Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

Cars are being pushed for the start of the 1961 Italian Grand Prix, including the Coopers of Jack Brabham (No10) and Bruce McLaren (No12) and Lotuses of Jim Clark (No36) and Innes Ireland (No38). The ordinariness of the picture masks the tragedy that was to come: the race was marked by the death of potential Formula 1 world champion Wolfgang von Trips, whose Ferrari collided with Clark’s Lotus and crashed, killing 15 spectators.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

1962 Austin Mini Riviera

Sold by Bonhams Cars Online, £97,650

Fiat’s doorless Jolly beach cars crop up for sale quite often. But when did you last see an example of Austin’s attempt at evoking the Riviera vibe? Probably never, since a mere 14 were made from 1961-62, 13 of which were sent to the US. This one remained on home soil and was loaned to the Queen who is said to have used it on the Windsor and Sandringham estates. The unique Alamo Beige car was returned to Longbridge in 1968, from where it was bought by the vendor’s grandfather – who had worked in the BMC experimental department with Mini designer Alec Issigonis.


2021 Ford GT ’66 heritage edition

2021 Ford GT ’66 heritage edition

Sold by Bonhams, £450,000

This second-generation Ford GT was among 50 ’66 Heritage Edition cars built to commemorate the original GT40 achieving a 1-2-3 finish at Daytona in 1966, led by the car of Ken Miles and Lloyd Ruby.


1988 Yamaha XT500

1988 Yamaha XT500

Sold by RM Sotheby’s, £73,100

The price of this big thumper trail bike was accounted for by the fact that it was as brand new – still in its transport crate and with all its ancillary parts packed in the original polystyrene tray.


1959 Austin-Healey Sprite

1959 Austin-Healey Sprite

Sold by Broad Arrow, £37,530

This pristine ‘Frogeye’ Sprite was especially built for Le Mans legend Jacky Ickx who has pledged to donate the entire sale proceeds to a Rwandan charity. Its tweaked engine was good for 75bhp.


2002 BMW Z3M

2002 BMW Z3M

Sold by RM Sotheby’s, £110,085

Finding a low-mileage Z3M that hasn’t been thrashed is no easy task – which explained why this mint Phoenix Yellow model made its money. It was fitted with the rare, desirable 325bhp S54 engine.


1975 Ducati 900SS

1975 Ducati 900SS

Sold by Bonhams, £40,250

This came from the first year of ‘square case’ engine production and is believed to have been owned from new by the much-missed collector and Le Mans racer Alain de Cadenet who died in 2022.


1964 Mini Cooper S

1964 Mini Cooper S

Sold by Dore & Rees, £24,640

Finding an original 1071cc Cooper S is difficult, but to discover one that has been in the same family ownership from new is truly rare. This has been used both for daily driving and competition.


1990 Mercedes-Benz 190E EVO II

1990 Mercedes-Benz 190E EVO II

Sold by Bonhams, £540,000

This sale reinforced the EVO II’s position as one of the most coveted modern classic Mercedes-Benz models of all. Having passed through the hands of three very restrained owners it had clocked up just 110 miles and was described as “factory new”.


Forthcoming sale highlights

  • Barons, Southampton, November 29
    Although Barons was bought by Manor Park Classics almost a year ago, regular sales are still held under the Barons banner. This one could be a useful hunting ground for anyone looking for a historic racing support van for next season – so far, a 1972 Morris half-tonner and a 1959 Ford Thames are up for grabs. Both appear Goodwood Revival-ready.
  • RM Sotheby’s, Phoenix, Arizona, January 23
    If the grey winter of northern Europe is getting you down, head to the warmth of Arizona and the annual January sales. This one is set to include a host of 1960s sporting classics, including a superb Shelby Cobra with the lovely, 289ci engine. It’s been restored in its factory colour scheme of Vineyard Green and could be yours for a predicted £1m.
  • Artcurial, Paris, January 27
    Artcurial’s Automobile Legends sale takes place at the plush Peninsula hotel and will be highlighted by the Ferrari F92A F1 car gifted by the marque to French star Jean Alesi at the end of 1992. Since then it has resided in the gymnasium of his home near Avignon, unused and untouched, and is said to be in exactly the condition as it was in when he received it.
  • Bonhams, Paris, January 29
    If being in the thick of the Rétromobile crowds gets too much, head to the Polo de Paris, one of the world’s most historic venues of the ‘sport of kings’. There you’ll find a selection of 80 classics and modern supercars in the Bonhams auction tent – including a 1955 Mercedes-Benz 300 SL Gullwing in rare black. It’s tipped to fetch up to £1.3m.
Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

Say the name Wolfrace to car fans of a certain age and they will immediately think of the brand’s legendary Slot Mags, the first-ever European-made polished alloy wheels. Founded in 1971, Wolfrace became such a part of car culture that its products were chosen for everything from the Lotus Esprits used in the James Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me to the Land Speed Record car Thrust 2.

1981 Wolfrace Sonic Back

Currently in primer, but the car’s original paintwork was dark purple

Historics

1981 Wolfrace Sonic Barry Treacy and Nick Butler

Car is road legal – and exempt from the MOT test, road tax and the London ULEZ charge

In 1980, meanwhile, the firm launched the celebrated Sonic design that, as well as being standard fitment on performance Fords such as the XR2 and Capri 2.8i, was also available off-the-shelf. To promote the Sonic, Wolfrace founder Barry Treacy commissioned former aerospace designer turned custom car builder Nick Butler to create the out-of-this-world machine pictured here in a bid to command major press coverage while drawing excitable crowds at car shows.

1981 Wolfrace Sonic on display

The Sonic wheels were the reason for the car’s existence

1981 Wolfrace Sonic engine

Two Rover V8 engines sit side-by-side behind the front wheels

Historics

The Wolfrace Sonic is said to have cost more than £75,000 to complete back in 1981 (almost £300,000 today) and featured twin Rover V8 engines driving the rear wheels through two gearboxes and a pair of Jaguar differentials. Its four front wheels used a system based on that of the Tyrrell P34 F1 car, and the two-seater cockpit incorporated an aircraft-style control panel and was accessed through ‘scissor’ doors.

1981 Wolfrace Sonic differential

Twin Jaguar differentials deal with the power

Historics

1981 Wolfrace Sonic steering wheel

Investment of £100,000 has enabled 80% of the restoration work to be completed

Historics

Having been paraded at the opening of the 1984 British GP, the Sonic was sold to a private buyer and, in time honoured fashion, disappeared from view before being bought in a neglected state around a decade ago.

Now 80% restored, it’s one of five eccentric customs being offered at this Historics sale and is said to need only “finishing touches” to get it back on the road.

1981 Wolfrace Sonic black

Futuristic bodywork is made from glass fibre


1981 Wolfrace Sonic
On offer with Historics, Brooklands, November 29. Estimate: £80,000-£120,000. historics.co.uk

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

These days, BMW and Mercedes-Benz are the marques best known for offering souped-up four-door cars off-the-shelf through respective M and AMG tuning houses. But the former racer and Jaguar dealer John Coombs was likely the first to tempt enthusiastic drivers with tweaked saloons back in 1962, when he created a menu of modifications for the already sporty Mark II 3.8.

1962 Jaguar MarK II 3.8 ‘Coombs’ back

Carmen Red with one-off black vinyl roof

Charlie Brenninkmeijer

Born in Chertsey, Surrey, in 1922, Coombs ran the eponymous dealership founded by his coachbuilder father, William, and took up motor sport post-war in both Formula 2 and Formula 3.

He was also a keen club racer during the 1950s, entering a Jaguar Mark I into the Silverstone TT of ’56 (the year in which Jaguar officially retired from competition), subsequently establishing his own team that gave seat–time to a firmament of up-and-coming stars, including Graham Hill, Jackie Stewart, Jack Brabham and Roy Salvadori, who all achieved impressive results on track with Coombs-modified Mark IIs.

The majority of a believed 33 examples built were pure race machines, but a handful of buyers of new road cars asked Coombs to add his magic touch prior to delivery and were able to choose from a range of options from a list divided into ‘Basic’, ‘Specialist’ and ‘Competition’.

1962 Jaguar MarK II 3.8 ‘Coombs’ side

Original Coombs demonstrator

Due to their rarity and capability, multiple Mark IIs have been modified to so-called ‘Coombs specification’ later in their lives and examples appear at auction quite regularly. But the car on offer with Trofeo is very much the real deal, because it’s one of the original two Coombs showroom demonstrators.

Manufactured in March 1962 and registered a month later, it was initially supplied to Coombs & Sons in Guildford with a close-ratio gearbox and wire-wheel conversion before being fitted with all available options from the Coombs list (save for a strengthened anti-roll bar) by the firm’s Ken Bell – who came to be regarded as the leading authority on the Coombs Mark IIs and ended up buying this one for his personal use.

1962 Jaguar MarK II 3.8 ‘Coombs’ interior

E-type steering wheel

Charlie Brenninkmeijer

That means it ‘got the lot’ in terms of tuning mods, which include everything from a high-compression race engine with lightened flywheel and straight-through exhaust system to a limited-slip differential, long-range fuel tank and upgraded suspension.

The car became the main Coombs demonstrator and was instantly recognisable due to its Carmen Red paint job, unique black vinyl roof and the highly distinctive registration mark BUY 1 (which is no longer with it, although the original physical number plates remain). As well as the multitude of mechanical enhancements, the car also features modified rear wheel arches (without spats), a wooden-rimmed, E-type steering wheel, manually operated choke, reclining seats and hand-made stainless-steel sports exhaust.

1962 Jaguar MarK II 3.8 ‘Coombs’ engine

3.8 litres

Charlie Brenninkmeijer

With the Coombs engine modifications being claimed to boosting output from the 3.8’s standard 220bhp to as much as 265, the Mark II saloons were said to have been a match for any E-type up to 100mph and handled with far greater aplomb. And if anyone still robbed banks these days, this would surely be the ultimate getaway car.

1962 Jaguar MarK II 3.8 ‘Coombs’
On offer with Trofeo Cars, Norfolk. Asking £235,000. trofeocars.com


  • When you’ve made the stone tomb of Oscar Wilde and created a sculpture said to be the pinnacle of Vorticism (Rock Drill), you deserve a good-looking car. This 1939 Jaguar ss100, right, was owned after World War II by jacob epstein. One of just 300 SS100s built, it was last restored in the ’70s. It’s on sale at brian classic & company in Cheshire, £POA.
    1939 Jaguar ss100
  • In an about-turn, Alfa Romeo is to reinstate V6 Quadrifoglio versions of its Giulia and Stelvio from April 2026, after ceasing production in September. Alfa has also shelved plans to replace its petrol saloon and SUV models with EV alternatives until 2027, with Jules Tilstone, Stellantis’s premium brands chief, citing that 80% of the UK market remains ICE.
  • Italian styling coupled with American muscle, this 1966 ISO Grifo GL300, is one of a mere 35 right-hand drive examples made. If you want some motor sport provenance thrown in, it was formerly owned by Le Mans and F1 driver and bike racer Mike Hailwood… and yes that’s the original colour. It’s at DD Classics in Richmond, London, £POA.
    1966 iso grifo gl300
  • Struggling to cope with blinding LED headlights? The issue is to be dealt with by the government’s upcoming Road Safety Strategy. RAC research states that 25% of drivers are driving less at night due to dazzle. Changes could be introduced in 2026.
  • It’s around this time of year that we look at some of DVLA’s banned reg plates… BA75 ARD, BA75 SHT, EA75 LSD, GE75 GUN, HO75 AGE, KN75 FEY, LE75 ZRS and TO75 HOT will not be degrading your driving experience anytime soon. LG
Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

When Peter Wright was pitched in to keep Team Lotus alive at the beginning of the 1990s, he was both out of his comfort zone and out of his depth. He recalled the unequal fight he and Peter Collins faced before the team closed in 1994.

“I was managing director of Lotus Engineering for two years, which was not really up my street as a manager of 500 engineers and technicians – although I learned a lot. Tony Rudd was helping the Chapman family run Team Lotus, and they were basically running out of money. That’s when Tony said to me, ‘Team Lotus is going to close unless somebody does something about it. What about you?’ All I could affect was the engineering side, but I said I’d talk to my mate Peter Collins, who had some unfinished F1 business after leaving Benetton [mid-1989]. God knows how we did it, but we scrambled together some sort of a deal to take over.

Clive Chapman, Peter Collins, Horst Schubel and Peter Wright, 1991

From left: Clive Chapman, Peter Collins, investor Horst Schubel and Peter Wright, 1991.

Getty Images

“That was the end of 1990. But the Gulf War saw off any sponsors. So we went into the 1991 season with the previous year’s car, and we kept the team going for four years, although I know not how. We were on a wing and a prayer. In the last year but one we had Cosworth engines and owed them quite a lot of money, then got a Mugen engine for the next year. Honda were, we understood, very interested in Team Lotus, partly because we were back doing active suspension again and they couldn’t believe a two-bit outfit was managing it. They were looking for a team to put money into. Cosworth reckoned if they threatened us with administration Honda would come up and bail us out. They were wrong, so we went down.

