Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

October 7, 2016
Suzuka, Japan

By Round 17, Nico Rosberg led Mercedes team-mate Lewis Hamilton by 23 points. Here’s Rosberg in practice dramatically demonstrating the concept of lateral load transfer. He would go on to take victory in the race meaning that if Hamilton won the last four GPs with Rosberg finishing second, Rosberg would take the title… which is exactly what happened.

 

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

1967 PORSCHE 911 S

Sold by Rm Sotheby’s, £233,000

Sheffield-born Magnus Walker proved that the American Dream can come true when he moved to California at 19 and set up a clothing business that enabled him to indulge his passion for Porsche. Made famous by the biographical 2012 film Urban Outlaw, Walker became a kingpin of the Porsche scene – and accumulated so many examples that he’s had to pare-down his collection. This 911 S was a favourite. Walker bought it in the early 2000s with badly fitted Turbo wheel arches before returning it to its stock dimensions and treating it to a few of his famous ‘Outlaw’ custom touches.


Vintage 1950 Ford 8N tractor with a red chassis and cream body, fitted with a modified V8 engine, parked in front of a green corrugated wall.

1950 Ford 8N ‘Funk Brothers’

Sold by Iconic Auctioneers, £6750

The 8N is the best-selling American tractor of all time but for those who found its 2-litre side valve engine underpowered, the Funk Aircraft Company offered tasty upgrades, hence the V8 fitted to this.


Side view of a dark green 1954 Jaguar XK120 convertible parked in front of a brick wall.

1954 Jaguar XK120 DHC

Sold by the Market, £41,250

Is it possible that the travails of the 21st century Jaguar have filtered down to models from the marque’s golden era? It certainly looks like it, if the paltry price paid for this runner is anything to go by.


Yellow 1996 Land Rover Discovery Camel Trophy edition with off-road gear, parked in a forest setting.

1996 Land Rover Discovery Camel Trophy

Sold by Iconic Auctioneers, £12,375

It may never have battled its way through the jungles of Borneo but this was still a genuine Camel Trophy Discovery. It didn’t take part in the event, but was built as a training vehicle.


Black 2013 Ariel Atom 3.5 parked on a paved path, showing its exposed frame and minimalist design; powered by a 2.0-litre 310bhp engine.

2013 Ariel Atom 3.5

Sold by Collecting Cars, £30,252

Ariel’s mighty Atom remains one of the most accomplished track cars on the market – and one of the most fun cars that can be driven on the road. This one had a 2-litre, 310bhp engine.


1969 Egli Vincent Black Shadow café racer motorcycle with a nickel-plated frame and polished exhaust, parked on a paved surface with greenery in the background.

1969 Egli Vincent Black Shadow

Sold by H&H, £58,075

This Vincent was built into its current café racer spec just three years ago, complete with nickel-plated Egli frame, blueprinted Black Shadow engine and a host of top-drawer components.


Beige 1972 Renault 4 Sinpar 4x4 with raised suspension and rugged tires, shown in a studio setting.

1972 Renault 4 Sinpar 4×4

Sold by WB & Sons, £8284

Who needs a Range Rover when you can have this? It’s a rare Renault 4 Sinpar 4WD. Launched in 1962 in collaboration with French off-road specialist Sinpar, the model’s high cost meant few were sold.


Dark green 1977 MGB Roadster convertible with rubber bumpers, parked on a country road with trees and hedges in the background.

1977 MGB Roadster

Sold by Hampson Auctions, £3250

Rubber bumper versions may be the least desirable of MG’s ubiquitous B – but this older restoration with fewer than 50,000 miles on the clock still offered summer fun for little money. And it came with a selection of handy spares. You know, just in case…

Forthcoming sale highlights

Bonhams, Miami, May 3
Bonhams will set out its stall to a soundtrack of Formula 1 cars as it prepares to stage its now regular sale at the Miami International Autodrome during the Miami Grand Prix. A selection of lots curated to local taste will include a Bugatti Chiron Super Sport and a Porsche 911 S/T, both from 2024, plus first and second-generation Ford GTs and a smattering of gleaming Ferraris.

Aguttes, Paris, May 4
Aguttes is set to fill the floor of the recently refurbished Grand Palais near the Champs-Élysées with a selection of more than 100 ancient and modern classics in its role as the official auction house of the Tour Auto – the celebrated regularity rally which can trace its roots back to 1899. The sale takes place on the Monday, the day of rally registration and scrutineering.

Historics auctioneers, Farnborough, May 16
The modernist terminal of Farnborough Airport will be the backdrop for this Flight of Elegance sale, which will see more than 100 lots from pre-war classics to modern supercars. The eclectic mix includes a 1960s Willys military Jeep, a 1967 Ford Mustang notchback with ‘economical’ six-pot engine and a 1976 Ford Escort RS1800 – which could fetch £250,000.

RM Sotheby’s, Lake Tegernsee, Germany, July 4
Fancy a summer road trip to the Bavarian Alps? If so, you could find yourself among the genteel crowd bidding at RM’s second auction here, being staged during the now three-year-old Concours of Elegance Germany at Lake Tegernsee. It’s a spot famed for its five-star hotels, top-notch gastronomy and spectacular driving roads. Lederhosen optional.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

Back in the 1950s the FIA was decidedly particular about the type of vehicles used for speed record attempts, insisting they should be ‘wheel driven’ as per Henry Segrave’s Golden Arrow and Malcolm Campbell’s Bluebirds.

Flying Caduceus jet car rear wheel hub and aerodynamic bodywork, historic 1960s land speed record design

1. 8ft ribbon parachute helps bring the car to a halt

But others thought it time to embrace the jet age and to push the boundaries of automotive technology in a bid to see some real speed – hence the creation of this, the Flying Caduceus, the original, purely jet-powered record car.

Flying Caduceus jet car tail panel with golden caduceus emblem, checkered flags and rocket insignia

2. Tailfin was added after the initial build to combat crosswinds

The man who made it happen was Californian physician Nathan Ostich who, together with a group of hot rodders, set out in 1958 to build a jet car that could top 500mph. Ostich put up the cash and Firestone was tasked with developing a wheel and tyre combination up to crossing the Earth at such a prodigious speed without being ripped to shreds.

Vintage aircraft cockpit with black control yoke, ‘MICROPHONE PUSH ON’ text, and analog flight gauges.

The car remains in 1960s condition – and needs a new home

While the Firestone boffins beavered away, Ostich and his team procured a General Electric J47-19 turbojet capable of producing almost 7000bhp – as used by the Convair B-36D Peacemaker bomber – fitting it inside a cylinder made from steel tubes topped with an aluminium skin.

Flying Caduceus spare GE J47 turbojet engine on display stand, historic 1960s land speed record car component

3. Spare turbojet engine for display comes with the car

The cockpit was positioned well forward in jet-plane style, while ‘handling’ was taken care of by independent suspension from a modern Chevrolet and braking by four 14in diameter discs matched to suitably large Halibrand calipers.

Flying Caduceus jet car Firestone wheel with aerodynamic disc design and sponsor decals, 1960s land speed record vehicle

4. Wheels and tyres are the very ones used at Bonneville in 1963

The Flying Caduceus – which is being sold from the collection of the National Automobile Museum in Reno, Nevada – ran at the Bonneville Salt Flats in 1960, 1962 and 1963, clocking a maximum of 359.7mph but failing to set any records.

Flying Caduceus jet car cockpit with worn black seat and vintage harness, 1960s land speed record vehicle

5. Cockpit is decidedly cosy

5. Cockpit is decidedly cosy

It did, however, establish jet power as the route to serious speed, paving the way for everything from Craig Breedlove’s Spirit of America to Richard Noble’s Thrust and Andy Green’s Thrust SSC – and that makes it a true piece of automotive history.

Flying Caduceus jet car dashboard with 700mph speedometer, RPM and exhaust gauges, 1960s land speed record cockpit

6. Speedometer is graduated up to 700mph

1960 flying caduceus On sale at Bonhams, National Automobile Museum, Nevada, June 13. No reserve. bonhams.com

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

Back in the 1960s, Austin found itself on such a roll with the Alec Issigonis-designed Mini that it set-out to capitalise on the basic format with the larger Austin/Morris/Riley/Wolseley/Vanden Plas 1100/1300 and the even larger Austin/Morris 1800.

Seldom had a car murmured ’suburban middle management’ more than the lumbering 1800, a large, heavy saloon with levels of comfort and solidity that more than made up for what it lacked in speed.

But while its stately pace and lumpen looks (penned, incidentally, by Pininfarina alongside Issigonis) may have qualified it for the ‘boring’ category, BMC’s competition department soon recognised that its bridge-like strength, front-wheel-drive grip and bump-smoothing Hydrolastic suspension provided all the ingredients for a potentially cracking rally car.

Vintage BMC green engine block with black valve cover, twin carburetors, and red ignition wires inside Austin 1800 rally car

BMC-branded engine; top up the suspension; it remains in original state

Gallery Aaldering

And so it was that five fully rally-prepped 1800s lined-up in London’s Crystal Palace on November 24, 1968 for the 11pm start of the London-Sydney Marathon, a gruelling, month-long dash that took in three whole continents. And among the five was SMO 227G, pictured here.

Assigned to the three-man Australian crew of Evan Green, George Shepheard and Jack ‘Gelignite’ Murray, the mighty ‘land crab’ (as the Austin 1800 was nicknamed) completed the titanic course in style, crossing the line in a highly respectable 21st place.

Austin 1800 SMO 227G red rally car with roof‑mounted spares, London‑Sydney Marathon and World Cup Rally veteran

Roof-mounted spare wheels

Gallery Aaldering

In fact, all five cars finished the race, with SMO 226G, crewed by Paddy Hopkirk, Tony Nash and Alec Poole, clinching second behind the winning Hillman Hunter of Andrew Cowan, Colin Malkin and Brian Coyle.

Austin 1800 rally car cockpit with vintage gauges, manual gearbox and Hydrolastic suspension pump

But SMO 227G had yet more to give. Having been left in Australia, it was then prepared by the local Leyland competition department for the 1970 World Cup Rally – an even longer jaunt which covered 16,000 miles from London to Mexico City. And once again it proved the 1800’s built-in resilience and reliability by being the 11th of just 23 cars to finish the race from an original 96-car entry.

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Perhaps deserving of a proper rest, it subsequently ended up in Gilltrap’s Auto Museum on Australia’s Gold Coast, where it remained for decades until returning to the UK in 2002.

Current owner Roy Stephenson (who also has an 1800 that served as a London-Sydney reconnaissance car) acquired SMO 227G last year with a plan to organise a full-scale re-run of the event.

A change of circumstances means that is no longer going to happen, hence this most remarkable of land crabs – the only car ever to have completed both the London-Sydney and World Cup rallies – being available for sale.

And as the pictures show, it’s in more or less the exact condition in which it finished the World Cup event 55 years ago, complete with its original, roof-mounted spare wheels, Plexiglass windows, dirt-dispersing front mud flaps and auxiliary instrumentation. Look on the parcel shelf, meanwhile, and you’ll even find the original pump for topping-up that spine-saving Hydrolastic suspension. Austin 1800s, not cool, you say? Rubbish!

1968 Austin 1800
On sale with Roy Stephenson, Northallerton. Asking: £29,950. [email protected]

Close‑up of red racing car body near rear window with scratches, fuel cap, and partial Flow By text, black and white photo.

Dealer News

Bentley back to its Brooklands best

The first grand prix at Brooklands was exactly a century ago; a few years on, this 1934 Barnato-Hassan Bentley, was making headlines on the bumpy banks by breaking lap records. It was built for ex-Bentley chairman Woolf  Barnato by the firm’s legendary engineer Wally Hassan. It’s been restored and on sale at Vintage Bentley in Hill Brow, West Sussex, £POA.

1973 Ford Escort Mk1 RS1600 works rally car in blue and white livery with Shell, Dunlop, Motul, and Lucas sponsor decals, number 2 on the door, flared arches and mud flaps, displayed at Gallery Aaldering.

Rolls-Royce has announced Coachbuild Collection, an invitation-only initiative in which the well-heeled can purchase a limited-edition all-electric car coupled with a multi-year programme of experiences – like visits to the design inner sanctum. “This is something the super-luxury world has never seen before,” said Rolls-Royce chief executive Chris Brownridge.

We may have been going doolally about WRC Lancias in Motor Sport of late but this 1973 Ford Escort RS1600 Works Rally, on sale at Gallery Aaldering in Holland, is as alluring as anything the Italians have given us. It was driven by Roger Clark in the 1973 East African Rally and has been returned to Safari spec. On sale at £170,000.

1930s vintage blue race car with aerodynamic body, wire-spoke wheels, side exhaust pipes, and open cockpit

Mileage fraud – clocking – on used cars remains rife, according to vehicle history platform CarVertical. The Nissan Qashqai tops the list with nearly 10% showing signs of odometer tampering, and an average wind-back of 15,490 miles.

Car makers were no less inventive this year with their April Fool’s jokes. Our faves? Leapmotor’s Leap Mode on its C10 uses the SUV’s EV architecture to lift it over speed humps, while Suzuki’s Pothole Protector warns “Uh-ohhh” if the car spots a divot. LG

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

Close-up portrait of driverI raced in Formula 1 for five years at a dangerous time when you knew that at least one driver on average would probably be killed or maimed each year. The 1982 season, however, stood alone as a time when the sport was changing fast and drivers were strapped into projectiles that were just downright dangerous. It proved to be one of the wildest years ever.

For me, getting the Williams drive was a fantastic opportunity, but my season as Keke Rosberg’s team-mate turned out to be a bit of a mish-mash. I showed plenty of promise, but in the end I didn’t get the results. I’ve often wondered why – and never really delved deep into the reasons until writing a book.

My first race with Williams was the Belgian Grand Prix at Zolder. During qualifying, Gilles Villeneuve was killed when he tried to pass Jochen Mass during his final do-or-die qualifying run. Villeneuve was perhaps the bravest driver in Formula 1, driving for the greatest racing team of all, Ferrari. However, in a fit of rage, following his team-mate Didier Pironi’s reneging on an agreement in the previous race at Imola, he allowed circumstances to dictate his behaviour and pushed just a little too far.

Formula 1 car rear view with Fly Saudia wing passing under Shell sign, black and white photo.

His debut race for Williams was Round 5 at Zolder – and a case of rear-brake lock-up syndrome

I was sitting in the pitlane when the red flag came out to stop the qualifying session. Nobody really knew what had happened because in those days the pitboxes didn’t have live television coverage. Through my helmet intercom I could hear Frank Williams in discussion with various people. His chief designer, Patrick Head, informed him that Villeneuve was “out of the car”. What we didn’t know at the time was how he got out of the car.

Keke led the race until a mistake on the last lap, caused by worn tyres and locking rear brakes, let John Watson through to win for McLaren. While I was running sixth, the same dreaded rear-brake lock-up syndrome that the team had been fighting struck me. The Williams FW08 was a lightweight, short-wheelbase, go-kart type of car that was prone to locking its rear brakes. I could see that Eddie Cheever was catching me in his Ligier and I braked a smidge too late on well-worn tyres. Just as with Keke a few laps later, the rear wheels locked and I slid off the road. It wasn’t a good debut.

“I suddenly saw that Pironi’s Ferrari was right in front of me”

The highlight of my 1982 season was the Monaco Grand Prix. I have always considered that the reason I didn’t win the race can be traced back to the first practice session. At one stage I was fastest in that session, before my Cosworth engine blew up. As the spare car was set up for Keke, the team rolled its fourth car (our test car) up to the pitlane for me and began to do some final preparation on it. I was never as comfortable and never as fast in that car. I qualified eighth, two places behind Keke. When everything has to go right to win in Formula 1, my destiny had already been compromised by being forced into that fourth car.

Formula 1 car number 5 with Saudia and TAG logos cornering as marshal holds flag, black and white photo.

Daly was among the points in the Detroit GP

LAT Images

After what happened in 1980, I was far too careful at the first corner and Nigel Mansell – another dreamer like me but one who went on to become world champion – slipped by in his Lotus. That became a big issue because it took me a long time to get past him. I remember catching Keke, and then, almost in slow motion, I saw his right-front wheel hit the kerb at the harbour chicane, breaking the push-rod, and the wheel begin to wave in the air as he slowed and retired from the race.

Lap after lap, I was so focused and on the limit – maybe even a bit over the limit at times because I viewed myself in catch-up mode. I could feel the car dancing across the road as I pushed harder and harder.

“As the season unfolded, the missed opportunities piled up”

When rain came with just three laps to go, I thought I could take advantage, because I was always good in the wet. The track was slippery and unpredictable. I remember seeing Alain Prost’s Renault, which had been leading, smashed in the middle of the road. What ultimately ended up costing me the race was a half-spin at Tabac corner. I was so sideways that my rear wing hit the guardrail, but the impact actually got the car straightened up and I continued on my way. I hardly missed a beat and didn’t lose any positions.

However, the knock at Tabac had severed the rear wing from its gearbox mount. I didn’t realise at the time that the oil cooler for the gearbox was attached to the wing, so as I continued round the lap, the gearbox oil pump was now depositing the all-important lubricant onto the track.

Formula 1 car number 5 with TAG and Mobil logos racing past blurred grandstands, black and white photo.

Daly’s Italian Grand Prix didn’t even last the first lap after being hit by Roberto Guerrero

LAT Images

Back then we had no radio communication between the pits and driver during the race. When I passed the pits, I could see Charlie Crichton-Stuart, Frank’s friend, waving at me to slow down because the team knew that the gearbox, without oil, would probably fail before the chequered flag. My oil spill helped me momentarily because it caused Riccardo Patrese to spin out of the lead in his Brabham. Patrese never knew why he spun until he read an interview I did 30 years later. We’ve laughed about it many times since. After Patrese’s spin, Didier Pironi’s Ferrari and Andrea de Cesaris’s Alfa Romeo had brief spells in the lead until they both had problems, Pironi with a misfiring engine and de Cesaris running out of fuel. And so, although I didn’t know it, I took the lead!

Going through Rascasse to start the last lap, I could hear the gearbox making noises. Without oil, it finally cried enough and my car ground to a halt – one lap shy of winning the Monaco Grand Prix. It was a dramatic race with numerous potential outcomes in that final period. I stepped from my car not knowing that I was leading, nor of course knowing that I would never race in Monaco again.

