processes you’re not going to get far. We’ve taken the team from 700 people to 1100, bringing in some of the best you can find up and down the pitlane, people who understand what great looks like. That allows us to keep that pathway going.”

Atlassian Williams Racing F1 side profile

Part of the appeal of Vowles to Dorilton and its advisers was indeed that he ‘knew what great looked like’ after 13 years with Mercedes, much of it as strategy chief but learning much of the art of management from Toto Wolff. He was also able to clearly see which parts of the operation were the furthest from the best and what the order of priority of investment should be. To that end, Vowles campaigned for an exemption to the capital expenditure part of the cost cap regulations, arguing that the team could otherwise be trapped, prevented by regulation from spending what was required to bring it up to standard.

“Yes, for ’23 I asked for more capital expenditure. I asked for £100m, got £20m. But the £20m was very useful. For the ’26 regulations it’s free on cap-ex [capital-expenditure] so we can spend what we need to build the machines we need. But all of the depreciation goes into your operational cap. So anything you invest in has a standard depreciation model. You can build a £60m wind tunnel if you want but you’ll take a massive hit in your cost cap depreciation – which will affect your running budget. So you have to be careful about how you spend your cap-ex. Which I think is a much better way of doing it actually.

Jost Capito in the paddock

Jost Capito ran Volkswagen’s sporting interests before joining Williams. Some of his early investments have paid off, such as new machinery

Getty Images

“To build a component costs us more than others because we’re not as cost-efficient as most other teams. We have to get to the level where a new floor for the car costs the same in our building as it would elsewhere, and we’re not there yet. Which is where the investment comes in. So speed, quality and time are the three axis in which you want to continually improve.”

Competitive progress since the rock bottom of 2019 when Williams couldn’t even race the next-slowest car has not always been evident in the constructors’ championship and certainly last year’s sequence of accidents severely restricted the car’s development. But halfway through the season the team lies fifth, with Alex Albon and new recruit Carlos Sainz regular Q3 qualifiers. It’s not yet a top team but by almost all measures is ‘best of the rest’ after the big four of McLaren, Red Bull, Mercedes and Ferrari. Up to the Austrian Grand Prix its qualifying average was around 0.7sec adrift of the front, the smallest deficit since its BMW days at the turn of the century.

Atlassian Williams Racing F1 rear

There’s a lot still to come. “Personnel we’re probably 80% of the way there,” says Vowles. “Most individuals who are highly qualified are on very long gardening leave contracts. You need to be prepared to wait three years. There are some great people joining at the end of this year. A lot more joining in ’26. That part gets easier. I used to need more words to convince people that we were really going places. Now the results are there to back it up so it makes the conversation easier in attracting top-tier talent.”

Amid all the talk about systems and culture, they are merely the ‘hygene’ factors, the things that need to be in place before a team can even contemplate being the best. With that foundation in place talent is still the differentiator, and Vowles is quick to acknowledge that.

“Speed, quality and time are the three axis you want to improve”

“Yes, it’s never going to be AI-designed cars. The talent will still be the ones who spend all week thinking about a problem and coming up with an idea, putting it on the table and saying ‘let’s look at this’. It’s still a set of humans collaborating to make a difference and aerodynamics is no different. It’s a series of highly intelligent people sitting down and thinking about how flow structures work when designing a car around it. The difference now is that it has KPI [Key Performance Indicators], tools and systems wrapped around it. The ideas come and the tools and systems accelerate the process significantly. So you can test ideas in hours or days rather than weeks or months. One of the KPIs is how quick from idea to production. The technology is to make sure we put our time and effort in making the fastest car possible. Because we’re in cost cap you want to maximise every dollar. You need technology to help you with that.

Alex Albon Carlos Sainz and James Vowles selfie

Vowles has two strong drivers in Sainz and Albon, who are both helping to push the team up the grid

“But in terms of building/infrastructure/systems/processes – we’re only about 30-50%. Still a long way to go. I think the ’28 car will be the first one on which we’re firing on all cylinders and using everything in the right way. Until then we’re still… this year’s car is better because we have the foundations in place. Next year’s will be better because the foundations are more solid. The year after we’ll have a lot more structures and systems in place. Then 2028 is the first time we’ll have the right people in the right places with the right systems and structure.”

“We’re nowhere near the state to fight for a world championship today,” said Vowles after recently extending his contract with the team. “But the investment we’re doing is for that. It’s not to finish fourth or third.”

