Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

October 24, 1965, Mexico City, Mexico
The 10-round F1 championship came to a close under a blue sky in Mexico. The last race of the 1500cc era was won by Richie Ginther, leading – which would be his sole F1 victory. He was driving a Honda – the manufacturer’s first win. Jim Clark retired early in the race, but he’d been 1965 world champion for almost three months.

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Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

1972 Porsche 911 2.4 t Targa ‘oil flap’

Sold by Osenat, £43,340
As barn finds go, they don’t get much better than this 1972 911 Targa that emerged from a dusty garage where it had lain since 1982. Acquired by the unidentified family when it was just a year old, the metallic gold gem was additionally desirable for being one of few examples with an oil filler flap in the right-hand rear wing – a feature abandoned after only 12 months due to the confusion it caused at the petrol pumps. Save for a set of aftermarket wheels (easily rectified) the car appeared to be 100% original with only a mouldy interior and grimy paint attesting to its long period of hibernation.


1962 Ferrari 250 GTE

1962 Ferrari 250 GTE

Sold by Bonhams, £230,000
This was sold new to Benjamin Guinness (Lord Iveagh), the less-than-brilliant chairman of the brewing business from 1961 until his death in 1992, at 55. The car had remained in the family since.


1976 Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow

1976 Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow

Sold by Manor Park Classics, £2520
The price may have been the start of the new owner’s outlay but, being in running condition, tidy inside and not ravaged by rust, this was the Rolls bargain of the decade. Here comes the bride?


1970 California Show Cars ‘Sand Draggin

1970 California Show Cars ‘Sand Draggin’

Sold by Historics auctioneers, £22,880
Bob Reisner’s custom-build California Show Cars created this outlandish ‘beach dragster’ more for show than go – although there was plenty of the latter thanks to a 7.4-litre Oldsmobile V8.


1997 Mitsubishi Pajero Evolution

1997 Mitsubishi Pajero Evolution

Sold by Historics auctioneers, £18,000
This was among 2500 homologation specials built for the Japanese market in order to qualify works Pajeros for competition. Rally versions went on to achieve 12 victories in the Dakar, 1985-2007.


1979 Laverda Jota

1979 Laverda Jota

Sold by Manor Park Classics, £14,455
A 1970s superbike landmark, the Jota was a handful at low speeds but glorious on the move – and the fastest production bike of its era. This one had the desirable 180-degree crank engine.


1981 Lamborghini Countach LP400s

1981 Lamborghini Countach LP400s

Sold by Bonhams, £546,520
In the same hands since 1999 when the late owner bought it for £56,000 with 450 miles on the clock, this still-pristine Countach had covered fewer than 1200 miles in the intervening 26 years.


1990 Tornado M6 GT

1990 Tornado M6 GT

Sold by Historics auctioneers, £24,000
Ever fancied a Can-Am car for the road? This would do the trick. Inspired by Bruce McLaren’s enclosed-cockpit M6 project, it was produced by UK company Tornado, weighed just 850kg and packed 250bhp. Papaya Orange paint completed the tribute.


Forthcoming sale highlights

  • Mecum, Las Vegas, January 27-31
    This motorcycle auction includes one of the first Honda products – a 1952 F-Type Cub engine designed to attach to a bicycle. Fitted to a Firestone 500 bike, it has never been started. Harley-Davidsons from all eras will be on offer, as well as early 20th century board track racers, motocrossers and a 1957 Mondial GP bike campaigned by Sammy Miller.
  • Bonhams, Milton Keynes, February 13-23
    The live ‘spring Stafford’ motorcycle sale has become an indelible fixture in the diaries of bike fans around the world. But for those who can’t wait for April, this lesser-known online auction offers a chance to snap up a late winter bargain in preparation for better weather. Rarities include a brace of Bimota sports bikes and a century-old Henderson four.
  • RM Sotheby’s, Palm Beach, Florida, February 14
    There can be few better places to visit on Valentine’s Day than a car auction. In this case, a dedicated Ferrari affair being staged during the annual Cavallino Classic up-market car show. The boutique sale will feature only Prancing Horse cars accompanied by Ferrari Classiche certificates or past winners of Cavallino platinum awards. Don’t expect bargains.
  • Iconic, Stoneleigh Park, warwicks, February 20-22
    This sale will feature cars and motorcycles for road and track. Ready-to-race offerings include a 1987 DAM 4100 Metro 6R4 built by David Appleby, the Austin Rover Motorsport engineer who fettled works 6R4s. Bikes are highlighted by one of the 260 Ducati Panigale V4 Álvaro Bautista replicas built to celebrate the Spaniard’s 2022 Superbike title win.
Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

“The Clubman’s model Gold Star has been developed for competitions in road and short circuit events, and its specification is such that it is neither intended nor suitable for road use as a touring motor cycle.” So said the catalogue for 1961’s BSA DBD34 Gold Star, the seventh and final iteration of the legendary single-cylinder machine first developed after racer Wal Handley was awarded a Brooklands Gold Star for lapping at more than 100mph in 1937 aboard one of the marque’s Empire Stars.

1961 BSA DBD34 clubman Gold Star log book

Original buff logbook is still with the bike

H&H

1961 BSA DBD34 clubman Gold Star engine

Single cylinder ‘thumper’ engine of 499cc could produce up to 42bhp

H&H

The manufacturer’s warning about the unsuitability of its ‘Goldie’ for the road didn’t prevent one Fred Allinson of Groby, Leicestershire from buying this one, complete with de rigueur clip-on handlebars, imposing Lucas headlamp and a brace of Smiths Chronometric instruments.

Five years earlier, in 1956, Bernard Codd had sealed the Gold Star’s place in motorcycle racing history by winning both the senior and junior Clubman TT races, covering the Isle of Man circuit at an average best of 86.33mph. Not bad for a basic 500cc pushrod engine that, in its most wildly tuned form, produced only around 42bhp – but which could still send a well-sorted Goldie to 60mph in first gear.

1961 BSA DBD34 clubman Gold Star Carburettor

Mikuni carburettor replaces original Amal – but latter included in sale

H&H

1961 BSA DBD34 clubman Gold Star speedo

Smiths speedo uses a clockwork mechanism to tick-up speed at intervals of three-quarters of a second

H&H

This example never strayed far from its original home, ending up with successful 1970s and ’80s TT and scrambles rider Dave Hallam, the owner of Leicester’s Supreme Motorcycles, who restored it to its current pristine condition.

According to H&H, it has been out of use since Hallam’s death in 2021 and will need “some recommissioning” – after which it should just be a case of adding petrol.

And an extremely strong right leg…

1961 BSA DBD34 clubman Gold Star handles

Clip-on handlebars were fitted for speed, not comfort

H&H

1961 BSA DBD34 clubman Gold Star wheel

Drum brakes front and rear are not for the faint-hearted


1961 BSA DBD34 clubman Gold Star
On sale with H&H, Solihull, Birmingham, March 25. Estimate: £7500-£8500. handh.co.uk

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

As the supercar that returned McLaren to road-going vehicle production 13 years after the last F1 left the line, the MP4-12C is surely deserving of collectible status. Although almost 3500 were built, the model was only available for three years before being replaced by the (very similar) 650S, further adding to its appeal. But no regular 12C is ever going to be quite as desirable as the special version pictured here – one of a mere three GT Can-Am Edition models produced, and possibly the only one in its original configuration.

2013 McLaren MP4-12C GT Can-Am Edition side

Can-Am Edition branding and papaya livery.

According to Jez Warrant, sales manager of SB Racing, McLaren set out to build 30 examples to offer its new-found band of wealthy clients the ultimate track-day tool but, with 12C production coming to an end and the marque’s increased focus on its GT racing programme, the project was canned.

The three buyers who managed to put their money down in time were rewarded with a truly epic car that was hand-built not in the McLaren Automotive building, but in the marque’s former F1 workshops.

The fact that it was intended purely for track-day fun meant race rules didn’t apply, so the 12C’s regular twin-turbo V8 was hiked to 639bhp, weight was slashed by 40kg and downforce was increased by 30% thanks to a carbon-fibre front splitter and that giant Can-Am rear wing. The car was swathed in carbon elsewhere, too, from its door mirrors to engine cover vents and from its radiator intake vanes to its sill covers – which all added to its track-focused good looks.

GT steering wheel McLaren Can-Am-7

GT steering wheel

SB Race Engineering

The interior of the carbon MonoCell, meanwhile, was stripped-back to basics and fitted with twin race seats, six–point harnesses, an FIA-approved rollcage and a motor sport-specific air-conditioning system.

But perhaps the most obvious pointer to the fact that this 12C had left the road for the track was the steering wheel, the design and functionality of which was carried over from the 12C GT3 racer and inspired by that of the MP4-24 F1 car.

Bristling with buttons and switches, it also held the paddles for the six-speed transmission which, of course, was pneumatically activated. The electrical system too is lightweight and competition specification with a membrane-type switch panel, digital dash, auxiliary power supplies, electronic power management and a McLaren Electronics ATLAS (Advanced Telemetry Linked Analysis System) ECU as used on the era’s F1 cars.

3.8-litre engine McLaren Can-Am-8

3.8-litre engine

2013 Mclaren MP4-12C 3.8-litre engine

Six-point harnesses

When launched the 12C Can-Am Edition cost £375,000, on top of which buyers could choose a bespoke factory support programme that included a full ‘arrive and drive’ service and, for only another £78,000, you could also have a full spares package. The car on offer includes the latter and is said to be “on the button” and ready to go. It also comes with all the parts needed to convert it to GT3 spec, making it eligible for competition in events such as the Peter Auto GT3 Revival Series and GT3 Legends.

And, to top it all, this is chassis number 001 of the three originally built – so it could be worthy of storing away as an investment. But wouldn’t it be a whole lot more fun just to drive it?

2013 McLaren MP4-12C GT Can-Am Edition
On sale with SB Race Engineering, Aylesbury. Asking: £399,995. sbraceengineering.co.uk 


Virtual insanity: Jay Kay’s SWB Quattro 

  • Jamiroquai frontman Jay Kay – y’know the fella, oversized hat – has owned hundreds of cars, helped enormously by a string of huge-selling albums since 1993. He’s now offloading this 1985 Audi Sport Quattro SWB, LHD, 39,000 miles and in his ownership for 14 years. Just 214 of these F40 killers were made; it’s on sale at Joe Macari in London for £624,950.

1985 audi sport quattro swb

  • With seven new models to arrive by 2030, Alpine is going to need some bigger showrooms – and the refurbished Arnold Clark site in Glasgow is leading the way, doubling in size to 2600sq ft. “This allows us to offer a truly premium environment,” said David Munton, Arnold Clark’s brand director.
  • “Give me Goodwood on a summer’s day and you can keep the rest” – so said Roy Salvadori, who was the first owner of this 1962 Jaguar E-Type. But it was in the hands of its next custodian, John Quick, where its wins stacked up – 43 from 1964-72. More recently it’s been seen at Goodwood’s Revival driven by Richard Attwood and Jochen Mass. It’s on sale at Fellowes Fine Cars in Essex, £POA.

1962 jaguar e-type,

  • According to the SMMT, the Ford Puma was the biggest-selling new car of 2025 (55,488), followed by the Kia Sportage (47,788) and Nissan Qashqai (41,141). New car registrations were a little over two million; the market was up 3.5% yoy.
  • BYD has overtaken Elon Musk’s Tesla as the world’s biggest-selling EV maker. In 2025 the Chinese firm sold 2.26 million EVs compared to Tesla’s 1.64 million. On a TV interview in 2011, Musk laughed at the idea of BYD becoming a competitor to Tesla. LG
Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

As we slowly emerge from the gloom of a British winter it is worth remembering sunnier times past and looking forward to more to come. As well as designing cars I am lucky enough to also be a judge at various automotive concours events. These often take place at the height of summer and at either a schloss in Germany, a château in France, a sumptuous villa in Switzerland, a palace in India or, sometimes, a smart hotel or damp golf course in the US.

Heveningham at night

This year is the ninth edition of the concours.

Bugatti at last year’s gathering

Bugatti at last year’s gathering

TIM SCOTT/fluid images

Heveningham WWII flypast

WWII flypast

TIM SCOTT/fluid images

In Britain there are a number of venues that hold concours events, but the private home of the Hunt family is something very special. Heveningham Hall, in the middle of Suffolk, close to the tiny village of Heveningham, is a Grade I-listed building that hosts what can feel like a well-kept secret.

The first house on the site was built in 1657 for the politician William Heveningham but the present house, dating from 1778 to 1780, was designed by Sir Robert Taylor for Sir Gerald Vanneck, 2nd Baronet, with interiors by James Wyatt. Like many it fell into disrepair in the second half of the 20th century until (after being on the market for three years) it was bought in 1994 by current owner Jon Hunt and his wife Lois for use as a family home.

judges Ian Callum and Peter Stevens

Judges Ian Callum and Peter Stevens

TIM SCOTT/fluid images

Heveningham_Hall_Concours_d'Elegance

Around 50 cars take part in the concours, with a dozen or so propeller aircraft also visiting, parked on nearby grounds

The hall sits within 500 acres of grounds – a Capability Brown design brought to life by contemporary landscape architect Kim Wilkie. This includes a wonderful series of five grassed terrasses laid out in a semi-circular plan ringed with trees. And this is what gives the concours its unique feel: the entrants are arranged on tiered ground facing the back of the house creating an unforgettable image.

The concours, held at the rear of the imposing home, is not the only attraction. There’s a country fair attached to the weekend as well as an eighth-mile hillclimb where anything from a vintage hot rod to a brand-new supercar, via a Bowler Land Rover, can have its tyre-smoking performance measured against many others.

1909 Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost Roi-des-Belge

1909 Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost Roi-des-Belge

TIM SCOTT/fluid images

1994 Ducati 916

1994 Ducati 916

TIM SCOTT/fluid images

If that sounds a bit like the Goodwood Festival of Speed it certainly is not. There is no hour or two spent queuing to get in and another hour or two getting back on the road and, while Goodwood attracts well over 200,000 spectators over four days, Heveningham has 10,000 over two days.

Last year there was a wide selection of cars among the 50 curated by my good friend ‘Scotty’, his gently persuasive powers bringing together what people would call an ‘eclectic selection’. This year there was the gas turbine-engined all-wheel-drive Lotus 56B Formula 1 car, a derivative of the Indianapolis Type 56 driven by Graham Hill and Joe Leonard at the 1968 Indy 500. In 1971, despite startling unreliability, Emerson Fittipaldi persuaded the wretched thing to finish in eighth place in the Italian Grand Prix while Reine Wisell and Dave Walker failed to finish at either the Dutch or British Grands Prix. But what a great chance to see such an historic car.