Three weeks later, Pironi qualified on pole position for the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal. He stalled his Ferrari engine at the start, causing mayhem as everyone tried to navigate around him. From my position of 13th on the grid, I could see that something unusual was happening, but from so low to the ground in the car I couldn’t see what it was. I was probably in third gear doing well over 100mph when I suddenly saw that Pironi’s Ferrari was stationary right in front of me. If I didn’t do something drastic, I was about to smash straight into it.

With racing engines screaming all around me, I didn’t have time to think and could only react. I yanked my steering wheel to the left and just missed Pironi’s car. In a breathless, subconscious blur, I somehow managed to avoid catastrophe. At the very moment I realised the imminent danger, Mansell was starting to draw alongside me on my left. He saw what I saw, and his mental processing told him what I was about to do to save my life. In an almost synchronised panic move, he yanked his car left as well, perfectly timed with my avoiding action, and we both swerved around the potential crash in unison.

Three Formula 1 cars racing Monaco street circuit with marshal holding flag, black and white photo.

Nigel Mansell leads Daly in Monaco – the one that got away

Sutton

Riccardo Paletti wasn’t so fortunate. He was towards the back of the grid and doing about 120mph when he came upon the stranded Ferrari. He didn’t have enough time to react and his Osella slammed into it. He suffered massive injuries and, just as the rescue workers and doctor reached him, his car exploded into flames because of a ruptured fuel cell. Paletti’s mother was in the grandstand and saw her son’s life end without him ever having completed a race in his Formula 1 career and just two days before his 24th birthday.

I was struggling to match Keke in qualifying and the trend continued at the Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort. In the race I ended up a lap down with nothing to show for my efforts except for an on-track tussle with Michele Alboreto in his Tyrrell. After the race he charged into my pit and took a swing at me, shouting, “Bastardo… next time I keel you.”

He was mad that I’d raced him so hard down the front straight and into Tarzan corner. The tussle went on for many laps and I wasn’t going to make things easy for him. Eventually I squeezed him as much as possible until we touched, and we both spun. After we gathered ourselves up, I finished fifth; he was seventh. He was livid and wanted a piece of me.

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Just four weeks later, at Hockenheim for the German Grand Prix, Pironi’s career ended violently while trying to pass me during untimed practice in wet conditions. Having qualified his Ferrari on pole position, he was testing a new prototype rain tyre for Goodyear and was over 2.5sec quicker than the next car. He was demonstrating superb pace given the conditions but made a slight misjudgement.

I was following Alain Prost’s Renault down the high-speed straight heading towards the stadium section. Pironi was catching us both. I presume all he saw was a big ball of spray. Perhaps he thought there was just one car creating the spray. As we approached the stadium right-hander, I pulled over to the right indicating that I was slowing and going to the pitlane. I can only surmise that he thought the road was now clear and he accelerated past me before realising that I was following Prost. He didn’t have time to brake sufficiently and smashed into the back of the Renault.

Two Williams FW07 cars with Saudia and TAG logos in busy pit lane, black and white photo.

Daly and Rosberg, pits, British GP

Corbis via Getty Images

As the season unfolded, the missed opportunities piled up. At the British Grand Prix at Brands Hatch I finished fifth when really I should have been on the podium. I made a pitstop for new tyres and was delayed because my tyres were somewhere other than ready to go on my car. I think Keke had stopped twice and took my tyres. This was typical of the type of support I was now receiving from the team because of the strong focus on Keke.

A week later at the French Grand Prix at Paul Ricard, I was running strongly, ahead of Keke, when I got a puncture. Frank thought that my soft-compound tyres had just gone off and elected to put me on the harder compound. That effectively killed my lap times. During qualifying at Hockenheim, I lost a front wheel on my out lap with new qualifying tyres fitted. This was a terrible mistake by the team because, at last, I was now using a more powerful Cosworth engine.

Williams had commissioned specialist engine builder John Judd, who built my Formula 3 engines, to create a single-cylinder test-bed engine to the exact measurements and specifications of a Cosworth DFV and try to modify it to get more power. Judd’s efforts were successful and, when incorporated into a race engine, delivered an extra 40bhp. This was big stuff. That much extra power would transform the outcome of every qualifying session and every race. Because the supply of these engines was limited, only Keke usually got them.

At the next race in Austria, I lost another wheel, a rear one, which caused me to switch to the spare car. At this stage of the season, it was obvious that attention to detail was sorely lacking on my car. Again I was slated to use one of the more powerful Judd-modified engines but it misfired off the startline. Someone hit me and the knock broke part of the suspension. I should never have been in that position to get hit in the first place but, with the wheel falling off my regular car, I was again forced into the spare and that caused my potential good result also to ‘fall off’.

I never out-qualified Keke until we got to the Swiss Grand Prix, held at Dijon in France, but it wasn’t a legitimate effort. There was a section of the track where, if you missed your braking point, you could simply go through the run-off area and rejoin after a massive shortcut. I was running about 6sec behind Watson when I went through this run-off area. I stopped my car and waited for Watson to pass before resuming, now only about 3sec behind him. By the time I flashed across the start/finish line, the electronic transponder timing system had no idea what had happened, and my sizzling lap time was officially registered.

To get away with something like that, a confluence of circumstances had to align. Normally when a car missed a chunk of the track, the flag marshals posted there would report it to race control via radio, and the lap would be deleted. My guess is that the marshals’ post at this particular position didn’t have a radio connection, or it wasn’t working properly, and consequently a quirky qualifying time was recorded forever. At the end of qualifying, I told Charlie Crichton-Stuart what had happened and he immediately insisted that nobody tell Keke. Ironically, Keke scored his only win of the season that weekend.

Close‑up of Formula 1 driver in cockpit wearing Daly Ireland helmet and orange gloves, black and white photo.

Was Daly given equal footing at Williams with the team hellbent on Rosberg winning the title?

Corbis via Getty Images

Unfulfilled promise continued at the Italian Grand Prix at Monza when Roberto Guerrero clattered into the back of me at the first chicane immediately after the start. That left just the final race, in Las Vegas, where I was again at a disadvantage without the more potent Judd engine. I had a good run to finish sixth while Keke’s fifth place allowed him to claim the world championship title.

I often wondered whether the playing field was level for me. I’d raced against Keke Rosberg in Formula 2 and never had trouble being at least as fast as him and mostly faster. Yet, in qualifying in the Williams I wasn’t even close to him. I didn’t suddenly forget how to drive and, likewise, Keke didn’t suddenly unleash something he’d never displayed before.

In Detroit, Patrick Head said to me that the team would have to work harder to get me qualified closer to the front. He recognised that my lap times during the races were much closer to Keke’s and often better. Those words were hollow because he never followed through to ensure that I at least had a fair shot.

Unfortunately, I never clicked with Patrick like Keke did, or certain other drivers did. I don’t think he ever liked or respected me. I still remember an off-the-cuff remark he made about me ruining his aluminium chassis with salt residue because I perspired so much. Al Unser Jr tested for Williams on one occasion and also came away with a dislike for Patrick.

Keke was undoubtedly lightning-fast, but he didn’t suddenly gain that ability during qualifying. I often wondered why I appeared to struggle. I don’t know the full answer, but after some careful research I have a good idea.

At the end of my Formula 1 career, a lingering question hung over me for years: how did Keke Rosberg suddenly appear to get significantly faster than me in qualifying in ’82? Many years later I delved into the numbers.

“Williams was slowly killing off my F1 career by favouring Keke”

At Williams I competed against Keke 12 times. To all intents and purposes, he out-qualified me every time, if I overlook my illegitimate lap at Dijon. Frank Williams invested heavily in engines because by this time turbocharged engines – as used in 1982 by Brabham (BMW), FerrariRenault and Toleman (Hart) – definitely had the advantage. When he commissioned John Judd to modify the team’s Cosworth DFV engines, the result was the impressive power increase. It wasn’t until the seventh of my 12 races, in France, that I had use of a Judd-modified engine complete with its game-changing chunk of power in the back.

The 1982 season was also the year of underweight cars. There was turmoil going on between the turbo-equipped teams and the normally aspirated teams in a bid for supremacy and the weight limit of 580kg favoured the turbo teams. Some normally aspirated teams found a way to circumvent this limit. As the rules in place at the start of the season allowed cars to be replenished with cooling liquids after qualifying and the race before being weighed by the scrutineers, Brabham and Williams came up with the idea of ‘water-cooled brakes’ as a means to run lightweight cars that were way under the weight limit. First used at the Brazilian Grand Prix, this trick involved fitting a water tank that was quickly emptied – supposedly for cooling the brakes – once out on track. In Brazil, water-cooled brakes allowed Nelson Piquet to win on the road for Brabham (still with a Cosworth engine early in the season) and Keke to finish second for Williams.

Formula 1 car number 5 with Saudia and TAG logos racing past spectators, black and white photo.

Daly survived the season, but the casualty rate in ’82 was high, leading to regulation changes

LAT Images

Although water-cooled brakes were banned before I got to Williams, there was still an understanding that the new short-wheelbase Williams FW08 was able to run underweight.

As Niki Lauda observed, the problem with the water-cooled brakes saga was that Frank’s new car was too quick too soon, and its times in Keke’s hands got tongues wagging. If it had been only, say, 20kg under the 580kg limit, perhaps nothing would have been said, but the advantage was much more than that. When the water-cooled brakes were banned, the advantage was still there, but not as much as before. Anyway, the lightweight cars were built and available for combat, and it was common knowledge that Williams had one of the lightest and used it often for key laps. How else can you explain Keke’s speed during qualifying?

An overall view of my season at Williams could be summed up as poor qualifying. That meant that in the races I got caught up in other people’s accidents and had to strain the car and tyres too much too soon to try to get good results – just like in Formula 1 today. But why was I suddenly so bad in qualifying? Remember, I already had a track record against some of the fastest drivers in Formula 1, as with Pironi and Jean-Pierre Jarier when we were teamed together at Tyrrell in 1979–80.

In our first race together at Zolder, Keke was 2.3sec faster than me in qualifying, but his fastest race lap was 0.2sec faster. Why wasn’t he able to produce the same scintillating form in the race? Being 2.3sec faster in qualifying is impossible unless my car had something seriously wrong with it – which it didn’t. If Frank thought I was 2.3sec slower than Keke, he should have fired me – but he didn’t.

At Detroit, my third race with Williams, he was 2sec faster than me in qualifying, yet only 0.06sec faster in the race. Although on that occasion I was told that my car had a broken shock absorber during qualifying, the pattern was nonetheless the same. This race was held in two legs because of an early red-flag stoppage. I performed strongly and actually caught and passed Keke in the second leg, but the deficit from the first leg gave him a finishing position ahead of me, fourth to my fifth.

At Brands Hatch, one of my favourite tracks, he was 1.4sec faster than me in qualifying, but I was a second faster than him in the race. He didn’t forget what to do overnight and, likewise, I didn’t bring a bag of magic with me on race day. No one knew Brands better than me and certainly not Keke. No one in Formula 1 was 1.4sec faster than me at Brands in equal cars. If Frank thought that I was, in addition to what happened at Zolder, he should have sacked me there and then. He would have been justified.

Instead, when I look back today, Williams was slowly killing off my Formula 1 career by favouring Keke so heavily. Williams’s original driver choice for the No5 car, Carlos Reutemann, ended his own career with his sudden retirement two races into the season, and then his replacement driver was also systematically marginalised by the team.

At the French Grand Prix, Keke was a second faster than me in qualifying, but his best race lap was slower than mine. What might explain his meteoric form in qualifying? Was there a special (lightweight) qualifying car and more powerful Judd-modified engine available to him? Knowing what the facts scream, most people would say: “Yes.” It appears that my career was being sabotaged.

In race trim I was faster than Keke in Monaco, Canada, Britain and France. In Detroit, Holland and Germany, my race fastest lap was less than a tenth slower than his. By the time of the last race in Las Vegas, chatter about a lightweight qualifying car for Keke was pretty open. The secret was out. Las Vegas was an anomaly as I was 0.53sec slower than him in qualifying and 0.46sec slower in the race.

Considering that I lost a wheel during qualifying in Germany and again in practice in Austria, would it not be fair to question car preparation on my side of the garage? Then there were two first-corner collisions that took me out in Austria and Italy, both instances where my handicapped qualifying performance put me further down the grid and in a vulnerable position in the first-lap mayhem.

I believe the facts show that Frank and Patrick sacrificed my career and the constructors’ championship for focus on Keke. On reflection, in one key respect this didn’t make sense from the financial point of view because, just as it is today, most of the prize money was paid according to finishing position in the constructors’ championship.

I understand that I wasn’t their first choice for the seat – Reutemann was – and in a situation like that I was always going to have to do something special to win over their confidence. With what I now believe happened, however, that was all but impossible.

Book cover showing Derek Daly in racing suit with title Serial Survivor and Formula 1 car image, black and white photo.

Extracted from Serial Survivor, by Derek Daly, published by Evro Publishing, on sale in May priced £60 ISBN 9781918070033

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Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

Grayscale portrait of bald man with short white beard wearing plain T‑shirt, isolated background.

Olivier Panis has always struck me as a man of charming contradictions. Whenever I have met him, which has been often over the past 30-odd years, particularly during his Formula 1 career, he has always been polite, warm and funny. He is the sort of fellow with whom dinner is washed down with good claret and, now that he is retired, might easily drift into immoderate laughter over a second bottle.

Yet beneath the easy grin lies a hard edge. He was fearless in a racing car and, by his own admission, he is capable of real steel when circumstances demand it. In his F1 heyday he was also, shall we say, not entirely averse to the occasional airborne celebration – those who flew home from grands prix on Air France in those days will remember the business-class cabins sometimes becoming rather lively places once the champagne corks had begun to fly.

He was also quick, very quick, but fate offered him only one genuine shot at grand prix victory. When that moment arrived, in the wet-dry-wet 1996 Monaco Grand Prix, he seized it with both hands. Three decades later his bittersweet tale still has the power to shock: unlikely triumph in Monte Carlo followed 13 months later by near-tragedy in the Canadian Grand Prix. He has plenty to say about both those days.

Young child driving small vintage go‑kart on paved surface near building, black and white photo.

Oliver Panis behind the wheel at four years old; despite the smile, it wasn’t fast enough for him

Sygma/Ercole Colombo via Getty Images

But, first, let us go back to the beginning. He smiles as he recalls the boy he once was. “I was a good kid, quite quiet, pretty easy-going, not naughty, but I never liked people giving me shit. I’m still like that actually” – and there, straight away, you see evidence of the hard edge and the real steel that I mentioned earlier.

He was born in Lyon, the son of a mechanic. “I have one sister, four years younger than me. My father is 85 and my mother is 80. My dad, Philippe, ran a garage. I spent a lot of time there when I was growing up, helping him. I fell in love with cars very young. We were working on normal cars, not fast cars: Renaults, Peugeots, Citroëns.”

Formula racing car number 12 with Elf and Gitanes logos speeding on track, blurred background, black and white photo.

Runner-up in French Formula 3, 1991

Despite the humdrum nature of the motors on which young Olivier was cutting his automotive teeth, motor sport was also part of his environment. “My father did some hillclimbs in a Ferrari [a CeggaFerrari V12 to be precise], which he bought from a guy in Switzerland, Georges Gachnang, starting in the late 1960s, soon after I was born. So I was exposed to racing from very young, and I first tried a go-kart when I was just four years old. I didn’t like it much, because it was a kids’ go-kart, pretty slow. But six years later, when I was 10, when I tried a faster kart, I loved it, and I was immediately quite good.”

“At Interlagos in 1994, only one F1 driver came up to me, welcomed me, and that was Senna”

The father-and-son apprenticeship that followed was classic grassroots motor racing. “My dad was my kart mechanic for three years, I started getting podiums and wins, and when I was 13 we were contacted by Tony Kart. I raced a gearbox Tony Kart after that, entering the world championship, and the best driver I was racing at that time was [Gabriele] Tarquini. Actually, I was heading for the world championship one year, 1982 I think it was, but my engine exploded on the second-to-last lap. I was always super-unlucky in karts.”

He was a teenager in the golden age of French F1, when Tricolores seemed to flutter everywhere in grand prix paddocks. “I loved all the French guys in F1 at the time – and there were so many – [Alain] Prost, [Patrick] Depailler, [Jacques] Laffite, [Jean-Pierre] Jarier, [Jean-Pierre] Jabouille, [René] Arnoux, [Patrick] Tambay, [Didier] Pironi – but at that time, in my teens, I didn’t know much about any other series to be honest. So my heroes were those French drivers – then, a bit later, [Ayrton] Senna of course and also [Nigel] Mansell. I always loved Mansell.”

formula3000_spa_podium_avon_winner

A first taste of racing success arrived in 1993 when Panis won the International Formula 3000 title with DAMS – including a Spa win

When he finally made it to F1, one of those heroes made a quiet gesture that he has never forgotten. “When I started in F1, at Interlagos in 1994, only one F1 driver came up to me, welcomed me, and was interested to say hello to me, and that was Senna. That meant a hell of a lot to me, and I can say that he was a brilliant driver – obviously – but also a fantastic person. Honestly, he was one of the best human beings I ever met in F1.”

Before that, Panis’s journey through the junior formulae had been brisk and purposeful: French Formula Renault champion in 1989, runner-up in French Formula 3 two years later, then the big one, the International Formula 3000 title in 1993. “Up to then I’d been supported by Elf, Gitanes and Gauloises in Formula Renault and Formula 3, then the cigarette sponsorship laws changed, so before the 1992 season [Jean-Paul] Driot [the DAMS boss] asked me how much budget I had. Well, I didn’t have enough for Formula 3000, and I told him that. But he told me not to worry, and he arranged support from not only Elf but also the French government, then he said to me: ‘You have one year to learn, and one year to win. If you don’t win in the second year, you’ll be going home.’