“The big problem with Team Lotus was following Chapman’s death they didn’t invest in technology, whereas McLaren and Williams did. They built big wind tunnels, formed relationships with engine manufacturers. Team Lotus did not do that. It’s unfair to think the family could have raised the money. But that’s why it failed.”

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

He spent the best part of 30 years trying to make racing cars go faster, then the next quarter of a century striving to make them safer. But Peter Wright, who died in November aged 79, was an understated figure who never sought the limelight despite being one of the most influential R&D motor sport engineers of his generation. We visited him at his home in July just four months before his untimely death.

1968 BRM P138, Peter Wright, Geoff Johnson, Alec Osborne

Unveiling the 1968 BRM P138 with Geoff Johnson, middle, and Alec Osborne, right. “I drew the ugly nose cone,” said Peter.

Additional photos: Peter Wright

Ostensibly we were going to talk to him about his recent book – How Did I Get Here? – but also to mine first-hand memories from a genuine polymath: his immense contribution to Lotus, for whom he shaped ground-effect aerodynamics in the 1970s, then pioneered active suspension in the 1980s, and his second racing life as a classic ‘poacher-turned-gamekeeper’ at the FIA which made him a key influencer on the modern drive for improved safety.

What we found was a man grappling with squaring the circle as he reflected on a long and fruitful life dedicated to motor sport, in a world for which he now feared.

Tributes poured in after his death was announced on November 6: the FIA called him “pioneering”; Mark Hughes dubbed him the “father of F1 ground effects”; Damon Hill said he “exuded genius”. As it turned out, this interview has become ours.

Peter Wright home in Herefordshire

Idyllic off-grid home in bucolic Herefordshire

Herefordshire home Peter Wright

After spending his FIA years living in France’s Dordogne, Wright was living cheerfully off-grid in a stunning barn conversion on the English-Welsh border in Herefordshire, with his third wife Dorothy, when we paid our visit. Like so many high-achievers in racing, ‘retirement’ wasn’t really part of his lexicon. Recent projects included stability control research for e-scooters, while for indulgence he maintained a suitably off-centre trio of classics: a recreation of a GN Akela raced at Brooklands by Ivy Cummins, a replica Jaguar C-type – “One of the most beautiful, if not the most beautiful racing car ever made” – and a bright red Mark II. Life also revolved heavily around sustaining his off-grid existence. In the basement, Peter showed us the hefty pack of a dozen 4V batteries upon which he and Dorothy relied. Power was supplied mostly via solar panels, plus a 2.5kW wind turbine, with water flowing from a spring in a corner of the half-acre site.

“For me, safety was as interesting as making cars go quicker”

Another side project had been his memoir, self-published and entitled How Did I Get Here?: Memories of Six Decades in Motorsport, and Musings on the Future of Formula 1 and the Planet. As you’ll gather from that, it’s a wide-ranging tale from a genuine free-thinker and spirit who experienced his fair share of upheaval and personal trauma on the racer’s road. No wonder then that, having graciously accepted our request to pay a visit to his quirky home in this delightfully bucolic corner of the UK, our conversation with Peter turned out to be far from one-dimensional.

We began by discussing his vocation for sustainable living. He was quick to accept the contradiction of having dedicated most of his life to a sport centred on burning fossil fuels, but it didn’t affect his quiet determination to address the reality of climate change – “I happen to believe in scientists” – especially as the challenges of living off-grid stimulated his engineering instincts. “There’s a 99.99% consensus, so you would be wise to take notice of the scientists,” he said. “I couldn’t see any reason why they are wrong. So what do you do about it? The answer is, I suppose, there’s not much I can do. But at least one can live sustainably and also it’s interesting to do so. So I thought, why not?”

Wind tunnel. Peter Jackson, and David Jackson Peter Wright

At the controls of Specialised Mouldings’ wind tunnel. Founding Jackson brothers Peter, right, and David, left, look on.

Additional photos: Peter Wright

The final chapters of his book are dedicated to climate change, and he explains his convictions in well-sourced logic and the forensic language of an engineer. In short, governments influenced by the oil giants that feed our global economy have known the reality of what we face for decades, yet here we are – and now it’s already too late… Wright relished provoking debate, not unlike a certain FIA president he used to work for. “The one thing one can do is try and find out the truth,” he told us. “It’s a bit of work, but people want to believe what suits them.”

One can’t help but wonder how different racing history might have been had Peter Wright been driven by such convictions as a young man, when instead his fire was lit by improving lap times. Inspired by our own Denis Jenkinson in the early 1960s, he said motor sport per se didn’t interest him, rather the cars, the engineering, the process of finding speed… and also winning. “I started at BRM, which was fundamentally an engine company,” he said of his mid-1960s break, in the midst of scraping a third-class degree in mechanical sciences at Trinity College, Cambridge. “I thought I was going to be God’s gift to Formula 1 engine design, then quickly discovered I wasn’t.”

Peter Wright home

Under the bonnet of an off-grid home

He cited three key leaders in his life as his big influences: Tony Rudd, Colin Chapman and Max Mosley. “I like working for people, but there are not many people I like working for!” he said. Peter owed it all to Rudd. “He gave me a job. Tony was a lovely guy. I was at college and decided BRM was the company I was going to work for. So I wrote to him and he said, ‘No, you don’t want to do that.’ My dad told me, ‘Don’t take no for an answer, they’re just testing you.’ So I insisted to Tony, ‘Yes, I really want to work at BRM.’ He said, ‘You better come and see me then.’ I caught him at the exact moment in which he realised that F1 was going more technical and needed graduate engineers, and that’s why he offered me a chance to spend the summer vacation there [in 1966], and then ultimately a job. I walked straight in at a time of composites and aerodynamics, those basic two key technologies, and Tony was very supportive. He was everybody’s uncle. I effectively followed him to Lotus.”

Andretti in Lotus 78, Peter Wright

Wright had ideas of living in Mauritius but instead was coaxed to Norfolk, where he helped reshape F1 via the Lotus 78,

Getty Images

Rudd left BRM for Lotus in 1969 in the same year Wright was infamously working up an early ‘wing car’ design. When Wright initially tried to follow, Rudd again tried to dissuade him. “Tony said, ‘Don’t go to Lotus, you are not ready.’ Probably one of the best bits of advice I’ve had. So I went to Specialised Mouldings with whom I was basically bringing composites into BRM. I spent four years there and got itchy feet. I applied for a job as a lecturer in mechanical engineering at the University of Mauritius and I put Tony down as a reference. He rang me up that night and said, ‘Come to Lotus, there’s a job managing the composites research company developing methods for manufacturing both cars and boats in production. Oh, and in the evenings and weekends you can work on the F1 car.’

Peter Wright smiling at home

“Tony had been given the job of redefining the F1 car following Colin’s failure to replace the Type 72. He said to Tony to choose who he wanted from Team Lotus and set up a think-tank. He got Ralph Bellamy and between them they worked out they needed an aerodynamicist for wind-tunnel work. They knew I’d developed a wing car at BRM. So evenings and weekends it was, before we got the Type 78 to the point where it was being built. I then joined Team Lotus full-time to develop ground effects.”

Chapman set the brief, but then others including Wright made ground effects in F1 a reality. So does the Old Man really deserve the credit? Peter was emphatic in the affirmative, and here’s why. “My feeling is although I came up with a number of things, innovations that Lotus followed successfully or unsuccessfully, they were always thanks to Colin. There’s no doubt at all that without him they wouldn’t have happened. He had an instinct for technology, what was worth pursuing and what wasn’t. And when he thought it was worth pursuing he’d throw the whole bloody company behind it.

Peter Wright classic cars, C-type and Mark II Jaguars and GN Akela

Wright’s classic cars, C-type and Mark II Jaguars and GN Akela.

Jonathan Bushell

Peter Wright home Power

Home power

“He could also always detect technical bullshit. If something wasn’t working he could tell whether it was because somebody hadn’t done something or hadn’t done it properly, or whether it was a technical barrier that was worth pushing through. There’s no doubt with ground effects he did that. The race engineers and even the drivers were asking why are we bothering, messing around with skirts, and Colin said, ‘No, we’re pushing it.’”

As others have said, Team Lotus under Chapman was intense, chaotic, a little crazy… and fun. Wright held the Old Man in the greatest affection. “I got fired by him twice,” he chuckled. “The second time he took off his corduroy cap, threw it on the ground and jumped up and down on it. Which was quite impressive. Then I explained what I’d done had to be done and he said, ‘Ah, OK’. Picked up his hat, dusted it off, put it back on his head and walked off.”

“Colin threw his cap on the ground and jumped up and down on it”

How Chapman really impressed Wright was when he pitched the Old Man a fresh innovation in the wake of the banning of the twin-chassis Lotus 88 in 1981. Chapman was disenchanted with F1 to the point where Wright reckoned he would have walked away from grand prix racing had he not felt obliged to fulfil his obligations to sponsors. “He was an extraordinary person to work for,” said Peter. “Pitching to him the concept of active suspension, nowadays you’d have to do a 50-slide deck on PowerPoint. I went in with nothing and no idea what it would cost – £15,000 or something. I talked to him for 20 minutes. He realised computers were important, but didn’t like them. The modern era wouldn’t have suited him. Then he said, ‘OK, I’ll get you a car – a Turbo Esprit – and you’ve got six months to get the concept up and running.’ He had an ability to take risks.”

Senna in Lotus’s active ride 99T, 1987

Senna in Lotus’s active ride 99T, 1987

In the wake of Chapman’s death at just 54 in December 1982, Wright was sidetracked away from F1 and active suspension was dropped – perhaps understandably as Peter Warr attempted to stabilise Team Lotus. But the concept was revived in 1987 when Wright returned to the team, with Ayrton Senna claiming (proper) Lotus’s last two grand prix victories in a 97T fitted with active ride. “We lost four years,” said Wright, whose relationship with Warr was rarely smooth. “Colin wouldn’t have dropped it. It was early days, but we were completing grands prix with it, and it wasn’t uncompetitive. The potential was obviously enormous, and it was a technology that got totally wasted at Lotus. Williams did a simpler version and ended up dominating F1. Team Lotus could have been there a long time before.”

Nigel Mansell with Peter Wright at the 1980 Dutch GP

Nigel Mansell with Wright at the 1980 Dutch GP – Mansell’s brakes had failed

Getty Images

In the early 1990s Rudd talked Wright into stepping up to keep the badly listing Team Lotus ship afloat, which he managed for four years in partnership with his friend Peter Collins. When the great ship finally went down at the end of 1994, Wright was left looking for a new job – and a new direction. “Well, Senna had just being killed and I’d always been interested in safety. The first time I’d been the least bit involved was when Chapman asked me to do a report on Ronnie Peterson’s car [after the Swede’s death in the wake of Monza 1978]. That was pretty interesting to see the way the structures had basically not stood up to the crash. I knew Charlie [Whiting, the FIA’s long-serving race director] quite well, and when it was apparent that Team Lotus was not going to survive and I needed a job, I thought I’d go talk to him. I thought it was probably likely I’d end up more on the regulatory side, having broken or challenged regulations over the years. He talked to Max, and Max said, ‘Come see me.’”

BRM P142 ‘wing car’ schematics from 1969, Peter Wright sketch

BRM P142 ‘wing car’ schematics from 1969

Additional photos: Peter Wright

Wright revelled in the free rein Mosley gave him during the 1990s, working as part of Professor Sid Watkins’ research group. “Ad hoc” was his description of how his safety work was structured, but his role was formalised after 2001 when Mosley sold the commercial rights for F1 to Bernie Ecclestone for 100 years. Wright was that rare case: someone who approved of the deal, because it funded the formation of the FIA Foundation. In 2004, the FIA Institute for Motorsport Safety was created, an umbrella for various working groups, with its suggestions for new or modified regulations then going for approval to the FIA Safety Commission. Watkins was the commission’s first president, with Wright taking over from 2010.

Peter Wright on FIA duty at Silverstone in 1998

Wright on FIA duty at Silverstone in 1998

“The 1990s was an era when Max put money into safety and research, and we were given quite a lot each year to crash things,” he said. “What’s not to like? It was interesting. I was working with great people, particularly doctors. People like Terry Trammell, Steve Olvey, obviously Sid Watkins.”

Four years since his death, Mosley remains divisive. Wright understood why, but made a strong case for Mosley as a forward-thinker whose contribution, especially on safety, must never be overlooked. “Intellectually, he was phenomenal. He had a good technical grasp thanks to his two degrees, in physics and law. I get on with lawyers because they’re logical. I think they’re very close to engineers. He was challenging but fun to work with. If there was an issue that one needed to bring up with him, he got it quickly. If it was something he didn’t understand, he’d find out what it was, and then he was off, and you better be running to keep up. As president of the Safety Commission, I was sort of between the World Council and the research area. When we spotted a major safety issue we would act.”