1951 Ferrari 212 Export Cabriolet by Vignale – Chairman’s Choice 2025

1951 Ferrari 212 Export Cabriolet by Vignale – Chairman’s Choice 2025

TIM SCOTT/fluid images

Aston Martin DBR9, as seen in the ’06 American Le Mans Series

Aston Martin DBR9, as seen in the ’06 American Le Mans Series

TIM SCOTT/fluid images

As Stevens says, an eclectic line-up

As Stevens says, an eclectic line-up.

A fascinating and immaculately presented car was the 1984/2022 TAG Turbo 930 ‘re-imagined’ by Lanzante. Yes, this is a TAG Formula 1-engined 911, a 1499cc, 500bhp road car that was impressively and beautifully detailed by Dean Lanzante’s little team. There was also a 1984 Toleman-Hart, an underfunded car powered by a hand grenade; I seem to remember that I was involved in the Candy/Segafredo graphics. This is the car that so nearly won the dreadfully wet 1984 Monaco Grand Prix driven by aspiring new driver Ayrton Senna. He finished in second place right behind Alain Prost.

“I seem to remember that I was involved in the Toleman graphics”

Best in Show was the glorious 1920 350HP Sunbeam, Sir Malcolm Campbell’s Land Speed Record-breaking car. The designer was Sunbeam’s chief engineer Louis Coatalen, the man who had previously designed World War I aero engines. He adapted one of his Manitou V12, 18.8-litre engines to power this impressive machine.

Campbell bought the car in late 1922 after testing it at Saltburn Speed Trials. He named the car Blue Bird, like all his other boats and cars. During the winter of 1922/23, after the Saltburn outing, the car was tested in the Boulton Paul wind tunnel in Norwich, where a longer tail and a narrow, and slightly lower, front radiator cowl were developed.

Hevengham concours at night

2025 Best in Show was this 1920 Sunbeam 350HP

TIM SCOTT/fluid images

Jenson Button’s 2004 BAR 006

Jenson Button’s 2004 BAR 006

TIM SCOTT/fluid images

Gladiator MkII, Hanna Aviation

Gloster Gladiator MkII, Hanna Aviation Trophy winner.

TIM SCOTT/fluid images

In June 1923 he took it to the island of Fanø in Denmark where he hit 137.72mph, although the record didn’t stand due to the unofficial timing equipment used by the Danes. In September 1924 Campbell set a new record of 146.16mph at Pendine Sands. The following year he returned to the beach and raised the record to 150.87mph. Winning Best in Show was not just a tribute to Lord Montagu’s perseverance in completing a rebuild of the unique car, it was also seen as a tribute to his restoration team and those very generous donors who made the work possible.

I have now judged at the Heveningham Concours for five years. The fact that I live locally and know the Hunts helps with being able to work with Lois’s small team. As local people we all feel that the ‘Suffolkness’ of the event is very important. Suffolk is neither a heavily populated nor wealthy county, but we like to think that it is welcoming and unpretentious. Lois likes to make sure that it is fun, not just for us as judges, but for the local families who can all find something of interest at this unique event.

Heveningham Concours 2026 is on 27-28 June.


235_HC_2025_CMaynard

Concours judges owe it to the owners

These enthusiasts deserve a chat, says Peter Stevens

Concours events are quite unusual in that the cars, which are the essential element of the show, are brought along at the owner’s expense. Therefore, it is my opinion that they deserve the full attention of the judges. The pleasure of listening to an owner recounting the history of their car is almost always fascinating. On at least one occasion the wife of a friend, with whom I was judging, stormed by to tell us we would miss our lunch because we were “chattering away” to the owners.

Judges with a 1984 Ferrari 288 GTO

Judges with a 1984 Ferrari 288 GTO, but there was no prize for this car in 2025

There is almost always an element of politics in the choice of class winners or Best in Show. If an event describes itself as a Concours d’Elegance then elegance is required of the winners. I once made myself unpopular by speaking up against an ugly old race car, a Maserati being awarded Best in Show. One of the judges had ‘arranged’ the sale of the car to the expectant owner, and another judge wanted the car for their own concours as being B-in-S. But you can’t please everyone!

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

Some of you reading this may have a dream car. And given that it’s the car of your dreams, it likely cost   a princely sum. In January 2025, bidding on the Porsche 917 that Steve McQueen drove in his 1971 film Le Mans went to $25m (£18.5m) before seller Jerry Seinfeld decided that simply wasn’t enough. But what if money’s not your issue? What if the problem is that the only example of the car of your dreams burned to the ground over half a century ago, nothing surviving save a pair of flyaway glassfibre doors? What do you do then?

Well, if you’re California tech entrepreneur Bob Lee, whose motto is ‘Lord, give me patience and give it to me now’, you plunge headlong into an odyssey that will involve, in no particular order, a box of blueprints, a dead man’s hard-drive, Paul Newman, Holmesian powers of deduction, an argon purge chamber and a Baker’s Pride pizza oven. For some of us, it will serve as a cautionary tale. For others, pure inspiration. But the end result is a brand-spanking-new, savagely fast machine truer to 1970s racing in America than a great many so-called ‘original’ Can-Am cars. And if you have any gasoline in your veins and get to see and hear it in person, know this: it will make your toes curl.

Ilja Burkoff, on Ti22 MkII owner Bob Lee V8

Ilja Burkoff, stepson of the Ti22 MkII owner Bob Lee, spins the oil pump on the aluminium-block V8.

Sherwin Eng

The Autocoast-sponsored Ti22 MkI was   a sensation when it arrived on the scene during the 1969 Can-Am season. Papaya Orange McLarens, piloted by Denny Hulme and team founder Bruce, had come to dominate the no-holds-barred series. That year, they would collect their third straight title, sweeping all 11 races. Imagine the surprise, then, when at the last three a machine designed by a modestly educated non-engineer leading a tiny team — so small it couldn’t afford a back-up chassis — showed up and posed a credible threat to   a juggernaut that had seen off challenges from Ford, Ferrari and Porsche.

It was the brainchild of 31-year-old London-born expat Peter Bryant. He’d been taken over to the US not long before by Mickey Thompson to work on the Californian’s star-crossed 1964 Indy 500 entries. He remained there as   a mechanic for a variety of teams, including Shelby and Carl HaasLola’s US importer.

Ti22 in Can-Am’s 1969 at Riverside

The Ti22 appeared late in Can-Am’s 1969 season – here at Riverside.

Getty Images

Paul Newman in the MkII in 1971

Paul Newman was filmed in the MkII in the 1971 doc Once Upon a Wheel

LAT Images

“He told me he wasn’t going to get anywhere in England,” says Bryant’s US-born widow Lois, “because if you aren’t from   a social standing, you can’t really advance.”

The car Bryant had created stood out for two reasons. One, extensive use of strong, lightweight titanium: Ti22 is the atomic symbol and number for the precious metal referred to then in racing circles as ‘unobtainium’. TIMET, aka Titanium Metals Corporation, supplied all that Bryant required at a fraction of the cost. It meant the Ti22 MkI was stiffer and lighter than other Can-Am cars – a crucial advantage. The second thing was its approach to aerodynamics. Bryant integrated innovative ‘fences’ from the tops of the front fenders to the rear spoiler — something McLaren would copy in future models — and a sloped underbody to convert airflow into adhesion. “You could feel enormous downforce,” driver Jackie Oliver told Sports Car Digest, “like F1 cars 10 years later.”

“As the rise went over the top, the full force of   the air got underneath the Ti22. It did a full 360”

If the Ti22 MkI’s three starts in 1969 raised eyebrows, at the first two of the ’70 season jaws dropped. At Mosport, Oliver qualified third, then proceeded to pick off both McLarens. Eventually American golden boy Dan Gurney, standing in for recently killed team leader Bruce, was able to slip back by. The Ti22 had to settle for second.

At St Jovite, Oliver again qualified just behind the McLarens and was in the process of passing them… when disaster struck. “I was chasing Denny on the opening lap,” says Oliver. “Got tucked up right behind him on the rise, and as the rise went over the top, the full force of the air got underneath the Ti22. It did a full 360 in the air, fortunately, and landed back on its wheels.”

Autocoast-sponsored Ti22 at Riverside in 1969

Autocoast-sponsored Ti22 at Riverside in 1969, but Oliver’s race was over before the halfway point

Getty Images

The landing may have saved Oliver’s life. It killed the Ti22 MkI. Resurrecting it would be a massive undertaking, and Bryant was concerned it might always run second to the McLarens, so he decided to fast-track development of his intended 1971 challenger and the subject of this story, the Ti22 MkII.

The second-generation Ti fighter would enjoy three main upgrades: extending the wheelbase and widening the body; turning   the engine into a stressed member and attaching the rear suspension to the transaxle to save weight and reduce flex; and developing new suspension at both ends to run stiffer springs and more anti-dive.

“The car was stiffer, the body was better, the geometry was better,” remembers Alex Groundsell, a fellow Londoner like Bryant who joined the team as a mechanic after big-league experience with Alan Mann and Ferrari privateer Ronnie Hoare.

Dan Gurney in the McLaren M8D trails Jackie Oliver’s Ti22 MkI at Mosport in 1970

Dan Gurney in the McLaren M8D trails Jackie Oliver’s Ti22 MkI at Mosport in 1970; Oliver would finish second – behind Gurney

Bryant had to form a new company, TRC, to build the new and improved Ti22 MkII, which was ready, if barely, for the two season-ending 1970 races, where it proved to be everything he hoped. At Laguna Seca, Oliver qualified fourth, 0.6sec behind polesitter Hulme, and finished second, just over 1sec behind the newly crowned series champion. The Ti22 set fastest lap. At Riverside in California, Oliver again finished a close second, and again set fastest lap. At a time when it was rare for others to finish on the same lap as the Orange Elephants, both Hulme and Oliver lapped the field in both races.

Burkoff, left, and Bob Lee reviewing original MkII blueprints

Burkoff, left, and Bob Lee reviewing original MkII blueprints

Actor Paul Newman, then starting his own racing career, was so taken with the MkII that he arranged to drive it at Ontario Motor Speedway for his 1971 documentary Once Upon a Wheel. The team hoped it might lead to an influx of cash. When that didn’t happen, Bryant was forced out of his own squad and what remained of the car was sold at   a bankruptcy auction. Which makes what happened next an even more improbable part of the Ti22 MkII story.

“Hobbs proceeded to bully his way past the 27 cars ahead of him, passing 13 on the first lap alone”

In autumn 1971, T-G Racing, another small team, purchased the remains and decided to enter it in the final two Can-Ams of the season.  The ‘car’ was very much in pieces and parts were missing, most notably sets of thicker-wall suspension components that had greatly improved the car’s reliability and safety the previous year. Mechanics Tom Jobe and Bob Skinner, who had revolutionised drag racing as ‘The Surfers’, were brought in to put it back together as best they could. They also made improvements. They reinforced the chassis, installed better brakes and, for Riverside, introduced a low-drag wing. Recently crowned F5000 champion David Hobbs was brought in to drive.

MkII was made from titanium, just like the original

The recreation MkII was made from titanium, just like the original

At Laguna Seca, Hobbs qualified a stunning third behind the McLarens. Stunning because the underfunded, now one-and-a-half-year-old car qualified ahead of Formula 1 champion  Jackie Stewart in the factory Lola T260, former Ti22 wheelman Oliver in the factory Shadow Mk II, World Sportscar Championship star Brian Redman in the factory BRM P167 and F1 and WSC winner Jo Siffert in the latest Porsche 917/10 “At one stage he was on the front row with [McLaren team-mate Peter Revson],” said an incredulous Hulme. “Hobbs is a nice guy, but I don’t like him that much.”

Riverside was even more shocking. The rear titanium crossmember failed in practice, forcing Hobbs to start the race from the back. People who witnessed what followed talk about it in hallowed terms. Hobbs proceeded to bully his way past the 27 cars ahead of him, passing 13 on the first lap alone.

“At one stage [we were] the fastest car   on the track – I was really carving my way through the field,” says the Brit. “I was very impressed. With a few changes, I think it would have been right there [with the McLarens].”

On lap 17 he was about to overtake fourth-place man Sam Posey when a patch of oil caused the Ti22 to yaw slightly and strike   a tyre marker. The team, so poor it had no spare nose, was forced to retire.

The following year, in the hands of club racer Nick Dioguardi, the Ti22 was leading the California Sports Car Club nationals at Riverside when it crashed through a steel guardrail and exploded. Dioguardi would recover, but the sole MkII that ever existed was consumed in the inferno.

And that’s where the story would have ended if not for Bob Lee.

Bill Drury, Frank Oroczo, Burkoff and Linda Burkoff-Lee – Drury and Oroczo make the body

From left, Bill Drury, Frank Oroczo, Burkoff and Linda Burkoff-Lee – Drury and Oroczo helped make the body buck while Burkoff-Lee provided moral support and helped rivet high-strength Jabroc (a densified wood laminate) on the nose

Its resurrection started, improbably, with a 427 Cobra. “I had been a workaholic,” says Lee. “My wife and I worked around the clock.” When Bob and Linda sold their company in 1987, they bought one of Carroll Shelby’s AC-Ford offspring. They thought about racing it until a fateful club event at Willow Springs where Bob nearly rolled the beast and Linda nearly did likewise — with her 18-year-old son Ilja Burkoff in the passenger seat. Chagrinned, Bob consulted some of his racer friends.

“Being a novice and not a car guy, I said, ‘What has horsepower and handles?’ And they said, ‘Well, a Can-Am car.’ So then I’m like, ‘OK, I gotta get a Can-Am car.’”

Thereafter, Bob began an improbable lifelong love of Can-Am cars, campaigning   a series of them including the ex-Hollywood Sports Cars McLaren M6B, ex-Denny Hulme McLaren M20 and ex-David Hobbs Lola   T310 ‘aircraft carrier’.

After reading Pete Lyons’ landmark book on the series, Can-Am (1995), he became fascinated by the Great-White-(and blue)-Hope of a car that had nearly toppled the McLarens and thought, “If I could buy the rights to it,   it would be wonderful to recreate it.”

Bryant died in 2009, but in 2013, Lee heard his widow was selling the drawings for the MkII. First he purchased the rights to it, which still belonged to Dioguardi. “Then I called Cris Vandagriff [president of the Historic Motor Sports Association in the US] and asked, ‘If   I recreate the MkII, will it be accepted at the Monterey historic races?’ Cris said yes – if   I make it out of titanium.”

Ti22’s designer Peter Bryant in CAD drawings

Ti22’s designer Peter Bryant had started making CAD drawings, which Lee bought

At the Bryant house, Lee discovered   a bonus. Not only did Lois have a box of drawings, but “Peter had started to put the car in CAD, because his dream was to rebuild the MkII. He hadn’t finished it. But he had done a lot of work. I told Lois I’d like to buy the drawings and files off his hard-drive.”

Even with the CAD files and blueprints, Bob realised that was only part of the battle.