He was batting away a more outlandish suggestion made by former Williams and current Mercedes driver George Russell, who said: “When you look at how much more wind tunnel time they will have on McLaren [as part of the inverse championship position-available hours regulation], it’s immense. When you’re into a new era of regulations, finding masses of performance every single week you’re in the tunnel, maybe it won’t be one of the four top teams who is best next year…”

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Parting shot Aguri Suzuki loses his seat

Your feature Great Lost Circuits reminds me each month of the Marlboro Motor Speedway in the States, right. This compact 1.8-mile track had nothing to do with the famous brand of cigarettes, but was so named because of its proximity to the town of Upper Marlboro in the state of Maryland. Not a ‘great’ circuit by any stretch of the imagination, but one that has a certain significance for UK racing historians.

I was a student at Georgetown University, Washington DC, in the 1960s and attended race meetings at Marlboro on a regular basis. It was used mainly for local SCCA events including the annual Marlboro 12 Hours for touring cars. This was held from 1961 to 1966, before the track closed down in 1969 for safety reasons.

I remember going to the 12 Hours race in 1964, expecting to see the usual collection of SCCA drivers in their Volvos and Saabs, but was surprised to discover Jackie Stewart on pole position in one of three works Lotus Cortinas! Other Cortina drivers over the years included Jacky Ickx, Hubert Hahne, John Whitmore, Tony Hegbourne, Trevor Taylor, David Hobbs, Paul Hawkins, Frank Gardner and Jack Sears (who won in 1963 with Bob Olthoff).

Stewart won the 1964 race, together with Mike Beckwith. This, if I’m not mistaken, marked Sir Jackie’s first appearance in the USA and a significant overseas win, but it seems to be largely overlooked in his career statistics.

Andrew Rawlins, Nyons, France


 

A man of Aussie grit – the ‘Wollongong Wild One’ Wayne Gardner riding a Honda NSR500 in 1989

A man of Aussie grit – the ‘Wollongong Wild One’ Wayne Gardner riding a Honda NSR500 in 1989

Getty Images

With regard to your feature on great Australian sportsmen [Aussie grit, August]. I haven’t the faintest idea what cricket is all about, but no sport has given more insight into Aussie grit than motorcycle racing. Take Wayne Gardner, the first Aussie GP500 world champ. The ‘Wollongong Wild One’ came to the UK sponsored by a Kiwi rider, Graeme Crosby, to manhandle big, ungainly streetbike-based Moriwakis that Crosby imported among the nifty GP  machinery in the British championship. Living in a van, winning the occasional race, he’d become a Honda factory rider and the first Aussie world champion in 1987 on
the infamous widow-making Honda NSR500.

In 1992, Mick ‘Thunder from Down Under’ Doohan smashed a leg on the other factory NSR500, facing amputation before he came back in a display of mind-over-very-mangled-matter gritting his teeth as he “wasn’t
a painkiller type of person”. It took one season to get back up to speed before becoming utterly dominant, winning five titles in a row.

And there was two-times MotoGP champion Casey Stoner. His parents sold everything they owned to give him a shot in Europe. He repaid them in spades.

But the most grit can be found in the rough and tumble of World Superbikes. Men like Rob Phillis and Troy Bayliss. Bayliss picked up on racing late after giving up his job as a spray painter and won three titles. What sums him up was his first race in the American Superbike championship in Daytona. Asked if he was scared on the banking while his Ducati bucked and weaved with fully compressed suspension, he said he didn’t have time to be scared as he had a family to feed, mate. Aussie grit indeed.

Pieter Ryckaert, Belgium


I enjoyed the Motor Sport special issue F1 75 on 75 years of grand prix racing. Of particular interest to me is your opinion on which were the greatest 75 individual races [The 75 greatest grands prix]. I attended many of the races you mention and particularly remember the 1981 Spanish GP at Jarama (No24 in your list). The report covers the race and the struggle that Gilles Villeneuve had to stay in front of his pursuers. What I remember was standing with Bernie Ecclestone on the straight, and he said to me, “I never stay to the end of the race. I try to get out before the rush but I am not going to miss this. I don’t  like the little bugger but there is not another driver that could keep that car where it is.”

I also remember the 1959 US Grand Prix at Sebring, Florida (No53 in your list). It was the first F1 grand prix in the United States. I knew the track well because I had driven a Lotus 15 there in March of the same year. I had been at a sports car race in the Bahamas the previous week and decided to drive to Sebring for the F1 race.

The track surface was rough for the F1 cars. Early in the first practice session Jack Brabham had something break in the steering system of his Cooper-Climax with the result that the left front wheel swung right around and made a significant bend in the lower frame rail. Jack, unfazed, took off some body panels and with help from the bumper jack of his rental car and a few bits of timber he straightened the frame rail back to its original position. He then fixed the steering problem. He turned to me and said, “You can’t do that with your bloody Lotus, can you?” Jack ran out of fuel and had to push  his car across the finish line but he ended up 1959 world champion and it started many years of great competition from British cars and engines built by what Enzo Ferrari called “garagistas”.