Michael Schumacher’s 170mph crash at Silverstone 1999

Michael Schumacher’s 170mph crash at Silverstone in 1999 led to F1 safety improvements

Getty Images

At least a third of his memoir is taken up with explanations of his safety and regulatory work. “We set the requirement post-Senna’s accident that a driver should be able to go off anywhere and walk away,” he told us. “We developed two things. One is a driver restraint system [the HANS device] and a cockpit from which the driver could walk away from a 60g accident. And then we developed a barrier system which you could hit in any direction at 60g and you’d expect the driver to say, ‘Where’s my spare car?’ We then developed the edges of the circuit to limit any impact to 60g, which needed space” – modern circuits’ large run-off areas. “And we did the high-speed barrier system, which came out of Michael Schumacher’s accident at Silverstone [in 1999] where he had brake failure and went through a tyre barrier and into an earth bank. He was doing 170mph when he hit the bank and the monocoque wasn’t up to the job. So we came up with a spec. It actually takes about 3m at 60g to get that speed off. It was all done on the back of an envelope. You all think it’s worked out on computers, but it’s not!”

Peter Wright Akela replica Brooklands

This Akela is a replica of one that raced at Brooklands

Jonathan Bushell

Peter Wright Lotus memories on the wall

Lotus memories on the wall

We finished by discussing modern F1, its regulations and its future. Here then was another contradiction: as a former acolyte of Chapman, the man who believed in ‘adding lightness’, Wright is partially responsible for today’s heavy F1 breed… “It’s the safety,” he fired back. “That’s not a bad thing. The cars carry more energy than they used to, because they’re 1000hp and not 400. Everything’s bigger because of the extra power and speed, the tyres and wheels, the brakes. So slow them down. That’s one way to do it.”

No surprise he was an advocate for F1’s pledge to chase zero emissions. “Max Mosley got onto the whole sustainability issue quite early on,” he pointed out. “One thing we did was to work out how to offset the entire carbon emissions of F1. This was in the 1990s. It’s flying stuff around the world that’s the problem. The running of the cars is trivial.”

“It’s flying stuff around the world that’s F1’s problem. The cars are trivial”

So what did Wright think of the move back towards V8 engines? “I get it. If that’s what F1 is about, fine. It is all about entertainment. Netflix and Drive to Survive, I watched seven episodes to see how much they talk about technical things. And there was no mention whatsoever of the engine, the aerodynamics, the chassis, the brakes, the wheels or the tyres. And no technical person was featured. That sums it up.

“From 2008, with Tony Purnell, we came up with the current set of F1 regulations under Jean Todt which was put in place in 2014. We did a lot of simulation, a lot of modelling. The regulations have stood the test of time, but they’re no longer relevant to the automotive industry. Now somebody needs to work out what’s the most entertaining thing, what people want, and that’s what it comes down to. Whether it’s a V10 or a V8 at an rpm that’s economically feasible, fine – as long as you don’t pretend it’s anything else. Yes, it should be on a sustainable fuel, but at $300 a litre? Really? That’s what apparently has been quoted. [A substantial rise from the current cost, which is $22-$33 per litre, and a hot topic of discussions with the concerned teams].”

Peter Wright

Wright feared F1 might become as complicated to follow as Formula E next year. But he had other priorities on his mind in his final years

Jonathan Bushell

His worry for next year was the complexity of the entertainment on show, that F1 might find itself echoing Formula E (of which he was not a fan). “Formula E is very strategic which you can’t see unless you are a serious anorak. That may happen a bit with F1 for next year, because you’re rationing people on their energy for overtaking and boosting. Explaining that story will be quite hard.”

Contradictions abound within Wright’s life. Cheerful despite his acceptance it’s too late to save our world from a defining change in temperature, he somehow reconciled a future for the frivolous pursuit of racing. We can’t just turn off the things we love, but through the technological curiosity that drove him, Wright believed there are always new ways and means. Was he a pessimist or an optimist? Life just isn’t that binary. Peter was proof you can be a bit of both.

How Did I Get Here? by Peter Wright is out now, price £30, and available to buy at howdidigethere.co.uk

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

Guenther Steiner is that rare thing in modern motor sport: a genuine character; a straight-talking, old-school racer in an era of corporate jargon and marketing polish. Not despite that, but rather because of it, he has become a cult hero to millions thanks to his gloriously unfiltered appearances on Netflix’s Formula 1: Drive to Survive, cussing his way into the hearts of fans across the globe. But, while the world may have discovered him quite recently as the irascible boss of the Haas Formula 1 team, swearing at broken front wings, poor strategy calls, and of course his wincing drivers, his story is far longer, far more varied, and far more interesting than that.

Didier Auriol 1991 RAC Rally, Jolly Club’s Delta Integrale

Didier Auriol lights up the 1991 RAC Rally in Jolly Club’s Delta Integrale

Sutton Images

Now 60, Steiner has spent four decades in the racing world, from the rough-and-tumble stages of rallying to the glossy boardrooms of F1 factories, without ever applying for any of the jobs that propelled him forwards. The only position for which he has ever formally applied was his very first: as a Mazda rally mechanic in Belgium. That was in 1986. He has never sent a CV since.

And, now, with his F1 chapter closed – for the moment, anyway – he is about to reinvent himself yet again, this time as a MotoGP team owner. Yes, really: the man who once ran Jaguar’s F1 set-up for Niki Lauda, and built Haas F1 from nothing, is now going two-wheeled. As Steiner puts it, “It’s cool as shit.”

But to understand how a butcher’s son from the mountains of South Tyrol got to where he now is, you have to go back – way back. “I was born in Merano, in South Tyrol, in the north of Italy, very close to the Austrian border,” Steiner begins. “My parents weren’t rich. They came from nothing actually. They had to make their own success. So they opened a butcher’s shop – to give my sister and me the best they could – and they always worked very hard, both of them. I helped my dad in the shop.” There is a calm pride in his voice: not nostalgia, not sentimentality, just a rock-solid memory of a work ethic instilled young, the kind that does not merely shape a career, but also shapes a life.

M-Sport’s chief engineer with Ford’s new Focus, Paris Motor Show, 1998

M-Sport’s chief engineer with Ford’s new Focus, Paris Motor Show, 1998.

Getty Images

“Motor sport was very small where I was brought up,” he continues. “It was all about skiing, and ice hockey too, but mainly skiing. I’m not a good skier because I preferred ice hockey. On Sundays, instead of going skiing, I always played ice hockey.” It is safe to say that Steiner’s childhood did not hint at future F1 greatness. Indeed, his parents were not remotely interested in racing. The mountain air was not full of the scent of Castrol R. But then a famously toothy Austrian came along.

“Niki Lauda was very prominent in Austria and our part of northern Italy when I was a kid,” Steiner recalls, “because he was F1 world champion for Ferrari in the 1970s [in 1975 and 1977, when young Guenther was 10 and 12 respectively]. So that triggered my interest. I watched every grand prix on TV. There was only one local motor sport event – the Bolzano-Mendola hillclimb – about 40km from our home. I used to beg my dad to take me to it every year. I must have been about seven when that started.”

Still, the idea of working in motor sport never occurred to him. “To be honest, I didn’t even understand that you could make a living out of motor sport,” he says, chuckling. “It was too far distant for me. I liked to watch it, but I never thought about working in it. It wasn’t even my dream. I never wanted to be a racing driver. Racing was something I watched, and I enjoyed, but I wasn’t trying to find a way into it.”

Guenther Steiner Ford, Colin McRae and Nicky Grist 1999 Monte Carlo Rally

Guenther Steiner was at Ford when Colin McRae and Nicky Grist were finding their feet with the new Focus – here at the 1999 Monte Carlo Rally

DPPI

So Steiner did an apprenticeship as a regular mechanic, then he did his national service. He was now 20, and his father had died, so, casting around for something to bend his mind to, “I said to myself, ‘Maybe I want to experience something different, something new.’ I saw an ad in [the German motoring and motor sport magazine] Auto Motor und Sport – ‘Mechanics wanted for Mazda in Belgium’ – so I applied.

“I drove to Belgium for the interview,” he remembers, warming to his story. “The chief engineer was German, so we did the interview in German – thank God – because I didn’t speak English at all back then. I spoke only German and Italian. Anyway, they offered me a job.”

“I couldn’t believe Niki knew who I was. He was a superstar and a legend. He was a hero of mine”

And, with that, young Guenther packed up and moved. “It was a simpler time in motor sport back then,” he recalls. “It was more like being in a travelling circus than working at a regular job. I took my first ever flight in 1986, to Finland, when I was 21, to work at the 1000 Lakes Rally.” After a few years with Mazda, he returned to Italy. He freelanced in a number of rallying roles, then he began to climb through the rallying ranks. “I worked for Top Run in 1989 and 1990, then I joined Jolly Club in 1991, running the wonderful Lancia Integrale in the World Rally Championship. Those were Lancia’s glory years.”

In 1997 came a call from David Richards. “He asked me to manage Prodrive’s European Rally Championship team,” Steiner remembers. “I could speak English OK by then. I asked my wife if she fancied moving to England. She said, ‘Yeah, why not?’” It was in Banbury that the one-time itinerant rally mechanic, now in his thirties, began to transition into senior management – and, crucially, into a leader. From Prodrive he moved to Malcolm Wilson’s M-Sport, where he led the development programme that made the Ford Focus a World Rally Championship winner, then came the phone call that changed his life, and still seems almost unbelievable today.

Gunter Steiner and Niki Lauda 2001 Jaguar

Steiner moved to F1 for the 2001 season when Jaguar chief Niki Lauda recruited him. Results were poor; Lauda departed before the end of 2002

Getty Images

“One day in 2000 my phone rang. A woman said, ‘Mr Lauda would like to speak with you. Can he call you?’” Let’s pause here. Just imagine it. Niki Lauda – a three-time F1 world champion, a global icon, an airline tycoon – cold-calling a rally man working in Cumbria whom he had never met.

“I’d never spoken to Niki before,” Steiner says. “I’d never even been in the same room as him. I couldn’t believe he even knew who I was. I mean: Niki was Niki, a superstar and a legend. He was a hero of mine, an absolute hero. Anyway, he called me and he said he was running Jaguar Racing, the F1 team, which was owned by Ford. He’d been looking for someone to help him run it, and I’d been recommended to him by Tyrone Johnson, who’d been at Ford for ever – he joined Ford straight out of university in fact. Anyway, as I say, Ford owned Jaguar at that time, and I was working for M-Sport doing work for Ford, and I knew Tyrone, and Tyrone knew Niki. So that was the link. Anyway, Niki asked me to meet him for dinner in Vienna.”

They sat down together at a table in a fine-dining Viennese restaurant. Everyone had warned Guenther that the meal would be a 20-minute test of nerves, after which Lauda would make his excuses and bolt for the door. “Niki was famously impatient,” Steiner explains, “but we spoke for two hours. Amazingly, he never mentioned a job even once. The next morning, he called me and said, ‘Thank you for your time. You’re going to be working for me.’

“I thought, ‘What the f***?’ But obviously I didn’t phrase my reaction that way. I said, ‘Mr Lauda, what work am I going to do for you?’ He said, ‘I don’t know. I’ll tell you later.’”

Red Bull, 2005, Christian Horner and Gunter Steiner

Birth of Red Bull, 2005, with Christian Horner and Steiner leading the team in its early days

DPPI

Thus began Steiner’s F1 career. He joined Jaguar Racing in 2001, as managing director, reporting directly to Lauda, and he entered a political maelstrom. “Jaguar were doing shit,” Steiner says with typically unvarnished candour, “but I got on well with [Jaguar Racing’s number one driver] Eddie Irvine. He was coming to the end of his F1 career, but he was honest and straight-talking. I learned a lot about F1 from him – and of course from Niki as well.”

“I was doing OK at Red Bull but I could see that it was getting congested at the senior levels”

If Lauda was all instinct, more knee-jerk than strategy, Ford’s senior execs were the opposite: suited and booted, buttoned-down, and PowerPoint-wielding. “They could hardly have been more different from a cultural point of view,” Steiner says. “Actually, there were not only two cultures, but three or four. There was Niki, there were the German career executives like Dr [Wolfgang] Reitzle, and there were the dyed-in-the-wool American car guys. Then there was me, trying to pick up the pieces.”

Despite the chaos, Steiner thrived – until, that is, Ford changed the guard. “When they brought in Tony Purnell and David Pitchforth, and they got rid of Niki, they offered me the team principal job, but reporting to Tony and Dave. Well, my allegiance was to Niki. I didn’t see myself doing what needed to be done under Tony’s and David’s leadership. So I left.”