“We had drawings but didn’t have a clear view of what the front and rear subframes looked like,” Lee explains. “And we were missing all the drawings of the tops of the fuel cells.” So Lee commenced a search for every period photo he could find, especially of details under the skin. He knew that even if he had full drawings, discrepancies might remain. In those days, if during a build a team ran into, say, a clearance issue, they’d fix it without necessarily updating the prints.

Pizza-Oven-in-Use

Heating up a titanium panel to 800°F in the infamous Baker’s Pride pizza oven

Eric Sedletzky hand-lettering the bodywork

Eric Sedletzky hand-lettering the bodywork

He found much of the photography he needed at the Revs Institute in Florida. Karl Ludvigsen’s pictures were a treasure trove. “Wonderful photos of the front and rear suspension,” says Lee. “Close-ups. I could see the calipers. I could see that they used the monobloc Hurst/AirHeart caliper, not   the two-piece caliper that they used on the MkI.” Crucially, Lee could also “see where they’d made changes to the drawings. I could see all the plumbing and everything they did in the rear of the car”.

“Bob did a tremendous amount of research,” remembers Burkoff, “because there’s big holes in the drawings. There were parts we didn’t have any drawings for. Then there would be others [where] we’d have three drawings with three different sets of notes that contradicted each other.”

Lee entrusted his stepson with the fabrication effort. He was a terrific choice. By day Burkoff was a general electrical contractor. But he also has experience in welding, machining, carpentry and antique restoration.  And Lee put just as much thought into the rest of the team.

TI22 MKII Welding-Ti-rods

Argon purge chamber

Jordan Coonrad and Burkoff on riveting duty

Machinist Jordan Coonrad and Burkoff on riveting duty

“I wanted to make sure we would have no interference problems making the chassis,” says Lee, “so I hired a design engineer, Sandor Bota, to finish putting the chassis in CAD. This gave us files we could use to waterjet-cut the titanium panels. I engaged a titanium expert, Chuck Dohogne, plus a racing engineer, Peter Hansel, to specify shocks, springs and anti-sway bars.” Another key player was Jordan Coonrad. The San Francisco native answered a Craigslist ad for a machinist with aircraft experience. Coonrad remembers the reverse engineering involved in trying to reconcile things that appeared on the car that weren’t on the prints.

“There were parts we didn’t have drawings for. Others, we’d have three contradicting drawings”

“I spent hours studying photographs and figured out the scale dimensions from pictures, so when I did something, it was going to look like the original car,” says Coonrad. “One was a little switch box on the instrument panel, about 2in deep. It turns out Oliver couldn’t reach the switches the way the car was built, so they had to build a little box to bring the switches back to where he could reach them.”

They also consulted some of the original builders, including Groundsell and Al Willard, co-designer of the MkII. One of the first questions was safety.

Lee team members Alex Groundsell and Al Willard, and Burkoff, Sears Point, 2023

From left, Lee with original team members Alex Groundsell and Al Willard, and Burkoff, Sears Point, 2023

TI22 MKII complete chassis

Complete chassis

“Ilja and I were concerned about the Ti part failures that Hobbs experienced at Riverside and what caused the Dioguardi crash in ’73,” says Lee. “We determined why the rear crossmember shock support failed and came up with a fix. I also learned from Jobe that the original thick-wall suspension used on the MkII had gone missing and they had had to run the thin-wall pieces, resulting in the lower front A-arm failure. So, we used the thick-wall Ti tubing called out in the drawings.”

The technical challenge was learning how to machine, weld and hot-form titanium. “Virtually everyone told me, ‘Don’t waste time on titanium, make it out of steel,’” Lee adds. “But it wouldn’t be the Ti22 if it was steel.”

TI22 MKII Rear lights

Rear lights had to be period accurate; these were sourced from the ‘Taillight King’ in Texas

TI22 MKII rear

“Titanium is an interesting metal to work with, in that it’s not a very good conductor,” says Coonrad. “You could hold a piece up to a grinder and actually have it white hot at one end and be holding it 2in away.

“Titanium was the only material I’ve ever worked with where you could drill a hole and after the bit came out, the hole was smaller than the bit. The material was so ductile it would expand around the bit, then cool back off to [where] the hole would be smaller than the drill bit that just came out of it.”

Burkoff, who’d worked on Can-Am cars, says using titanium was “exponentially harder. Just the fact that we had to hot-form all the bends.” Unlike steel or aluminium, you need to heat titanium to form the shapes you want. “To Bob’s credit, he found that pizza oven.”

Ah, yes, that Baker’s Pride pizza oven.   At first the team tried heating just the areas of the parts that needed to be bent. No dice, says Lee, “because you end up warping the titanium. When it cools off it doesn’t assume its old shape. You’ve gotta heat the whole piece of Ti. Well, we had pieces 54in wide, and I’m looking at commercial ovens, which are $20,000-$30,000, and you still can’t get the size of the Ti [pieces] in the oven. Finally, on Ebay, I see a pizza oven for sale, and the dial goes to 800°F. And it’s wide enough to get the widest piece of Ti in.”

Welding posed additional challenges.

“We purchased an argon chamber to weld the sub-assemblies,” says Lee. “You have to weld titanium in a chamber purged of oxygen to prevent oxygen and nitrogen embrittlement and other contamination. I recruited a fantastic titanium welder, Jai Hardy-Flores.”

TI22 MKII dash

Dash is reproduced exactly as in 1970, down to the “PUMP OFF PLEASE SIR” on the steering wheel

Another issue was finding the period-correct parts for the things Lee, Burkoff and company couldn’t make themselves. The   right period-correct Vertex Magneto. The right Lucas MacKay fuel injection system. The correct Gurney-style wheels. Bryant had used a number of AAR/Gurney parts for both Ti22s including wheels, uprights, steering wheel and shifter. Fellow Can-Am owner Dave Pozzi identified the Ti22’s unusual taillights as long-obsolete Grote 201 SAE side marker lights. Bob’s pursuit of them led to a guy in Texas known as — and we’re not making this up —   the ‘Taillight King’.

Lee insisted even the parts they made themselves be as accurate to 1970 as possible. “Bob and I had constant discussions about keeping it original. I remember at one point, Bob was like, ‘Why are you making the shift linkage out of steel?’ Because in period photos, you can see it’s a black-painted piece, so we assume that’s steel because if [any part] was Ti, they kept it bare Ti.”

“The other issue we debated were the brakes,” says Burkoff. “The original Hurst/Airheart units were a problem. One of the reasons the car went quicker in Hobbs’ hands was because Skinner and Jobe had switched to far superior Lockheed brakes. I wanted to put Lockheeds on the car, but Bob wanted   to keep the car as accurate as possible to the 1970 Riverside Can-Am. So Bob borrowed a Hurst/Airheart monobloc caliper from an AAR [Eagle] Indycar owner and had an engineer put it in CAD so we could recast the calipers.”

“At the 2018 Monterey Motorsports Reunion, fans were cheering as Ilja moved up the field”

One of Burkoff’s biggest triumphs was the bodywork. “First, I had to make a body buck. We had cross-section drawings for the MkI and a full-size side view, but the MkII was different. It was 2in longer and 4in wider. We put up the full-size MkI drawing on the shop wall and cut it in half at the cockpit and spaced the pieces 2in apart. Bob had acquired the original MkII door bucks and door moulds, and they were a great help in getting the buck right. It was a major thrill when I got the Ti22 nose [from the glassfibre shop] and it fit perfectly.”

Lee and Burkoff debuted the car at the 2017 Long Beach Grand Prix support race, which included a spectacular gathering of first-generation Can-Am McLarens, Shadows, Lolas and Porsches. There were still issues to be sorted — Burkoff had to back off halfway down the straights — but it looked fantastic and finished fourth. Dioguardi’s family   came and were clearly moved.

Once sorted, the results were even more impressive. At the 2018 Monterey Motorsports Reunion, Burkoff beat every car in a 21-car field apart from Craig Bennett’s 1974 Can-Am champion Shadow DN4 — a landmark Tony Southgate design created four years later with four more seasons of technological evolution behind it. Burkoff set fastest lap in the process.

TI22 MKII at Laguna Seca, 2018.

Tearing up the field at Laguna Seca, 2018.

“Fans at the Reunion were cheering as Ilja moved up the field,” remembers Lee, “and many came by our pits to thank us for bringing back the car.” Among them Lois Bryant.

“That was a special thing for those people to see that car come to life,” says Burkoff.

Having driven a number of first-generation Can-Am cars, Burkoff can compare. “The [McLaren] M6 kinda rolls and talks to you   a lot,” he says. “This car stays very flat. It’s more like a go-kart and a lot of fun.”

Critics point to the fact that the Ti22 MkII is a recreation, even though many so-called ‘original’ Can-Am cars have few if any original parts and deviate sharply from their original specifications. Perhaps the better question is, as long as they’re represented for what they are, are today’s enthusiasts better served by seeing an accurate recreation of an otherwise extinct car or should we never see them again?

Ti22 Monterey Motorsports Reunion chasing a McLaren

Lee’s Ti22 rolled back the years at the Monterey Motorsports Reunion in ’18, chasing a McLaren

Perhaps the last word should go to Groundsell, who was there with Bryant giving birth to the original Ti22 MkII back in 1970. “I had thought initially that [Bob] was quite silly and would never complete the project,” he says. “How wrong I was… and how determined Bob and Ilja were! They have made an amazing replica of the original car. Seeing it run in anger at Sears Point also made me sad for one reason: the memory of Peter [Bryant], Al [Willard], Mike [Lowman], Barry [Crowe] and I all working long, underfunded hours and came so very close to succeeding as a team.

“I think that if we’d finished the season and started to build a second car, if we’d had money, we would’ve been champions.”

Without the physical recreation of the ultimate Ti fighter to gaze upon, listen to and, yes, curl our toes, all of these emotions, all of this history would be lost in time, to quote   a different sci-fi epic, like tears in the rain.


TI22 MKII

TI22 MKII

Engine 7-litre Chevrolet V8
Chassis 6Al-4V titanium aluminium monocoque
Power 800bhp
Transmission Hewland LG600 MkI 5-speed
Suspension Independent unequal A-arms with radius rods
Wheels Magnesium front   11in x 15in and rear 16in x 15in
Weight 775kg

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

With the 2026 Formula 1 season coming up fast, there is much anticipation around Aston Martin. The combination of a works Honda power unit and a car overseen by Adrian Newey has created a tantalising prospect, and that’s before you factor in that he has now also become team principal.

After Newey announced early in 2024 that he was leaving Red Bull, there was a queue of teams pitching for his services, and it was Lawrence Stroll who ultimately made an offer that the sport’s most celebrated technical guru could not refuse.

Always a man in demand, Newey’s career has featured a series of carefully considered steps, each one a logical progression from where he was before. And yet 36 years ago he found himself being edged out of a team whose boss didn’t want him to run the show – and instead he took a step back to a less senior role elsewhere.

Tim Holloway and Newey behind the scenes

Tim Holloway, left, and Newey, right, firm friends behind the scenes

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After a false start in F1 with Beatrice Haas, Newey first made a big impact as technical director of the upstart Leyton House team in 1988. “Adrian was doing Indycars in 1987,” recalls team manager and founder Ian Phillips. “He used to come back between races, because he had a very young family. And then Tim Holloway [Leyton House chief engineer] and I used to go to the pub with him one or two nights a week.

“He was 26 years old, and I persuaded him the board is yours, it’s a clean sweep”

“We tried to convince him that what he needed to do was to be in F1. He was 26 years old, and I persuaded him the board is yours, it’s a clean sweep, it’s $150,000 plus 10% of the prize money. And I basically did the deal with him.”

With its neat packaging and advanced aerodynamics, Newey’s Judd-powered March 881 earned the attention of the paddock even before it began logging spectacular results, with Ivan Capelli finishing third at Spa and second at Estoril, and even leading briefly at Suzuka until he inadvertently hit the engine kill switch.

Bicester arose Leyton House

A modest abode in Bicester arose Leyton House

The following year’s CG891, however, proved to be very difficult for the Italian and his team-mate Mauricio Gugelmin to tame, and it was also unreliable. The car failed to score a point – a third with the old 881 in Brazil was the only good result – much to the frustration of team owner Akira Akagi. “Occasionally you could get it right,” reflects Newey. “In Mexico in 1989 we qualified second row, but it was very tricky to get it right and keep it in the window. When you don’t understand the car, you start to doubt yourself. And there are plenty of people also happy enough to jump on that bandwagon, as is I suppose normal in these situations.”

For Newey, the sudden transition from design hero to zero was a difficult one to take. “I guess I’d been lucky enough to have a good career in sports cars and then Indycars up to that point,” he says. “And then the ’88 car for a tiny team had punched well above its weight. It was the car that changed the direction of F1 in many ways. But the follow-up car, which was meant to be the sort of, ‘If you think that one was good, wait until you see this one,’ was a complete disaster.

Ivan Capelli chases Ayrton Senna in the 1988 Portuguese GP

Ivan Capelli chases Ayrton Senna in the 1988 Portuguese GP; the March took its best result of second

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“And I think overreaching ourselves on the mechanical design was my fault, in many ways, for just pushing the tiny team too hard. But ultimately that just meant initial problems in getting the car sorted. The underlying performance and aero problem remained.”

Inevitably, the negative spotlight fell on Newey, who toiled away in the Southampton wind tunnel but couldn’t find any answers as to why the car was so sensitive to ride heights. He had to come up with something better for the following year.

“Akira Akagi was just trying to save money, and he put the accountant in charge of the team”

“Under pressure through the second half of ’89 to design a new car, I just took the attitude of ‘What’s the point in designing a new car if you don’t understand what’s wrong with this one?’

“So the 1990 car was very much the ’89 car, very, very similar, not quite identical chassis, but almost identical. Gearbox and the engine and everything were the same, but trying to desensitise the aerodynamics. It turned out that we were looking at the wrong area, mainly around the front wing and the front of the car, and not so much at the diffuser.”

This is Capelli at the 1989 Monaco GP

After the promise of 1988, the following year proved a step back with the CG891. This is Capelli at the 1989 Monaco GP

Now running under the Leyton House chassis name, the CG901 proved to be as uncompetitive as its predecessor, and the early races saw a string of DNQs for both Capelli and Gugelmin – the glory days of late 1988 already seemed far away.

“We didn’t have a lot of grip, and we were chopping and changing with the mechanical stuff,” remembers Holloway, “because the wind tunnel was telling us that we’d got much better figures. We were changing the mechanical a lot from super-soft to super-stiff, changing geometries, and a lot of effort went into that.”

“The ’89 car had the same problems as later on the ’90 car had,” says race engineer Gustav Brunner. “The ’90 car was more extreme, but the problem was the same – the aerodynamics were only working at one ride height. And if you were too high or too low, you had serious problems. You had understeer, oversteer, you had no downforce or too much downforce, and it was not constant through the corner.”