“I ended up P14 in qualifying. It was painful. But I said, ‘Don’t worry. Tomorrow we’ll score points’”

“It was tough, but it was fair, and I did it – and, after that, the Elf guys arranged for me to have a Formula 1 test at Paul Ricard, with Ligier, against [Éric] Bernard and [Emmanuel] Collard. So it was a shootout. I was quickest, and Ligier chose Éric and me to race for them in 1994.”

formula came in 1994

A shift up to Formula 1 came in 1994, with Panis showing his potential with a second-placed finish in the German GP – his first F1 points in the bag

Sutton

Thus began Panis’s F1 career with Ligier, a once sporadically brilliant team now well past its prime. “Well, 1994 was hard, because Ligier was in a bad situation financially by then, and my contract was race-by-race, so I never knew whether I was going to race each weekend until just a few days before. But I did an OK job in those circumstances, especially for a rookie. I learned fast and Éric was a fantastic team-mate, older and more experienced than me, and he helped me a lot. At Hockenheim I finished second, my first F1 podium, which was a bit lucky but still great, and I also scored points in Budapest and Adelaide, so when [Flavio] Briatore then bought the team he gave me a proper two-year contract for 1995 and 1996, because he said I’d been doing a good job.”

Momentum came. “Yes, ’95 was a good season – second in Adelaide and I delivered good points finishes in BarcelonaMontrealSilverstoneBudapest and Suzuka.”

Then there was Monaco in 1996, that improbable Sunday in May when chaos, bravery, instinct and a pinch of providence collided magnificently. “In the two races before Monaco –Nürburgring and Imola – I’d failed to finish. But before Monaco I’d been testing at Nogaro, working on high-downforce configurations with the Ligier guys and engine driveability with the Mugen-Honda guys, and I thought our car was going to be not too bad for Monaco. So I was confident that I’d be able to score points, but no more.”

Alain Prost was a fantastic world champion, but being a team principal is a totally different thing”

Practice suggested promise; qualifying delivered frustration. “In first practice I was sixth – pretty good – then in second practice only P13, but the car still felt OK. Then in quali we were unlucky. In those days you had four sets of tyres, and four quali runs therefore, and I was right up there after the first run. Then I had an electronics issue on the second run. We tried to fix it, but we couldn’t, so that spoiled my third run as well. We had a spare car, but [Pedro] Diniz [Panis’s Ligier team-mate] had crashed his race car so he was in the spare car. I was waiting for my chance to have a go in the spare car, then Pedro crashed that, too. So I ended up P14. It was painful. My engineers were upset – one of the Japanese guys was even crying – but I said, ‘Don’t worry. Tomorrow we’ll score points.’ To be honest I only said it to try to lift their spirits.”

Ligier JS43 car number 9 with Gauloises logos as driver waves French flag in victory, black and white photo.

Jubilant Panis at the 1996 Monaco Grand Prix, with flag, having started from 14th on the grid

LAT Images

The next morning the clouds hung low over Monte Carlo. “Overnight they’d found and fixed the electrical problem, and the next day I was quickest of everyone in the warm-up. I said to my wife, Anne, ‘I’m going to get a podium today.’ To be honest, she laughed at me, because no one gets a podium at Monaco from P14 on the grid.”

What followed will go down in history as one of the sport’s most remarkable races. “It was wet at the start and, after being quickest in the warm-up, I was very confident, in spite of the rain. I asked to have the car completely full-up with fuel, so as to be able go long on the first stint, which the engineers thought was a bad idea, but I persuaded them. At the start the track surface was very slippery, but the car felt good, I felt good, and I overtook half a dozen cars very early on – [Mika] Häkkinen, [Martin] Brundle, a few others too – and there were plenty of shunts ahead of me.”

Three Formula 1 drivers on podium with trophies, center in Parmalat suit raising cap, black and white photo.

Monaco was Panis’s first and only F1 win; just three cars finished the race, with David Coulthard and Johnny Herbert trailing

Then came the crucial moment. “Around lap 30, the track began to dry, and I saw that [Damon] Hill, who was leading in the Williams, was making a pitstop to switch to slicks, and I said, ‘I want slicks now.’ The engineers weren’t convinced, but I insisted. So we made a pitstop, and I went back out onto the circuit in P4, behind Hill, who was leading, [Jean] Alesi [Benetton] in second, and [Eddie] Irvine [Ferrari] in third. Everyone knows how hard it is to overtake at Monaco, but I thought I’d have a chance against Eddie. I grabbed it at the Loews hairpin, and it was a risky move, because nine times out of 10 you end up in the barrier if you try to overtake there, but I managed it, so now I was third, with more than half the laps still to run.”

The race, as so often in Monaco’s labyrinth, was far from finished with him. “After that, I said to myself, ‘Wow! I’m in P3,’ which I could never have predicted, so I decided to start pushing very, very hard. Then, on lap 39, I saw smoke again, and it was Hill, whose engine had blown, and my engineer said, ‘Be careful on Damon’s oil.’ But by the time I’d heard that message it was too late, and, at the exit of the Tunnel, I’d spun on Damon’s oil. I was so lucky. I did a 360-degree spin, I hit nothing, and I got going again. So now I was in second, behind Alesi, who was now leading.”

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Then fate intervened again. “Twenty laps later Alesi stopped with suspension damage, and I was in the lead. But [David] Coulthard [McLaren] wasn’t far behind me, so I had to keep my speed up.” Fuel anxiety added one last twist. “A few laps from the end, my engineer told me I was running low on fuel, and that I would need to make a splash-and-dash pitstop. I said, ‘No way!’ We had a discussion, and I said, ‘No, I’m leading the Monaco Grand Prix. Maybe I can win it. If I splash and dash, I definitely won’t win it. Tell me how much fuel I have to use per lap, and I’ll drive to make it work.’ And, lap by lap, I began to work out how to make it work – changing gears early, not using sixth gear at all, lifting and coasting, all that – and I also knew that the two-hour-limit rule would apply. The race was scheduled for 78 laps, but the two hours came after 75 laps. That helped us, and we won.”

Two team members in Gauloises uniforms smiling and lifting large trophy together, black and white photo.

Panis and Prost, Spanish GP ’97

Gilles Levent/DPPI

Even the victory lap was touched by theatre. “On the parade lap, as I drove down towards Mirabeau from Casino, a French guy stepped onto the track and gave me a French flag – Le Tricolore – and I waved it as I drove around the rest of the lap, then I stopped in the pits. When, later, one of our mechanics tried to fire up the engine, he couldn’t do it, because the fuel tank was completely empty. So I was a lucky boy in many ways – I nearly spun off, I nearly ran out of fuel – but I’d won the Monaco Grand Prix, and it was a special day. It was a special day in many ways in fact.”

“There was a lot of potential at Toyota. We had good resources, good facilities and good people”

How special? “Very special. Look, I don’t want to compare myself to Senna – never – but that day I think I felt a little bit like what he described when he drove that amazing pole lap at Monaco in 1988. You know: an out-of-body experience almost.”

His win changed everything. “Oh yes, totally. Everything was different for me after that. Everyone in F1, and outside F1 too, suddenly saw me in a new light. It changed my life completely, honestly.”

The following year began brightly with Prost Grand Prix, which was Ligier renamed. “Yes, that 1997 Prost was a really good car – well, let’s be honest, it was basically a Benetton copy – and that 1997 Bridgestone was a really good tyre. So that could have been a very good season for me.

“Actually, I could have won in Barcelona that year. I was in second place, 10sec behind [Jacques] Villeneuve’s Williams with 15 laps to go, and catching him fast, when I came up to lap Irvine’s Ferrari. Even though the marshals waved blue flags at him, he didn’t let me pass him for seven laps, and by that time he’d delayed me, and Villeneuve was now 16sec ahead. I drove like crazy after that – flat-out – taking 1.5sec per lap off Jacques, but by the end I was still just over 5sec behind him. That should have been a win. I went to see Eddie afterwards, and I said, ‘That was ridiculous.’ He laughed, then he said, ‘I’m sorry.’ But, you know, that was Eddie.”

Two Gauloises Formula 1 cars racing side by side with Marlboro banners in background, black and white photo.

By 1998, Panis was driving under the Prost banner alongside Jarno Trulli, but neither driver had much trust in the car

Sutton

At that stage the F1 drivers’ standings looked improbably promising. “I was lying third in the world championship as we arrived in Canada. Could I have been champion that year? No, I don’t think so, but I would have done well, a few podiums, perhaps a couple of wins. Maybe I could have finished in the top three.” Instead came a crash in the 1997 Canadian Grand Prix, violent enough to fracture both his legs and threaten his entire career.

“I always knew this sport was dangerous. Where I crashed was a high-speed section of the Montreal circuit, and both my legs were broken. My first thought was: can I move? I wanted to know whether or not I’d been paralysed. So I started to try to get out of the car, then the marshals helped me onto the grass beside the track, then an ambulance arrived, then a helicopter, and off I went.”

He was remarkably calm. “I could see that my right leg was in trouble – worse than my left – but I knew that I wasn’t paralysed because I could feel and move my body. So it was bad, yes, but I wasn’t panicking. And when I got to the hospital I asked the surgeon, ‘Will I be able to race again?’ And he said, ‘Your left leg isn’t too bad, but we’ll have to be careful with how we treat your right leg over the next 24 hours, but, yes, I don’t see why you shouldn’t recover well enough to race again one day.’ After that I felt almost OK. I felt pain, yes, and I realised that healing would take some time, but my focus was already on racing again, and I’d been told that it might be possible. So, yes, I felt OK.”

Person performing abdominal crunch on towel with trainer supervising in gym, black and white photo.

Physiotherapy followed after Panis’s potentially career-ending collision in the 1997 Canadian GP

Sygma via Getty Images

It was here that Panis’s character revealed its iron core. I ask him whether he is a hard man, and he chuckles then shrugs. “I think I am. I’m a nice person, an easy person, but I can be tough when I need to be. If you try to fight me, you’re dead.”

His comeback later that 1997 season was almost absurdly brave. “Before Nürburgring I did a test in an F3 car at Paul Ricard, then another test in my Prost F1 car at Magny-Cours. The F3 test was fine but painful. I did 50 laps, no problem. And at Magny-Cours, in my Prost F1 car, I said to myself, ‘If I can’t take the left-hander after the pits flat-out on my second flying lap, I won’t return to F1.’ Alain [Prost] told me not to be a hero, to take things easy, but, no, I was determined to set myself that challenge. Well, I did it: I was flat through that corner on my second flying lap, and eventually I’d matched the lap record.”

Even then the pain lingered. “After a while the discomfort was so bad in my right foot that I knew it would be difficult for me to press the brake pedal with enough power to be quick over a whole race distance, so my engineer made a wide brake pedal for me, so that I could brake with both feet. I used that wide brake pedal at Nürburgring and Suzuka, and I braked with two feet in both those races. I’ve never revealed that publicly before. It was weird, but it worked, and I finished sixth at Nürburgring, which was a good comeback.” I think we can regard that as something of an understatement. It had been an astonishingly plucky return.

Toyota Formula 1 driver in car with team preparing in garage, Panasonic and Bridgestone logos visible, black and white photo.

F1 testing at Jerez in Spain with Toyota in December 2006 – his final few hours as the team’s test driver

LAT Images

Prior to his Montreal shunt there had been conversations, he reveals quietly, “with both McLaren and Ferrari about a race drive in 1998”. The accident scuppered all that, so he remained at Prost. The 1998 Prost was “a very shit car, the most shit car I ever drove in F1. But I was happy to have [Jarno] Trulli as a team-mate, because he’s a lovely guy and one of the quickest qualifiers I’ve seen. In Barcelona that year, 1998, he whispered to me, ‘Olive [a nickname used by all Olivier’s mates to this day], I’m scared of this car.’ I replied, ‘Don’t worry, so am I.’ It was awful.”

Unsurprisingly, relations within the team grew strained. “Things became difficult with Alain, because he was a fantastic world champion, but being a team principal is a totally different thing. We didn’t always agree about what would be the best way to cope with this difficult situation, and in Montreal I walked out of a briefing because he and I had an argument and I was so angry. Anyway, enough already. It was a terrible year.”

Three drivers in black and green suits celebrating on LMP2 car number 29 in pit lane, black and white photo.

Panis Racing triumphed in April’s European Le Mans Series 2026 season opener at Barcelona

Paulo Maria/Xavi Bonilla/DPPI

Then, amid the usual whirl of Monaco week in 1999, life dealt him a very different blow. “I didn’t have a manager at the time, but I had a lawyer, Peter Poeliejoe-Vewald. He mostly worked in the movie business, not in racing, but I knew him and I liked him. He, my wife Anne, and I had dinner together in Monaco on the Tuesday evening, he was fine, and we had a good time. We said goodbye after the meal and he said, ‘See you tomorrow.’ I didn’t see him the next day, which was a bit odd, but the Cannes Film Festival was happening that week, so I thought maybe he’d changed his mind and gone to Cannes instead of to Monaco. But when I didn’t see him on Thursday, or even Friday, I began to get worried. So Anne called Peter’s wife and asked her where Peter was. ‘Peter’s dead,’ she replied. ‘He had a heart attack on Wednesday.’ It was a big, big shock.”

Management thereafter came from two formidable figures – Keke Rosberg and Didier Coton – although Rosberg had initially declined the job. “Basically, Keke said no to me in 1999 because I’d said no to him in 1993, when he’d asked me if I wanted to be managed by him before. But that’s Keke, and in the end I had a great time with him. He’s my kind of driver, and my kind of guy. Didier was great, too.”

In 2000 Panis made a move that was radical at the time: stepping back from racing to become test driver for McLaren. “It was my idea,” he remembers. “I’d had an offer for IndyCar from Pat Patrick Racing, but, on reflection, I wanted to stay in F1. So I said to Didier, ‘You and Keke are well in with Ron [Dennis, the McLaren team principal], and I want to have the experience of driving a top F1 car, which I’ve never done before, so why don’t you suggest me to him as third driver, reserve driver and test driver?’”

The plan worked. “When I got to McLaren, I absolutely loved it. It was brilliant. Ron was great, Adrian [Newey, technical director] was great, Mansour [Ojjeh, senior shareholder] was great, Martin [Whitmarsh, chief operating officer] was great, and Mika [Häkkinen], David [Coulthard], and it was like a little family. It was amazing, and driving the car – wow! – it was fantastic. I tested it over 28,000km [17,400 miles] that year –wonderful! Also that was the year that we developed McLaren’s simulator, which was state-of-the-art. I remember this young boy had a go in it. Lewis Hamilton was his name.”

Motorsport team member in headset and Milwaukee‑logo hoodie with blurred racing backdrop, black and white photo.

The testing renaissance earned him a return to F1 racing with BAR in 2001. “Well, yes, in late 2000 I went to see Bernie [Ecclestone] in the FOM [Formula One Management] offices in London. I told him my situation – that I wanted to race in F1 again – and he said, ‘F1 needs a French driver, give me a week.’ And exactly a week later [Craig] Pollock [the BAR boss] called me.”

I suggest that those BAR seasons were unspectacular, not least because Panis’s team-mate Villeneuve always had preferential treatment. “Well, yes, but I still enjoyed my two years there,” he replies, unwilling to dish any dirt, “and I scored a few points even though our cars weren’t great. OK, the team was built around Jacques, you’re right, and he was obviously therefore the number one and I was obviously therefore the number two, but we pushed together in a difficult situation and he never did me any harm.”

Panis’s final F1 chapter unfolded with Toyota. “There was a lot of potential there, because we had good resources, good facilities and good people. Also, by that time I’d been with Japanese people so many times – with Mugen-Honda at Ligier, with Honda at BAR and now with Toyota – that I’d learned how to work well with them. I had a few good results with Toyota – points finishes in MontrealMagny-Cours and Hockenheim in 2003, then more points finishes at Monaco and Indy in 2004. Then at the end of 2004 I asked the Toyota bosses, ‘Do you think we’re going to have a car good enough to win the world championship in 2005?’ They said, ‘No, probably not.’ So I thought to myself, ‘Well, I’ve probably done enough.’ So I decided to stop racing. I was the Toyota test driver in 2005 and 2006, though, which was good money, and I still enjoyed driving F1 cars, so I was happy to do it.”

Retirement did not suit him. “In 2007, my first year of pure relaxing, I became depressed. OK, I enjoyed being with my family at home in Grenoble, but I missed being busy. I missed excitement, too. Anne noticed – and, at the end of 2007, she said, ‘I think you need to get involved with racing again.’”

Soon he was competing in the Trophée Andros alongside his old sparring partner, Prost. “He asked me if I wanted to join him, and I said, ‘Yes, for sure.’ So I was his team-mate at first, then I did it for many years, and I really enjoyed it, but it wasn’t enough because it was a winter-only series.

“Then one day I bumped into [Hugues] de Chaunac [the ORECA chief executive], we got chatting, and that’s how I ended up doing four Le Mans 24 Hours [2008-2011] and some other endurance races. I really enjoyed them, but by the end, 2011, I was 45, and after that I stepped back a bit, and I did only the French GT championship from 2012 to 2015.”

After that, Olivier finally hung up his distinctive red, white and blue helmet, and instead he embraced team management. “I started Panis Racing. But I delegated the running of the team to others and it worked, and 10 years later it’s still working. OK, I still attend every race and every test and I’m fully engaged, but I don’t run the team from a hands-on point of view. It’s great.”

What else floats his boat? “Anne and I recently celebrated 30 years of marriage –and we’d been together for 10 years before that, so that’s 40 years,” he says. “My kids [Aurélien, Caroline and Laurène] are grown up and successful, and I’m a grandfather, too. I’m fit and well. I run every day. I do a few speaking engagements. I’m busy. I’m a lucky man. I sometimes go to F1 races still – not often though – and when I do I always think to myself: ‘I was in F1 at the best time.’”

Perhaps that is the essence of Olivier Panis: lucky, yes, but also brave, stubborn, quick and generous of spirit. F1 has always been fondest of its heroes who win often. Yet sometimes it produces another kind: the man who wins rarely but memorably, perhaps even whose single triumph echoes for decades because it was seized with nerve, intelligence and heart.

When the Monaco harbour glitters in the spring sunshine and the ghosts of past races drift in off the Med, one can still picture a bleu de France Ligier barrelling its way through a chaotic grand prix, an excited Panis in the cockpit, a driver who learned that day, and would never forget, that opportunities in F1 make hens’ teeth seem common. When his moment arrived, he did what a true racer always does. He took it.