Jaguar’s Eddie Irvine at the 2002 Japanese GP

Jaguar’s Eddie Irvine at the 2002 Japanese GP – the Ulster driver was an F1 tutor and friend for Steiner at this time

DPPI

It turned out to be a wise move. Purnell and Pitchforth were and are both clever chaps, but within a year the Jaguar F1 team had been sold to Red Bull. Christian Horner duly came in. “Christian started in December 2004,” Steiner explains. “He and I knew each other already. He’d been trying to get himself into an F1 team for a while. He’d tried with Jordan and Arrows, and he finally made it stick with Jaguar when Red Bull bought the team. I started in January 2005. I was operations director, and I stayed about a year and a half. I was doing OK initially, but after a while I could see that it was getting a bit congested at the senior levels. I don’t really like that sort of thing, so I left.”

Did Horner already have the mien of a future F1 titan, I wonder? “Ah, it’s hard to say,” Guenther replies, scratching his chin. “He was in his early thirties back then, remember. I guess you could say he took the best part of 20 years to develop into what he eventually became. Back then he was just a former racing driver who’d run a Formula 3000 team. Oh and he hadn’t been a very good driver, actually, as Zak Brown always reminds him, because they raced each other a few times and Zak jokes that Christian was the only guy he could be sure of beating. But Dr [Dietrich] Mateschitz [the Red Bull co-founder, co-owner, and head honcho] believed in Christian.”

Gunter Steiner and Elton Sawyer during NASCAR testing Daytona 2008

Steiner with Red Bull’s competition director Elton Sawyer during NASCAR testing at Daytona in 2008; the team was based in Mooresville

Getty Images

By 2006, tiring as he puts it of the “senior congestion” within Red Bull’s F1 operation, Steiner began to allow his attention to drift elsewhere. “I’d always wanted to live in the States – and Dr Mateschitz offered me a role in NASCAR,” he says. “I didn’t know anything about NASCAR, but I asked my wife what she thought of the idea, and she replied, ‘Let’s try it.’” So they moved to Mooresville, North Carolina – NASCAR country – and so began yet another chapter in the multistoried life and works of Guenther Steiner, who was now in his early forties.

However, by 2009, his NASCAR adventure was already over. Not everything works out. Even so, Steiner stayed Stateside. “I found that I liked living there. Soon we had a daughter. We wanted to bring her up in America. So I co-founded a company, Fibreworks Composites, and we based it in Mooresville, and we built it up from five people to 300 people. We work in motor sport, of course, but also in custom design, engineering, transportation, aerospace, defence, even medical. It’s still based in Mooresville. We still live in Mooresville.”

“I suggested a US-based F1 team using some Ferrari tech, working carefully within regulations”

Also in Mooresville came a chance meeting with the F1 journalist, broadcaster and would-be team boss Peter Windsor. “I bumped into Peter in a coffee shop in Mooresville. I asked him what the hell he was doing there, because Mooresville is a NASCAR town, and Peter is an F1 guy, not a NASCAR guy. He wouldn’t tell me, but I later found out that he was trying to start USF1 [a stillborn US-based F1 team] with Chad Hurley, the YouTube guy [a co-founder and former CEO of YouTube in fact]. A little while later Chad contacted me, because he thought that my company, Fibreworks Composites, might be able to help USF1, but it didn’t work out. Still, it had planted a seed in my mind. I thought: maybe I can do something different. So I spoke to Mr [Giampaolo] Dallara [the founder of his eponymous racing car constructor], and Mr [Stefano] Domenicali [who was then the team principal of Ferrari], and I suggested a US-based F1 team using some Ferrari tech, working carefully within the F1 regulations.”

Steiner wrote a business plan. Ferrari agreed to it. Bernie Ecclestone didn’t say no – which, as Steiner puts it, “is as close to support as you get from Bernie”. By 2014 they had the necessary licence. By 2016 they were racing in F1.

Haas F1 2016 Australian Grand Prix Esteban Gutiérrez and Romain Grosjean

Haas made its F1 debut at the 2016 Australian Grand Prix with drivers Esteban Gutiérrez (No 21) and Romain Grosjean (No8)

DPPI

Guenther is clearly proud of Haas, although he is never boastful about it. “Most people in the other teams were reasonably encouraging,” he says. “They may not have liked the idea very much because it was new and different, but they respected it, and they realised it was legitimate and fair. Well, pretty much all of them. Well, to be precise, all of them except Ron Dennis [the McLaren chairman], who gave me shit in a team principals’ meeting. He said we were circumventing the regulations. I replied, ‘The regulations are available to everyone, so you can read them if you like. Oh and if you don’t have a copy, just go on the internet and you’ll find them.’ There was an atmosphere then, because people didn’t talk to Ron like that. But I wasn’t nasty – I just explained that I’d followed the regulations. Even so, by the time I’d finished saying what I had to say, Ron was on his feet and shouting at me. It was pretty good fun.

“In the beginning, when we set out, Ferrari asked us if we could run Esteban Gutiérrez in one of our cars, and for the other car we were initially talking to Nico Hülkenberg. And we nearly did a deal with him actually, but at the last minute he called me and said he’d decided to change his mind. So then I had to find a team-mate for Esteban, and quite quickly I did a deal with Romain Grosjean.

Haas Kevin Magnussen

With the departure of Russian driver Nikita Mazepin before the 2022 season, Haas turned to Kevin Magnussen, pictured

DPPI

“Romain’s highs are high and his lows are low. But on a good day he’s quick, very quick. In fact, on a good day you wouldn’t want anyone else. But on a bad day you’d definitely want someone else. Anyway, we went for Romain and Esteban, and we spoke to Kevin Magnussen also, and Kevin left a very good impression on me and Gene [Haas, the owner of his eponymous F1 team] because you could see how much he wanted the job. I mean, the guy just wanted to drive a race car, but we were a little bit scared of hiring him for 2016 because, although he’d raced well for McLaren in 2014, he hadn’t raced at all in 2015. He’d been McLaren’s reserve driver that year, and we wanted drivers with current up-to-date experience. But for our second year, 2017, when we were looking for a replacement for Esteban, and Kevin had current experience again because he’d been racing for Renault in 2016, we went for him.

“I always liked Kevin. I liked his spirit. You know: going racing, simple, no bullshit. When he’s in a good car, he’s the best. But when the car isn’t so good, maybe he sometimes gives up a bit too quickly, in my opinion, and I don’t know where that comes from. But Romain and Kevin were a great line-up for us for four seasons [2017-2020].

“When Covid came along, in 2020, we mothballed everything during that season, and we didn’t do any development at all, so I knew that our 2021 car was going to be very bad. I even told Romain and Kevin to look for other drives. Anyway, we got Nikita Mazepin and Mick Schumacher for 2021. Nikita brought money with him, and Ferrari was supportive of Mick.

“What Nikita did with that girl was stupid and wrong [in late 2020 Mazepin was filmed inappropriately touching a woman in a car, which action he himself described as “a huge mistake”]. Nikita’s father was absolutely furious with him about it, because he’d given him this golden opportunity yet he went and did something so idiotic.

“By the time I’d finished saying what I had to say, Ron Dennis was on his feet and shouting at me”

“Anyway, then Putin invaded Ukraine [which meant that Mazepin, a Russian citizen, would no longer be permitted to race in F1], and I don’t remember who else was available at the time, but there was no one free who was great, and we had no time to find anyone anyway. Gene asked me, ‘Do you know what Kevin is doing?’ And I was like, ‘Yeah, I just ran into him a few weeks ago at Daytona, because he was racing a Cadillac in IMSA for Chip Ganassi.’ So I put the telephone down on Gene and I called Kevin straight away. That’s how he got back in. He was contracted to Peugeot’s WEC team for 2022, but he told me, ‘Oh, don’t worry, I think I can get out of that contract.’

“People said Kevin was lucky, because he only got his chance to get back into F1 because of Putin, but actually we were lucky, to be able to get such a good driver at such short notice, and a guy who already knew our team. Because Haas as a team is different, you know? And getting used to a new team is always difficult – just look at Lewis Hamilton at Ferrari this year. And when Kevin came back it felt like he’d been away for only a week or two, then he scored points in Bahrain straight away, in the first race of the season. It was great.”

Gunter Steiner CEO of Tech3

Formula 1’s loss is MotoGP’s gain as Steiner, who recently turned 60, became CEO of Tech3

Getty Images

Then came the chaos, the fun, the Netflix boom, and the Steiner memes. Suddenly, Guenther was famous. “I didn’t expect us to be featured in Drive to Survive very much,” he says, leaning back in his chair and laughing fit to bust, “so I just behaved like the cameras weren’t there. I forgot I was mic’d up. When the premiere came out, I didn’t go – but at the next team principals’ meeting everyone was talking about me. And I was like, ‘F***, did they really put all that swearing in?’”

Yes; yes, they did; and fans loved it.

But behind the scenes there were frictions: disagreements with Gene Haas about direction, strategy, spending, development and more. “In the end,” Steiner says, “I was fine with it. Gene can do what he wants, and I can do what I want. I’m 60. Financially secure. I can work if I want, but I don’t have to.”

Would he embark on yet another new project, or would he relax at home in Mooresville, while keeping a weather eye on Fibreworks Composites and enjoying family life? “Well, I went to a MotoGP race in Austin, in April 2024,” he says, smiling. “I only went there for fun, but I thought, ‘This is cool; maybe I could run a MotoGP team?’ So I started looking. I’ve got good investment contacts, so I spoke to a few people, and we got the money together to buy Tech3.”

Gunter Steiner in São Paulo, 2023

One of the greatest characters in motor racing history – here at the Haas helm in São Paulo, 2023

DPPI

He will take over on January 1, 2026. He says that he will not go to every race, but that he will be deeply involved – just as he was deeply involved at Haas, at Jaguar, at M-Sport and at Prodrive.

And if F1 ever came calling again, what would his reaction be? “Never say never,” he says, frowning, “but it would have to be a project, not a job. I’m done with just doing a job.”

That seems like a good moment to finish. But I have one final question: what makes him happiest? “Ah, well, it makes me happiest when I’m doing something exciting and new,” he says. “Always I want to keep engaged. I don’t need to work to pay my bills. Besides, work isn’t all about money. I could have made more money in my life, but I like to experiment, to take risks, and to create, and I don’t take myself too seriously. If I fail, it’s alright.”

Born: 07/04/1965, Merano, Italy

  • 1986 Moves to Belgium as a mechanic for Mazda’s WRC campaign.
  • 1989 Returns to Italy with Top Run Motorsport as assistant team manager.
  • 1991 Becomes head of reconnaissance and then technical manager at Jolly Club.
  • 1997 A shift to the UK with Prodrive.
  • 1998 Recruited by M-Sport as project manager, then director of engineering.
  • 2001 Switches to F1’s Jaguar Racing.
  • 2005 Joins Red Bull as technical operations director; helps establish a NASCAR team in the US.
  • 2009 Starts Fibreworks Composites.
  • 2014 Becomes team principal at Haas F1; in 2016 the team starts GP racing.
  • 2019 Becomes the unlikely star of Netflix’s Formula 1: Drive to Survive.
  • 2024 Departs Haas; UK live show tour.
  • 2025 Announces MotoGP future.
Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

Super Formula in Super GT

Many Super Formula drivers also compete in Super GT

Getty Images

What’s the second-fastest category of motor racing on the planet after Formula 1? Formula 2? IndyCar? WEC Hypercar? Think again. The answer in fact is Super Formula, Japan’s top single-seater championship. And what about the fastest category of tin-tops – surely, nothing beats Hypercar? In fact, the GT500 class in Super GT is comfortably faster.

At Suzuka, the lap record for Super Formula is 1min 34.442sec set by Nick Cassidy in 2020. That would have cleared the 107% mark (just) for the previous year’s Japanese Grand Prix. As for GT500, the lap record around Fuji Speedway is 1min 25.764sec set by Nirei Fukuzumi in 2021, which is about 2.5sec faster than the WEC pole time from 2024. You’d have to go back several years to the tail end of the LMP1 era to find faster times than that.

Super Formula, Fuji, 2024

Super Formula, Fuji, 2024

Getty Images

These figures go a long way to explaining the ongoing appeal of Japan’s domestic racing scene to overseas drivers. Ask almost any driver who has come to Japan from abroad why they made the move, and the cars are often the first thing they talk about.

Sacha Fenestraz, who raced in Japan from 2019 to 2022, and is back this year after a two-year sojourn in Formula E, says: “You get to drive two of the best cars in the world. They are amazing with the amount of downforce they have, the tyres, plus you get to drive a lot. In Europe it’s not like that any more. As a driver you can develop a lot.”