Meanwhile there was turmoil off-track after Leyton House lynchpin Phillips was sidelined by illness early in the 1990 season. “I got on very well with Ian,” says Newey. “He was a good, steady guy, he understood racing, understood the ups and downs. Had he not fallen ill after Brazil, then he would have had my back much more.

Autoclave work on the CG901 June 1990

Autoclave work on the CG901 carried out in June 1990; a big upturn followed

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“Ian was out of action, and Akira Akagi was in all sorts of financial trouble, which we hadn’t appreciated. He was just trying to save money, and he put Simon Keeble, the accountant, in charge of the team. And he and I did not get on at all. He took great glee in sort of undermining me in every single way he could find.”

The 1990 season also saw Newey move his aero research from the Southampton tunnel to the new Comtec facility in Brackley. It was in the early days at the latter that he had something of a eureka moment – and realised there was a major issue with the facility that the team had hitherto been using.

“It turned out that the rolling road in Southampton had what was like a dip in a hill, it was like a banana, up at each end,” he explains. “Which meant that the diffuser was more stable than it was on a flat piece of ground. And it turned out that all the problems with the car had been down to that – the diffuser was stalling at most ride heights. And that, of course, made the car very inconsistent.

Leyton House 1990 Mexican GP

Newey was on borrowed time at Leyton House after the nadir of double non-qualification at the 1990 Mexican GP

“Going in the Comtec tunnel for the first time and doing the usual due diligence of looking at the balance but also looking at flow-vis and so forth, it revealed it straight away. And then it was very obvious what the problem was, and what the solution could then become, which was a new floor or diffuser.”

“The truth is I was feeling pretty burnt out by summer 1990. I had lost confidence in myself”

Newey set to work on the changes that he was now convinced would transform the car. Meanwhile, a double non-qualification in Mexico in late June contributed to the deterioration of his relationship with Keeble, and he began to reconsider his future at the team. Despite the on-track problems he was still highly rated up and down the F1 pitlane, and both Jackie Oliver at Footwork Arrows and Patrick Head at Williams had expressed an interest in hiring him.

“I think the honest truth is I was feeling pretty burnt out by the summer of 1990, having had over 12 months of struggles both with the car and then politically, with Ian ill, and Simon Keeble and everything. I was just tired, and I felt as if I needed a bit more security. I had lost confidence in myself, I suppose, to some extent.”

Accountant Simon Keeble team

Accountant Simon Keeble was brought in to run the team

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The Williams offer involved a step back from the technical director role to head of R&D, working under Head. Encouraged by Phillips, Newey began to think that such a move would lead to two steps forward. “I’d never worked for a big team,” he explains. “So I was curious to experience a big team and what it had to offer in terms of resources that just weren’t available at Leyton House. Even in 1990 we were still 55 or 60 people. We were tiny, really.

“So having the resources and organisational skills and so on and so forth of working for a big team kind of appealed. I hadn’t appreciated just how much financial mess Akagi was in, but it was obvious that we were not going to easily grow just relying on Leyton House as the sponsor/owner.

“I met Patrick, I think it was in a pub, to discuss it. And I thought it seemed interesting. I said to Patrick, ‘I’d like to accept, but obviously I’m contracted to Leyton House, so I need to sort that out.’”

Adrian-Newey-headshot

Newey was on borrowed time at Leyton House after the nadir of double non-qualification at the 1990 Mexican GP, opposite

Events then took an unexpected turn: “Having met Patrick at the weekend I walked in on the Monday, literally the very next day, and Keeble said, ‘Come into my office.’ He said I was going to be removed as technical director. I could stay on as an aerodynamicist if I wished to, but Chris Murphy is going to be brought in as the new technical director. So I thought well, I’m certainly not staying for that.

“Technically he didn’t fire me, he offered me the chance to stay if I wished to as head of aero, but not as technical director. So I negotiated a small exit penalty, and off I went.”

“Capelli had a fuel pressure issue but managed to fend off Ayrton Senna to claim second”

“I was in Simon’s office when it was announced,” says Gugelmin’s race engineer Andy Brown. “And I said, ‘Don’t do this, he’s got this new underfloor package coming out. At least wait and see what that produces before you make this leap. The guy’s obviously brilliant, he just needs to learn his craft.’ I think Simon’s reply was along the lines of, ‘I can’t get sponsorship for an Adrian Newey-designed car…’”

Newey’s close friend Holloway was so incensed that he resigned in sympathy: “Adrian was under pressure at that stage, and people were using him as a scapegoat, which was completely wrong. I went to Adrian’s house, and he said, ‘They want me to leave.’ And I said, ‘It’s up to you, if you’re not happy.’ And he wasn’t happy. I said, ‘If you go, I’m going.’ And he left.

French GP 1990 Capelli came close to a shock win

French GP 1990: Newey had left but his work on the CG901 meant Capelli came close to a shock win

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“The diffuser was just about finished. A week after Adrian left, we tested it at Silverstone. We did a back-to-back, it was literally one floor off, the other floor on, and it was night and day difference. The new diffuser was 2sec-2.5sec a lap quicker. And that was on the Friday. I left the team that evening after the test. I wanted to make sure that it was working.”

The following Sunday, Newey sat at home on his sofa to watch the French GP, where the CG901s were equipped with his new diffuser. On Paul Ricard’s smooth surface it worked better than even he had anticipated, and given the dire performance at the previous event in Mexico the team was already pleased when Capelli and Gugelmin qualified seventh and 10th.

Ian Phillips behind his desk

Illness for Ian Phillips was a setback, although the team bounced back

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Capelli celebrates his second at Paul Ricard, 1990

Capelli celebrates his second at Paul Ricard, 1990.

What transpired in the race would stun the F1 world. Both drivers worked their way up the order and, helped by Brunner’s insistence that they could survive without a pitstop after a honing a set-up that was kind to the tyres, they eventually made it to first and second. Alas, Gugelmin dropped out with an oil-pump problem, and then in the closing laps Capelli had a fuel pressure issue that meant he was unable to keep Alain Prost at bay, although he managed to fend off Ayrton Senna to claim second.

“I was pretty confident that the car would be better,” says Newey. “I didn’t think it would go from being a car that couldn’t even qualify to a car that was unlucky not to win the next race!”

Wind tunnel was faulty

The wind tunnel was faulty

“It was fantastic for the team, it was fantastic for everybody,” smiles Capelli. “And I think that it was a sort of sliding doors moment for the team, for myself, for all the story of Leyton House and Ivan Capelli. Because if we could have won t hat race, probably our future could change.”

Capelli also shone in the British Grand Prix at Silverstone, another smooth track, where he ran third before retiring. Thereafter the car slipped down the order again at bumpier venues, perhaps a legacy of Newey not being around to further hone the package, while problems with the tunnel didn’t help. However, those two races did have a lasting legacy, as Adrian recalls: “On the basis of the performance at Ricard and Ivan being fastest at Silverstone – even though he had a cracked exhaust – when I arrived at Williams, Patrick said, ‘Why don’t you be chief designer?’ Which was much better suited to my skill set, to be honest.”

Toolbox decoration Leyton House

Toolbox decoration

DPPI

Once in Didcot, he set to work on what would become FW14 – a car that owed much to the knowledge he had gained at his previous team. Just two years later he would log his first F1 title success with Nigel Mansell at the wheel.

“At Williams, Patrick said, ‘Why don’t you be chief designer?’ It was better suited to my skill set”

Meanwhile, former Lola man Murphy had a hard time being accepted by Newey’s ex-colleagues, most of whom were long -time March folk, and were frustrated by the sudden departure of their guiding light. “It was probably the most difficult and unpleasant experience of my 40 years in motor sport!” he shudders. “That’s because there were several factions in that team. I arrived in good faith, thinking I was being appointed by the owner, and I’ve been hired to design the next grand prix car.

Bicester factory early ’89

Bicester factory early ’89

Akira Akagi at the race

Akira Akagi had money strife

Getty Images

“Simon Keeble was appointed by Akira Akagi. The owner of the team decided he wanted Adrian fired, and he instructed Simon to do that. He’d already told him to shop around for another chief designer and they had a short list, and I came towards the top of that short list. I went to Tokyo, and it was Akira Akagi who appointed me.”

“Adrian leaving obviously was the biggest problem,” say Capelli. “Because we didn’t have the person who had the idea of the whole project, and was the father of the car. When an engineer has to replace another, and takes what is not his project, it’s difficult then to be able to get in and to have the opportunity to improve it.”

After returning from illness, Phillips was kicked out by Keeble at the end of 1990 – within days he had hooked up with Eddie Jordan to create the team that would eventually morph into Aston Martin.

Capelli, rear of shot at Silverstone 1990

A week after leading the 1990 French GP, Capelli, rear of shot, was in the front pack again at Silverstone

Meanwhile, Leyton House would endure a difficult 1991 before Akagi’s legal problems meant the end of his ownership. After a brief return to the March name, the team collapsed prior to the 1993 season.

“The whole thing was just messy,” Phillips says of its demise. “And there was nothing holding it together. They thought they could do a better job without me. There were some very, very talented people, most of whom followed me to Jordan over the years. And that was the sad end to it. They didn’t deliver after we’d all gone.”

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

If you spend a couple of hours with Nick Fry – as I did recently – you quickly grasp two things. The first is that he is almost constitutionally incapable of self-aggrandisement. The second is that the modesty of the man makes the scale of his achievements sound faintly surreal when he finally does get around to describing them. He will talk animatedly about Ford and Aston Martin, about Prodrive and Subaru, about BARHonda and Honda and Brawn and Mercedes, but he will tell the stories as though they were showcasing the successes of someone else, or as though he had merely wandered through them, quietly holding a clipboard, generally trying to make things a little bit better.

Yet behind Fry’s chummy reserve sits a career that helped shape entire eras of both the global automotive industry and the strange, high-pressure, carbon-fibre-and-cojones world of Formula 1. He is one of the rare executives who learned to speak both languages fluently: the big-company dialect of budget cycles, capital expenditure and cautious governance, and the paddock patois of risk taking, engineering audacity, political dark arts and the occasional overnight miracle. Only a small number of men – and even fewer women – can walk comfortably in both worlds. Fry is one of them.

Nick Fry at Ford-owned Aston Martin workshop

Nick Fry took the helm at Ford-owned Aston Martin when he was 35 – with three months’ probation

Nick fry archive

But before the boardrooms and pitlanes, there was a semi-detached house in Surbiton. “I was born in 1956,” he begins, with that wry half-smile of his, “and I grew up with my dad, my mum and my two younger brothers in Surbiton, a commuter town between leafy Surrey and suburban south London, in a very happy but, by today’s standards, probably rather poor household.” He pauses, unwilling to make it sound Dickensian. “To be clear, we certainly weren’t destitute. We just lacked creature comforts. For instance, we didn’t have central heating. But we never felt poor, not at all, because everyone else seemed to be in the same boat.”

It is typical Fry: an acknowledgement of minor hardship, immediately qualified by perspective. His father was a circulation manager for Mirror Group Newspapers. His mother – a housewife by the time Nick was born – had previously been a senior PA to Major HN Robertson, a splendidly patrician figure who became Nick’s godfather. “I think it was Major Robertson who made me realise that there was a bigger, richer world out there,” Fry says, “but it was my mum who instilled in me the devotion to attention to detail that I’ve always brought to my work.” He smiles again. “She was a brilliantly rapid and accurate typist. She used to get me to proofread her stuff when I was a boy, and I’d get a roasting if I missed anything. She believed in hard work. She always said, ‘They call it work for a reason.’ She was ambitious for me.”

Yet you sense that that ambition was never oppressive. It was love expressed as drive – a thread that winds itself throughout Fry’s life. Even so, nothing in his childhood pointed directly towards motor sport. His father was a sports lover – football, cricket, golf – but no petrolhead. “I simply have no idea where my passion for cars and motor sport came from,” Nick says, shrugging. But there it was: the child who obsessively compared the trim levels of his dad’s company Vauxhalls, noting which one had a temperature gauge and which did not; the teenager standing at Brands Hatch in 1971 for the tragic World Championship Victory Race; the young man at snowy Silverstone for the International Trophy in 1973. “Dad would take us to events because he got freebie tickets through the sports desk, but he wasn’t an F1 fan. It was just luck, really.” Luck mixed with instinct, which describes a few of the pivotal turns in Fry’s life journey.

“I learned a lot at Ford. I worked out what makes engineers tick”

He went to a secondary modern school but “I wasn’t the best scholar”, he admits, his end-of-term reports often containing the dreaded phrase ‘could try harder’. That changed when he encountered a charismatic A-level economics teacher. “Ah, yes, Mr Still,” Fry says, chuckling. “There were only six of us in his class. He’d take us down the pub at lunchtimes. I loved it. And that’s why I chose economics at [Swansea] university.”

For a working-class lad from Surbiton, university in the 1970s was an exploration. “No one in my family had ever gone to uni before,” he explains. “Graduates were pretty rare in those days, so I never feared not getting a job, as today’s graduates sadly often have to.” He interviewed with Ford, Unilever and Procter & Gamble, and he chose Ford, which was “immensely successful in the mid-to-late ’70s,” as he puts it, when the Escort and Cortina ruled the UK’s roads.

Ford was where his education truly began. Sales, market research, customer service, then brand management: a steady, deliberate rotation around the engine room of a vast industrial organism. “Although I’m no engineer, I learned a lot,” he says. “From about 25 I was working closely with Ford’s design engineers on the specs of new models – Escorts, Cortinas, Capris and Granadas – and I worked out what makes engineers tick.”

That insight – the realisation that engineers require the rare combination of freedom and clarity – became one of Fry’s defining skills. He also developed the equally rare understanding that, if you want to manage complex organisations, you must learn about their shop-floor chores as well as their boardroom strategies. “I always felt I needed to understand the whole business,” he says. “So I volunteered to run Ford’s Dagenham factory.” Running a plant producing a new car every 50 seconds is “gruelling”, he says with characteristic understatement, but he did it. And when Ford needed someone to steady Aston Martin, it turned to Fry.

“Ford owned Aston Martin in those days,” he explains. “At first Victor Gauntlett was running it, then Walter Hayes took over as chairman.” Hayes was a legendary figure: the man behind Ford’s backing of the all-conquering Cosworth DFV engine, the man who helped create Jackie Stewart, the man who nudged the Ford GT40 to glory at Le Mans. Fry was just 35 when Hayes invited him to his plush London offices, just off Mayfair’s Berkeley Square. “He told me all about fathering the DFV, about mentoring Jackie Stewart, about winning at Le Mans, and I didn’t say a word. I just sat there, listening to this legend whom I’d only ever read about before. Then he said, ‘OK, I’ll offer you the job – boss of Aston Martin – but you’ll have to do three months’ probation, and if I don’t like you after that, I’ll fire you.’” Fry, with a new baby at home, said yes.