Robert J Hanna, Former Executive Director, Canadian Automobile Sport Clubs 


A long-time Ferrari-fan reader reckons Lewis Hamilton needs a little more time to find his feet

A long-time Ferrari-fan reader reckons Lewis Hamilton needs a little more time to find his feet

I have been an avid Ferrari fan since 1970. At the moment Lewis Hamilton seems to be getting a lot of stick for underperforming at Ferrari [Lewis’s sluggish start, September]. But let’s not forget that when Michael Schumacher was winning his world championships they had Rory Byrne designing the car, Ross Brawn engineering the car and Jon Todt leading the team. I always thought it was going to be a tough job for Lewis but
I think he has the balls to see the job through.

Stuart James Warsop, via email


Ulf Norinder was spotted standing over his F5000 Lola at Castle Combe in 1970 and   duly photographed on  a Kodak Brownie

Ulf Norinder was spotted standing over his F5000 Lola at Castle Combe in 1970 and duly photographed on a Kodak Brownie

I was just reading through the September  issue and came across a name from the past, Ulf Norinder [Stepping out of the past]. I came across him at my very first race meeting at Castle Combe, which I attended with my dad. His name fascinated me as it sounded so exotic to me at the time. The photo, above, is one of my first motor sport efforts, taken with my Kodak Brownie showing him with his Lola F5000 car. I don’t think I even knew the tall guy was the driver. It was the car I was shooting. It is only on seeing the picture in Motor Sport that made me realise it was him.

Iain Trice, Wymondham, Norfolk


It appears that Doug Nye isn’t a fan of electric cars judging by his column in the September 2025 issue [Rumblings].

I wholeheartedly agree. Just aside from the extra wear and tear of tyres/brakes, etc due to the extra weight of the vehicles, I remain unconvinced of the ‘green’ credentials of electric vehicles. Yes the emissions are zero but how much damage do we do to the environment in the creation of the batteries in the first place? And then what is to be done when the batteries are depleted?

I won’t say much about the lack of range, but I’ll be staying with my 2.0 TDi for a good while yet. Six-hundred miles on a tank and re-filling in a matter of minutes.

Mark Killelay, Gainsborough, Lincs


In his Rumblings column Doug Nye questions the premise that cars made heavier with batteries containing rare metals and needing more energy to propel that extra weight along, thereby causing more wear to both tyres and road surfaces, will actually do much, if anything, towards preserving our planet.

Might the interests of the environment be better served by Doug’s preference for smaller, lighter vehicles running on alternative fuels?

John Tuck, Royal Wootton Bassett, Wilts


I’ve got to say, Matt Bishop has fast become a Motor Sport favourite. Every article, be it online or in print, gives detail, insight, humour and is written in such a comfortable style as to make you feel you can really get to know and understand the personalities or subjects he writes about. I sincerely hope that I’m reading his work in Motor Sport for many years to come.

Tim Johnstone, Chorley, Lancashire


The letter about the Railton [September] triggered a memory. I am sure I worked on this car as a boy apprentice in a garage in Braintree, Essex in about 1946. It was unusual to see a car like that and I asked the mechanic about it. He told me it had an American straight-eight side valve engine built for the long American roads. A few details that I still remember (I’m 95 now) is being given a wooden stick with a rubber sucker on the end and a tin of valve paste. I sat on the wing and for a long time rubbed in 16 valves. I also remember seeing the new head gasket taped to a long piece of wood having been posted from London.

Because the mechanic was so pleased with the engine when we had finished he said, “Come on, you deserve a ride.” It drove wonderfully. It did not have a Wilson box then. It was fitted with a bypass to the exhaust box and, to me, it made a lovely noise.

If it is not the actual car you refer to, it is certainly its sister.

Dave Farmer, Poole, Dorset


As much as I enjoyed the article Grand Prix vs Brad Pitt [September] (I was 11 when Grand Prix was released and have never tired of watching it) by Mark Salisbury, I find I have to point out a mistake.

Mark states that half of the driver’s appearing in the film were dead before the decade was out, including Jim Clark, Jochen Rindt and Graham Hill. Jochen passed away in 1970 and Graham Hill died in 1975. Of the three mentioned, only Jim Clark didn’t see out the decade having died in 1968.

John F Cunningham, via email

We see the confusion. The writer was referring to 10 years after the film was released – Ed


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