“Many drivers have described Super Formula as a better stepping stone to F1 than F2”

Part of what makes Super Formula so quick is the spec Dallara chassis tips the scales at just 677kg, including the driver, over 100kg less than F1, while producing an impressive amount of downforce. Exact power figures produced by the Honda and Toyota four-cylinder turbo engines are a closely guarded trade secret, but are estimated to be in the 600-650bhp range. And the spec Yokohama tyre allows drivers to push throughout a race.

Many drivers have described it as a better stepping stone to F1 than F2. Besides the difference in tyres, in Super Formula there’s more onus on the driver to guide the team and mould the car according to his or her own preferences compared to F2, where set-ups tend to be more fixed and drivers make do with what they have.

TOM’S driver Nick Cassidy Fuji in 2020

TOM’S driver Nick Cassidy was a record breaker at Fuji in 2020.

Getty Images

In recent years Stoffel Vandoorne, Pierre Gasly and Liam Lawson all made the step up to F1 from Super Formula, while Álex Palou used the series as a springboard to go on to dominate IndyCar. Next year, Kalle Rovanperä will be the latest star to try his hand at the series as he plots a course towards F1 after his shock decision to quit the WRC.

It’s common for overseas drivers to take on double programmes in Super Formula and Super GT, where the tyre war is the key to the cars being so quick. Bridgestone, Yokohama and Sumitomo Rubber-owned Dunlop are all locked in a constant race to improve their products in GT500, while in the lower GT300 class, Michelin provides a fourth competitor.

Stoffel Vandoorne at Suzuka, 2016

Race winner Stoffel Vandoorne at Suzuka, 2016

Getty Images

Perhaps the biggest factor in Japan’s attractiveness, though, is its purity. Super Formula is a no-gimmicks, no-frills contest to establish the country’s fastest driver. Super GT features more ups and downs, with a long-established success ballast system to stop one team dominating, but this is easy to understand and isn’t susceptible to political wranglings, making it by far and away preferable to the WEC’s dreaded Balance of Performance.

Bertrand Baguette arrived in Japan in 2014 having competed in Formula Renault 3.5, the WEC’s LMP2 class and IndyCar. Originally racing for Honda, he now represents Nissan in GT500, having won the brand’s most recent championship title in 2022. And the Belgian says the Japanese scene has kept him hooked for more than a decade, despite having had offers to go back to Europe in the meantime.

2014 Japanese Super GT Series Fuji

Belgian driver Bertrand Baguette scored his first Super GT podium at Fuji in 2014 – his debut season in the series; he’d win the title in 2022

“What I like about being here is that it’s still ‘real racing’,” says Baguette. “When I started with Nakajima Racing, we had no motorhome, just one chair for two drivers to share, and we had to get changed in the back of the truck! But all the money was going towards the car. There’s no bullshit. Here, if you are fast, you have a job. If you are slow, you won’t have a job any more. I’m still here after all these years because I love it so much.”

“What I like about being in Japan is that it’s ‘real racing’. Here, if you are fast, you have a job”

It’s not just drivers that have built careers in Japan. Canadian engineer Ryan Dingle spent six years in Super Formula and Super GT before joining Toyota’s WEC operation full-time in 2023 – although he remains a regular presence in Japan through his consultancy work for the Akio Toyoda-owned Rookie Racing squad, giving him an almost unique perspective on the European and Japanese scenes.

“The competition is more pure, especially in Super Formula,” observes Dingle. “If you’re the best, you could win every race all year. Super GT is different with the ballast, but it’s still very high-level. And, from an engineering standpoint, Japanese racing is still quite hands-on. It’s not quite as automated as it is in Europe. You can learn a bit more as a youngster than you would in F1 or WEC, where it’s systems-driven. You can make a bigger impact.”

Mugen’s Tomoki Nojiri leads Autopolis in May

Mugen’s Tomoki Nojiri leads from pole at Autopolis in May.

LAT Images

Being able to make an impact also applies to being a foreign journalist, an even bigger rarity in the paddock than overseas drivers and engineers. Since I made the move to Japan in 2019, I’ve usually been the only non-Japanese person in the press room.

So, why did I move to Japan? Partly because I spotted a niche, partly because I felt I needed a new challenge after five seasons reporting on WEC, MotoGP and other series in Europe, and partly because I was still living with my parents in the UK and was keen to fly the nest. But mostly because I fell in love with the country – not just the racing, but the scenery, the food, the clean streets, the on-time public transportation and, most of all, the people, whose kind hospitality has to be experienced first-hand to be truly understood.

Media Jamie Klein

Man in the field, Jamie Klein

The initial trigger for my interest in Japanese motor sport was McLaren’s decision to send then-GP2 champion Vandoorne off to contest Super Formula in 2016, but things reached a new level in 2018 when F1 champion Jenson Button entered Super GT. By this time, I had already had the chance to travel to Japan twice to cover WEC and MotoGP, and, having made some friends on those trips, I decided in 2018 to have a longer stay in the country and visit both the Super Formula finale at Suzuka and Super GT decider at Motegi.

After that trip, my mind was pretty much made. I decided to give living in Japan a try, study the language properly (I’d already started picking up a few words on my previous visit), go to as many races as I could and see where it led. Starting in the autumn of 2019, I attended a language school in the bustling Tokyo district of Shibuya, famous for its ‘scramble’ crossing that would become a feature of my daily commute – at least until the Covid-19 pandemic struck in March 2020 and both school life and the racing world came to a sudden halt.

Nojiri in 2023 at Fuji

Nojiri in 2023 at Fuji… of course

You might think that moving to Japan barely six months before the onset of a global pandemic was bad timing, and in some senses it was. Travel in and out of the country became almost impossible, leading to a major drop-off in the number of foreign drivers. But there was a silver lining when the racing season resumed in July that year: with no foreign tourists, and with the Japanese government offering discounts on hotels in a bid to generate domestic tourism, getting to races was cheap. That allowed me to visit every race on the Super Formula and Super GT schedule that year out of my own pocket, get to know many of the teams and drivers, and gradually begin to establish myself as a paddock regular.

Liam Lawson 2023’s Super Formula

Liam Lawson finished runner-up in 2023’s Super Formula.

Juggling language school and work was unquestionably tough, but I soon came to realise that the sacrifice was worthwhile. Some time in early 2021, when I requested an interview with TOM’S team boss Jun Yamada, I was asked by the PR, “Is Japanese OK?” Before I knew it, I found myself putting to use what I had learned in school. Now, interviews in Japanese are no problem and my subjects are always understanding, despite the odd instance of questionable grammar or even forgetting the right word.

In any case, with so many Japanese drivers and team personnel unable to speak English – or, at least, unable to give an insightful interview in English – being able to speak their language is a huge advantage when it comes to relationship-building and finding out what is going on. Misunderstandings still occur, and I have gotten into trouble once or twice for some of the things I’ve written, but then which journalist hasn’t?

Naoki Yamamoto and Jenson Button, Motegi, GT500, 2018

podium for Naoki Yamamoto and Jenson Button, Motegi, GT500, 2018

Outside of racing, daily life in Japan has its perks as well, especially once you master the lingo. The cost of living, even in a big city like Tokyo, is considerably cheaper than the UK, allowing even a humble motor sport journalist to live in relative comfort. Going on a trip within Japan is not too expensive either, and with the country stretching from tropical Okinawa in the south to snowy Hokkaido in the north, there’s lots of variety.

I still enjoy visits abroad, both to the UK to see family and to the big overseas races like the Le Mans 24 Hours. Certainly, nothing on the scale of Le Mans or the Indy 500 exists in Japan; the lack of such a marquee race is the biggest negative point of the domestic scene. But every time I return to Japanese soil, I feel glad to be home and eagerly anticipate the next time I can watch Super Formula or Super GT up close.

GT500 Katsumasa Chiyo & Mitsunori Takaboshi

The quality of racing in Japan is high, which pulls overseas drivers who are keen to make it to the leading series – although some stay


Is Super Formula overtaking Super GT?

Observing Japanese racing before I moved, I had assumed that Super Formula was the more popular of the country’s ‘big two’ series. It was only when I first visited a race that I realised Super GT is historically larger in terms of fan and media interest. However, recent evidence suggests things are slowly changing in Super Formula’s favour.

Super GT has made a couple of high-profile missteps in recent times in a bid to retain fan interest, such as the implementation of an aggregate qualifying system last year (reversed for this year) and a sprint race format at Fuji in 2025 that didn’t prove much of a hit with fans.

Equally, the tyre war that has been such an integral part of the championship is coming to an end. Michelin pulled the plug on its GT500 effort at the end of 2023, leading to a period of Bridgestone domination, and from 2027 there will be a single supplier for each of the classes (unannounced at the time of writing).

Having bounced back from Covid faster than Super Formula, Super GT is now finding its trackside attendance figures plateauing, although the revived Sepang round attracted a crowd that most domestic tracks would look at with envy.

Super GT has tough decisions to make about its next-generation GT500 rules. It goes without saying that Toyota, Honda and a financially ailing Nissan all must be kept on board if the class is to avoid going the way of DTM’s Class 1 formula.

On the other hand, Super Formula appears to have benefited from its closer association with F1 and its growing focus on personalities in the Drive to Survive age. And with Kalle Rovanperä and potentially other high-profile names on the way for ’26, the trend looks set to continue. JK

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

Good-looking, 22, paid almost £4m per year as a base salary by Honda Racing until 2029, vanquisher of all three AMA SuperMotocross crowns so far (31 weekends of supercross, motocross and three play-offs with a £750,000 payout) and a darling of Red Bull and Alpinestars – Jett Lawrence seemingly has it all.

Beyond 10 AMA titles in all 250cc and 450cc classes (including a perfect motocross season of 22 consecutive wins in 2023), the Rolls-Royces, the Met Gala invites, the Formula 1 driver buddies and fashion-brand shoots, Lawrence rides a dirt bike unlike anyone else. This is already quite a claim in a sport that has fostered champions like Jeremy McGrath, Ricky Carmichael, James Stewart and Ryan Villopoto, racers that have transcended what is mainly a North American pursuit in the case of Supercross that almost fills NFL and MLB stadia across the US.

Lawrence, the younger brother to fellow AMA champion Hunter (in a parallel reversal of the MotoGP Márquez brothers) is panache on two wheels. Pure technique and racecraft. Apply any necessary cliché but perhaps the best is how he defies the rigours of arguably motorcycle racing’s hardest discipline. It appears easy. “He keeps his balance and makes it look like ballet, so fluid and light,” offers father and ringleader Darren.

Jett Lawrence at Met Gala 2025

Jett Lawrence at Met Gala 2025

Getty Images

“I think a lot of it comes down to his natural ability,” says Honda HRC Progressive team manager Lars Lindstrom, who has overseen Lawrence’s progression since he moved from European championship competition to the US in 2019. “He can do things that others cannot do and it is intuitive. His brain: Jett is able to process things quicker than others when it comes to the speed he is going and the things he can see.”

Lawrence half-grins when asked to dissect his skill set. “It’s so hard to explain because we have so much muscle memory in everything we do nowadays,” he says. “We don’t think about how we ride a dirt bike much. It’s taken years, years and years of training and working on technique with our elbows, hands, fingers on the brake levers and clutch, feet positioning, hips and bike posture. It’s about having that foundation at a young age. You learn more at a slower speed so that when you get to a bigger bike you are more focused on making speed.

“I do love it when I can get creative with my lines and do different things,” he adds.

Lawrence is still adjusting to life while carrying the largest target in his sport. He is not only the reference for rivals but fodder for fans that crave new heroes and laud the underdog. What he says, does and how he behaves come under scrutiny and will receive quick judgements, whether its spats with riders like Jason Anderson, messy management situations with his Wasserman representation, how he spends some of his vast winnings, or forthcoming duels with controversial American hopes like Haiden Deegan.

“We’ve done quite a lot…which means people are now focusing on the moments when we do lose and they make a big deal out of it,” he says. “I will lose races! I can’t win them all.”

For the time being, though, he is doing exactly that.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

The Weston Beach races are the focal point of the UK enduro motorcycling season, and the event attracts all-comers of varying experience – including young riders with fresh ambition.

Take Harry Nott. The 13-year-old has only been riding for a couple of years and this was his second crack at Weston. His dad Andrew says the bug has well and truly bitten.

“Harry is a member of Sudbury Motorcycle Club and there is a very strong enduro/motocross gaggle in this area of Suffolk. He’s done some motocross this season with everything geared towards Weston.”

Harry has been riding a Husqvarna TC 85 and has established himself as a frontrunner in the Eastern Youth Enduro series, and has taken in a couple of rounds in the Welsh championship too. He’s lucky enough to have his own workshop at home and Andrew says tinkering with his bike makes for “a pretty healthy lifestyle”.