Aston Martin in the early 1990s was a glorious shambles. “A complete mess, yes,” Fry says. But with Tom Walkinshaw’s TWR handling the engineering, and Fry managing the brand and the business, the DB7 emerged and changed Aston’s fortunes. “We sold loads of them – 10 times as many cars as Aston had been selling before,” he says, permitting himself a demure grin. The car was as successful as it was beautiful.

Fry’s at Aston Martin in June 1993 with Adrian Reynard and Jackie Stewart

Fry’s tenure at Aston Martin was centred around the development of the DB7 – here at the car’s appraisal in June 1993 with Adrian Reynard and Jackie Stewart

Nick fry archive

Fry returned to Ford thereafter, to take charge of the Mondeo from a brand point of view – a big job – but the motor sport threads in his life were tightening. David Richards – the Prodrive owner and chief executive, the rally navigator turned team principal – had become something of a friend, for he had bought Astons as road cars, had run them as daily drivers and had loved them. Moreover, Ford wanted its Mondeos to deliver British Touring Car Championship glory, and Prodrive would run the programme. Alain Menu took the BTCC title in 2000, which was the last hurrah of the Super Touring era. Then, when Richards found himself busy with the complexities of the World Rally Championship at the turn of the millennium, he asked Fry to join Prodrive as managing director. Again, Fry said yes.

At Prodrive he witnessed the artistry of Richard Burns, who had been runner-up in the WRC in 1999 and 2000, and would be champion in 2001, Fry’s first year at Prodrive. “Richard Burns was brilliant,” Fry recalls. “He’d say, ‘Do this, do that, hire this person, fire that person.’ And I did it, and it worked.”

Because Prodrive’s Subaru WRC team was sponsored by BAT’s 555 brand – and because BAT owned the BAR F1 team – BAT’s senior executives soon spotted a solution to their F1 difficulties. Craig Pollock, BAR’s founding team principal, would be replaced by Richards, and Prodrive would run BAR. Richards would be supported by two capable lieutenants: Hugh Chambers for marketing; and Fry for operations. “The team was in a right old mess,” Fry remembers. It is becoming a refrain.

Honda was supplying the engines and Fry’s background with Ford made him the natural interpreter between manufacturer and race team. “Honda latched on to me as the car company man who understood them,” he says. “David was brilliant with the outward-facing stuff. Hugh handled marketing. I spent my time in the factory trying to get it to run well.” There were improvements; there were even breakthroughs; but there was also Jacques Villeneuve.

Fry with Ross Brawn, 2009

Fry with Ross Brawn, 2009

Getty Images

“The truth is that I found Jacques very difficult,” Fry says plainly. Villeneuve had arrived at BAR as its superstar signing. He was Pollock’s protégé, Pollock remained his manager and a shareholder in the team, and Villeneuve’s side of the garage – “the chosen few”, as Fry calls them – had grown accustomed to exceptionalism. “Jacques got miles better treatment and equipment than his team-mates,” Fry says. “The parts weren’t even interchangeable between the two cars.”

And the 1997 world champion could be abrasive, too. Fry recalls one particular exchange: “He said something very unpleasant to one of our engineers. I said, ‘Jacques, how do you think that guy feels after you’ve spoken to him like that?’ Jacques just stared at me. He didn’t even understand the question.”

Yet 2004, after Villeneuve’s departure and Jenson Button’s arrival, was a revelation. BAR finished second in the F1 constructors’ championship, behind only Ferrari. The team that had once been a punchline was gradually becoming a powerhouse. Better still, two years later, in 2006, Button won his first grand prix in a wet-dry-wet-dry-wet Budapest epic of the sort that makes or breaks the delicacy of a driver’s touch. “That’s the kind of situation in which Jenson used to come into his own,” Fry says. “He was always so sensitive in tricky, changeable conditions. He always understood what was going on in those kinds of races.”

“Ross is a truly outstanding engineer. We never had a cross word”

But 2007 brought the opposite of glory, for the RA107 was a car so off the pace that Button looked genuinely shellshocked when I interviewed him in the Melbourne paddock that March. “That was a terribly difficult year,” Fry admits. But that experience taught him a crucial lesson: “F1 is no place for beginners.”

So he went to see Charlie Whiting, F1’s unflappable and much -missed race director and paddock sage. “I said, ‘Charlie, who have I got to get to be successful?’ And he said, ‘Get Ross Brawn, Adrian Newey or Pat Symonds.’ So I set out to do just that.”

He spoke to Newey first – “but it was immediately clear that it wasn’t going to work”. Newey’s genius is matched only by the singularity of his working style, and Fry feared that Honda would be discomfited by it, so he quickly moved on to Brawn. The Honda hierarchy opposed the idea at first. “Not because of Ross personally,” Fry explains, “but because they thought the perception would be that they’d hired the guy who’d won everything for Ferrari. Any success wouldn’t be seen as Honda success therefore.”

Fry argued the opposite. If a Honda team won, the credit would go to Honda, he insisted: Brawn was merely a means to that end. He pursued Ross relentlessly. He called him repeatedly. “Eventually I persuaded him to come to my house in Woodstock [Oxfordshire] and we talked it all through. I’d prepared diligently. I showed him an org [organisation] chart, and we went through all the people on it, every single one, and he seemed relatively satisfied with that. Then I went through an inventory of all the new tech we’d invested in. Then I took him through the budgets. Finally, he nodded and said, ‘OK, I’ve heard it all from you, but now I need to hear it all from Honda.’ So, the following week, we boarded separate flights to Japan, so that we wouldn’t be spotted together, and we went to see Honda. And, after that, Ross said yes.”

Jacques Villeneuve, BAR star 1999-2003

Jacques Villeneuve, BAR star 1999-2003.

DPPI

Their partnership was seamless. “We never had a cross word,” says Fry. “It worked perfectly, and we’re still good mates now. Ross is a truly outstanding engineer and engineering manager, and he’s less interested in the commercial side, which I took care of.”

Their 2008 season was a building one. There were no signs of impending doom. Then the global financial crisis hit and, in December, Honda summoned Brawn and Fry to a Heathrow hotel and told them that they were pulling out. Tears ran down the faces of the Japanese executives as they imparted the news. Seventeen years later Fry recalls the moment with vivid clarity. “They instructed us to go back to Brackley and tell everyone to go home. I explained that, under UK employment law, you can’t just sack 700 people on the spot. And we had responsibilities to our suppliers, too. In the end we managed to persuade them that they’d have to help us try to sell the team.”

Fry sought buyers everywhere, but in a global financial crisis no one suitable was willing. So, on Boxing Day, in a modest hotel just off the M40 motorway, he sat down with his finance director Nigel Kerr, the M&A [mergers and acquisitions] expert Gordon Blair and a blank sheet of paper. Over sandwiches and coffees a management buyout plan began to form. When Brawn returned from his Christmas holiday, Fry explained it. “At first Ross wasn’t keen,” he remembers. “It was way out of his comfort zone.” But Fry knew that, paradoxically, taking the team off Honda’s hands would be cheaper for Honda than shutting it down.

Honda trio 2007, Christian Klien, Rubens Barrichello and Jenson Button

Honda trio 2007, from left: Christian Klien (third driver), Rubens Barrichello and Jenson Button.

Grand Prix Photo

The UK government concurred. High-profile job losses on that scale would be a PR nightmare; from a political perspective a management buyout was significantly preferable. But the price was brutal: 350 redundancies, half the staff gone; and research and development budgets slashed to less than a quarter of what Red Bull was spending. “Winning the world championship wasn’t even on our horizon,” Fry says quietly.

Also, they needed a new engine to replace the Honda unit. They considered Ferrari, but the Scuderia’s V8 would not fit their car. Besides, Ferrari would never allow a customer outfit to beat its works team. “By contrast, Ross and I believed that Mercedes would be honourable,” Fry says. “We thought they’d abide by ‘may the best man win’.”

2009 Australian Grand Prix Brawn 1-2 pitlane

For Fry, the 2009 Australian Grand Prix was a special moment; a Brawn 1-2 brought applause throughout the pitlane

Grand Prix Photo

Even so, Brawn and Fry still had to work out how to persuade the powers-that-be in Stuttgart to let them use their engines – not an easy task, on the face of it, since for many years Mercedes power had been harnessed exclusively by McLaren. Enter Martin Whitmarsh. The McLaren team principal, in one of the most surprising acts in 21st-century F1 history, secured Merc engines for Brawn GP – at very significant competitive cost to his own team. “Without Martin we’d have been done for,” Fry says. “But, amazingly, and to McLaren’s detriment, he gave the crown jewels to the enemy. It was bonkers really, but it saved us.”

“Winning the F1 world championship wasn’t even on our horizon”

It did indeed – and, in Melbourne, in 2009, the Brawn BGP 001, white, yellow and day-glo fluorescent green, rolled into the paddock like a ghost that had drifted in by mistake. Yet, from its first lap, it was obvious that it was the class of the field. Button duly won the Australian Grand Prix from pole position. Rubens Barrichello completed a Brawn 1-2. Then, as all the drivers ran their cars down the pitlane after the race, something extraordinary happened: every mechanic from every other team lined up to applaud them home. “Even now, 17 years later, I could almost cry about it,” Fry remembers. “It was off-the-scale special.”

Brawn kept winning, although Red Bull began inexorably to catch up. “Actually, they were faster than us pretty early,” Fry admits, but Brawn had accumulated enough early points to arrive in Brazil with Button still leading the F1 drivers’ championship. “Yes, we got to Brazil, for the penultimate race, and Sebastian [Vettel] had won last time out in Japan for Red Bull, whereas Jenson had finished only eighth there. Then, in Brazil, it rained in qualifying, and Sebastian ended up 16th, and in the race he battled through to fourth, but Jenson was fifth, and that was enough. We’d done it. He was F1 world champion.” Brawn had already secured the constructors’ crown. Together they had achieved the impossible.

Spanish Grand Prix 2009

Spanish Grand Prix 2009, with Jenson Button on a winning streak.

John Button and Jenson Button

John Button was a calming influence on son Jenson

I ask Fry how he views Button as a driver – and as a man. “Oh, Jenson was great,” he replies, “but I want to say something about John [Button, Jenson’s father], too, if I may, because John’s influence shouldn’t be underestimated. When Jenson came to us, in 2003, he was fast, but he was still young [23], he was good-looking, and he was a bit of a playboy. Behind the scenes he needed a bit of controlling and, even though John was a bit of a character himself, he did a lot of that work. John and I used to talk on the phone a lot, and that way we’d agree on a strategy to get Jenson to do the right thing. Don’t get me wrong: Jenson was never a tearaway but he needed management in that way when he was in his early twenties.

“All in all, I’d say that Jenson was a superb driver but in terms of one-lap pace and sheer bloody-minded resilience he was never quite in the same stellar category as your Michael Schumachers, your Fernando Alonsos and your Lewis Hamiltons in their prime, or your Max Verstappens now. Put it this way: by contrast to those four, if Jenson had a tricky Friday, you knew you were likely to be going to have a difficult weekend. But whenever he had a fast car that he was comfortable with, and that he could really lean on, he was brilliant.”

São Paulo in the penultimate F1 race of 2009 Brawn

A fifth place at São Paulo in the penultimate F1 race of 2009 was enough to bring Brawn’s Button his first and only world title

That memorable day at Interlagos, in October 2009, Button’s fifth place was enough. Relief flooded Fry as Button crossed the line. Pride, too. But then came the suitor they had been half-expecting: Mercedes. The German giant wanted to buy the team. “People sometimes say, ‘If you’d kept it, it’d be worth billions now,’” Fry says. “But lots of things could have gone wrong in the meantime. Besides, we never intended to be team owners, Ross and I. And the most likely outcome is that we’d have ended up like Williams, hobbling along, surviving but never winning.” So they sold. They made a lot of money, they gave the team a secure future, and Mercedes went on to dominate F1.

“Since leaving uni I’ve never been poor. I’m humbled by that”

Soon after Mercedes bought his and Ross’s team, Nick moved on. Today he is chairman of Motion Applied – which you will remember as McLaren Applied – and he remains at the cutting edge. “We’re doing the new standardised electronic system for F1, for the 2026 power units, and the equivalent for NASCAR, and plenty of other things, too.”

He is 69; he could pass for 15 years younger; and he is comfortable, successful and secure. I ask him if he ever expected to be so rich. “Well, since leaving uni, I’ve never been poor,” he says, after a pause. “I’m humbled by that. But I’ve done it myself – with the brilliant help of some fantastic colleagues.”

That last phrase is the closest he will come to boasting. But it is also the most accurate. His life has been one long partnership – with industrialists, with entrepreneurs, with engineers, with mechanics, with drivers, with risk and with opportunity. He is, at heart, a quiet and collaborative master of the improbable. He speaks of it all with no trace of regret. Well, almost none. If you ask him directly about regrets, as I do as I reach for my iPhone and stop our recording, he answers instantly: “Teams I ran [at Prodrive] finished second at Bathurst twice, and it really bugs me.” That’s Fry for you: the F1 world champion exec whose only real irritation is not quite cracking Mount Panorama.

2009 – Button is drivers’ champion with Brawn and team

History is made, 2009 – Button is drivers’ champion while Brawn became the first team to win the constructors’ title in its debut season

As our encounter draws to a close, I realise that what I admire most about Nick Fry is not the trophy cabinet that he helped build, nor even the F1 world championships that he helped win. It is the old-fashioned decency that underpins every chapter of his story. He is a man who rose from a humble house in Surbiton with no central heating to the summit of world motor sport – not by swagger, not by ruthlessness, not by guile, but by judgment, curiosity, hard graft and a sort of loyal, unshowy competence that F1 often undervalues. Perhaps that is why his story still feels so uplifting. F1 is a sport of sharp minds and sharper elbows, yet sometimes, just sometimes, every so often, a decent man wins. Nick Fry is proof.


Born: 29/06/1956, surbiton, surrey

  • 1978 Joins Ford as a graduate trainee after gaining an economics degree.
  • 1979-2001 Moves to Ford’s Product Development office as product planner, ultimately becoming business director.
  • 1992-95 Shifts to Aston Martin as MD, overseeing development of DB7.
  • 2001 Becomes managing director at Prodrive; doubles company turnover in three years; two WRC titles.
  • 2002 Adds managing director of F1 team BAR Honda to his responsibilities.
  • 2004 BAR Honda is runner-up in the F1 constructors’; Fry becomes CEO in 2005.
  • 2006 Fry appointed Honda F1 CEO.
  • 2007 Negotiates hire of Ross Brawn.
  • 2008 Fry and Brawn lead a management buyout when Honda pulls out of F1, purchasing the team for £1.
  • 2009 Brawn wins F1 drivers’ and constructors’ titles; team sold to Mercedes with Fry becoming CEO of the F1 team.
  • 2013 Leaves F1; business interests include healthcare, artificial intelligence, esports and data security.
  • 2021 Appointed non-executive chairman at McLaren Applied.
Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

The vibration is as extraordinary as the noise is deafening and we’re not even in the air. But I guess that’s what you get when there’s 1500bhp’s-worth of 27 litres of two stage supercharged, quad-cam, 48-valve Merlin up front doing the talking.