CV

BORN: 02/09/1966, LYON, FRANCE

1988-89 French Formula Renault – 4th in first season; champion in 1989.

1990-91 Moves to French Formula 3 – 4th in ’90, second in ’91.

1992-93 International Formula 3000; in second season wins title with DAMS.

1994-95 Big-time beckons with F1 seat at Ligier; one podium in ’94, one in ’95.

1996 In third season at Ligier, wins Monaco GP after starting from 14th.

1997-99 Two podiums while driving for Prost. Breaks both legs after shunt at Canadian GP in ’97; misses seven races.

2000 Test driver at McLaren.

2001-02 At BAR; best result 4th in Brazil.

2003-04 Toyota – final F1 team.

2005 Toyota test driver; retires in 2007.

2008-11 The comeback. Trophée Andros and Le Mans – 5th in ’09 and ’11.
l 2012-15 French GT Championship.

2012-15 French GT Championship.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

Light tan military helmet with fabric neck guard and leather chin strap, black and white photo.

1952 Stirling Moss

To me Stirling Moss and his Herbert Johnson crash helmet are almost indivisible. I love the fact that he has signed it with more than his usual care – most of his signatures were little more than a quick scrawl – and that the patina of all those years and work is so clear to see. I love too that this helmet, or at least its design, meant so much to him that he continued to use it while racing historics into his eighties. Whether he had special dispensation to wear a helmet that would have passed no modern safety test, or whether organisers simply looked the other way, I cannot say. But the fact it was so important to him, and formed so much of his identity as a racing driver, cannot be doubted.

Andrew Frankel

Worn red racing helmet with Römer and AGV logos, scratched visor and chipped paint, black and white photo.

1976 Niki Lauda

Flicking through this brilliant book is an amazing walk down memory lane for fans of the history of the sport. Seeing Niki Lauda’s helmet from his 1976 crash at the Nürburgring, and the scars from the fire from which he miraculously recovered, is probably the obvious standout. But I particularly love the story around the helmet used by José Froilán González, the first F1 World Championship race winner for Ferrari, and that he extraordinarily wore the same one for 10 years! Contrast that to someone like Lewis Hamilton today, who will probably go through 40 helmets this season alone. It’s incredible to think that they just drilled some holes in it for ventilation. Different times indeed.

Karun Chandhok

White helmet with short brim and multicolor band around circumference, worn surface, black and white photo.

1963 Jackie Stewart

The Jackie Stewart tartan helmet was instantly recognisable to anyone of infant school age in the early 1970s to be growing an obsession with motor sport. But, of course, that was the newfangled full-face job, the pattern spray-painted on. What is remarkable about this primitive peaked open-face lid from 1963 is the DIY ethos, the Royal Stewart tartan applied via a silk ribbon apparently stuck on by wife Helen. Extraordinary to think that this was just a decade before he retired as a three-time world champion, a stark and sobering illustration of the dangers Stewart campaigned so vociferously to negate from a sport that cost him so many friends.

Marcus Simmons

Black and red racing helmet with Marlboro, Labatt, and Matra logos, visor and balaclava visible, black and white photo.

1979 Gilles Villeneuve

My choice is the Gilles Villeneuve Simpson RX-1 from 1979. This Star Wars-style helmet subsequently became quite popular but I was not aware of Villeneuve ever having used one. The book tells us that he tried it during testing at Fiorano in ’79 at the instigation of Bill Simpson but he decided to stick with Bell subsequently. Villeneuve was my last hero as a fan, just a totally inspirational character, almost like he’d been invented as the epitome of everything admirable in the genus of racing driver, with talent beyond calibration and a refusal to accept mediocrity.

Mark Hughes

White racing helmet with orange stripe and name Jody in blue letters, worn visor, black and white photo.

1974 Jody Scheckter

I was sitting in the Clark Curve grandstand at Brands Hatch in 1974 when Jody Scheckter’s helmet first fixed itself in my imagination. He won that British Grand Prix, the first I had ever attended, and it struck me even then as graphically iconic, its papaya and white echoing the McLaren of his F1 debut yet complementing the blue of the Tyrrell that he was manhandling to victory before my rapt 11-year-old eyes. Its design clarity made the identity of its wearer instantly clear: no frills, no fripperies, just purity and purpose. Thus began my lifelong love affair with F1’s speed, beauty and danger, all distilled in one unforgettable crash hat, forever bright in my memory.

Matt Bishop

Brown leather football helmet with stitching, chin straps, and padded ridge, black and white photo.

1930s Tazio Nuvolari

As a kid I spent much time devouring books of motor racing history. They left me with tremendous regard for the diminutive Italian champion of the 1930s, Tazio Nuvolari. Ill health forced him out of racing by the time hard-shelled crash helmets became mandatory in 1952, but through the later years of his long career he had favoured this soft red-leather racing cap tailored for him by Fumagalli of Milan. Author Joe Twyman reminds us that their slogan was ‘A man with class wears Fumagalli’. No racing driver displayed more class – more courage – than ‘Nivola’, ‘Il Mantovano Volante’. He drove his heart out in almost anything on four wheels to win the the Mille Miglia, the Targa Florio and the RAC TT twice each. He also won Le Mans, the Vanderbilt Cup, the 1938 Donington GP, plus myriad more trophies. To view his favoured leather helmet, to touch it, is for some an almost religious experience. Count me among the faithful.

Doug Nye

White racing helmet with red and blue stripes, black visor, chin strap, name Martin in red, black and white photo.

1985 Martin Brundle

My choice is obvious, but so is the helmet. Absolutely every helmet my father or I have ever used has stemmed from this design. I love it because it’s basic but also reflects the realities of racing. The colours are based on the cheapest and most abundant available at the paint shop of the Kings Lynn auto dealership. The white top is intended to keep the driver cool by reflecting the sun in hotter climates. Still looks as great in 2026 as it did then!

Alex Brundle

Black and purple racing helmet with Mercedes logo, Monster Energy and Petronas branding, reflective visor, black and white photo.

2020 Lewis Hamilton

I tend to associate Hamilton with his yellow helmet – specifically the one he used in his McLaren days when I first interviewed him. People assumed it was in homage to his hero Senna but in fact he said it came about because his father Anthony wanted a colour that was easy to spot on the karting track. But this later helmet owned by Mercedes is drenched in significance: it is the one he wore at Abu Dhabi, the final race of his 2020 championship winning season in which he equalled Schumacher’s seven world titles. I thought an eighth was inevitable: he’d won 11 of the 17 grands prix that year. But it wasn’t to be in 2021 and we all know why. And now it looks like those seven stars, specially painted on this helmet after his world title was clinched three races earlier, are as much a lament for what really should have been as a celebration.

Joe Dunn

The Art of Racing Curated by Joe Twyman with Ronald Stern Click here for more details

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

After 25 years I was reunited with the Ascari A410, the sports prototype that last contested the Le Mans 24 hours in 2002. The Ascari bridged the gap between Group C racing and the noisier era that followed it. In a former life, the carbon-fibre chassis had been a Lola T92/10 until they cut the roof off and John McNeil went about designing the bodywork. A 4.0-litre Judd V10 motor, re-purposed from Formula 1 duty, was bolted into the back. Stepping into the car was like sliding on an old set of trainers, back to a time when I thought I could breakdance.

At 11,500rpm in sixth gear it reached 220mph. At Le Mans, the trees bordering Mulsanne fixed into a constant peripheral blur. The dotted while line in the centre of the road vanished beneath the bodywork like tracer fire. I had a cauliflower ear from playing rugby and occasionally an earplug would slip out, so I got treated to the full roar. If a Greek God ever trod on a piece of Lego, that was the sound it would make.

The first time I drove the Ascari was in 2001 at Barcelona when it was engaged in the FIA Sportscar Championship in what was then the premier league of Le Mans racing: LMP900, or Le Mans prototypes weighing 900kg. I was in Formula 3 at the time and having won a few races, thought I was a big deal. Team Ascari was looking for someone to partner Werner Lupberger and had been trying out a roster of drivers with far bigger CVs than mine.

“I worked out daily to build the fitness needed to drive the car for four hours straight at Le Mans”

Werner’s physique resembled that of Rocky Balboa, muscles bulging against the stitches of his Nomex. The Ascari with Werner at the helm tore past us on the pitstraight at 190mph, the engine screaming as he crashed down the sequential gearbox to make the chicane. A shiver descended my spine. “You’re in this lap,” chief engineer Brian Ireland wailed in my ear.

Silver race car number 21 with blue and pink accents, Union Jack decals, top‑down pit lane view, black and white photo.

The car appeared in the pitlane looking low and angry, the engine banging against its rev limiter to restrict the car’s speed to 60mph. It swung in and I noticed Werner’s chest heaving against the shoulder belts as he drew in giant gulps of air. I slid in, reached past the upper left side of the steering wheel to flick on the ignition and then to the right to fire the motor. ‘Whomp’ went the engine. Eight-hundred bhp at the tip of my toe in a machine that weighed less than a Mini, with more downforce than an F1 car – and they were letting me loose in it…?

The lollypop man released me and off I went. No power steering. Within two corners my arms were burning. Every apex requiring more than 90 degrees of steering became an enemy. As I opened the tap on the throttle and the beast squirmed out of the corner, rapid steering corrections were required to trim the attitude of the tail or succumb to the embrace of gravel and Armco. Three laps later, I was done in.

Ascari A410 LMP900 Le Mans scenes — Ben Collins in cockpit, team presentation, and silver No.17 race car on track

Clockwise from top: Ben Collins in an LMP900 Ascari, Brno, 2001; no power steering in those days; from left, Werner Lupberger, Collins and TJ Bell, Le Mans, 2002

Sutton Images

Back in the pits, Brian plugged his computer into the car’s brain and then came to download mine. “How’s the car?” There are friends who want to talk when you go for a run with them. It was like that, except that this was a job interview so: “It’s… huhhh… re—heaally… go-ood” wouldn’t pass muster. I did my best. “Some understeer here,” I told him, “the tyres felt clapped out in the slow corners so I had some wheelspin…” yaddy-yadda. “OK, we’ll soften the rear bar, do a 10-lap run and we’ll see how you get on.” Translation: drive it like you stole it if you want the job.

I did my best. Braking into the chicane at 190mph with that much downforce produced so much grip that it was impossible to lock a tyre at the onset, so I smashed the pedal with enough pressure to produce diamonds from coal. I eased the pressure as the speed bled off below 80mph, cranked the steering and the Ascari darted eagerly towards the apex. It felt lighter than the huge body suggested. The throttle was delicate. Crack it open and the chassis responded instantly. In medium speed corners it settled the rear as the acceleration force squatted it into the deck, but squeeze it past 50% and the horsepower unleashed through the rear differential and the car scrabbled onto the straight.

Ascari A410 FIA Sportscar Championship collage — podium celebration, pit stop crew, and No.23 race car in action

Clockwise from top: Collins and Lupberger, first at Donington, 2001 FIA Sportscar series; Daytona 24 Hours; Collins, 2001 Le Mans. Opposite: A410 Chassis 001

Ben collins

The physical effort of withstanding so many forces to drive as precisely as the car demanded took everything I had. I pulled in and Brian left me alone as I climbed, or rather fell out of the car. Werner stood with his arms crossed, Iceman sunglasses on, and gave me a knowing nod as I peeled off my balaclava.

A few days later I got a call to come up to the factory and to my great surprise, they hired me. I worked out daily to build the fitness needed to drive the car consistently and fast for four hours straight at Le Mans, or for three hours in the 6 Hours ’sprint’ races I shared with Werner. We battled with Ferrari all season, made a few tactical errors like running out of fuel, won at Donington and placed fourth in the championship.

Prototype race car number 21 with Mitsubishi Electric and Dunlop logos parked in garage, black and white photo.

Three chassis are for sale, from £595,000

A brilliant aerodynamicist called Andy Coventry was brought in to revamp the car and he turned up looking like Adrian Mole. On a cold test day at Snetterton we eyed this stranger with scepticism and had to restrain the chief mechanic when Andy took a disliking to a section of the rear floor, and cut it off with a saw. At a stroke it lapped a second faster. He eventually managed to reduce the overall drag of the car while increasing the downforce to lop multiple seconds off our lap times at Le Mans.

We were a small team but we battled with giants. Michelin made the fastest tyres back then but they were in limited supply so we made do with Goodyear and Dunlop. Despite lacking overall pace, they were durable and extremely fast in the rain. Werner qualified on the front row for the 2002 Daytona 24 Hours, while at Le Mans I was hunting down the lead Audi during the monsoon of 2001 until a fuel pump died at 4am.

Driver in cockpit wearing flame‑design Praga helmet with reflective visor and Le Mans suit, black and white photo.

Collins back in familiar territory – the seat of the A410 and it all comes flooding back

The dangers of racing a roofless prototype seemed obvious when you drove one. Large insects and clumps of rubber pinged off your helmet’s visor. When it rained, you got wet. If the car went upside down, you landed on your head. Prototypes went through a phase of flipping into the air at high speed when the pressure of downforce had an argument with the airstream and we had to monitor for signs of cavitation. Thankfully it was never a problem in the Ascari and the sheer exhilaration of racing in open cockpits was worth the risk anyway.

“My 10 laps were over all too quickly but the addiction to driving that Ascari was back”

There was never a dull moment at Team Ascari and that stemmed from our fearless leader, Klaas Zwart. An oil wildcat and engineering genius, his dream was to build a car company and promote it by winning Le Mans. His lair was the Ascari resort and circuit near Marbella, built to mirror Formula 1’s most challenging corners. When it rained, Klaas didn’t like to wait for it to dry, so he would use his helicopter to blow-dry it.

Ascari A410 LMP900 collage — Judd V10 engine, sponsor logos, Repsol race car on track, and MOMO cockpit steering wheel

Clockwise from top left: Judd 4-litre; Ascari lasted until 2010; Collins preferred the full wheel; vs 962 at Paul Ricard, 2026

His first car design was the Ecosse, a lightweight spaceframe chassis with a glassfibre and Kevlar body, mated to a BMW 4.4-litre V8. It was followed by the all carbon-fibre KZ1, on which the GT3 racing car was built, and then there was the middle child: the A10. A GT2 racing car with a numberplate. Jeremy Clarkson described it as “staggering” and I lapped it around the Top Gear track on a damp day to within a few tenths of my lap record in a Bugatti Veyron Super Sport.

Front left wheel of race car number 21 with Michelin slick tire and Dunlop logo at Paul Ricard circuit, black and white photo

The three Ascaris were acquired by Sam Hancock from marque founder Klaas Zwart, along with spares, moulds and tooling

Ascari closed its doors in 2010 and the Le Mans cars went into storage. They lurked under tarpaulins until their era returned to the limelight, thanks to the Peter Auto racing series that has embraced these noughties mega beasts and even returns them to compete at Le Mans.

Sam Hancock, an old racing rival of mine who restores and sells these incredible cars, instantly saw the opportunity to revive one of the most potent and exhilarating machines from that era. He partnered with Pastorelli cars in Maranello to restore them to their prime and after a year in the workshop, asked me if I could still fit into a race suit.

Related article

I arrived at the Paul Ricard circuit in the south of France with an image of Werner laughing at me. I ate a small breakfast and donned my old race suit with a little resistance from the zip. Pastorelli poured me a new racing seat that moulded my kidneys to the carbon-fibre tub. It felt like home and that was what concerned me: overconfidence. I stalled the engine leaving the pits.

Once I got going it felt natural and my mind started nit-picking the subtle changes since I drove it 25 years prior. The set-up needed dialling in and would yield dividends by lowering it into the packers to maintain a precise height above the ground and thereby greater downforce.

The steering wheel was a half-moon rather than a full circle. I don’t like those because when the shit hits the fan, you need to be able to fling the wheel around without grabbing a fistful of air. One thing I wasn’t moaning about was the power steering, a luxurious upgrade that suited me fine.

Blue and white open‑cockpit race car with rear wing driving on circuit with colorful curbing, black and white photo

V10 buzz

As I approached 190mph on the back straight the dashboard was vibrating like a NASA rocket and all the lights were flashing. Anyway, I was on the rev limiter in sixth with a long time to contemplate the Signes right-hander. I used to take that corner flat in sixth. The speed, the noise and the vibration convinced me beyond a doubt. I’d rather staple my eyeballs to the exhaust than try that.

My 10 laps were over all too quickly but the total addiction to driving that Ascari was back with a vengeance. Blasting past GTs like they were parked, out-dragging a Group C, the insanely late-braking zones everywhere and the buzz of the V10. I wanted to go out again to nail a proper lap and get a sponsor to campaign the car. All of that will be the preserve of the lucky individual or team who decides to buy the Ascari package. Chassis 003 costs £595,000, 001 and 002, £895,000, and for just £1 they’ll throw in the driver.

Thanks to Sam Hancocksamhancock.com

Ascari A410

• Engine Judd GV4 4.0-litre V10

• Chassis Carbon-fibre monocoque

• Power 630bhp

• Transmission Six-speed manual

• Suspension (front & rear) Double wishbone suspension, with push-rod actuated coil springs and dampers

• Weight 900kg

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

Atlantic City Speedway in New Jersey proved ephemeral. Built using 4.5 million feet of timber, on the site of the dismantled Amatol munitions factory, it arrived with a bang in 1926, but began its gradual return to nature just two years later.

Frank Stallworth Lockhart was also ephemeral. He arrived with a bang – winning the Indianapolis 500 as a 23-year-old rookie in 1926 – and in less than two years would establish himself as an all-American hero. (Charles Lindbergh ‘had’ to fly solo across the Atlantic to upstage him.)

Although born in Dayton, Ohio, Lockhart was a West Coaster. The ‘Boy Wonder’ of LA’s burgeoning dirt track scene dove deeply on shallower lines, overtaking as he did so, before releasing the brakes (fronts only on his spartan Model T-based Fronty-Ford) and the rare speed – think Nuvolari, Clark, Schumacher – contained therein. More experienced rivals aboard superior machines cursed his impetuosity, marvelled at his virtuosity.