Weston Beach race sand pit

The (sand)pit

So is junior off-road motorcycling as brutal as the youth karting arenas? “Motocross is pretty dog-eat-dog, but enduro has a difference ethos about it,” says Andrew. “The other competitors and families are all very friendly. You camp at the venue and get to see the same people every time. Even the kids Harry is riding against – there’s a camaraderie. If the bike breaks, all the parents pitch in to help fix it. It’s a nice place to be.”

From such acorns, careers in the car and motorcycle world are born. Well-known classics dealer Lee Maxted-Page is a family friend. “I took Harry down to Lee’s place to see what he does. He likes the engineering side, and has been around cars and bikes all his life so far. It’s in his DNA.”

As for Weston, Harry was out of luck – for a second successive year. His engine seized before he could get into his stride. “As Lee said to him, ‘Well, Harry, that’s motor sport,’” says Andrew. “It’s a good lesson for him. All the guys in the pits realised he’d broken down and came up to him to say, ‘You’ll be all right – next year.’”

So, third time lucky in 2026? “I’ve sold the other bike and just bought him a new one,” says Dad, “so the answer to that is yes!”

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

Absolute chaos. I’ve never seen anything like it.” That’s ace photographer Jayson Fong’s verdict after we sent him west for a special commission: to capture the madcap Weston Beach Race.

First run in 1983, the event in Weston-super-Mare is an annual highlight of the UK’s motorcycle off-road calendar and attracts hundreds of riders of all ages and experience, plus thousands of spectators. The races are held on a six-mile circuit made up of a flat-out blast along the beach, before riders turn back across a tough course pock-marked by man-made dunes.

Run on the first weekend of October, Storm Amy played havoc this year and caused the Saturday races to be cancelled. But after rebuilding the course overnight, organiser RHL Activities was relieved to find Sunday dawning under clear blue skies. The schedule was compressed for all classes to squeeze in their races, with the main Solo event cut in half from three hours to a still gruelling hour and a half.

“It’s Wild West stuff – just bonkers,” says our man Fong. “The sheer number of people and bikes in one space… You’ll have some at the bottom of a dune waiting to go, then you’ll have some pro who just doesn’t stop and keeps going up the dune at full speed.

“People often get stuck on the dunes. It’s such a physical race, different to anything I’ve seen. Bikes were getting stuck in the sand, people were falling off and then having to lift them back up.

“It’s one of the best things I’ve ever photographed. So much action, wherever on the circuit you are and you don’t have to follow who’s winning. Plus the spectator fencing is at the edge of the track. As a punter you’d get the same pictures as me.”

Never been before? A dead cert for your 2026 schedule, surely.

Weston Beach Race bikes

No donkeys today

Jayson Fong

Weston Beach Race Camaraderie in the sand

Camaraderie is central to the spirit of beach racing;

Jayson Fong

Sand in your brakepads, Weston Beach

Churned sand in your brakepads? Of course.

Jayson Fong

Hazards signs at Weston Beach race

Hazards are waiting to catch out riders and their machines

Stcuk off bike Weston Beach race

Stuck in a rut? It can happen to the best at Weston

Jayson Fong

Robber glove on helmet Weston Beach

Not everyone takes it entirely seriously

Jayson Fong

Blue at Weston Beach

Blue skies and relatively dry sand must have been a surprise after Storm Amy wreaked havoc on Saturday

Jayson Fong

Bryan Yeo’s Honda Weston Beach Race

Bryan Yeo’s Honda prepares for blast-off

Jayson Fong

Weston Beach race pulling out bike

Are they burying it or pulling it out?

Jayson Fong

Advice from the pitcrew

Helpful advice from a supportive pitcrew is always appreciated

Jayson Fong

Ben Puddy stuck in the mud Kawasaki

get out of that – Ben Puddy ponders how to dig out his plugged Kawasaki

Jayson Fong

Traffic at the Weston Beach

And you think the Monaco Grand Prix is bad for traffic

Jayson Fong

Ciaran O’Connor takes a break

A moment of respite for Ciaran O’Connor

Jayson Fong

Weston Beach no goggles

Goggles might be best… then again, try keeping your lens clean among this lot

Jayson Fong

Quad bikers at Weston Beach 2025

Life’s a beach for some of the intreprid quad bikers

Jayson Fong

Rob Pickard catches some air

Rob Pickard catches some air

Jayson Fong

Bikes our the gate at Westone Beach

Emergency escape opens as dune becomes clogged

Jayson Fong

Lucy Barker top woman rider at Weston Beach

Lucy Barker, centre, was top woman rider

Jayson Fong

All dirt bikes at Weston Beach…

One push and they’ll all go down…

Jayson Fong

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

The FIA Formula 1 World Drivers’ Championship turned 75 in May. Later that month the series for constructors celebrated its centennial. For Vanwall did not win the first of these in 1958 as commonly thought. Alfa Romeo did – in 1925.

Bugatti won the next (1926). Delage dominated the one after that. And that was (not quite) that. Having suffered a painful birth, this idea ahead of its time endured a protracted demise. Its remaining three editions were embarrassments unworthy of a world champion. So none was declared. Yet this was at a time of rapid growth for motor racing: the poster sport for The Speed Age. A Bugatti advertisement laid claim to 501 victories in 1926 alone. No doubt these included the most minor of events – as well as the World Manufacturers’ Championship – but it is no exaggeration that fans in France and Italy stood a good chance of seeing their heroes in the flesh given the proliferation of rudimentary road courses/street circuits hosting healthy fields unencumbered by proscriptive regulation.

Alfa team-mate Giuseppe Campari, Montlhéry, 1925

Alfa team-mate Giuseppe Campari, Montlhéry, ’25

Getty Images

The governing body – not for the last time – was out of touch, and blind to both the dwindling interest from manufacturers and the rise of the cult of the (mainly privateer) racing driver. Unhelpful factors were beyond its control: a worsening global economy; and the fatal accident that befell the period’s most famous driver. But nor did it help itself. An unpopular formula change increased costs – reduced weight and increased rpm have never come cheaply – and consequentially shrinking grids would result in the most farcical grand prix: a lonely trio of the same make droning around a bland, desolate and windswept oval.

Its hands-across-the-sea entreaties were admirable – and reciprocated to a friendly degree – but engine capacity was the singular truly transatlantic uniformity. For American fans travelled to steeply banked board tracks – that most niche specialism – to watch the world’s fastest races: braking and changing gear were for other folks. Their heroes were professional, too, well recompensed for their risk. The Indianapolis 500 would make very little play of its part in a world championship. A standalone event, it had no need of European validation.

Codified global motor sport had been mooted in 1923 by influential French journal, L’Auto. The response was mixed; and the suggested formats were bewildering in their variety and complexity. The idea eventually coalesced when Italian representation on the recently created Commission Sportive Internationale (CSI) – a more inclusive arbiter than the l’Automobile Club de France (ACF) that it superseded – cut to the quick in January 1925.

Antonio Ascari in 1925 at Spa for Alfa Romeo

Antonio Ascari won the opening race in Europe in 1925 at Spa for Alfa Romeo.

Undoubtedly keen to capitalise on Alfa Romeo’s likely continuing superiority, it proposed a series of five races, of at least 800km, for GP cars complying with the existing (since 1922 in Europe) 2-litre formula: minimums of 650kg (dry) and ‘two-seater’ cockpits of 80cm width. Points were to be awarded according to a manufacturer’s best result at: Indianapolis; the GP d’Europe – an arbitrary honorary title, on this occasion handed to Spa-Francorchamps; the GP de l’ACF; and the British and Italian GPs. The best four – three in reality – of these would count towards the final standings.

There was a twist, however. Eligibility for the 70,000F first prize – and 30,000F bronze trophy – was dependent on the mandatory contesting of a manufacturer’s home GP, as well as the Monza finale. A tie was to be broken by a 200km winner-takes-all, to be held in Italy within two days of its inconclusive GP.

The Paris-based l’Association Internationale des Automobile Clubs Reconnus (AIACR), forerunner of the FIA, gave its enthusiastic if naive blessing. It had failed to read the room. Those 20 starters representing seven manufacturers from across four nations – France, Great Britain, Italy and America – at the 1924 GP d’Europe, hosted by Lyon and won thrillingly for Alfa Romeo by Giuseppe Campari, was a zenith. For now Fiat, creator of the 2-litre GP car’s template, was deafeningly silent, conspicuously absent. Rolland-Pilain, winner of the 1923 San Sebastián GP in Spain, had pulled its competitive plug. And Sunbeam of Wolverhampton, winner of that year’s GP de l’ACF at Tours, was laggardly suddenly.

The European contingent at Indianapolis in May 1925 would number just one: a privateer Fiat. Much more surprising was that only Alfa Romeo and Delage bothered to show up at Spa in June, for seven starters in total.

The opening round of 1925, the Indy 500, was won by Pete DePaolo

The opening round of 1925, the Indy 500, was won by Pete DePaolo,

Getty Images

The former race drew an entry of quality over quantity – its joint second-smallest, at 22 – which was dominated by 16 pencil-thin (and therefore theoretically non-compliant) single-seaters by Miller, a specialist selling mainly to wealthy and/or sponsored individuals. The victory, however, went to Duesenberg, the sole major US manufacturer willing to compete still; an expensive compunction that had cost sporting brothers Fred and Augie control of their eponymous company.

Alfa Romeo won the latter race. That it stopped for a languorous lunch while doing so was apocryphal. Such hyperbole, however, was understandable given this well-practised team’s advantage over a poorly prepared rival: three of the four Delages retired within the first six laps (of 54).

“The Delage was still no match for the well-proven Alfa Romeo P2 in the hands of Ascari”

It had been an unedifying beginning for a championship already at its halfway point. For the British had had to politely decline its invitation due to impending litigation over noise levels at Brooklands. Even greater store, therefore, was placed on July’s GP de l’ACF – Europe’s standalone – on the newly constructed artificial road course of Montlhéry. Sunbeam had joined the fray, as had Bugatti, and so a stronger field of 14 took the rolling start.

The powerful twin-supercharged V12 Delage, though improved, was still no match for the excellent handling, road-holding, acceleration and braking of a well-proven Alfa Romeo P2 in the hands of Antonio Ascari. The runaway winner at Spa – almost 22min ahead of team-mate Campari – leapt into another lead and pulled away remorselessly. His forcefulness, sustained even when rain swept through at quarter-distance, animated a dull affair. A late switch to running the course clockwise had been criticised by some as being dangerous – but not by the bold Ascari, on the eve of the race. Others, Sunbeam’s Henry Segrave prominent among them, thought that the Milan-based car dealer was simply trying too hard to win Europe’s first big-bucks prize: 150,000F. Certainly, he paid dearly for a fractional error.

Pete DePaolo in a Duesenberg

Pete DePaolo, in a Duesenberg

Catching paling fencing on the inside of a fast corner, the dark-red machine tore up 130yd of it before pitching into a fateful roll. Confirmation of Ascari’s death would cause Alfa Corse to withdraw after 40 (of 80) laps. Florid coverage of his laying in state in Paris, processional homecoming and thronged funeral far outweighed the continuingly feeble promotion of the championship.

Yet a counterintuitive points system – one for first place; two for second; three for third; four for a classified finish (i.e. all laps completed); five for a DNF; and six for an absence – had given rise to a three-way decider: Alfa Romeo and Delage were level on 12 points ‘lost’, with Duesenberg closely ‘behind’ on 13.

Albeit a battle skewed by the Montlhéry result – Campari had been leading by more than 2min when called to a respectful halt – at least September’s showdown had a hook. Which Delage then used to pop this balloon! It preferred the easier pickings of the non-championship San Sebastián GP to being Alfa Romeo’s whipping boy. Run to AIACR rules two weeks after Monza, it was rumoured that Italy had vetoed this Spanish race’s inclusion. The CSI wasn’t all harmonious inclusivity.

More politicking elsewhere thankfully confirmed Duesenberg’s presence. That is to say: USA’s best versus Europe’s. The Contest Board of the powerful American Automobile Association (AAA) had used it as a bargaining chip in its quest for recognition as the national governing body. The AIACR’s favouring of the smaller but well-connected Automobile Club of America was a contributory factor to a long-running US feud.

Duesenberg took its opportunity seriously, arriving in Italy with a vast array of equipment. By the time of AAA’s release clause, however, its Indy 500 winner and national champion, Italo-American Pete DePaolo, had offered his services to Alfa Romeo. (This was accepted once Tazio Nuvolari had crashed injuriously from a sensational but brief Monza assessment of his potential: fantastically fast; and worryingly wild.)

Edmond Bourlier’s Delage vs Malcolm Campbell’s Bugatti, Brooklands, RAC GP, 1927

Edmond Bourlier’s Delage (no3) vs Malcolm Campbell’s Bugatti, Brooklands, RAC GP, 1927

Getty images

Driven by Tommy Milton and ‘Pete’ Kreis, and modified to meet Europe’s interpretation of the 2-litre rules – though their steering wheels remained (theoretically illegally) central within widened cockpits – the Duesenberg’s centrifugal supercharging was expected to sing on Monza’s dished oval, whereas the more flexible delivery of Alfa Romeo’s Roots blower would surely be more advantageous on the layout’s road course section. Perhaps this affair was going to be closely fought after all.