I’m in a Supermarine Spitfire Mk IX, a real warbird which flew, attacked and was attacked in World War II, about to take off from what was once known as RAF Westhampnett, better known today as the Goodwood Aerodrome, and the very place from which Douglas Bader departed in a Spitfire for his last flight of the war. He was lucky enough to survive his encounter with the enemy and saw out the conflict in a variety of POW camps; 544 of his fellow fighter pilots in the Battle of Britain never came home again.

Andrew Frankel stands with Spitfire TR9

This two-seater was originally a single-seater, allocated to 315 Sqn (Deblin), a Polish squadron at Northolt in 1942.

LOWLYT media

This is a date I’ve waited 25 years to fulfil. In 2000, I was going to fly in one to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Battle of Britain, but while I was waiting for ‘my’ aircraft to be serviced another came down. We’d just had our first child and it’s the only thing my long-suffering wife has ever asked me not to do. Now, with the children grown and gone, she’s much less bothered…

Up front sits Charlie Huke, ex-RAF and a man who’s flown over 250 different aircraft types, both fixed wing and rotary; but in a Spitfire, I sit in my own, separate cockpit where Charlie cannot be seen nor barely heard through my helmet over the roar of the Merlin. That name, incidentally, comes not from wizardry, but falconry.

Andrew Frankel Spitfire TR9

Tally ho!

“It’s going to get quite noisy now,” he bellows into his microphone, “so we’ll talk again when we’re up.” And with that he throttles the Merlin up to take-over speed – about 2400rpm on my rev-counter – and releases the brakes. I see the stick between my legs jostling all around its sphere of action as Charlie corrects for bumps and gusts around the aircraft’s aerodynamic surfaces.

I look around. Stare at the dials and controls, so many whose purpose I can only guess at. Teenagers flew these into the face of the Luftwaffe, sometimes several times a day. I try to imagine the terror as I wheeled around the skies, suffering near blackout levels of g-force in my efforts to engage or evade the enemy, and realised I cannot. Today the biggest battle we’ll face is against the wind, which is building close to the allowable limit for this kind of aircraft these days.

Spitfire TR9 controls and dials

the RAF only converted a lone Spitfire to two seater in the war; this Spit became a TR9 after restoration from 2005-20

LOWLYT media

Spitfire TR9 badge

As a single-seater, BS410 flew 35 sorties.

LOWLYT media

We lift effortlessly into the sky, borne aloft by an engine that powered not only Spitfires, but Hurricanes, Lancasters, Halifaxes, Mosquitoes and Mustangs. Surely no other single design could have had a more consequential effect on the outcome of the conflict. Ahead I can see blue sky and fluffy clouds, to the left and right Reginald Mitchell’s revolutionary elliptical wings.

“In the motoring world, in terms of its feel, the closest equivalent is a modern Formula 3 car”

We’re here to intercept another aircraft, not a Focke-Wulf FW 190 like the one this very aircraft damaged in combat, but perhaps a little more prosaically, a Cessna Caravan containing our intrepid photographer. But we can only spend five minutes parked off his starboard wing: the Caravan’s flat out, the Spitfire just chugging along as its temperatures rise. It was never meant to fly this slowly.

As soon as we’re clear Charlie hands over control, and I find myself flying a Supermarine Spitfire out over the English Channel. So I ask him what I’m allowed to do, and he simply replies that I’m in control, it is ‘my’ aircraft and within bounds of what is safe and sensible, I can do what I damn well like.

Spitfire TR9 engine

Merlin 66

LOWLYT media

Spitfire TR9 nose

Chocks away!

LOWLYT media

And even I realise at once what must have made this aircraft so different to those that came before it. It is unbelievably reactive, the sort of pressure on the stick you might imagine reserving for stroking a butterfly is enough to gain an instant response. Nudge it, just enough to depress the pads on your fingertips, and it’s off: up, down, left or right. In the motoring world and in terms of its feel, the closest equivalent I’ve driven is a modern Formula 3 car. Except the Spitfire can pull far greater g: over eight in combat, but no more than four today. I’ve heard it said that the heavier, more stable Hawker Hurricane was a superior gun platform and I can believe it, but you’ve got to get the enemy in your sights first and certainly when it was new, there wasn’t an aircraft in the sky better qualified for doing that than the Spitfire.

You learn at once to make sure your movements of hands and feet on the stick and rudder are as co-ordinated as can be and to issue instructions gently, but firmly: like a racing car it won’t understand indecision and will react unpredictably or not at all in its face.

Gabby Gabreskiin the cockpit

Polish-American Gabby Gabreski was posted to Northolt to pilot Spitfires, flying the Mk IX frequently across the Channel.

The engine note never falters. It’s hard to believe the Spitfire emerged from the war with twice the power with which it entered it just six years earlier, by which stage the Merlin itself had become obsolete in this application and been replaced by the 37-litre Griffon engine. And while the Spitfire (single-seat) itself would stay in production until 1948, with over 20,000 built, by cessation of hostilities it had been largely superseded in performance terms, at least at low altitudes, by aircraft like the Hawker Tempest. Such is the pace of change when war is the catalyst.

My time is up so I hand back to Charlie, who performs the most beautiful victory roll before heading back to Goodwood. Upside down in a Spitfire: that’ll take some forgetting. We land right on the permissible crosswind limit and I note how furiously the stick is now being stirred as the aerodynamic surfaces start to lose their grip on the air flowing over them.

It’s over, but it doesn’t matter. Because however much I was amazed to have flown a Spitfire, I’ll cherish the memory of having done so just as much, and for rather longer.

Andrew flew with spitfires.com who are based at Goodwood and offer flights in a two-seat Spitfire from £3250. 


Spitfire TR9 soaring

Spitfire TR9

Converted 2020
Length 31ft 5in (9.58m)
Wingspan 36ft 10in (11.23m)
Height 12ft 8in (3.9m)
Max Take-Off Weight 3742kg
Engine Rolls-Royce Merlin 66
Maximum Speed 400mph
Range 450 miles
Service Ceiling 10,000ft

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

Most grand prix motorcycle riders who competed at Spa-Francorchamps agreed that it was the greatest racetrack of them all, even though many breathed a sigh of relief when it was removed from the world championship calendar in 1991 because it was considered too dangerous for top-class racing.

Spa was once the deadliest GP venue of them all, riders joking darkly, “There are so many memorials around Spa, they could make a fence out of them.”

Spa’s corners are majestic in scale, legendary in reputation. And none more so than Raidillon de l’Eau Rouge – a 110mph left/right/left, downhill/uphill roller-coaster that makes Laguna Seca’s Corkscrew look like something off a kiddie’s Scalextric track.

I rode six Spa 24 Hours between 1984 and 1990, twice finishing second, so I must have attacked Eau Rouge around a thousand times, day and night. Raidillon de l’Eau Rouge was the highlight of every lap, because the sequence is so unusual that it demanded a particular and inch-perfect approach. It was also a lot of fun.

You accelerate out of La Source hairpin, taking a wide line through the subsequent right-handed kink, so you end up riding towards the trackside wall on the right. When I raced at Spa, this was the start/finish straight, where the pitwall was topped by lap scorers and their pitboards. The fun to be had here was getting as close as you dared to their feet, hitting around 150mph, before you peeled left into the first part of the left/right/left.

The left-hander is the not-so-important corner, so you’re fully focused on the right. That’s why you hang off the right of the motorcycle as soon as you veer left, away from the pitwall. Thus you make an awkward sight as you stroke the brakes and hurtle into the left-hander, but it all makes sense when you flick right to climb Raidillon.

At this point you reach Spa’s lowest point, over the Eau Rouge stream, where the compression is so violent that your stomach wants to go through your backside. At the same time, the asphalt in front of you looks like a vast wall towering over you, which you start climbing, hard on the throttle, using the grip afforded by the massive positive camber.

The good times aren’t over yet. If you’ve come up Raidillon fast enough, your front wheel will leave the road when you reach the crest, where the track goes left. By this time you’re doing maybe 120mph, trying to turn the bike from right to left with the front wheel in the air.

This is all anticipation and prediction, because you’ve done it so many times before, but get it wrong and things may get messy.

Raidillon de l’Eau Rouge isn’t only a joy, it’s also vitally important to the lap time. Get through there fast and you carry that extra speed all the way down the 0.7-mile Kemmel Straight. If there’s a racetrack in heaven, it has to be Spa-Francorchamps.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

I’ve raced Formula Renault 3.5, GP2, GP3 and GT3 at Spa-Francorchamps, and in the GT3 car it’s actually much more of a corner than the others.

In the BMW [M4 GT3, in which he won the 2023 Spa 24 Hours], the strength of that car was the high-speed performance in general – it was very good and very stable, and always high-grip. But in certain instances, Eau Rouge will become somewhat different, and you have to start lifting and thinking about where you’re actually going to place the car in traffic.

BMW, 2023 Spa 24 Hours

BMW, 2023 Spa 24 Hours.

Depending on which other car you’re following, you have to be very careful. If it’s an Audi you’re behind, because of its exhaust positioning, it takes away a lot of the aero from the front of your car, whereas with the Porsche you can stay closer and plan a move up to Les Combes.

It can become a really different corner when it starts to rain and you’re on slicks, and in the dry you also have to be careful about your first few laps. You can go flat, but that puts damage in the left-front tyre and you can lose around 5km/h.

And people forget it climbs so much, even from Eau Rouge to Les Combes, so you have to keep that momentum up. Looking after the left-front on full fuel is very important.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

Karun Chandhok at Spa, 2011

GP2 winner, 2007

Just the name Eau Rouge is enough to evoke strong emotions in a racing driver. As you come out of the La Source hairpin, it’s hard to appreciate on television just how steeply you actually descend before hitting the sharp climb up to the top of Raidillon. The key to getting the line right is choosing when to transition the weight transfer from the left kink at the bottom to the right-hander, using the minimum amount of steering input so you don’t scrub off any more speed on top of what you lose with the inclination.

The first time I went to Spa was in Formula 3 and while in the dry it was already comfortably flat out, in the wet, which it often is, it was much more of a challenge. Back then, the circuit had gravel alongside the edge of the track and if I’m being honest, a big part of the challenge of Eau Rouge has been taken away with all these asphalt run-offs.

In F1, it’s no longer a corner the drivers think about in the dry, but in terms of racing behind other cars, it’s crucial to get right. I remember winning there in 2007 in GP2 – choosing to stay flat through Eau Rouge while fighting the dirty air behind Andy Soucek was crucial to me overtaking him for the victory. In a GT car or track-day car, it’s a bigger challenge and the drivers need to think about carrying the speed through there but also getting back to full throttle as early as possible as the straight all the way to Les Combes is long and uphill.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

Alex Brindle head shot

There have been times when LMP2 cars were kicked in the nuts and given a lot less downforce to keep them behind LMP1, but the best era for LMP2 was back in 2017. Full-fat, well over 600bhp, weight around 900kg-ish including the driver.

You’d get to the base of the hill at Eau Rouge and the magic, in a car that’s only just flat through there, is to remember how much space you have at the top that you can’t see.

When you hit the top kerb, you have a full car’s width of real estate, and a lot of people forget how wide the track is beyond that kerb to the right. You’ve got a lot of space to catch the car, and the kerb beyond that is very flat.

Brundle Eau Rouge manoeuvring a Ford GT40 at the 2025 Spa 6 Hours

Brundle also has experience of Eau Rouge in older cars, here manoeuvring a Ford GT40 at the 2025 Spa 6 Hours classic

The technique is muscle memory in many ways. Everyone is scared of that right-hand wall before you turn in, so you’ve got to get as close to it as possible and then it’s a pure geometry exercise, a matter of maximising the metres.

You get most grip in the compression as it turns right, so do all the turning you can possibly get done there. So you point the car straight and then, at the top of the hill, remember you’ve got enough room not to need to lift.

Any car that’s set up properly will smash the deck on the first lap on low tyre pressures and heavy fuel, so you’ve got to be pinpoint perfect.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

The most challenging corner of the post-war period.” Those were the words of Motor Sport’s Denis Jenkinson when that corner, or rather sequence thereof, appeared under threat 30 years ago. He was talking about Eau Rouge at Spa, the left at the bottom of the hill after the old pits and then the steep uphill right and the left over the brow collectively known as Raidillon.

Denis Jenkinson with Gordini’s Maurice Trintignant, Spa, 1953

Motor Sport’s Denis Jenkinson with Gordini’s Maurice Trintignant, Spa, 1953

DSJ, our long-time continental correspondent, was biased: he made no secret of his love for the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps while lamenting the emasculation of race tracks around the world. The Belgian venue was, he insisted in a piece written with me in 1994, “the only real circuit in F1”. He dismissed everything else in typically forthright manner: “The rest are rubbish – most of them don’t even come close. I wouldn’t bother looking up from my book for them.”

“Eau Rouge was incorporated into the public road network”

Our story was born of fears that arguably the most famous corner in worldwide motor sport, and certainly Spa’s trademark, would bite the dust in the dark days of 1994. For that year’s Belgian Grand Prix, a chicane was installed at Eau Rouge, though with a promise that it was only temporary.

Eau Rouge as we know it didn’t disappear. The abomination of a chicane was used only for the F1 weekend. Circuit and F1 stuck to their collective word: Eau Rouge was restored to its former glory for the 1995 Belgian GP. The sorry saga turned out to be but another twist in the long, winding and sometimes tragic story of the bends that have remained in place to this day.


Dick Seaman in his Mercedes, 1939 Belgian GP

Dick Seaman on the climb in his Mercedes, 1939 Belgian GP – the first year of the classic Eau Rouge/Raidillon configuration

ORIGINS OF EAU ROUGE

Eau Rouge has been a fixture at Spa since the very beginnings of the circuit back in 1921 and the first car racing the following year. But not in the same form as today. It may or may not explain why in the English vernacular three corners are lumped together under its name. Or perhaps it’s just that we Brits can’t cope with the pronunciation of Raidillon.

The original iteration of the Spa circuit, made up of a nine-mile triangle of public roads through the Ardennes roughly linking Francorchamps, Malmedy and Stavelot, turned sharp left after a bridge over the stream that gave its name to the corner: the red hue of the water is explained by rich deposits of iron oxide in the vicinity.

Alberto Ascari, 1950 – he’d win the Belgian GP twice

Alberto Ascari, 1950 – he’d win the Belgian GP twice (1952 and ’53).