“Having qualified at an unheard-of 92.45mph, he set 10 distance records on Cleveland’s dirt”

The creator of those superior machines wisely decided to draw this pesky kid closer from the second half of 1925. Harry Arminius Miller would get more than he bargained for. The wins flowed, as he had hoped, but this relentless young charger drove him crazier than ever. The auto-mechanic with a shock of wavy hair had had no formal engineering training – from humble beginnings, Lockhart was rumoured illiterate. But rather than bask in the brilliance of Miller and his lieutenants, Leo Goossen and Fred Offenhauser, he quietly – Lockhart neither boozed, nor smoked, nor cussed – busied himself improving the unimprovable. That his car, which he was being paid to build – and which carried his preferred No27 race number – went faster for longer as a result of his unauthorised changes failed to entirely assuage his employer. His handy covering of several bases, however, saw him placed on the team’s Indy roster – Lockhart’s first trip across the Mississippi – primarily to act as relief driver to Bennett ‘Nemo’ Hill.

Frank Lockhart in Miller Special No.15, 1926 Indianapolis 500 victory celebration with team

Lockhart started from row seven in the 1926 Indy 500, passing 14 cars on lap five alone

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Nobody knew what to expect of Lockhart. He had proved his adaptability by winning his only road race to date – in elbows-out Jack Brabham fashion on a five-mile gravel course snaking through the hills above the Ascot Park half-mile dirt oval – but had crashed on his only visit to a board track, underestimating the speed required to mount its bankings.

“Lockhart again finished runner-up in the standings, this time to Pete DePaolo”

Indy’s bricks, however, held no terrors for him. Immediately quicker than Hill, and substantially so, the clamour for his inclusion when another Miller racing car became available two days before qualifying could not be ignored: “Give it the kid,” croaked a shivering, flu-ridden Pete Kreis from his hospital bed.

Lockhart’s first officially timed lap was a huge new record – 115.488mph – but his second saw him limp in on a shredded right-rear. His second, and more restrained, attempt was halted by a broken valve that damaged the block. Facing a knockout third strike, and bedding-in the rebuilt engine, he dawdled for the seventh row.

1920s board track race with Miller cars, packed grandstands at historic wooden speedway

The AAA championship visited Altoona in Pennsylvania twice in 1926 – with Lockhart winning the second race, in September

Getty Images

Sure enough, he whipped through the field to run second after just 16 laps. But this was a marathon, not a sprint. Could Lockhart, who had only once gone beyond 100 miles – that road race win – be able to pace his effort? He stalked team-mate Dave Lewis, in Miller’s supposedly faster – and 50% more expensive – front-wheel-drive version, before taking the lead on lap 60. He appeared to the manor born. Not even an hour’s interruption – a first for the event – fazed him, and he was almost three laps to the good, and averaging 95.904mph (better than his qualifying speed) when the rain’s return caused the result to be called after 400 miles. His $35,600 purse would allow him to cut the strings.

The beneficial effect of independence was prompt: breakthrough wins on the boards of Charlotte in August were followed by his pocketing the season’s second biggest prize ($10,000) at Altoona in Pennsylvania. The national championship eluded him – he had missed too many rounds to be able to challenge the consistent Harry Hartz – but his was assuredly the buzz. The mandarins of the American Automobile Association Contest Board had tried to take him down a peg by insisting that he contest the lesser event of an unanticipated double-booking in July. But Lockhart swallowed his undeserved medicine, won on the dirt of Abilene, and pressed on, undaunted.

Frank Lockhart smiling in Miller Special No.15, post‑race celebration with 1920s pit crew crowd

An ice-cold bottle of milk was still 10 years away for the Indy 500 winner; in 1926, Lockhart downed a Coke

Getty Images

His winter was spent on myriad improvements, working in conjunction with like-minded, Ohio-born but LA-raised contemporaries: Zenas Weisel was a graduate of Berkeley; and younger brother John was studying at Caltech. Counterpoint to their youthful, brainstorming exuberance was hard-nosed Ernie Olson, riding mechanic to the late Jimmy Murphy, winner of the 1921 Grand Prix de l’ACF for Duesenberg and proclaimed as the ‘King of the Boards’. Lockhart was their undisputed leader. According to The Autocar, “He never claimed that these ideas were either revolutionary or necessarily right, but simply that they were the logical sequence of such experience as he had gained.”

Foremost among them was an air intercooler that usefully lowered the mixture’s temperature after its compression by the rear-mounted centrifugal supercharger. Other mods included: a downdraught carburettor with an air-scoop; increased impeller rpm; and heat-treated valves. This 1.5-litre twin-cam straight-eight had generated 154bhp at 7000rpm in standard form. Rear radius rods, a locked differential and beefier driveshafts and UJs were now needed to cope with its newfound 230bhp at 8000.

Frank Lockhart with streamlined Stutz Black Hawk Special, 1920s land speed record attempt crowd scene

Speed records were the preserve of massive cars with aero engines in the 1920s, but the Stutz Black Hawk Special was smaller

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Frank Lockhart’s 144.2mph pole position around the 35-degree bankings of 1.25-mile Culver City in March was a step change. His 171.021mph arcing approach and pass through the flying mile at Muroc Dry Lake – today part of Edwards Air Force Base – in April was a giant leap. A tiny track car – the addition of wheel discs its only concession to reducing drag – had entered the realm of the aero-engined monsters: Henry Segrave’s twin-engined 44.8-litre Sunbeam had cracked 200mph only a fortnight before. Lockhart’s whirring mind now roared. He had his new quest.

There were still races to be run and won in the meantime. His 147.3mph pole around the 45-degree bankings at 1.5-mile Atlantic City – completed in that hunched, urgent style reminiscent of Nuvolari’s – would not be beaten until Jim Hurtubise’s 4.2-litre Indy roadster flirted with 150mph in 1960. And Lockhart’s leading of the opening 81 laps of the Indy 500 – from its first 120mph pole – would not be beaten until Emerson Fittipaldi led the first 92 of 1990.

Reliability was harder to come by: a broken oil line at Atlantic City; a conrod at Indy, having led 110 of 120 laps: “Where’s the nearest hot-dog stand? I’m hungry”; a supercharger at Altoona; and another conrod on Detroit’s dirt. Lockhart was by now running a two-car team, ambition which paid dividends with consecutive 1-2s in August, at Kalamazoo in Michigan and Toledo. A corner had been turned.

Stutz Black Hawk Special on Daytona Beach, Frank Lockhart seated for 1920s land speed record run

Note the Black Hawk’s spats covering the tyres

Getty Images

Successive wins at Syracuse in New York, Altoona and Charlotte followed. On September 25, having qualified at an unheard-of 92.45mph, he set 10 distance records in winning the 100-miler on Cleveland’s dirt; and he did so in his secondary Miller, to prove that it was as potent as his Indy winner. Two victories on the boards of New Hampshire track Salem in October topped off a season in which he again finished runner-up in the standings, this time to Pete DePaolo. Lockhart was clearly the faster – six poles to Pete’s none – and surely his moment would come. Alas, time and tide were against him.

He would never race again.

Though his Land Speed Record bid was announced in July, its finance had been finalised sometime before that, in the spring: Stutz president Fred Moskovics, who thought the world of Lockhart, stumped up $35,000 of the estimated $80,000-$100,000 cost – a syndicate of millionaire sportsmen covered the shortfall – and also offered the use of his company’s facilities in Indianapolis. The Weisels joined – on $40 per week for a minimum of four months – the day after John’s graduation.

Others involved included: Jean Marcenac, the Frenchman brought over to oversee Ralph DePalma’s Ballot at the Indianapolis 500 in 1920, and who then decided to stay; Jimmy Lee, Lockhart’s Indy-winning crew chief; fabricators Myron Stevens, another LA contemporary, and Floyd Dreyer, the motorcycle legend who had assisted Marcenac in George Souders’ recent Indy victory.

A dozen draughtsmen and six mechanics, working in secrecy and a spotless environment for three months, and under Lockhart’s inspiring command, combined to create the startling Stutz Black Hawk Special, pristine in white, where it wasn’t plated or polished. Wrapped around its driver’s 5ft 3in/135lb frame, its body measured 24in at its widest, and 46in at the tip of its headrest, within an extended 9ft 4in wheelbase and a standard Miller 4ft 4in track. It scaled just 2800lb. The rival White Triplex, somewhat ugly and drab in seaweed green, tipped 8000lb.

“Just missing officials, the final flip flung Lockhart beyond the hissing wreckage”

This blundertruck featured three engines combining for 81 litres. Lockhart’s rapier was powered by a 3-litre comprising a pair of supercharged/intercooled Miller ‘eights’ at a 30-degree included angle on a common crankcase, spurred together, and driving through a three-speed gearbox. Its 385bhp at 7000rpm was theoretically sufficient for 263mph, given the low frontal area and ground-hugging – underslung rear axle, worm-gear final drive – streamlined shape conceived in the wind tunnels of the Curtiss Aeroplane & Motor Company, who also helped with the body’s construction, and the Army Air Service at Dayton: 54lb of lift, 458 of drag, at an ambitious 285mph.

The drag links of its cam-and-lever steering were the only mechanisms exposed to airflow; finned, curved intercoolers formed part of the bonnet; a radiator was obviated by 75lb of crushed ice; spats encased 30in x 5in tyres and Lockheed hydraulic brakes; 76 ball bearings reduced friction; and axles and steering arms were shrouded by fairings. Many, rival Malcolm Campbell among them, doubted that something apparently so fragile could hold its course at such speed. Lockhart, however, knew that no weight had been shaved at the expense of rigidity.

There was, though, an aspect beyond his control. The destruction of the rig and widespread damage caused by his firing a shotgun at a tyre rotating at 3000rpm had, according to a January Firestone report, proved that such an occurrence would be fatal. Firestone, with its well-established and successful competition department, was the obvious choice. It had designed covers with a doubled bead strength, and recommended 125lb/sq in and right-angled valve stems to avoid failure by distortion or penetration. Lockhart, however, went with financially straitened Dickinson Tires. We have to assume that money lay at the root of this decision.

Stutz Black Hawk Special crash at Daytona Beach, 1928 rescue scene after Frank Lockhart accident

Lockhart was rescued from the sea in February ’28; on his return to Daytona Beach in April, he died

Bettmann Archive

The attempt was scheduled for February at Daytona’s Ormond Beach. Quick to congratulate Campbell on his 206.956mph in the 22.3-litre Blue Bird, Lockhart might have topped that the next day but for a clutch failure which denied him a return run after a faster upwind pass. He tried again two days later, in adverse conditions. Momentarily disoriented by a patch of mist, he drifted left into softer sand at 225mph, twitched right, and skimmed and tumbled 100yds into the ocean, fortunately landing upright. Spectators held Lockhart’s lolling head above breaking waves as the car was heaved ashore so that he might be released – using chisels, drills and blowtorches – from the bent chassis and mangled cockpit. The worst of the first injuries of Lockhart’s career were three severed tendons in his left wrist.

Man and machine were rated fit by April. This time Lockhart congratulated Philadelphia’s Ray Keech on his 207.552mph in the White Triplex, but his own car was hampered by a carburetion issue. The pressure on him was increasing. Three days later, on a surface rippled by a high tide, the engine suddenly chimed: 203.45mph, upwind. Lockhart, a young man in a hurry – for wasn’t Segrave working on a new challenger? – now felt sure of the record. C’mon! Let’s go! Those spats not only made changing tyres impossible within the time limit, but also prevented a visual check. Besides, Lockhart had penned a public letter praising their integrity in his February crash: “No tire would have served me better.”

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Approaching the timing stand, and said to be on schedule for a 211mph two-way average, film footage shows the right-rear, reportedly scuffed by a 100ft skid caused by a locking brake at the end of an earlier run, bursting. This pitched the car sideways, Lockhart fighting the slide, and thence into a series of whipping flips and crunching bounces of varying amplitudes. Just missing flinching officials and their nearby parked cars, the final flip flung Lockhart beyond the hissing wreckage. Wife Ella was swift to the scene. Her man, linen helmet, collar-and-tie, was face down, beyond help. Bundled into a car and whisked to hospital, Lockhart, neck broken, chest crushed, was pronounced dead at 8.59am.

He was 10 years younger than Nuvolari. His superlative rear-wheel-drive Miller 91s would continue to dominate, winning two AAA titles and an Indy 500 – finishing 1-2 in 1929 – in the hands of Louis Meyer and Keech; and his LSR engine, modified and repurposed, would start from the outside of the front row at Indy as late as 1946. But the tide had rolled in. And out again.

Keech crashed fatally in June 1929. Miller retired from his business weeks before October’s Wall Street Crash. (He would be declared bankrupt in 1933.) And a New Jersey forest today shades the fading footprint of a once-famous track, designed to cope with 160mph and 300,000 spectators, and demolished in 1933. Greenery and grainy black-and-white.

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Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

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Turn 8 of the verdant, roller-coaster Barber Motorsports Park circuit in the US state of Alabama is the slowest point of this beautiful and much-loved venue. They probably wouldn’t do it, but any IndyCar driver looking left as they exit this corner during the series’ annual springtime race weekend would probably notice a large building: the Barber Vintage Motorsports Museum.

The Barber complex is the playground of former dairy magnate and capable amateur racer George Barber, who died in February at the age of 85. And one of his last projects, the latest exhibit in the philanthropist’s museum, is very special.

“I think the spark might have been the Race Car of the Century by Motor Sport magazine”

The recreation of Lotus 49/R1 was part of Barber’s assemblage of the world’s largest collection of Lotus race cars (the museum also houses the planet’s biggest motorcycle collection). Barber had to have a 49, because the readers of the magazine you are reading voted it as the Race Car of the Century in its August 2024 issue, during the celebrations for Motor Sport’s centenary.

Mike Costin in Lotus 49/R1

Cosworth co-founder Mike Costin in Lotus 49/R1, Hethel test track, 1967 – with car designer Maurice Phillippe; Costin, 96, with the 49/R1 recreation

“I think the spark might have been the Race Car of the Century by Motor Sport magazine, which George was aware of,” reflects Classic Team Lotus chief Clive Chapman, son of Lotus founder Colin. “He felt that with his latest collection, the best thing to have as the crowning glory, as it were, would be a 49.”

Dick Scammell driving 49/R1

Dick Scammell was one of the first to drive 49/R1 in ’67; and sat aboard in 2026

The problem is, it’s near-impossible to get hold of one. Which is where CTL’s archive came in handy, because it contains the original design drawings for the car. Chassis R1, which Graham Hill drove to pole position on its debut – and that of the epoch-defining Ford Cosworth DFV engine – at the 1967 Dutch Grand Prix, would therefore be recreated. “Getting hold of a 49 is difficult, and we still had the title to R1, and George particularly liked the idea of recreating the very first one to the Hethel launch spec,” continues Chapman.

Two generations of Chapman

Two generations of Chapman in two generations of 49/R1

“We talked about it over, say, a six-month period, and then we really got serious about it at the beginning of last year, and he asked if we could have it finished by Christmas [2025]. We said, ‘Yeah, that’ll be fine,’ and then the deadlines were suddenly, ‘Oh my God, we’ve got to get going.’ But we did it – we got it down on the ground and fired up just before Christmas.”

Grands prix in 1967

Jim Clark won four F1 grands prix in 1967 at the wheel of the 49 – and was sixth here at Spa

The thing is, it’s all very well having the design drawings – period components were also used as far as was possible – but not everything was drawn. Chapman explains that the flying over from the States last year of chassis R2 (in which Jim Clark took victory first time out at Zandvoort and which was restored by CTL in 2010) for the Clark weekend in Duns was a big help: “Chris MacAllister [owner] said, ‘That’s absolutely fine, you can look at the car, you can get the tape measure out as you wish,’ which I thought was particularly generous.”

Lotus F1 rear suspension assembly

“George particularly liked the idea of recreating the very first one to the Hethel launch spec”

Furthermore, the Ford archive, says Chapman, had “loads of really good photos of the Hethel launch” from May 1967, while Cosworth partner Mike Costin “provided us with some images of the car when it ran a couple of days before the launch”. Meanwhile, Team Lotus mechanic Dick Scammell “had some really good reference photos of the car in build, which was quite extraordinary because we don’t have images like that for any other car”.

Lotus F1 cockpit interior view

With the help of readers, the Lotus 49 was voted Motor Sport’s Race Car of the Century 1924-2024

Ask Scammell why he pointed his camera at 49/R1 six decades ago, and he chuckles: “I’ve no idea really! It was a bit of an unusual project with the DFV as well, and I just took the camera along. I’m not a very good photographer so I don’t know what inspired me to do that. But I just took some pictures, and over a period too. I was pleased that I had them. Clive had quite a lot of drawings, but a lot of the details in those days were done on the spot and maybe drawn later.”

Lotus F1 engine and wheel

“Clive had drawings but details in those days were done on the spot and maybe drawn later”

One was the jump battery socket. “We couldn’t work it out because there was no drawing for that,” recalls Chapman, “and Dick said, ‘I made that a couple of nights before it ran, at home on the kitchen table.’ He told us how he’d done it, and then we retraced it. In fact his son Ben is busy recreating one for us now.”

Lotus F1 engine intake trumpets

Thousands of hours of work went into the recreation – and, of course, at its core is a DFV

Scammell’s previous work on aircraft inspired that idea. “We could never start the car because either the battery was too small or all sorts of things,” he says. “We ended up with a jump lead and I thought, ‘Life’s too short for that.’ So I decided to make one, which I’m sure wouldn’t pass health and safety today but in fact did the job, worked fine.

“A complete Formula 1 team in those days was six people, so there were four or five lads and me. We had a sheet metalworking department, who did a lot of the chassis work. That was made in a jig and so on.

Team Lotus F1 overhead view

Lotus 49

Engine Cosworth DFV, 3 litres, 90-degree V8
Chassis Aluminium monocoque
Power 400bhp at 9000rpm
Transmission Hewland Lotus 5-speed manual
Suspension (Front) Lower wishbone, top lever arm, coil springs over dampers
Suspension (Rear) Reversed lower wishbones, top links, twin radius arms, coil springs over dampers
Weight 501kg

“We helped where we could. And then after that it was up to us to put it together and come up with the bits and pieces that never got drawn in those days, like where the brake pipes were going to go, where to put the ignition system and so on and so forth.”