Kreis grabbed the lead but unproven braking and transmission hampered the Americans thereafter. He spun out. His team-mate led on occasion, despite having just top gear for the majority of the race, before a 20min repair of an oil pipe cost Duesenberg its chance. The persevering Milton eventually finished fourth – behind the fastest of the eight 1.5-litre voiturettes bolstering the field to 15.

Thus a weakened Alfa Romeo – Campari, badly bruised by a practice crash, and DePaolo, learning a new car – was crowned world champion manufacturer thanks to Count Gastone Brilli-Peri’s victory. It encircled its badge with a celebratory wreath – where it remained until 1972 – and decided to rest on its laurels rather than build a car for the new GP formula for 1926: 1.5-litre and 600kg.

Louis Delage was sympathetic. In an interview with WF Bradley, continental correspondent for The Autocar, he explained: “The time has arrived to call public attention to the unsatisfactory nature of the new racing rules… [these] are not conducive to progress, for they are engendering a type of car which does not have a beneficial reaction on the normal automobile.”

These ‘toolmaker’s jobs’ were not only too expensive, but also – and contrary to the AIACR’s hopeful intention – would be faster, he intoned, particularly on artificial tracks that “do not tend to all-round development”.

Not that mercurial Louis could resist building several of them.

“Delage drivers had to dunk feet burnt by the exhaust pipe into buckets of water”

The ACF, predicting a laughably optimistic bumper entry for its GP at Miramas in June 1926, set a limit of 40, which it envisaged being reduced to 30 for the final by a series of heats. Yet Delage had intimated that it would not attend. (It didn’t.) Alfa Romeo’s presence was extremely doubtful. Fiat remained tellingly silent. Sunbeam was chasing the better PR afforded by breaking the Land Speed Record. Daimler, which would merge with Benz out of financial necessity the day after the race, was holding a watching brief. French Talbot was running late and out of money. Itala’s ambitious V12 was unready. Sima-Violet’s 60bhp flat-four unsupercharged two-stroke was considered a joke…

Only Bugatti was ready to race: three started and one was classified as a finisher. “That’ll be 100,000F, thanks!” The crowd was small, and the ACF made a huge loss. But it deserved to.

Six cars started the GP d’Europe at San Sebastián – three Bugattis and Delages apiece – and two were classified as finishers after a brace of disqualifications because of the latter’s use of unauthorised drivers. (They would be reinstated in October. But the moment had gone.) Bugatti, which had at last bolted a supercharger to its impressive reliability, was again victorious.

Delage won the inaugural British Grand Prix at Brooklands in August – the legal ‘noise’ had silenced – albeit in the absence of ‘works’ Bugattis, and despite their drivers having to dunk feet burnt by the exhaust pipe into buckets of water. But once again it would duck the denouement. Because Bugatti merely had to make its mandatory appearance at the Italian GP in Monza to be assured of the title – it won a GP of two finishers nevertheless – Delage decided its time would be better spent refitting its toolmaker’s jobs.

Though this formula was already officially dead in the water – it would be allowed to flounder for one more season – Delage went to the crippling expense of shifting its engine leftward, and of turning its cylinder head through 180 degrees, so that the exhaust exited away from the driver. This doubling-down resulted in a genuinely great GP car. What opposition it didn’t frighten away – even Bugatti fought shyly – was meagre at best, and Robert Benoist won all four European rounds of the championship in 1927.

 

George Eyston’s Aston Martin leads Henry Segrave’s Talbot at the 1926 RAC GP

George Eyston’s Aston Martin leads Henry Segrave’s Talbot at the 1926 RAC Grand Prix – the first ‘British Grand Prix’

Getty Images

What might have been was hinted at when Fiat unveiled its new 1.5-litre at September’s Milan GP (run for three capacity classes) at Monza. (Organisers, understandably fearing that the main event might fall flat, would wisely run a free-for-all support race.) The ‘twin-six’ Tipo 806 proved sufficiently fast for an admittedly tired Benoist, the world championship now assured with one round remaining thanks to his solo effort in tricky conditions, to baulk at the idea of a five-lap sprint against a foe likely scaling significantly less than the AIACR’s new 700kg minimum.

It was all too little – just six cars started that GP d’Europe – and too late.

A delusional AIACR refused to give up on its global dream. (Yes, America’s board tracks had been ripped up, but the AAA ‘Junk Formula’ of 1930 was even further removed from any GP aesthetic.) Its latest rules were freer. They were ignored even so. Just one race complied in 1928. Its fuel limit formula from 1929-30 was equally ‘well’ received.

Finally, it got the message: AIACR’s 1931 championship would be Formule Libre, European in scope, and for drivers. Though it couldn’t resist imposing a 10-hour duration on its three rounds. An ill-judged decision – another one – that it would be forced to rescind for 1932.

Not that its ‘clients’ knew what they wanted. Their moaning caused a manufacturer element to be included in this second iteration. Alfa Romeo won that one, too.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

Las Vegas welcomed Formula 1 for a fifth time in November, promising a weekend of speed and entertainment befitting the spectacle of Sin City. The vast Sphere arena illuminated sector two during the race, having previously been awash with fans enjoying star-studded concerts included in the cost of admission – a perk for those not fully satisfied by the 220mph cars on the Strip.

Popular music artists have long been a staple of Formula 1, including at heritage circuits such as Silverstone, Spa and Monaco, where prestige alone has not always guaranteed sold-out grandstands. Despite contributing significantly to the race-day atmosphere, the crossroads of music and motor sport remain a largely uncharted area of study.

Carlos Sainz 2024 Las Vegas GP

By the time Carlos Sainz was on track at the 2024 Las Vegas GP, US rapper Ludacris had finished his headline slot at Sphere

Getty Images

My work as a composer for television (while moonlighting as a doctoral researcher in musicology) provides the perfect opportunity to map the history of this under-reported subject. Exploring over a century’s worth of press clippings, race reports and archival materials has illuminated a vibrant history, at the same time satisfying my own fascination with motor racing past and present. While Las Vegas’s trackside extravagance may irk purists, motor sport’s earliest races were far closer to today’s entertainment-laden experiences than to unadulterated competitive events.

“National anthems were a tradition swiftly adopted by motor sport”

The first motor races of the mid-1890s, though hugely popular with French spectators, were chaotic affairs. Unlike modern circuit racing, events ran from one destination to another, covering hundreds, if not thousands, of miles. As early as the inaugural Paris-Rouen race of 1894, contemporary newspapers reported that the route came to life with village fêtes as spectators occupied themselves with food, drink and music during the long waits for drivers to pass by. Given that villagers would not know when the cars would arrive, there was significantly more time spent on merriment than race-watching.

London-Brighton Emancipation Run, 1896

London-Brighton Emancipation Run, 1896

Motor racing expanded rapidly in the following years and the party atmosphere remained irrepressible. At the 1899 Paris-Boulogne race, an enthusiastic crowd erroneously celebrated a spectating motorcyclist as the leader at a mid-race checkpoint. The rider had to wait until the end of a rendition of La Marseillaise (the French national anthem) to return the celebratory flowers and explain the misunderstanding. As was tradition in those days, the drivers were treated to a grand post-race banquet, while their cars were displayed for the public to see.

Paris-Berlin, 1901

Paris-Berlin, 1901

Throughout the 1890s and following decades, musical instruments doubled as race management tools. Cars carried trumpets to warn of their approach, whistles signalled race starts and buglers were stationed ahead of villages to announce the arrival of competitors – mainly to remove any wayward stragglers from the road, but also to alert stewards who assisted with navigation through settlements. In 1891, three years before the first large-scale motor race, a single steam-powered Peugeot Type 3 Quadricycle entered the Paris–Brest–Paris bicycle race; caught off guard by the bugler, a villager emerged into the street without trousers or underpants, to the amusement of the locals.

Tazio Nuvolari, 1935 German GP

Tazio Nuvolari, 1935 German GP

Beyond the roadside, music had a social and hierarchical function within the motor sport community. The 1896 International Exhibition of Motors, hosted in London, saw the first performance of the Monte Carlo Orchestra in Britain, lending ceremony and distinction to this newly emerging industry.

When the British government removed early restrictions on motor cars in November of that year (while upholding a blanket ban on road-racing), the London–Brighton Emancipation Run concluded with a celebratory banquet featuring music. Two years later, the Automobile Club of America proudly assured its members that the winter of 1898 would not pass without sufficient orchestral performances for its upper-class patrons. Motor sport was, from the outset, a mixture of sporting and social occasions.

Christian Lautenschlager, 1914 French GP.

Christian Lautenschlager, 1914 French GP.

By the early 1900s, racing was an international pastime steeped in patriotism and prestige. National anthems were already appearing at sporting events such as cycling races – a tradition swiftly adopted by motor sport. The 1901 Paris-Berlin race saw anthems played at checkpoints across the breadth of the continent, culminating in Germany’s capital where La Marseillaise announced Henri Fournier (a Frenchman), as the winner. At a checkpoint in Hanover, a German band provided a less than stellar performance of their neighbour’s anthem, but the delighted French spectators were too elated to take offence. By the time competitors reached Berlin, excellent renditions of the French national anthem, La Brabançonne and Heil dir im Siegerkranz (anthems for Belgium and Germany respectively), as well as Strauss’s The Blue Danube waltz soon remedied any earlier wrong notes. Races across Europe (including Vienna, Amsterdam, Madrid and Ireland) mirrored France and Germany’s pageantry, with military bands becoming a fixture of such occasions.

At the Brooklands Double 12 in 1929

At the Brooklands Double 12 in 1929, an RAF band provided additional entertainment – in much the same way Sam Fender might today

Getty Images

On the other side of the Atlantic, musical entertainment was an equally important part of motor racing events. The 1901 Detroit Races featured a parade including police vehicles and a steam-coach filled with musicians playing the popular tunes of the day, while the 1901 Eagle Rock Hill Climb awards ceremony enlisted a string ensemble. This use of music to create a festive occasion marks a stark contrast from the Chicago Times-Herald race of 1895, in which the cars performed so poorly that the judges refused to attend the finish, leaving only two reporters to greet the winner of the first United States motoring competition.

“Band leader Billy Cotton balanced careers in music and racing”

By 1906, the convenience of circuit racing had become apparent, and the 1906 French Grand Prix was staged on a 64-mile route around Le Mans which was traversed 12 times. The Automobile Club de France put great emphasis on the spectacle of the occasion, arranging for bands, performances, parades, flowers and food to keep audiences entertained during the hour-long wait for cars to loop back around. Another significant development was afoot in 1906; Hugh F Locke King was sketching plans for the Brooklands circuit in Surrey – a cornerstone of British racing, a social hub, and a magnet for noise complaints.

George Harrison with wife Pattie Boyd and Jim Clark, 1966 Monaco GP

F1 fan George Harrison with wife Pattie Boyd and Jim Clark, 1966 Monaco GP.

Getty Images

While motor racing in the UK was finding its feet, across the pond the first jewel of motor sport’s triple crown emerged in 1911, with the inaugural running of the Indianapolis 500. Eighty thousand spectators were treated to bands performing in the stands ahead of the race start – by 1919, the Purdue ‘All-American’ Marching Band had established itself as a core part of the race day traditions. The festival feel extended well beyond oval-racing; the 1914 Los Angeles-to-Phoenix Cactus Derby race featured music and a fairground to entertain patrons at the finish line, with the winner,      Barney Oldfield, being awarded a medal proclaiming him Master Driver of the World. In Europe, the continental atmosphere was becoming increasingly unsettled as the inevitability of large-scale conflict emerged. World War I would begin just 24 days after the 1914 French Grand Prix, an event at which the French band refused to play the German national anthem for the victorious Christian Lautenschlager of Mercedes.

Grand Prix Endurance 24 hours 1923 poster

A little jazz with your endurance racing?

After hostilities ceased in 1918, post-war nationalism fuelled pride in sporting success and technological advancements. By the 1920s, cars were faster, circuits had public-address systems (Brooklands installed its first by 1922) and gramophone records joined live bands as race-day entertainment. Nineteen twenty-three saw the first running of the Le Mans 24 Hours. The Automobile Club de France remained keenly aware of the need to keep spectators engaged over the full race and listed a jazz band prominently on the event poster. A scene of unparalleled spectacle, there were bright lights, a myriad of shows, booths, a firework display, an American cocktail bar, food, the aforementioned musical entertainment and classical concerts broadcast via radio for those not yet accustomed to jazz. Beyond official entertainment, accordion music rang out through the night as visitors amused themselves before sleep (or more likely, while inebriated). Brooklands’ offering of a 24-hour race, held as the Brooklands Double Twelve in 1929, was split into two 12-hour sessions held on sequential days to satisfy noise regulations. The continental flare for drama had evidently been imported: an RAF band performed, alongside the construction of a temporary amusement park with dodgems – a scene which would not be out of place at today’s motor racing events.