The cars went uphill at a right angle to the current track and turned sharp right at the top before feeding back onto what were then known as the Kemmel Curves. The section was called Virage l’Ancienne Douane, the name derived from the border post at what was the Belgian-Prussian frontier prior to the 1919 Treaty of Versailles.

It wasn’t until 1939 that this was bypassed with the steep uphill Raidillon corners. The new Eau Rouge was incorporated into the public road network, in both directions initially. Only in 2000 did Spa become a permanent circuit.


Graham Hill leads in Spa 1965

Graham Hill leads in ’65

THE CREATION OF MODERN EAU ROUGE

Spa had been banished from the F1 calendar after 1970: a circuit upgrade after a year away in ’69, which included the addition of Armco barriers around much of its length, didn’t satisfy the drivers at a time of a growing safety crusade. Grand prix cars wouldn’t return until 1983, four years after the track was reduced in length with a new permanent section that dived off what had become the Kemmel Straight at Les Combes and rejoined the public roads of the old course prior to Blanchimont. The Spa we know today measuring 4.3 or so miles had been created.

A chicane at the start of the short chute to La Source, which now incorporated a new pits complex, went in for 1981, the twin developments helping to facilitate the F1 comeback. But there was another change made in time for the return of the Belgian Grand Prix to what most regarded as its rightful home.

Keke Rosberg at Eau Rouge Spa in 1985 for Williams

Keke Rosberg had a deep respect for Eau Rouge, here at Spa in 1985 driving for Williams

A remodelling of Eau Rouge appeared to have passed most by, certainly the F1 drivers and the British press pack. In the euphoria of the end of what former Motor Sport editor-in-chief Nigel Roebuck described as “an exile” of the Belgian F1 fixture to Zolder and, briefly, Nivelles, everyone overlooked the change.

“It’s a bit scary in places,” Williams driver Keke Rosberg told Roebuck. “That left-right – Eau Rouge – at the bottom of the hill is not exactly the easiest section of track I have ever encountered. It’s fabulous – one of those places that reminds you of why you get paid for driving racing cars.”

Our own DSJ recounted a similar tale from that year to me in ’94. It had the reigning world champion uttering a profanity as he praised the circuit, which may or may not have been some kind of embellishment. That Rosberg was dragging on a Marlboro Red at the time almost certainly wasn’t.

Formula 1 in 1983, compared to 1982

Note the change to the corner for the return of Formula 1 in 1983, compared to how the track was in 1982, below

Rosberg’s description of Spa’s keynote bends identifies him as a circuit rookie. He hadn’t experienced Eau Rouge up to that point in his career, but if he had, he would have known just how Raidillon had changed. That much is clear in the before and after photographs of the bend in 1982 and ’83. The positioning of the giant Texaco hoarding is the giveaway.

Raidillon was eased for the return of F1 to provide more margin for error on the outside of the right-hander, which in turn made the left at Eau Rouge in the dip less of a corner. Ditto the left over the brow. Put simply, Eau Rouge had changed significantly.


Eric Oliver:Denis Jenkinson, sidecars, Spa, 1949

Eric Oliver/Denis Jenkinson, sidecars, Spa, 1949

THE CHALLENGE OF EAU ROUGE

We don’t have to look much beyond DSJ’s 30-year-old explanation of why Eau Rouge is one of the great sequences in motor racing. “Eau Rouge on its own is nothing,” he told me. “Eau Rouge with Raidillon is something, but add the bump at the top and you’ve got a wonderful piece of racing circuit. The car is changing direction vertically at the same time as changing direction laterally. That’s the challenge of Eau Rouge.”

Jenkinson was well qualified to make a judgement. Before he toured the circuits of Europe for Motor Sport he was an accomplished sidecar passenger. He won the inaugural Sidecar World Championship in 1949 with Eric Oliver, one of their two wins that season coming at Spa.

It is the vertical climb that makes the segment unique and also so daunting for the drivers: the track rises 40m over a blind brow at a gradient approaching 20 degrees. “Like driving upwards through a tunnel” is how two-time Le Mans 24 Hours winner Timo Bernhard remembers the track on his first acquaintance in the late 1990s.

“Eau Rouge on its own is nothing, but add the bump at the top…”

That illusion has changed over the years as the barriers have been pushed back on both sides and, subsequently, asphalt run-off installed. Some say it has made it easier because if something starts to go wrong you can open the steering and run wide. Not so, argues another driver to win Le Mans twice. “You don’t approach Eau Rouge now saying that you are going to take it flat because there is more run-off,” reckons Alex Wurz, also a circuit designer in addition to a veteran of 69 F1 starts. “You know that if you do something wrong, it could still be a big one.”

What has made it less of a challenge are the flatter kerbs. “They have essentially opened up the three apexes,” he explains. “That’s why it has become easier.”

The track is smoother than in the past and the compression at Eau Rouge less severe. That’s significant, too. “You had to be more millimetre precise when the track was bumpier and the kerbs were higher,” says Wurz. “There was a lot going on with the compression and the bumps in the old days. It was quite uncomfortable to know that the car could suddenly snap on you.”


1993 Benetton’s Michael Schumacher led the way

Many have tried and failed to take the curves flat; it’s believed that in 1993 Benetton’s Michael Schumacher led the way

Getty Images

WAS HE FLAT THROUGH EAU ROUGE?

There are any number of candidates for the crown of first Formula 1 driver to take Eau Rouge flat. It was probably Michael Schumacher at the wheel of a Benetton in 1993, the same year Alex Zanardi escaped a huge accident at the section during practice in his Lotus. But what can be said with certainty, however, is that by the mid-1990s the drivers in the best machinery were keeping their right foot in all the way through on a low-fuel qualifying run. And that today in an F1 car it is routinely flat.

“The first F1 driver to take Eau Rouge flat? Probably Michael Schumacher”

“Easy flat,” is how Kevin Magnussen describes it. “When the higher-downforce cars arrived in 2017, it wasn’t really a corner any more. You could do it steering with one finger.”

It’s also flat in a GT3 car, a pertinent example given that they provide the grid for the Spa 24 Hours. The changes to the track and advances in the cars have seen to that. “The cars are not super-powerful and over the years they have gained more and more downforce,” says Maxime Martin, a winner of the race. “If your car is well balanced, you can do it flat all stint long.”

Kevin Magnussen Hypercar on Eau Rouge

Kevin Magnussen reckons Hypercars are a greater challenge on Eau Rouge than F1 cars

That’s not the case for the World Endurance Championship’s Hypercar class, which is why Magnussen’s love affair with Eau Rouge has been renewed. “It’s more of a challenge in a Hypercar in WEC than in F1,” says the Dane, who in 2025 completed his first year in the championship with BMW. “The cars are powerful, but they don’t have a lot of downforce and are heavy, so they move around a lot. It’s definitely not flat all the way through a stint. In qualifying, yes, and at the end of a stint if your tyres are still in good shape when the fuel load is low.”


1999, Brazilian Ricardo Zonta crash at Eau Rouge

Raising the BAR: in 1999, Brazilian Ricardo Zonta crashes at Eau Rouge in practice. Some thought it was a bet to go flat…

Getty images

THE BET THAT WASN’T 

The pieces of one BAR-Supertec 01 had just been swept up from the top of Raidillon, when the marshals had to get their brooms out for another. Team-mates Jacques Villeneuve and Ricardo Zonta both crashed at more than 180mph after losing it in the right-hander in qualifying for the 1999 Belgian Grand Prix. Legend has it that their shunts were the result of a bet to take the big dipper flat.

Not so, they both claim today. There was no wager made, just an understanding that staying flat was key to a quick lap.

“We were doing well in qualifying and we knew the top cars were going through there flat,” explains Zonta. “We were just trying to improve our lap times and we knew that taking it flat would do that even if that car wasn’t easy to drive. When we tried, we lost the car, both Jacques and I. It wasn’t a joke and there was definitely no bet.”

Spa in 1999 as Jacques Villeneuve, like Zonta, crashed at Eau Rouge

Misery compounded for BAR at Spa in 1999 as Jacques Villeneuve, like Zonta, also crashed at Eau Rouge

But perhaps a sense of bravado. “I had taken Eau Rouge flat in the Williams in 1996, ’97 and ’98, so I knew I could do the corner flat,” recalls Villeneuve. “And anyway if you don’t take it flat you’re a… well, you know the word. It’s not true that I had a bet with my team-mate.”

Perhaps the word or rather phrase he’s looking for is “big girl’s blouse”. That’s what his engineer, Jock Clear, used in conversation with Villeneuve to describe a driver failing to take it flat.


COULD EAU ROUGE BE BUILT TODAY?

The answer to that one is no. Probably. The FIA doesn’t have rules so much as guidelines for new circuit layouts. Eau Rouge would fall outside them, says circuit designer Clive Bowen.

The classic sequence at Spa wouldn’t meet the guidelines laid down for the radius of dips and crests, explains Bowen, the founder of Apex Circuit Design, whose credits include the Dubai Autodrome and the new Miami F1 track. “You have to think of an imaginary disc nestling in the sag at the bottom of the hill and another one under the track on the crest,” he says. “The minimum disc radius is defined by the square of the speed of the fastest car that will race at the venue divided by constants specified by the FIA. Eau Rouge and Raidillon would be massively outside what is prescribed today.

“There is room to negotiate. At Apex, we tend to be more relaxed about compressions than brows: I witnessed one of the Mercedes flipping over the hump on the Mulsanne Straight at Le Mans in 1999 and know that going outside the guidelines for crests is moving into a territory of dragons.”

Eau Rouge retains its place on the Spa layout under the FIA’s grandfathering rules, continues Bowen: “If you have a facility that has been around since time immemorial and has maintained corner geometry outside the guidelines but has been refined and enhanced over the years, it is deemed safe because it has benefited from that process of best practice.”


Eau Rouge chicane

Following deaths at Imola in 1994, Eau Rouge was given a chicane

Getty Images

THE DARK SIDE OF EAU ROUGE

The chicane built for the 1994 Belgian GP to which DSJ so objected has been the most obvious change to Eau Rouge since the return of F1 in ’83. Along with the temporary corners added at Barcelona and Montreal, it was a reaction to the deaths of Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger over the San Marino Grand Prix weekend. The FIA moved quickly to reduce speeds: aero was cut for the Spanish fixture less than a month after Imola and power for Canada two weeks later, before the introduction of the downforce-reducing underfloor plank for the German GP in July.

Ayrton Senna’s on Eau RRouge at Spa

Sparks fly as Ayrton Senna’s Lotus bottoms out through Raidillon –the bumps have been removed over time

The Eau Rouge chicane was built largely within the confines of the existing track save for an extension of the asphalt into an existing gravel trap and was never meant to be more than temporary. “It was the decision of the FIA to do it for that one race, while we looked to find a solution for the next year,” says then FIA safety delegate Roland Bruynseraede.

“We learn as much from near-misses as from serious accidents”

The FIA and Spa knew the dangers of Eau Rouge. German rising star Stefan Bellof had died after hitting the barrier at the bottom of the concrete grandstand on the outside of the right at Raidillon while racing a Brun Motorsport Porsche 956 in the World Sportscar Championship’s round seven in 1985. Five years later in 1990 local driver Guy Renard was killed in the Spa 24 Hours when his Toyota Corolla was T-boned after coming to rest over the top of Raidillon. The solution for 1995 was an extended two-part gravel trap that wrapped around the concrete stand and the creation of a new one on the exit of Raidillon.

The process of upgrading safety has been ongoing ever since. The barrier on the inside of the Raidillon right-hander was moved back for ’99, the concrete stand demolished for 2000 and the gravel of the revised run-off replaced by asphalt.

1985 Spa 1000Kms – Stefan Bellof is in third

1985 Spa 1000Kms – Stefan Bellof is in third

Getty Images

Another wave of safety improvements was made in the wake of the accident in which Anthoine Hubert lost his life in the Formula 2 race on the GP bill in 2019 as part of a £70m circuit upgrade for 2022. Run-off on the inside and outside at the top of Raidillon was enhanced at the same time as the compression at the bottom was eased.

It is a process that remains in progress, says FIA safety director Nuno Costa. He won’t talk about specific corners or accidents, only that every incident is analysed to aid the process. “We learn as much from the near-misses as from serious accidents,” he explains. “We look at the data and the incidents, and try to understand what worked and what didn’t, identify improvements and work from there.”

Ferraris of Massa and Alonso, 2011 Eau Rouge

Ferraris of Massa and Alonso, 2011 – the FIA had banned use of DRS through Eau Rouge


NOT EVERYONE LOVES IT…

The view of Eau Rouge for some is clouded by the dangers the sequence presents. Jenson Button is among them and is quite dogmatic in his viewpoint. “I don’t like Eau Rouge – it’s too dangerous,” he states. “I don’t enjoy it. The rest of Spa is exceptional. But Eau Rouge… I understand why people think it is awesome, but there have been too many incidents for me. The problem is that it’s blind. They have made it as safe as they can, but it is always going to be a dangerous corner.”

“I understand why people think it’s awesome. The problem is that it’s blind”

Button isn’t alone in having doubts about Eau Rouge. Aston Martin WEC driver Harry Tincknell admits that his view is clouded by the accident that followed a tyre failure on his Ford GT in the 2017 WEC race.

“When you have a big one there, it probably changes it for you – it certainly did for me,” says the Briton. “I don’t hate it, I’m just saying I don’t like it.”

Jenson Button 2012 Belgian GP

Jenson Button on his way to pole during qualifying for the 2012 Belgian GP; he says Eau Rouge is too dangerous


IT STILL HAS A PLACE

The deaths of Hubert and 18-year-old Dilano van ’t Hoff in a Formula Regional European Championship race in 2023, as well as the serious accident in which Jack Aitken sustained a broken vertebra and collarbone at the 2021 Spa 24 Hours, inevitably thrust safety at Eau Rouge into the spotlight. There were similarities to the three accidents: they involved a crashed car being hit by another at the top of Raidillon or, in the case of van ’t Hoff, a little along the Kemmel Straight.

Visibility has been improved at Eau Rouge over the years, but the topography means the brow remains blind. There is a two-fold answer to ensuring its future reckons locally born Vincent Vosse, a winner of the track’s 24-hour fixture and now boss of the WRT BMW squad for which Magnussen races. “Improving signalling, giving more warning, is important,” he says. “But so too is the mentality of the drivers: they need to understand that a yellow is a yellow and they have to slow down. I don’t think the corner should change, but sometimes I feel that the mentality of the drivers needs to change. They need to understand that they aren’t in a simulator.”

Ford GT of Harry Tincknell at Eau Rouge in the WEC, 2017

A tyre failure for the Ford GT of Harry Tincknell at Eau Rouge in the WEC, 2017

The changes to Eau Rouge over the years have improved safety, as well as altering its character. For the worse, according to Johnny Herbert. “It’s lost its soul,” he says. “It’s impressive that taking it flat in a modern F1 car is ridiculously easy, but I preferred it when you were hanging on for dear life. With all the run-off now, you have a get-out-of-jail card if you get it wrong.”