Lotus Ford badge, yellow bodywork

The Type 49 would race across four Formula 1 seasons, including three Monaco wins

The DFV, of course, enjoyed a remarkable 18 years of powering F1 machinery up to its obsolescence at the hands of the turbos in 1985, and underwent development throughout.

Smiths gauges and toggle switches

“A complete Formula 1 team in those days was six people, so there were four or five lads and me”

It’s impossible to fit a genuine 1967 version to the new R1, says Costin. “The breathing problem that we had with the early DFV, we had a modification to get the pressure equalised from the bottom of the engine to the top,” he explains of work on the oil pump. “That took air from the very bottom where the oil collected to be picked up by the pump and delivered that air up into one of the rocker boxes. You can’t go back that far because it would be impossible to find one of the old oil pumps. But they did make up some dummies, bolted to the top of the roller cover with Araldite all round them.”

Lotus suspension and exhaust detail

Lotus badge on steering wheel

“We helped where we could. And then after that it was up to us to put it together”

It led to a recreation that Chapman describes as “beautiful to drive. I drove it up and down Hazel Chapman Way [built in 1966 but renamed by Lotus Cars on May 19, 2023] a couple of times and took it out on the test track. Torque is actually relatively low and it’s just super-easy to drive. It just tootles around in first or second as long as you like, but then when you want to go faster it’s disarmingly quick. You suddenly realise, when you look at the rev counter, just how fast you’re going. ‘Oh hang on a minute – don’t overdo it.’”

Team Lotus F1 side profile

“If we knew then what we know now, it was a very important thing to be involved in,” sums up Scammell, who along with Costin was on hand in March of this year at the Hethel launch – even that was recreated! – with Chapman, as did his father and Hill 59 years ago, taking to the wheel. “They’ve done a great job of making it look original, of making what was basically a period engine look like the very first engine from 1967.”

Lotus monocoque chassis, top view

‘Thank you, Colin’

Cosworth DFV boffin Mike Costin recalls the privilege of being the first driver of the Lotus 49

It was especially appropriate that Mike Costin, along with Dick Scammell, sat in the seat of the Lotus 49/R1 recreation at Hethel. After all, engine man Costin was the first to drive it back in 1967.

“I drove it for two days in May,” recalls Costin, who was a decent racer in his own right. “At Hethel it was undriveable because of the way the suspension was put up. We put that right, and the next day we took it to Snetterton and I did about 20 laps, and that was when we discovered the problem with the top radius arm attachment to the monocoque.”

Monocoque interior, illuminated

R1 was one of only two cars skinned in 18-gauge Alclad aluminium sheet

This suspension design, to carry the driving and braking stresses, went hand in hand with the DFV’s installation, fully stressed and bolted to the monocoque. “Dick said, ‘Ah, that’s you putting a wheel on the kerb,’” continues Costin. “In those days Snetterton, when you came out of the hairpin you accelerated and it was on the original concrete wartime runway. And as you went over each joint in the concrete you got a little bit of wheelspin, and that was a sudden shock each time you hit one of those. That did the damage.

Bare aluminum monocoque chassis

“I learned that when Graham [Hill] drove it, it failed again. That was when they needed to redesign and add a beam inside the monocoque to take the load that they didn’t realise was there.”

ZF gearbox, disassembled

A period correct early spec ZF gearbox was sourced

Costin would have preferred Clark to have done that testing: “Graham would do two laps and come in – there’s something wrong, the wrong answers to the wrong questions. Jim, you’d be hard pushed to get him to give us anything. He’d say if it wasn’t handling right and we’d have a go at putting it right.”

Brake master cylinders, race car

But Costin, now 96, knew they had something special: “I suppose in hindsight I regret not phoning Colin saying, ‘That’s a fantastic car you’ve got there. Thank you very much for letting me drive it.’”

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Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

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When the assassination of one of your royal ancestors played a big role in triggering World War I – not to mention inspiring the nomenclature of one of the mid-2000s’ biggest breakthrough bands – it’s difficult to stay incognito. That’s why Ferdinand Habsburg, who shares at least part of his name with the aforementioned Archduke Franz Ferdinand, loves motor racing.

“There were some years where I was struggling more with it,” he admits of his inherited legacy, “and some where I could have the best of both worlds. You could do an act in your family requirements and duties towards history, politics and society, in your own way, and then you have this privilege to be working in a race environment where most people have never heard of the Habsburg monarchy. They probably think Habsburg comes from a burger joint!”

Just to explain: Habsburg would, after his father Karl, be the next king of Austria should there be an unexpected restoration of the throne. But he also happens to be a highly regarded racing driver in the World Endurance Championship with Alpine. Alongside Frenchmen Charles Milesi and Paul-Loup Chatin, he scored an emotional victory in last year’s Fuji 6 Hours. With Chatin off to the new Genesis team for 2026, in comes Formula E superstar António Félix da Costa to join the crew of the No35 car.

Habsburg wins at 24h Le Mans

Ferdinand Habsburg goes without facemask after his LMP2 class win at Le Mans, 2021

LAT Images

The Renault group has already confirmed Alpine’s exit from the WEC at the end of this season. But first, there’s the small matter of success in this series and the big one – the Le Mans 24 Hours – to attack with the A424 machines throughout 2026.

“We’ve been doing a lot of pre-season calls, chatting about updates, how to improve communication, iron out everything we’ve learned,” relates Habsburg. “And after every call we all kind of have this moment where we look at each other on the screen and… we’re all aware it’s coming to an end, but we are so aware of each other’s desire to do well. We might as well go out and give everything. We have nothing to lose in a way.

“We’ve got updates from last year because they were all developed without the knowledge of the desire of the board of Renault to cut the programme, so everything is in line for going forward. I’m enjoying this just-go-out-and-send-it attitude we’ve got.”

Habsburg at Alpine

Habsburg has been at Alpine, driving its Hypercar, since 2024, with a single win at Fuji, below

DPPI

The Milesi-Habsburg relationship is an enduring one. Together, they won the WEC’s LMP2 title in 2021, including victory at Le Mans after a last-lap heartbreak for Robert Kubica, described elsewhere in this issue. And they’ve teamed up in the Hypercar ranks with Alpine since 2024. Of the diminutive redhead from eastern France, Habsburg laughs: “A proper firecracker of a personality. Huge attitude but the funniest guy ever. He’s rapid, he’s got that fighting mentality. I love sharing the car with him, except the seat inserts – we have quite opposite lengths of legs! It’s the only issue we have.”

“Fuji came along. Our heads were exploding and it was just the most wonderful experience”

He knows da Costa of old too, after they teamed up in LMP2 for the Daytona 24 Hours at the start of 2018. This was before Habsburg’s final season of single-seaters, in Formula 3: “My first ever race that was longer than 35 minutes. António was just the best possible team-mate I could have asked for. There’s nothing you can doubt about his abilities as a driver. He’s got that pit bull in him.”

If you’re getting the impression that Habsburg loves everyone, you wouldn’t be far wrong. It’s a habit he’s exhibited since his late teens in Formula Renault and F3. “I’m chirpy and joyful rather than introverted and acting like a bully, and sometimes people would say, ‘You’re not going to make it – you’re too nice,’” he reflects. “That’s one of the things I’m most proud of: you can be a nice guy and win races, and I think there are quite a few people in F1 now who represent that as well, which I think is awesome.” He doesn’t mention him by name, but reigning world champion Lando Norris was a team-mate in Habsburg’s F3 days.

Habsburg Car in Fuji

Such enthusiasm extends beyond his fellow drivers. Ask about that Fuji victory, and Habsburg recalls: “It was completely insane and unexpected, because in many ways the race was, for me, one of the worst I had all year. All year long, we didn’t have the pace in the car, so what we did was save tyres in the beginning in the hope that a safety car would come at the end and then we’d be able to fight with a tyre advantage. Just get through the first half, then we’ve got to try to maximise everything with whatever we’ve pulled out with tyres and fuel.

Fuji came along and the safety car came at the right moment. We had the tyre advantage, the strategy worked out for us, and Charles got in and we went from the back to second place. Then we had a quicker stop and jumped the [leading] Peugeot in the pitlane. Our heads were exploding and it was just the most wonderful experience.

“It was also feeling like a testimony to a team that hadn’t been doing so well. Everyone is trying their hardest, so not succeeding is heartbreaking. You don’t do 24-hour races as a mechanic for fun or to make big money, so you’ve got to be passionate to do this thing. To get that win, especially for the mechanics… They’re not responsible at all for the development or the performance package – they have to work with what they’ve got, and I was just so happy for them. They’re the unsung heroes for me. It was great to party with them in the evening.”

Habsburg Grandhater

Grandfather Otto von Habsburg

Getty Images

In a way, it’s a Habsburg trait to propound on such unity. His grandfather Otto von Habsburg grew up in exile after the dissolution of the monarchy, but as an adult moved onto the political stage, campaigning against nationalism. As a result of his involvement in occupied Austria’s anti-Nazi resistance, he was subject to an execution order by Hitler henchman Rudolf Hess and went into exile again, this time in the US. After the war, he campaigned for refugees, became an MEP (as did Ferdinand’s father Karl) and was even instrumental in the Pan-European Picnic peace demonstration, where an opening of the Austro-Hungarian border was a trigger point to bringing down the Iron Curtain.

“Balance of Performance doesn’t matter to me. Just enjoy every race”

“What better example could you have when describing someone as a European?” admires Habsburg. “Someone who was looking for unity and shared values in how to treat and look out for people. When somebody asks about my role model, he’s the one I mention. He was just ruthless about being honest and honourable. He was willing to die for it. He would not speak a lie even when there was a gun pointed to his head, and he survived it. That’s something that we miss in the world today.

“It’s a very difficult burden he must have carried as the crown prince, being groomed to take over in a sincere way. On paper I’m the crown prince, but I never had to go through what he did. I’m grateful for how honest and courageous he was. It would have been very easy for him to become a playboy in New York and live out his life.”

Habsburg's car racing in Macau

Racing for ART in the ’19 Macau GP – but he was out after three laps and soon left single-seaters

At least Otto never had to deal with Hypercar Balance of Performance. Habsburg scoffs: “It doesn’t matter to me. Really shit cars have won races before with a lot of heart and spirit. And if you get the best BOP you can still screw it up. I wish we didn’t even get told what it was. Just enjoy every race.”

You can bet he’ll do just that – and carry on spreading that bonhomie.

Other racing nobles

Born with a silver spoon in one’s mouth but these drivers were also royalty behind the wheel

Wolfgang von Trips

Wolfgang von Trips

As Prussian nobility, Count von Trips was born in a moated castle and, in order to escape detection when he began racing in 1953, adopted the plainer name of ‘Alex Linther’. Problem was, he was too good for his identity to remain hidden. Von Trips was picked for the Mercedes sports car team. Then, post-Le Mans disaster, he joined up with Porsche and Ferrari. With the Prancing Horse, he battled with team-mate Phil Hill for the 1961 F1 title, before the Italian GP crash that claimed his life and those of 14 spectators.

  Alfonso de Portago

Alfonso de Portago

The 11th Marquess of Portago was named after his godfather, Spanish king Alfonso XIII. As well as being a handy driver, he twice rode the Grand National and just missed a medal with Spain’s bobsleigh team at the 1956 Winter Olympics. He was part of Scuderia Ferrari by ’55. In ’56, he shared a car to second place with Peter Collins in the British GP. But tragedy struck in the ’57 Mille Miglia, when a tyre blow-out resulted in the death of de Portago, co-driver Ed Nelson and nine spectators, hastening the race’s end.

Johnny Dumfries

Johnny Dumfries

John Crichton-Stuart aka Johnny Dumfries was the Earl of Dumfries, who would inherit the title 7th Marquess of Bute upon his father’s passing. That wouldn’t have helped him fit in with the ‘Sarf London’ lads in the Champion of Brands FF1600 paddock… He had a lot of talent, dominating the 1984 British F3 Championship. When Ayrton Senna vetoed the signing of Derek Warwick at Lotus for 1986, Dumfries was selected as a ‘non-threat’ alternative. He wasn’t a threat. But he did go on to win the ’88 Le Mans 24 Hours with Jaguar.

Leopold von Bayern

Leopold von Bayern

Like Ferdinand Habsburg, Bavarian Prince Leopold is descended from Franz Joseph I of Austria. ‘Poldi’, as he was known, finished fourth in the 1984 Le Mans 24 Hours in a Porsche 956B, but is best known for his exploits with BMW. He was a regular in the DTM in the early 1990s, and saw out the decade in Germany’s STW Super Touring series. Moving into the 21st century, European tin-top racing royalty also includes Dutch Prince Bernhard van Oranje, and Prince Carl Philip Bernadotte, fourth in line to the Swedish throne.

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Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

Ferrari is bidding for a fourth consecutive Le Mans 24 Hours win this year. Or to put it another way, to continue an unbeaten run since it ended its 50-year exile from the French enduro with the arrival of the 499P Le Mans Hypercar in 2023. The Prancing Horse had the fastest race car around the 8.47-mile Circuit de la Sarthe in each of the past three years, just as it did — for the first time – over the course of a full season in 2025 on the way to winning both the drivers’ and manufacturers’ World Endurance Championship titles. The form book would appear to be with Ferrari as it looks to continue its run.

In season three of the 499P the car had turned from “a shy princess to a shining queen”, reckons Ferdinando Cannizzo, technical director of Ferrari’s endurance programmes. It followed a deep dive into how Ferrari and the factory AF Corse team set up the car in the lead-up to the new season. A return to her demure ways this year isn’t likely, not least at Le Mans given the Ferrari LMH’s strengths around what is a unique circuit. As reigning WEC champion and 2023 Le Mans winner James Calado, who is again teamed with Alessandro Pier Guidi and Antonio Giovinazzi, says, “The car is well-suited to Le Mans; it is good in the high-speed corners and at the high-speed circuits.” But there have been some key changes for the new season that will go at least some way to ripping up the form book as the WEC circus gears up for the double-points round on June 13-14.

Ferrari 499P endurance race car number 50 in studio lighting with sponsor logos, black and white photo.

The 2026 WEC Ferrari livery launch was at the Enzo Ferrari Museum in Modena, February

Ferrari

BMW and Alpine took at least one upgrade joker, while Aston Martin chose not to with its still-new Valkyrie and Peugeot had exhausted its allocation. This process has always been by negotiation: manufacturers had to apply to the organisers, the FIA and series promoter the Automobile Club de l’Ouest, to be able to make changes. For this year, there is an additional clause in the regulations to remove any doubt. It states that permission will only be granted where there is “a demonstrated significant lack of performance as determined by [the] governing body”. Ferrari said late last year that it wasn’t planning any upgrades, though it can be taken as read that it wouldn’t have been allowed any had it popped the question.

“We know that 2026 will be much more difficult than last year. Competitiveness will be very high”

“The others have joker-driven evolutions, which have involved a lot more [development] than we did,” says Cannizzo. “Clearly, they had the chance to develop a lot more. We know that 2026 will be much more difficult than last year. I expect the competitiveness will be very high. For us it will be much more difficult to confirm what we did last year, but this is what we have to work for.”

Ferrari 499P Hypercar number 50 airborne on track with sponsor logos and TotalEnergies banner, black and white photo.

499Ps set the pace at Imola testing

DPPI

Yet the 499P has gone into the new season with a series of tweaks, not as a result of the joker system but an overarching rehomologation process. All the cars have gone back into the wind tunnel as a result of the Sauber Technologies facility no longer being available after Audi’s takeover of the Swiss team. Previously, LMH machinery was homologated at Sauber and the LMDh contenders that also compete in Hypercar at both Sauber and the Windshear tunnel in ConcordNorth Carolina.

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The need to put the LMHs through Windshear has coincided with a desire on the part of the rule makers to create what they have called a more robust homologation process, which has included a new method of defining the ride height and a downshifting of the aerodynamic performance window. Manufacturers have to fit within prescribed minimums and maximums on drag and downforce under both sets of regulations, which have been lowered for the new season. The reasons had yet to be explained — even to the participants – at press time, but the shift appears to have been motivated to give more scope to the system of Balance of Performance designed to create a level playing field in Hypercar. The FIA and ACO had little room to manoeuvre last year with Peugeot and Aston Martin, which for much of the season were nailed on at maximum power and minimum weight.

“What we have done out of this rehomologation is to still have a car that is easy to balance”

This rehomologation explains the slightly different look of 499P for this year. There have been detail changes across the car: “Flicks, dive planes, fences in the diffuser, Gurney flaps and things like that,” says Cannizzo. The biggest modification, at least one that is visible, is the removal of the Gurney at the end of the rear body section. They have added up to a car that is “inherently slightly slower” than before. “What we have done out of this rehomologation is to still have a car that is easy to balance, not to jeopardise our main characteristics,” says Cannizzo. He reckons this rehomologation should not affect the playing field per se, though he adds the caveat that some of its rivals — Cadillac, BMW and Alpine — were already familiar with the Windshear tunnel when the latest process began. He also suggests that what he calls the “repeatability” of results in Windshear tunnel is less consistent than at Sauber.

Ferrari 499P Hypercar number 50 racing at speed with sponsor logos, motion‑blurred background, black and white photo.

Can the marque match Toyota’s five-on-the-trot victories from 2018-22?

There’s another factor that could shake up the pecking order in Hypercar at Le Mans. A new range of Michelin slick tyres has been introduced, incorporating a minimum of 50% sustainable materials on the way to its target of hitting 100% for all its tyres, road and race, by 2050. Testing, says Cannizzo, has confirmed that the warm-up of the new rubber in the initial laps out of the pits is better than before, as demonstrated in the Daytona and Sebring enduros in January and March. The working temperature range of each of three compounds — all of which will be available at Le Mans — also appears bigger than before. It could, he suggests, “bring new opportunities”. By that he means, for example, there might just be something to gain by an earlier switch to the soft as the sun drops on Saturday night.

Ferrari race car number 51 in pit stop with crew in red uniforms and sponsor logos, black and white photo.

There will be two WEC rounds before the circus arrives at Le Mans

Charly López/Andrea Lorenzina/DPPI

There is also a question mark about the BoP, too. It remains a work in progress, and the FIA and the ACO have stated that there will be further revisions for 2026. Success handicaps, a measure being kept in the back pocket to further balance the field, were never planned to be used at Le Mans.