For many, Spa-Francorchamps without Eau Rouge is unthinkable. Kévin Estre, winner of the 24 Hours in 2019, is among them. “As a driver you want to feel alive and a sort of fear, having to be brave to be quick in a fast corner,” he says. “Even if we have lost some drivers, I wouldn’t want them to touch it for any money in the world.”


Spa Map

Spa-Francorchamps 

First race 1922

Fastest F1 Qualifying Lap
1 min 41.252sec, Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes-AMG F1 W11, 2020

Fastest F1 Race Lap
1 min 44.701sec, Sergio Pérez, Red Bull RB20, 2024


Scalextric twin cars

Reader competition

Motor Sport has teamed up with Scalextric to offer readers the chance to win models of two BMW heroes of the Spa 24 Hours worth £109.99. Visit motorsportmagazine.com for more details on entering the competition.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

Which sides of the garage are we going to have?” “Well, which do you want?” Valtteri Bottas and Sergio Pérez are chatting in the Silverstone pits a few hours before the first Cadillac Formula 1 car is dropped off, ready for its shakedown run the following day.

It’s a seemingly innocuous question, one that may already have been answered among the army of staff who are staring at screens on the other side of the Cadillac-branded dividing boards. It’s just one of the final little details before the fruits of their labour appear to occupy the space currently taken up by Motor Sport’s interviews and photography session.

Bottas and Pérez, both mid-thirties veterans of the F1 scene, with 16 grand prix wins between them, are comfortable in their own skin – as you’d expect. The mulleted, moustachioed Finn is amiable, chatty in his staccato way, laughing at our Australian-born snapper’s jest that he is the one who looks like more of an Aussie these days; the Mexican is rather less of an extrovert. And these contrasting, seasoned racers are a good combination for a start-up team.

Sergio Perez sits for interview

“We prioritised not just experience, but experience with multiple championship-winning teams,” explains team principal Graeme Lowdon. “We’ve taken people who are super-fast. Also I knew from bringing in a new team in the past, the importance of the driver in their role in gelling the engineering and garage teams together, the marketing team too. That was one of the strong reasons why we went for drivers who have that experience – we don’t have to show them where the paddock turnstile is.”

The boss is someone who, says Bottas, he has known “very well, for a long time”, well before Lowdon’s time spent in the Sauber pit as manager of Zhou Guanyu, who is now the Cadillac reserve. Of the Cadillac project, Bottas adds: “My first contact was more than two years ago actually with Graeme. He was talking about the project, and then he kept me updated on how it’s going, and once they finally got confirmation that they were going to be in F1.

“When I knew that I was not going to be racing again with Stake F1 Team [Sauber] in 2025, I thought for me the best option is to join Mercedes and still go to every race as a reserve, get to do some testing, and still be very involved in the sport. Because this sport never stops, you know. It’s always evolving. And that worked out perfectly, because then the opportunity came with Cadillac. We started more serious talks, and in the end we ended up signing before August. It actually went pretty smoothly, because it was my priority. I really believed about this project, and it seemed that I was their priority as well.”

While Bottas was being replaced by Nico Hülkenberg at Sauber, Pérez lost his seat at Red Bull in December 2024. That, he says, is when talks began with Cadillac: “Obviously at the time they didn’t have the licence. Once it became clear that they were making it into F1, it was pretty straightforward. What the team wanted and what I wanted, once I knew who was behind the team and so on, it became clear that this was a project that will make me enthusiastic to come back.”

“Being able to experience life out of F1 gave me a huge perspective”

In a parallel universe, one where Cadillac didn’t get the nod for F1, we might be seeing both drivers racing elsewhere. But each was motivated by the desire to return to a race seat at the pinnacle of the sport. “IndyCar was one option,” recalls Bottas. “Supercars another [his girlfriend is Australian and he’s spent a lot of time Down Under], but that’s not yet. F1 was always the priority, and that can all come later. No doubt I’m going to do Bathurst one day in Supercars – that’s going to be fun! But that can wait – I still have a few years left in the tank in F1.”

“I had a few approaches from other series,” admits Pérez. “I would have liked to do WEC, but to do WEC it requires full commitment, and I wanted to keep my muscle memory for F1. Once I’m done with F1 it’s something I can think of, but F1 is my 100% goal for the next few years.”

The Cadillac pair reaffirmed their desire to be on the grid in polar opposite fashion – perhaps reflecting their different personalities. As reserve for Mercedes in 2025, Bottas was present at each grand prix, and his irreverent videos kept him in the public eye as a social media highlight. “Watching from the side wasn’t easy,” he acknowledges. “I got the confirmation last year: watching every race, I was missing the racing more and more. I still have that will and fire to race, and I have still more to give to the sport.

“I was trying to be as useful as I can at the weekends, not just being the reserve but very involved in all the meetings, and trying to help Kimi [Antonelli] the youngster. And I got to do some testing – five or six days in the end – which was important for me every now and then to jump in the car and get some laps.”

Pérez, meanwhile, stayed at home. His time at Red Bull, of course, ended with a 2024 campaign that would destroy many. “I didn’t enjoy much the sport, and I needed refreshment more than I thought,” he reflects. No driving of racing cars for him, but instead “I was doing quite a bit of karting regularly with my kids.”

Valtteri Bottas and Sergio Perez chat with Marcus Simmons

Between them, Cadillac’s Sergio Pérez and Valtteri Bottas, both 36, have 527 Formula 1 starts

How many does Pérez have; how old are they? “I’ve got four! They are eight, five, three and two.”

But surely the youngest two children aren’t karting yet… “Well, the three-year-old is karting! It was a great year, being away from the sport. Being able to live and experience life out of F1 gave me definitely a huge perspective.”

So he’s left los Perezitos pequeños behind in their Mexican idyll to be at a dank Silverstone – any prospect of the photo shoot taking place in the pitlane is scuppered by a dismal downpour. Still, the weather would be better for shakedown day. And it’s only a couple of months since Pérez did finally get back into an F1 car, when Cadillac’s nascent team ran a 2023 Ferrari at Imola. Here is an advantage he does have over Bottas, in the sense that his colleague’s contractual commitments to Mercedes kept him from starting prep with his new team until December.

For Pérez, the work with Cadillac began “basically as soon as I signed the contract [last summer]. We had a couple of sim sessions, a couple of visits to the factory, contact with the engineers, and it hasn’t stopped since then.” And of the Imola test, he smiles: “Since I was a kid I never stopped driving for so many months, and when I jumped back into the F1 car I was quite in the rhythm, back on the pace with a lot of feeling in the car of what was going on. It was nice, and gave me a lot of confidence that it would be straightforward.”

“Cadillac should be the team that will progress the most in 2026”

For that reason, he reckons, it will take little time to get up to speed – especially with the new regulations meaning a significant increase in pre-season test days. “I don’t think so,” asserts Pérez decisively when asked whether he will need to build up again. “I think already by the first or second day I will be back. We all start from zero anyway with these new regulations. It’s great to come back in new rules. The regulation changes are huge on the engine side, and that’s going to impact a lot on the driving styles. We have to change a lot from what we’ve been used to.”

Bottas agrees that 2026 is an ideal moment for a new team to enter F1: “The timing is great. There’s new things for every team – new chassis, new tyres, new power unit, that’s the same for everybody. So everybody will be learning a lot in the first part of the year, and everyone will have some kind of issues here and there.”

He also identifies testing as “when we’re going to start bonding. There’s many people I need to get to know better, and that’s one part of this sport – you have to work with so many different personalities from different backgrounds, and make the most out of those people around you. That process has already started.”

Among those personalities, Bottas is working with one of many ex-Alpine men at Cadillac in the form of John Howard, who takes race engineer duties on his car, while Pérez has his ex-Racing Point performance engineer Carlo Pasetti on his side of the garage. “We won the only race for the team in Bahrain [in 2020 – his first F1 victory] – it’s been great times together!” he laughs. Overall engineering chief is Xavier Marcos Padros, formerly of Ferrari and, last year, the Cadillac Hypercar effort.

Caillac driver Valtteri Bottas and Perez

If the cap fits: Bottas spent last year as reserve driver at Mercedes, but missed full-time racing in F1

Jayson Fong

“Everything is new for everybody in the team,” enthuses Bottas. “Now the excitement’s really building because we’re in Silverstone about to run a new car for the first time tomorrow. What we’re expecting is it’s not going to be an easy start. In every shakedown there’s always some issues.”

For all the experience of Bottas and Pérez, who between them have represented six of the ‘established’ 10 teams on the grid, the elephant in the garage is the perception of each to the world at large. We’re talking about drivers who were good enough to finish runner-up in the world championship on a combined three occasions – Bottas in 2019 and ’20, Pérez in ’23. But while one was measured at Mercedes against the greatest driver of his era, in the form of Lewis Hamilton, the other had to match up at Red Bull against the greatest of the next era – Max Verstappen.

“I’m fine with those years,” sighs Bottas, seemingly relaxed. “They were tough, I tried everything I could. I never managed to beat Lewis in the whole season on average. I was up against Lewis I would say at his prime, but I learned a lot from that era. I don’t feel like I have any shadow to jump out of. This is a quite different situation – me and ‘Checo’ are here both to work together and I’m going to try and do the best I can for the team.” And surely the work of Bottas contributed to Hamilton’s success: “I helped a few times! That’s something I will carry always.”

Pérez, meanwhile, has put his Red Bull trauma firmly in the past, perhaps vindicated by the travails of Verstappen’s 2025 team-mates. “I’m extremely grateful for the opportunity they gave me, and for the success we had together,” he offers, shying away from opening old sores. “We won two constructors’ titles, Max won a lot of titles when I was there. We had a lot of success, we had a great team together, so Red Bull will always have a place in my heart. They changed my career big time!”

Valtteri Bottas and Sergio Perez exchange tips

It isn’t the time to reflect on the past anyway. This is certainly not a season where either driver can fight for the F1 title. Expectations are far more modest, and this is an atmosphere in which Pérez has flourished in the past in his days with Sauber and Force India/Racing Point. Ask what he hopes for this season, and he replies: “Progress. Lots of progress. Cadillac should be the team that will progress the most throughout the year. That’s the main target.”

Some points would be nice though… “Definitely. Step by step. And once you get your first points, you start to think of your next objective as a team.”

Bottas seems to be reading from the same PowerPoint on this question. “We are being realistic,” he states. ‘It’s not going to be an easy start, there’s lots of learning to do in the team. The main thing is to get a reliable car to start with and finish the races, and try not to be last, and that’s already a starting point. It’s not that much about where we start, it is where we end up, and that’s the motivation for everyone.”

You get the impression that it doesn’t matter from which side of the garage comes the Cadillac that notches up the first headline result. It will be celebrated equally fervently across the whole team.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

Cadillac didn’t have a car last year, but it did have use of General Motors’ simulator in Charlotte, North Carolina. From mid-season on, this allowed the team to hone its procedures by following grand prix weekends in real time – from bases on opposite sides of the Atlantic.

“We had an operations room running in Silverstone, and one in Charlotte,” explains team manager Peter Crolla of what came to be known as ‘rehearsals’. “Each rehearsal project grew – every time we did one, processes were more advanced, communication protocols were more advanced, the technology we had at our disposal was more advanced, and it was a fantastic rate of progression. From the first ones being rough and ready, we looked at and analysed what we were missing, so when the next one came round we were plugging the holes.

“We went from a fairly basic intercom system in the early rehearsals to what I would see as a communication network capable of supporting a full race team. From my side the biggest thing was understanding names, roles, voices, how they speak, and we were quite early in how we defined what our protocols would be in communication over radio and intercom.”

Cadillac F1 Charlotte virtual race conditions

This simulator in Charlotte was used to practise under virtual race conditions

Mostly, it was Crolla’s ex-Haas F1 colleague Pietro Fittipaldi or former IndyCar champion Simon Pagenaud on the sim. But the virtual track time was only a small part of the process – just like in real life.

“Every race weekend we’d carry out all our meetings, we’d have a full schedule, we’d allocate the right activities at the right time, so everybody started getting into a routine,” says Crolla. “Race teams are institutionalised in how they operate, and we like that level of continuity, so we started full race weekends from the start of the programme. We had a simulator operating for every session, but then we also adopted a real team that we followed throughout the sessions. So when it came to races, the team that we’d adopted, we were making calls on when we thought they should make a pitstop, looking at their lap times, tyre degradation, where they were in traffic.”

There were even ‘virtual’ scrutineering documents and parc fermé requests submitted to a phantom FIA, adds Crolla: “To make our lives as hard as possible so we could be best prepared for the real thing.”

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Ginther takes the hairpin at the 1965 Mexican GP

“I was driving down the A1, and I got a call from someone whose opinion I respect, and they said, ‘Would you take a call from the group that are involved with Andretti looking at F1?’”

That’s Graeme Lowdon talking of his introduction to the Cadillac project he now fronts.

“This was on the tail end of when they were looking to originally buy Sauber, and that didn’t work out, so they decided they wanted to look at a new entry,” he continues. “We had a call – the backers of the project were on it, as were Michael and Mario Andretti. My involvement began with advising them on how to go through the entry process to F1. And I remember that call ended with Mario saying, ‘OK this sounds good – you know how the process works.’

“When you’ve got the 1978 world champion telling you something like that, it sticks in your mind. I remember thinking, ‘I’d better not let him down!’”

Andretti Global Facility opened at Silverstone in 2024

The Andretti Global Facility opened at Silverstone in 2024. The project has since been rebranded

Although Michael Andretti’s well-documented personality clash with former Liberty CEO Greg Maffei didn’t help the team’s prospects of approval, father Mario is still involved with Cadillac, the 85-year-old holding an ambassadorial role.

Lowdon is a successful man in a high-pressure world, but allows an endearing glimpse of a man who was a schoolboy fan of F1 when he discusses Mario.

“You can tell a world champion when you’re talking to them, you can tell a racer,” he says. “He’s still a hugely competitive spirit, and a guy with a huge amount of energy, and what’s clear is a love of F1. It’s cool when you look back at the history of what he did; he did that because he loved F1, when he was racing on both sides of the Atlantic, just racing everything going but moving heaven and earth to be involved because he had that love from a very early age – and it’s still there and it’s quite infectious.”

That, of course, was instilled in Andretti and twin brother Aldo as young boys in Italy before their family emigrated. “That crawling under the fence at Monza and watching the cars, that’s what gave him the spark and fuelled it all,” smiles Lowdon. “For me, that twinkle’s still there in his eyes. We talk every so often. It’s good; we’re a racing team, we’re not a corporate conglomerate, so we should have those conversations.”