Calado obliquely refers to the BoP when asked to assess Ferrari’s chances, though the three-letter acronym doesn’t cross his lips — he’s not allowed to talk about it by regulation. “Le Mans is unique compared with anywhere else, so it really is an unknown,” he says. “At the end of the day the numbers we are given can be very important. I am sure we are going to be up there. Four in a row would be crazy. Never say never.”

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Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

Robert Kubica loves the Le Mans 24 Hours. And he reckons he’s going to love it all the more this time around. He’s going back as the reigning champion and he didn’t want to miss out, even though there was what he only describes as a “new challenge” outside of sports car racing on the table for 2026. He might have come to regret it had he passed up the opportunity to return this year, he suspects.

“We all race for trophies, but I also race for the emotions and the feelings it provides,” reflects Kubica, who is bidding to make it two in a row with team-mates Phil Hanson and Yifei Ye at the centrepiece round of the World Endurance Championship, driving for the AF Corse Ferrari team. “In the future I might have regretted it if I didn’t go back as the winner of the race. I want to experience that. Inside the car, once I have my helmet on, it’s going to be the same. But outside the car, I think it will be something different.”

The love story with Le Mans began five years ago when Kubica contested the 24 Hours for the first time at the wheel of an LMP2 prototype. He would have had good reason to leave damning the place after his maiden assault on the big race. He was set to win the class, together with Ye and Louis Delétraz aboard a WRT-run ORECA-Gibson 07, when the car ground to a halt after cutting out under the Dunlop Bridge at the start of the final lap.

Kubica in Citroën rally car and Orlen endurance racer

From left: WRC2 champion, 2013; Kubica’s Le Mans debut, with WRT, 2021

Ferrari, DPPI

His first crack at the big race, aged 36, took him back to the earliest days of his career. “I’d followed the race a bit on television, but I was discovering the event and the track for the first time,” explains the Pole. “The adventure kind of disappears when you have been doing motor sport for so long, but going to Le Mans for the first time took me back to when I was a kid going to Italy for the first time at the beginning of my karting career. Le Mans is unique, though it’s difficult to explain it. There’s nowhere else quite like it and when I went there for the first time I experienced a 360-degree sweep of emotions, good ones and bad ones. To come so close to victory only made me want to achieve it even more.”

Kubica hints that he regrets not taking the challenge of Le Mans sooner in his career. “Knowing what Le Mans is offering I would probably have tried to do it earlier,” he reckons. “But if I didn’t do it, it was because I was focused on something else. So it was the right decision.”

In the years following the accident on the northern Italian Ronde di Andora rally in February 2011, which left Kubica with life-changing injuries and ended the first chapter of his Formula 1 career, circuit racing was firmly off the agenda. He threw himself back into rallying “to occupy my brain and keep it from negative thoughts, thinking of what might have been”. Kubica, who had been about to start his second season with Renault in F1, had a Ferrari contract for the following year in his briefcase. Rallying had been something in which he dabbled for fun and to hone his driving skills, but now it became what he calls “a relief valve”.

Ferrari No83 wins Le Mans with Kubica and team celebrating

Clockwise from top: 2025 Le Mans 24 Hours-winning Ferrari 499P; It was Ferrari’s third win on the trot; Kubica gave a driving masterclass at La Sarthe last summer

In the knowledge that he was now never going to win the F1 world title, he set himself what he regarded as an altogether loftier ambition. “In my mind I wanted to say I am trying to achieve something even higher than an F1 world championship, so that I didn’t have time to think of the past and the what-ifs,” he recalls. “I just focused on a new challenge. There is nothing more complicated for the circuit driver than trying to compete at the highest level in the WRC. It’s a completely different sport.”

“We all race for trophies, but I also race for the emotions it provides”

Kubica ultimately fell short in his ambition to win a round of the World Rally Championship overall. He took the WRC2 title with the PH Sport Citroën team in 2013 and then made “one of my biggest mistakes” when he turned down the chance to drive a WRC car for the factory the following season. He’d only done a handful of rallies on gravel and didn’t have a full-time co-driver, so he decided that it was better to continue to learn his trade as a privateer, first with M-Sport and then, still with the Ford Fiesta RS WRC, his own entry supported by the Italian A-Style team.

From left: Kubica’s second stint as an F1 driver lasted 2018-22, with two seasons at Williams; Rally Finland 2015 getting the most from a Fiesta RS

From left: Kubica’s second stint as an F1 driver lasted 2018-22, with two seasons at Williams; Rally Finland 2015 getting the most from a Fiesta RS

Knowing that he wasn’t going to fulfil his ambitions in rallying, he changed course in 2016. Even though he competed only a few times — one rally and a couple of races — he was far from inactive. “I did very little in the spotlight, but I did some testing, quite a lot in a GP3 car,” he says. “The goal was to come back at the highest level possible in circuit racing. It was kind of a jump into deep water, back into the world in which I belonged. I thought I could go back to professional racing, but I didn’t know where.” It could have taken him into the WEC four years early. Kubica was scheduled to race for the ByKolles team in LMP1 before he opted out of the deal ahead of the season.

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A return to F1 wasn’t in his thoughts. That changed when Renault offered him a test in the summer of 2017. There had been the chance to drive an F1 car earlier, but he had turned it down: “I thought it was a case of, ‘Look what happened to this poor guy, let’s give him a bit of time in an F1 car.’ It wasn’t going to bring me anything, except to restart the bleeding inside me.”

When the Renault opportunity came he thought, “this doesn’t sound like a one-off for some media attention – I thought there was something behind it”. The team put him through all sorts of tests to assess his ability to drive an F1 car in light of the restriction of movement in his right arm resulting from the accident. He tells a fascinating story about a trip to a clinic in Andorra where the assessment was made. “On the first evening we went out for dinner and I ordered steak – I couldn’t cut it,” he recalls. “The doctors were all thinking at that point that it wasn’t going to work. But when they undertook the tests they found that in terms of precision and speed, my left arm was 30% better than anything they had seen before.

Ferrari No83 prototype racing through Le Mans corner

Now Kubica will forever be associated with Le Mans

“The brain is a powerful tool, and if you ask me how I drove before the accident, I can’t remember. Probably I performed better, but I think I am more sensitive to what the car is doing than before.”

“I heard positive stories about Le Mans, but I thought, ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah’”

The Renault test ultimately took Kubica back into F1 with Williams, first as a reserve driver in 2018 and then for a full season of racing the year after. That was followed by three years as a reserve for Alfa Romeo (née Sauber) that included two race outings in 2021. That was his first year of sports car racing, which as well as encompassing his maiden Le Mans assault included a victorious campaign in the European Le Mans Series with WRT. Once again, Kubica was looking for a new challenge after his second F1 foray, plus his year in the DTM driving a BMW M4 Turbo DTM.

Kubica and Ferrari teammates celebrate 2025 Le Mans victory on podium

From left: Prema’s team principal René Rosin, Kubica, Lorenzo Colombo and Louis Delétraz – second in class at Le Mans, 2022

“I heard lots of positive stories about Le Mans when I was in F1, but I thought, ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah, it is an exaggeration,’” he shrugs. “In your life, you have to discover to understand. My motor sport adventure, and forget the fact that I have won the race, would not be the same without Le Mans. If a driver has the chance to do Le Mans, he should take it. It’s the same for young drivers and Macau. If as a young driver you haven’t done Macau, you haven’t done the best event you can possibly do.”

Kubica’s sports car adventure continued in 2022 with a full WEC campaign, this time with the Italian Prema team. It included another near-miss at Le Mans together with Delétraz and Lorenzo Colombo with second in class. A return to WRT in 2023 then yielded the WEC P2 title, though only another runner-up spot at Le Mans with Delétraz and Rui Andrade. The growth of the Hypercar category facilitated Kubica’s move to the top class of the WEC for 2024. He nearly ended up racing a Porsche 963 LMDh for the British Jota squad, before a drive in the ‘extra’ Ferrari 499P Le Mans Hypercar fielded by AF alongside the two full factory cars came into the equation. He couldn’t turn it down.

Kubica and teammates celebrate atop Ferrari No83 after Le Mans win

From left: Kubica, Yifei Ye and Phil Hanson in ’25, all overall winners at Le Mans for the first time

Ferrari, DPPI

“One of the last painful things post-accident remaining in my mind was that I never had this chance to drive for Ferrari,” recounts Kubica. “I thought if I didn’t do it, maybe I will have to live for the next 20 years with, perhaps not regrets, but doubts.”

“We were running P10 or P11 and when I got out we were at the front”

Kubica, Ye and Robert Shwartzman were frontrunners at Le Mans in 2024, before and after a 30-second time penalty after Kubica was adjudged to have been at fault for an incident that put Dries Vanthoor’s BMW out of the race during the night. They were back in the mix when a hybrid issue resulted in retirement with four hours to go. Fast forward 12 months, and Kubica was the star of the race. He outperformed all the drivers in the factory cars by some margin, though he is dismissive when it is pointed out that he was more than three tenths up on the nearest of them based on a 100-lap average. “Endurance racing is not about averages,” he says. The race was won for Ferrari when Kubica was at the wheel of a mammoth quintuple stint lasting three hours and 33 minutes at a time when the chasing Porsche, with Kévin Estre driving at the end, appeared to have a genuine shot at victory. He reveals that he felt “a kind of calmness in my driving, which is what you want in the moments when you are fighting for something big”.

Ferrari No83 crosses Le Mans finish with team cheering

Kubica drove the final three-and-a-half-hour stint in the 499P, finishing 14sec ahead of the Porsche 963 of Matt Campbell, Kévin Estre and Laurens Vanthoor

Yet the stints that wowed the watching world and ultimately consigned Porsche Penske Motorsport to second position — and an exit from the WEC — aren’t the ones he chooses when asked to pick his best. Rather he plumps for his first turn at the wheel of the No83 Ferrari after taking over from Hanson after 6pm on Saturday. “I don’t think a lot of people saw it, but we were running P10 or P11 and when I got out of the car we were up at the front,” says Kubica of his first two hours. “I think Yifei was within six seconds of the leader when he went back out. That gave us a big boost. It is important to try to run Le Mans from the front. If you are chasing, you have to take more risks.”

Ferrari No3 racing through forest track at Le Mans

Kubica – bitten by the winning bug

This time around, Kubica believes he and his team-mates are going to Le Mans in a stronger position than 12 months ago, though he adds the caveat that the level in Hypercar remains on the up. The stability of the driver line-up — and the race engineer — will be important. “Continuity is important and for young drivers like Yifei and Phil a win can be a big lift,” he says. “But how the others will perform is the big unknown.”

Kubica, though, is going to savour the moment when he returns to Le Mans as the winner. His name will forever be linked to the big race and he says he’ll keep going back “so long as I am performing well and having fun.” Actually, he reckons he’ll be at Le Mans beyond that. “The first year I don’t race at Le Mans, I am going to go with some friends,” he smiles. “I want to live it as a fan.”

Ferrari driver in red suit holding helmet

Le Mans or WEC title?

But Ferrari’s Phil Hanson will be gunning for both…

It doesn’t come much bigger than winning the Le Mans 24 Hours, but Phil Hanson received an accolade that is right up with it at the start of this year. He was announced as a Ferrari factory driver: “About the best you can achieve.”

He admits that it was “on my mind” when he signed to drive Ferrari’s satellite Hypercar entry for 2025. “It is something I wanted to be part of. I am incredibly competitive, so being aligned with a manufacturer that shares that passion for success is everything I ever wanted.”

The move has come off the back of a season in which Hanson won Le Mans and finished second in the Hypercar points. But he reckoned a win at the French enduro in ’25 was a long shot. “After Ferrari had won the previous two years, I thought we were almost guaranteed not to,” he admits. “It was only when I saw how relentlessly everyone was working that I realised it might be possible. Even though we’ve now won three in a row, there is still the same hunger for a fourth.”

Ask Hanson whether his hunger to add a WEC title to his CV is stronger than a desire for another Le Mans victory, and he appears to be leaning towards the former. “Seeing that we’ve now finished second in the WEC, to win it would be the obvious goal,” he reckons. “The reality is that winning that race and winning the championship often go hand in hand.”

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

Ferrari

Ferrari 499P

It’s business as usual for the manufacturer trying to make it four in a row at the Le Mans 24 Hours with the 499P Le Mans Hypercar: Ferrari returns with a largely unchanged car without any major upgrades and the same drivers. It has made great play of the importance of stability in its line-up so it keeps with the same six factory drivers who took it to both WEC Hypercar titles last year and have been with the programme since 2023. The crew of the satellite No83 AF Corse team that completed the hat-trick at Le Mans in 2025 is unchanged, too.

No50 Nicklas Nielsen (DK), Antonio Fuoco (I), Miguel Molina (E)

No51 James Calado (GB), Alessandro Pier Guidi (I), Antonio Giovinazzi (I)

No83 Phil Hanson (GB), Robert Kubica (PL), Yifei Ye (CN)


Alpine A36 endurance prototype racing at circuit

La Sarthe has long-since been a track of fairy tale endings… but an Alpine win in its final Le Mans showing?

Alpine

Alpine A424

The French marque, part of Renault, makes its final appearance at Le Mans with the A424 LMDh after the decision earlier this year to scale back on its motor sport activities. With slower than expected growth in its niche in the electric vehicle market, the cars are headed for the museum on the completion of the season. Mick Schumacher has departed the line-up to race in IndyCar and been replaced by Victor Martins, a former member of Alpine’s F1 academy programme and now test and reserve driver for Williams. Ex-Formula E champion António Félix da Costa returns to the WEC after a two-season absence to take the other vacant seat after the departure of Paul-Loup Chatin to Genesis. A single evo joker has been invoked, with an increase in downforce the target.

No35 António Félix da Costa (P), Charles Milesi (F), Ferdinand Habsburg (A)

No36 Jules Gounon (F), Victor Martins (F), Frédéric Makowiecki (F)


Cadillac endurance prototypes with Hertz livery showcased under dramatic lighting

Two WEC Jota Cadillac Hypercars will line up at Le Mans; last year its No12 entry finished fourth

Cadillac

Cadillac V-Series.R

Cadillac downscales its Le Mans entry from last year’s four cars to three. The Action Express Racing squad that joined the full-season WEC entries at the French enduro in 2023-25 is concentrating on its IMSA SportsCar Championship programme in North America. Wayne Taylor Racing joins up with the British Jota team for a second year. There’s no Jenson Button at Jota this year; the 2009 F1 champion has hung up his helmet. Jack Aitken takes his place and is pulling double duty across WEC and IMSA where he is racing with Action Express. The Caddy V-Series.R has benefited from two joker upgrades: one aerodynamic and one on the braking system.

No12 Alex Lynn (GB), Will Stevens (GB), Norman Nato (F)

No38 Jack Aitken (GB), Earl Bamber (NZ), Sébastien Bourdais (F)

No101 Filipe Albuquerque (P), Jordan Taylor (USA), Ricky Taylor (USA)


Toyota GR010 Hybrid number 7 racing at Le Mans

The TR010 is an updating of the GR010 – ‘TR’ due to a rebrand to Toyota Racing. Best-looking car on the grid this year?

Toyota

Toyota TR010 Hybrid

The Japanese manufacturer has undertaken a significant overhaul of its long-serving LMH, the oldest car on the Hypercar grid. It’s even got a new type number: the TR010 Hybrid rather than the GR010 after the Gazoo suffix was dropped from the name of the team. The developments under the evo joker regulations have been focused on the aerodynamics, with the goal of overcoming the deficit in straightline speed that has hamstrung its efforts to add to its tally of Le Mans victories since win number five in 2022. The driving crew remains constant for a third season.

No7 Mike Conway (GB), Kamui Kobayashi (J), Nyck de Vries (NL)

No8 Sébastien Buemi (CH), Brendon Hartley (NZ), Ryo Hirakawa (J)


BMW M Hybrid V8 number 20 racing in endurance series

BMW

BMW M Hybrid V8

A manufacturer that endured a difficult second season in the WEC in 2025 with the Belgian WRT squad, at least after it was right in the mix at the season-opener in Qatar, has undertaken a significant aero upgrade of its M Hybrid V8, below. The aim of the updates, which have given its LMDh a change of look, are aimed at creating a more consistent racing car. The same six drivers return.

No15 Kevin Magnussen (DK), Raffaele Marciello (CH), Dries Vanthoor (B)

No20 Robin Frijns (NL), René Rast (D), Sheldon van der Linde (ZA)


Genesis number 17 endurance prototype racing car with Shell livery

The motor racing arm of Hyundai is a newcomer to the WEC but its drivers are not lacking Le Mans experience – André Lotterer is a thrice winner

Genesis

Genesis GMR-001

A manufacturer new not just to Hypercar and the WEC but to motor sport as a whole has modest ambitions for its maiden Le Mans with an in-house team established at Paul Ricard. Hyundai’s prestige brand has big ambitions, though, and insists it’s in WEC for the long haul. It has assembled an impressive driver line-up with three-time Le Mans winner André Lotterer and Pipo Derani, who has four victories at the Sebring 12 Hours to his name, and Mathieu Jaminet recruited from Porsche.

No17 André Lotterer (D), Pipo Derani (BR), Mathys Jaubert (F)

No18 Mathieu Jaminet (F), Paul-Loup Chatin (F), Daniel Juncadella (E)


Aston Martin Vantage GT3 number 007 racing with Heart of Racing livery

Aston Martin

Aston Martin Valkyrie

Aston Martin is back for a second attempt with the Valkyrie LMH, above, to reprise its solo Le Mans triumph in 1959. The Heart of Racing factory team has been on an upward curve since last year’s 24 Hours when it got both its cars to the finish without major problems. With a bit more luck it might have finished the year with a top-three race finish, something the Valkyrie did achieve over in North America with second in the IMSA SportsCar Championship finale at Road Atlanta. No jokers played. It is too early in the programme for that, says Aston.

No007 Harry Tincknell (GB), Tom Gamble (GB), Ross Gunn (GB)

No009 Marco Sorensen (DK), Alex Riberas (E), Roman De Angelis (CDN)


Peugeot 9X8 number 94 endurance prototype with TotalEnergies livery

In the WEC last year, Peugeot’s results improved after Le Mans, including podiums at Austin and Fuji

Peugeot

Peugeot 9X8

This is a fourth Le Mans campaign for Peugeot’s 9X8 LMH, which underwent a significant overhaul one race into the 2024 WEC season. Those revisions and changes in the years either side mean it has exhausted its supply of jokers, but the organisers have more wriggle room with the rehomologation of the Hypercar grid to bring the French car into the equation. The results of Le Mans last year suggest that might be needed, notwithstanding the late-season form that took it to a pair of podiums. Nick Cassidy joins the line-up after signing up with Peugeot sister brand Citroën in Formula E after leaving Jaguar. Théo Pourchaire is now a full-timer after making his debut with the team at the end of last year. GW

No93 Paul di Resta (GB), Nick Cassidy (NZ), Stoffel Vandoorne (B)

No94 Loïc Duval (F), Malthe Jakobsen (DK), Théo Pourchaire (F)

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

1. Toyota is back in the red

Toyota doesn’t just have a revised car with a new name, a TR rather than a GR010 Hybrid, it’s got a new colour scheme to go with what can be described as significant aero changes. The matte black livery of the past two seasons is gone, replaced by a predominantly red paint job with white flashes. It takes its inspiration from the retro livery run on the No7 car at Le Mans last year, which tipped its hat to the colours in which Toyota fielded its underachieving GT-One in its inaugural Le Mans campaign of 1998.

The current car started out at the beginning of the Hypercar era in 2021 running in a mish-mash of white, red and a bit of black. Before that, Toyota LMP1 cars were blue and white, though it is largely forgotten that, when Toyota presented the TS030 Hybrid that would take it back to Le Mans in 2012 on the rebirth of the World Endurance Championship, it was liveried in red and white.

By the time it came to its debut, delayed from Spa in May until Le Mans after a shunt in testing, the machine had changed to blue. The initial plan had been to run one of each. That was canned for various reasons. For a start, every hybrid Toyota road car had blue shading inside its interlocking oval badge, and there was also the concern about making enough sets of body parts to be wrapped in different colours to act as spares. Then there was the fact that Toyota reckoned its prototype just looked better in blue.

Iconic Dunlop Bridge at Le Mans circuit sunset with #PassionDunlop branding and golden sky backdrop

It was announced last December that the iconic – and we don’t use that word often – Dunlop Bridge would go, replaced by a Goodyear Bridge

James Moy/Getty Images

2. Dunlop no more

One of the most enduring landmarks on the Circuit de la Sarthe is gone. Sort of. The Dunlop Bridge for decades provided the backdrop to that famous first-lap photograph of the pack streaming down the hill into the Esses and on to Tertre Rouge and the start of the Mulsanne Straight. Or at least it did before that section of track was remodelled from a short straight into a new wiggle for 2002. The pedestrian track crossing over the chicane at the start of the 8.47-mile lap is now the Goodyear Bridge.

The structure of the bridge is the same, but it has been refaced in line with the new deal: it is still supposed to look like half a tyre! The backstory involves the complicated ownership history of the Dunlop brand. Goodyear had the rights to use the Dunlop name for tyres in several markets, including Europe and North America, but last year sold that to the Japanese Sumitomo Rubber Industries company, which had owned the bulk of Dunlop since the 1980s. Goodyear is the supplier of tyres for the LMP2 and LMGT3 classes, it should be pointed out.

The bridge remains but the name is changed

It is the end of a story that dates to the inaugural running of the 24 Hours in 1923. The first Dunlop Bridge was near the Pontlieue hairpin at the north of the circuit in the days when it stretched into the city. It has been in its present location since 1932, but largely forgotten is the fact that there were two bridges bearing the word ‘Dunlop’, the second one near Tertre Rouge.

M24 Museum of Motorsport Le Mans architectural renderings with Richard Mille partnership and modern design

An essential stop-off on anyone’s French holiday will be the new M24 museum at Le Mans, which opens in May

ACO

3. M24 – Le Mans’ new museum

Le Mans has a brand new museum for this year, which for those making a pilgrimage has to be a nailed-on visit. It has been built on the site of its previous home and is known as the M24 – Museum of Motorsport in reference to a partnership between the race organiser, the Automobile Club de l’Ouest, and watchmaker Richard Mille. The Frenchman is also president of the FIA Endurance Commission and an avid car collector. Some of his 100-strong fleet will be part of the displays in the 8600sq m (92,570sq ft) building located at the main gate of the track.

It’s not just sports cars that will be in there from its opening on May 28. There will be sections dedicated to other disciplines of motor sport – Formula 1, rallying and IndyCar included. Machinery such as the 1924 Le Mans-winning Bentley 3-Litre Sport will be joined by a Ferrari F2002 driven by Michael Schumacher. There’s no word yet on whether there’ll be an example of McLaren’s USAC Indycar of the 1970s with which the museum shares its name!

LMGT3 No.10 race car in orange‑black Goodyear livery with DHL sponsorship and aerodynamic design

Garage 59’s McLaren 720S

Garage 59

4. Meanwhile, in LMGT3…

It’s largely business as usual in LMGT3, with one major exception. The British Garage 59 team has taken over as McLaren’s representative after United Autosports opted to step back to focus on its Hypercar entry with the British marque next year. Garage 59 is a fitting replacement because the team takes its name from the race number of the Le Mans-winning McLaren F1 GTR of 1995.

The organisation headed by four-time Le Mans participant Andrew Kirkaldy developed the first two McLaren GT3 cars, the MP4-12C and the 650S, before the manufacturer took the GT3 programme in-house on the launch of the 720S. It traded as McLaren GT but, when it decided that it ought to start running its own team to showcase the 650S, it came up with the Garage 59 name in a nice touch. It all seemed a bit strange when it was running Aston Martins in various series around Europe.

Otherwise, the same nine manufacturers and nine teams remain, although The Heart of Racing now has two Aston Martin Vantage GT3s run by the Prodrive/Aston Martin Racing operation. Gray Newell drives one of them. If his name sounds familiar, it’s because he’s the son of THOR co-founder and tech billionaire Gabe Newell, to whom we all owe thanks for providing the inspiration and much of the funding to revive the Valkyrie Le Mans Hypercar project.

There’s no Valentino Rossi this year. The seven-time MotoGP champion scaled back his racing activities in 2025, concentrating on the WEC in LMGT3 with the BMW WRT team and only making occasional appearances in the GT World Challenge Europe in one of the team’s M4 GT3 Evos. For this year he’s contesting the full GTWCE.

Le Mans 24 Hours podium celebration with Hyperpole winners, fireworks, Rolex branding and Michelin backdrop

Fireworks for the polesitters in 2025 – but there’s a format change this year

Jakob Ebrey/LAT

5. Format fettling for qualifying

There’s a subtle tweak to the qualifying format for Le Mans this year. The additional third session introduced last year to the Hyperpole knock-out system that came on stream in 2020 remains, but there are limitations on who can drive when. In 2025, a driver taking part in the opening 30-minute session on Wednesday evening could also drive in one of the H1 or H2 sessions on Thursday. Now he or she won’t be able to do so. So if a car progresses all the way to the final H2 shoot-out lasting 10 minutes, each of the three drivers will have taken part in qualifying. The only stipulation on who is nominated to drive in each of the sessions is in LMGT3, where the mandatory bronze rated driver must take the wheel on Wednesday.

Le Mans 24 Hours team lineup with Porsche prototypes and GT cars on track beside grandstands and ferris wheel

What a difference a year makes… there were seven Porsche entries at Le Mans last year – including Proton’s No99 Hypercar

Porsche AG

6. No Porsche?

Porsche is absent from the prototype ranks this year after three seasons bidding for that elusive outright 20th Le Mans victory with the 963 LMDh. It didn’t have to be this way. There was a plan for the Proton Competition privateer squad, which ran a 963 in the WEC in 2023-25, to continue with backing from Penske, which would have allowed the US organisation to take up the automatic entry it had garnered for winning the teams’ title in last year’s IMSA SportsCar Championship. All that was required was permission to use the word Porsche in the entry name, something that wasn’t forthcoming from Stuttgart. Series rules required Porsche to be represented as a manufacturer, which ran counter to its decision last summer to quit the WEC at a time of falling sales.

It’s not like the old days when Porsche seemed to be ever-present at or somewhere near the front of the Le Mans grid – even when it looked like it wouldn’t! Think of the 936 Group 6 cars being dusted off and rolled out of the museum at short notice for 1981, or the hurried conception and development of the car correctly known as the Dauer 962 LM Porsche of ’94. Both projects came good and triumphed in June.

No Porsche prototypes this time means fans of the marque only have the Manthey-run 911 GT3 Rs to cheer. They might be hoarse by the end of the race, given the Nürburgring-based team half-owned by Porsche has claimed class victory in each of the first two years of the LMGT3 era. Porsche has a new evolution version of its existing 992-shape GT3 racer for 2026, while Ford and Ferrari have also updated their respective Mustang and 296 racers.

Genesis No.17 Hypercar racing at Le Mans 2026 with Shell, DHL and Michelin sponsorship in motion blur

South Korean manufacturer Genesis makes its Le Mans debut with its GMR-001 Hypercar – and will be on the WEC grid this year too

Andrea Lorenzina/DPPI

7. It’s just the beginning for Genesis

The number of manufacturers duking it out in Hypercar remains the same as last year despite Porsche’s departure. The arrival of Genesis, the prestige brand of Hyundai, keeps the tally at eight.

Die-hard sports car fans might not regard it as a fair swap, but Genesis means business. It insists it’s in the WEC for the foreseeable future — definitely into the next rules cycle starting in 2030 — and it appears to be doing everything right. The creation of an in-house team based at Paul Ricard and the choice of drivers backs up the perception that it is deadly serious.

The big stories, however, will be next year when Ford and McLaren, two Le Mans-winning manufacturers, arrive with their respective LMDh contenders. That should give us nine manufacturers at the front of the field (new arrivals minus Alpine).

Green endurance prototype racing at Le Mans sunset with aerodynamic design and dramatic golden sky backdrop

Polish LMP2 team Inter Europol, with drivers Tom Dillmann, Jakub Smiechowski and Nick Yelloly, had a golden Le Mans in 2025

Damien Saulnier/DPPI

8. LMP2 carries on regardless

Fewer Hypercars on the grid – down three to 18 – means that the LMP2 prototype class provides a slightly bigger proportion of the 62-car field than last year. The entry for a category that has been absent from the full WEC schedule for the past two season stands at 19, two up on last year and well above the 15-car minimum the ACO set when P2 disappeared from the world championship.

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All the usual suspects are present, each running the ORECA-Gibson 07. LMP2 at Le Mans has effectively been a one-make class since 2023 as the other three marques licensed to build cars faded from the scene. We’ll have to wait until 2028 for a bit of variety when the next generation of P2 contenders powered by a Gibson 3.4-litre twin-turbo V6 arrives. Just two constructors, ORECA and Ligier, have been granted the licences to develop P2 cars this time.

The two teams that have taken home the silverware over the past three years each field two cars. The Polish Euro Interpol Competition squad is back with last year’s winning line-up of Tom Dillmann, Jakub Smiechowski and Briton Nick Yelloly. The driving squad over at United, P2 winners at the Circuit de la Sarthe in 2024, includes Ben Hanley and Oliver Jarvis, as well as Mikkel Jensen. The Dane is keeping his hand in with United this year while waiting for McLaren’s new LMDh contender.

There’s a Fittipaldi as well as a Trulli on the entry list. Sometime F1 driver Pietro Fittipaldi, Emerson’s grandson, turns out with the British Vector Sport team, while Enzo Trulli, son of Jarno, races for the Algarve Pro operation with which he moved into the prototype arena with an Asian Le Mans Series programme over the winter. Another big name in a P2 is Porsche factory driver Kévin Estre. Rather than have a weekend off, he is turning out with the French TDS Racing squad for what will be his 12th Le Mans start. It’s not his first appearance in a P2 here. He made his debut in an OAK Racing Ligier back in 2015.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

48 What to look out for
From Genesis to… several other revelations for the 24 Hours

58 The Hypercar teams
Who’s hot, who’s not,
and who’s driving in June

62 Robert Kubica
Ferrari‘s Polish superstar on his road to 2025 Le Mans glory

70 Ferrari: four in a row?
How the Prancing Horse is plotting a latest success

77 The racing archduke
Getting to know Alpine works driver Ferdinand Habsburg

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Nico Rosberg celebrates victory at Suzuka in 2016

I enjoyed your article about the lifestyles of James Hunt and Barry Sheene [The boys are back in town, May]. So different from the ‘total dedication’ and media savvy of today’s stars who, with few exceptions, won’t risk incurring disfavour with their employers and sponsors through incautious or unapproved choices of words and actions.

When, in the early 1980s, I bought our house in Fulham, I found race numbers stuck to the garage wall. They were smaller than those used for cars, so I assumed they were numbers used in bike racing.

Investigation revealed that the house had belonged to one Piers Weld-Forester, an aristocratic playboy who had been a sometime boyfriend of Princess Anne. He had married in 1973 and, tragically, his wife had died the following year in an air crash. How this affected Weld-Forester can only be imagined, but ‘wild’ might best describe his subsequent lifestyle. He had participated, with moderate success, in endurance racing before turning his attention to motorcycle racing, which is how he came to know and become friendly with Barry Sheene.

Weld-Forester invited Sheene to stay at his house during part of the recovery from his dreadful 1975 Daytona accident, and Sheene’s ‘recuperation’ was aided, or at least made infinitely more pleasurable, by the attentions of the plethora of ladies who attended the frequent, somewhat dissolute parties Weld-Forester put on. I’d like to think that this hospitality went some way towards preparing Sheene for his successful 1976 season. With a bit of luck English Heritage will one day install one of their blue plaques: an inscription along the lines of ‘Barry Sheene, champion motor cyclist, caroused here’ would seem appropriate.

Happy days, although sadly Weld-Forester died in 1977 in a racing accident at Brands Hatch.

Tony Gomis, Fulham, London

Just a short note regarding the Hunt & Sheene article in the May edition. I just wanted to say a genuine thank you. I’ve certainly read more technically interesting pieces and probably read more historically detailed articles. However in terms of capturing my memories of such a great period in racing history – it was simply the very best!

I was a ’skool boy’ in 1976 busy falling in love with motor sport. I was there at Brands (actually fell asleep in an F3 Brabham – long story) that year, and it began a life-long love of, and involvement in, the sport. You guys totally nailed it. I’ve always understood how seminal the Jenks/Moss article was, however for my own age group, this ran it close. I’ve been floating around on the memories of that year since reading it. Superb.

Richard Booton, Dorchester

Ferrari F1 show car with Hamilton and Leclerc numbers

At Ferrari’s launch of its F1 car, there were two numbers on the bodywork, as our reader spotted

Ferrari

On pages 68 and 69 of the April issue [New power generation] the Ferrari pictured clearly shows the rear of the car with No44 (Lewis Hamilton) and the nose shows No16 (Charles Leclerc). Two different numbers. Do these drivers know their cars appear to be ‘cut and shut’? Can somebody please explain?

David Clark, Sidmouth, Devon

The images from the launch event are of show cars; teams regularly place both driver numbers on these. No nefarious under-the-railway-arch activity going on! – Ed

Over the years, Motor Sport wrote positively of the various models of Bristol cars it subjected to road tests, and I thought the enclosed copy of Advice of Despatch note, pictured right, might be of interest being that for the Type 403 saloon purchased in July 1953 by The Teesdale Publishing Co Ltd for Mr Tee.

In early 2025 the Bristol Owners Heritage Trust (BOHT) acquired about a tonne of documents, drawings, brochures, manuals and ephemera from the liquidators of the owners of the last iteration of Bristol Cars that are now being sorted and catalogued to create the archive of the records of The Car Division of The Bristol Aeroplane Co Ltd and its successors. It is appropriate that this archive will be housed at Aerospace Bristol in Filton close to where the majority of Bristol cars were assembled.

Those interested in the activities of the BOHT can view the trust’s website at bristolownersht.com.

Michael Crawford, Trustee, Bristol Owners Heritage Trust

I am getting more and more annoyed at being told, after 65 years, that I do not understand motor sport. Watching F1 on TV this year I have seen lots of overtaking. Isn’t that what everyone has been calling for? But this is apparently the wrong sort of overtaking. I’m wondering whether it’s Mr Verstappen and Jeremy Snook [Letters, May]who don’t understand motor sport?

Things are different this year. So get used to it.

Rod Hunt, Seaton, Devon

Mario Andretti drives STP Brawner Hawk to 1969 Indy 500 victory

Mario Andretti won his sole Indy 500 in 1969 driving this Brawner Hawk – now a museum piece

IMS

Thank you for your feature on the 1969 Indianapolis 500 [Super Mario: Indy ’69, May]. Those were the best times. Different chassis and engines, and all that lovely chrome! Driven by real heroes who carried the scars of their profession.

Last year, I was visiting the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington DC, where I discovered Mario’s STP Brawner Hawk on display. A high-water mark of American race engineering before the trickle of British designs became a flood. A replica is at the IMS Museum but it seems the Smithsonian is the original.

Advice of Despatch note for Bristol 403 saloon sent to Motor Sport in 1953

A Bristol for the Motor Sport proprietor, Mr Tee; we write about the 403 in Rumblings, June 1953 issue

Thanks also for your Parting Shot of the previous edition [April] showing Jacky Ickx in the old tunnel of Monaco in 1972. It was replaced by the new tunnel the following year. There was no two-hour limit then so it took Jean-Pierre Beltoise 2hr 27min to complete the 80 laps in the rain. That was a long time for me to stand in the tribune at Ste-Devote getting thoroughly soaked.

The flag was dropped early, which caught out the front row, allowing Beltoise to get by.

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On the prior Friday, I was walking the principality when I came across DSJ talking to someone. I asked for his autograph (not knowing that I would find him staying in the same small hotel as me!). Being DSJ he brought me into the conversation and we discussed why no one had taken up the 1.5- litre supercharged route to F1. The other person was Max Mosley – I wonder what became of him?

That is the joy of your magazine. I open it and the memories come flooding out. Keep up the good work.

Peter O’Donnell, Epsom, Surrey


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