Nino Farina at Silverstone, 1950

Nino Farina beneath one of 125 loudspeakers at Silverstone, 1950

As motor sport boomed in the late 1920s and early 1930s, so did its social scene, with another racing jewel emerging in 1929 – the glamorous and star-studded Monaco Grand Prix. Monte Carlo’s casino attracted both drivers and performers, occasionally embodied in a single figure, as with bandleader Billy Cotton, who successfully balanced careers in both music and racing.

It was a golden period in the expansion of motor sport, offering a variety of challenges for drivers and teams. Recognising the propaganda value of motor racing, fascist regimes of the 1930s were quick to embrace racing’s grandeur. Mercedes was state-sponsored by the Nazi party, while Alfa Romeo was backed by Mussolini’s Italy. Such was Germany’s motor sport dominance in the 1930s that when the Italian driver Tazio Nuvolari took victory at the 1935 German Grand Prix, it was a moment of national shame for Germany. Unprepared for a foreign victory, the race organisers had no way of playing the Italian national anthem. With great foresight, Nuvolari had wisely packed a gramophone record in his suitcase, which was broadcast over the public-address system to a dissatisfied German audience.

DJs crowd at GT Series Endurance Cup’s Spa 24 Hours in 2016

DJs pound out dance tunes at the GT Series Endurance Cup’s Spa 24 Hours in 2016; there was also a Mercedes on the grid with a livery designed by Linkin Park

A more serious incident occurred two years later at Donington Park in 1937. With increasing European tension following Hitler’s persecution of Germany’s Jewish and minority populations, the Mercedes victory was poorly received in England. In a highly unusual and disrespectful departure from the established post-race decorum, Deutschland über Alles, the German national anthem, was not played for the victorious driver. Given that the Nazi Party directly sponsored Germany’s motor racing efforts, this was close to causing a diplomatic incident, and tensions were only calmed when the anthem was played at the celebration dinner later that evening. While the following year’s race ran smoothly (despite being rescheduled on account of the Munich Crisis), the events of 1937 foreshadowed racing’s second interruption at the outbreak of World War II in 1939.

“The Chain has undoubtedly secured its place as a defining tune”

Although 1945 brought peace, it took a few more years for motor sport to regain its previous momentum; grand prix racing returned to the UK by 1948, and the Le Mans 24 Hours to France by 1949. Opera singer James Melton, joined by the Purdue ‘All American’ Marching Band, made (Back Home Again in) Indiana a part of the Indy 500 pre-race ritual as early as 1946 – a tradition which endures today. The Formula 1 World Championship commenced at Silverstone in 1950, an event attended by royalty and the Band of the Grenadier Guards, supported by 125 loudspeakers which had been installed across the circuit. Musical expectations for race weekends were solidified, with anthems and entertainment firmly embedded in the F1 experience.

Acker Bilk, British GP, 1970

Acker Bilk, British GP, 1970

The increasing popularity of film and television broadcasting heralded the next major development in music’s relationship with racing. Maurice Jarre’s 1966 score for Grand Prix and Michel Legrand’s 1971 music for Le Mans introduced orchestral-jazz stylings to motor sport cinema.

However, it was in 1978 that the BBC’s title music for Grand Prix (its first broadcast solely devoted to F1) created one of the most memorable musical associations with motor racing. The iconic bass riff from Fleetwood Mac’s The Chain cemented rock music as synonymous with F1 broadcasting in the UK. The song became the flagship theme, ending only when ITV secured the 1997 television rights, before returning in 2009 when the BBC reclaimed the broadcasting licence until 2015. Individual musical associations often develop from a viewer’s first exposure to F1 coverage; ITV used Moby’s Lift Me Up (among a variety of tracks), Sky Sports F1 ran Alistair Griffin’s Just Drive before switching to Daft Punk’s Outlands (an orchestral-hybrid cue from Tron Legacy), while Channel 4 features Justice’s Genesis. Musical tastes may change, but The Chain has undoubtedly secured its place as a defining tune in motor sport’s soundtrack.

Spice Girls at McLaren’s 1997

Spice Girls at McLaren’s 1997 launch

The union of rock music and racing was cross-continental, where the genre remains an intrinsic part of NASCAR and IndyCar’s identities. In the 1970s, rock music was heard in the infield at Watkins Glen, and in the mid-1990s, Silverstone spectators received their own rock concert from Eddie Jordan on drums and Damon Hill on guitar. This was a stark contrast to Elio De Angelis’s piano playing during the 1982 South African Grand Prix drivers’ strike, where the Lotus man serenaded his racing compatriots with pieces by Mozart during the protest.

Many drivers are talented musicians, including current F1 competitors Lewis Hamilton (rapping under the artist name XNDA) and Charles Leclerc. In turn, pop stars have often been found socialising in motor sport paddocks. George Harrison spent a year travelling with the F1 circus, an experience which inspired the track Faster on his eponymous 1979 album. It was later revealed (by David Coulthard and Mika Häkkinen) that Harrison had also penned a song named Bernie Says, reflecting on the unquestionable power of F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone. Unsurprisingly, the composition was only ever shared privately and the track was left unrecorded and unreleased.

By the mid-1990s, Bizet’s Les Toréadors (from his opera Carmen) had become the podium music for F1 celebrations, bringing with it a grandeur befitting the drama of a grand prix. And Bernie Ecclestone had also commissioned sonic idents (mainly distorted guitar) for F1 branding.

To launch the McLaren MP4/12 in 1997, Ron Dennis hosted an extravagant affair at Alexandra Palace with the Spice Girls for maximum sponsor attention. Other teams followed suit, and the branding used by F1 continued to evolve across the early 2000s.

Fleetwood Mac motor sport

Bum bum-bum-bum b-b-b-b-bum bum… Fleetwood Mac

Getty Images

By 2010, the World Endurance Championship was synchronising the start of the Le Mans 24 Hours with Strauss’s Also sprach Zarathustra (popularised by Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey) to lend prestige and excitement to the first lap of the race – an approach ultimately extended to the rest of the calendar.

In 2008, F1’s Singapore Grand Prix took the entertainment a step further with a vast post-race music performance featuring world-renowned artists such as Bob Marley’s Wailers. Race organisers across the globe subsequently adopted the idea to help boost spectator numbers, with standout events at Silverstone, Austin and Las Vegas. While a festival feel at circuits had been noted over 100 years earlier at the 1906 French Grand Prix, reactions to the concerts were not wholly positive and it remains a contentious part of race weekends for some fans who believe it trivialises the sport. Controversy aside, the extra entertainment is no doubt a draw to patrons who want some additional excitement on race day.

The World Rally Championship was an early adopter of bespoke music for their brand, an approach which has spread across motor sport to grand prix, endurance and motorbike racing. In 2014, Formula E premiered its title music, which has since been updated on multiple occasions. F1’s orchestral theme was composed by Brian Tyler for the 2018 season and, after initially dividing fans, has become firmly engrained as the contemporary sound of the sport.

Johnny Herbert, Eddie Irvine and Damon Hill, Silverstone, ’95

Johnny Herbert, Eddie Irvine and Damon Hill, Silverstone, ’95

The music of racing also crosses media platforms, appearing in video games, docu-series (such as Netflix’s Formula 1: Drive to Survive) and making another jump to the big screen with Hans Zimmer’s score for the 2025 blockbuster film F1. Branding crossovers, such as F1’s mariachi rendition of Tyler’s theme for the Mexican Grand Prix, and the switch to Hans Zimmer’s score for the 2025 Belgian Grand Prix, sparked significant online discussion, which demonstrates that music remains as important to viewers at home as it does for those at the trackside.

And there’s more. From K-pop crossovers, to Brazilian victory anthems and even multiple Europop hits celebrating Max Verstappen. In fact this year’s music infused Vegas GP was just the next chapter in a tradition as old as the sport itself.

Will Farmer is a TV composer and editor and is currently researching a PhD on music and motor sport 

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

Narrower tyres
Those big fat slicks of old seem a long time ago now… The wheels remain at 18in, but the width of the front tyres has been reduced by 25mm and the rears by 30mm. This comes with an estimated weight saving of 5kg.

Software and modelling
Ahead of its change of identity to Audi, Sauber opened its new Technology Centre at Bicester Motion in the heart of the UK’s Motorsport Valley in July, to provide support to HQ in Hinwil. Vehicle modelling, software, data analytics and CFD all come under the remit here. “The support it will play to Hinwil will be important to our long-term success,” predicted Audi F1 project chief Mattia Binotto.

Who’s driving?
It may be a new name in the form of Audi, but there’s been no reason to change the line-up. The hugely experienced Nico Hülkenberg remains on board – and his German nationality doesn’t do any harm – while impressive 2025 Brazilian rookie Gabriel Bortoleto occupies the other seat.

Concept
Audi is not pretending that this is the real R26; it has been dubbed the ‘R26 Concept’. But it gives a taster in traditional Audi livery. “It’s about releasing something unique,” explains team principal Jonathan Wheatley. “If you look at an F1 car in five years, you’ll say that’s an Audi. In 10 years’ time, you’ll say that’s an Audi. It’s about setting a design ethos that will just carry through.”

Engine
Audi is making much of the fact that its 1.6-litre, V6 engine is the first F1 powertrain to be developed and built in Germany in over a decade (Mercedes’ is produced by its facility in Brixworth). With an almost 300% increase in electric power for 2026, to equal the output of the internal combustion engine, it is hoping that its Neuburg engineers’ experience from Formula E, LMP1 and the electric Dakar Rally project will come in handy.

Chassis
Initially under the name Sauber, the team has been producing F1 cars from its facility in Hinwil, Switzerland since 1993. For 2026, the regulations have prescribed a reduction in length of 20cm to 3.4m, and width of 10cm to 1.9m. Combined with the smaller tyres, this brings a decrease in overall weight of 30kg to 768kg. It’s not massive, but a step in the right direction for those who argue that the cars have become too bloated.

Rear wing: no DRS
The old Drag Reduction System makes way for active aerodynamics to be deployed in what has been termed Z-mode and X-mode, both activated by the driver. Z-mode increases cornering speed by angling the elements on front and rear wings; X-mode is low-drag to boost straight-line speed – a kind of DRS Version 2.0. This combines with an increase in electric power for chasing cars to help boost overtaking.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

Audi F1 R26 Concept front

Audi unveiled its R26 concept in mid-November, sporting a titanium, carbon black and red livery

In a nondescript German factory corridor, bright shafts of light break through the gaps in a shutter. Suddenly the corrugated metal door starts to rise as the dazzling white beams bursts forth, causing the small crowd assembled in the passageway to take a step and shield their eyes. 

All that’s missing is the Also Sprach Zarathustra theme from 2001: A Space Odyssey to accompany what promised for a second to be a seismic moment, but all ends in a bit of an anticlimax.

Revealed is a few studious, bespectacled engineers who turn round to stare at us in mild annoyance, before going back to their work without saying a word.

Still, we’re in the middle of something historic here. Motor Sport has been invited to Audi’s famous Neuburg motor sport facility to take a sneak peek behind the scenes as the German marque goes flat out to get its hugely complex, 1.6-litre hybrid engine ready for the Formula 1 season opener in March. The engineers in front of us are carefully constructing the beating heart of the silver machine.

It’s from this building that Audi has conquered Le Mans, WRC, the Dakar Rally and more: out of all the brands that have competed anywhere but modern F1, it’s surely the most successful. Now though, over 80 years since it reigned supreme in pre-war grand prix racing as Auto Union, Audi is set to join the world championship – and intent on doing things its own way.

Audi’s Auto Union C type

Audi’s last GP racer

Our factory tour is a precursor to the marque announcing itself on the world stage with a glitzy livery launch for the 2026 F1 car, dubbed the R26, nearby that evening.

At the event, the clink of champagne glasses is brutally interrupted by the eviscerating roar of a V16 engine, as a 1930s Auto Union C-type tears across a vast expanse of asphalt before pulling up outside the giant marquee.

It’s handy having an immense motor sport history to fall back on when leveraging your PR shindig. Group B rally monsters, LMP1 prototypes and rally-raid machines are used to ferry in Audi legends such as Mr Le Mans himself Tom Kristensen, the WRC’s only female winner Michèle Mouton and all-round race ace Hans-Joachim Stuck, each giving a regal wave to the crowd from the red carpet.

Despite all the razzmatazz, it’s clear Audi is also trying to keep a lid on expectations. “Mistakes will happen, but learning from them is what drives transformation,” says head of F1 project Mattia Binotto, adding that while “the goal is clear”, there is no question of overnight success. According to the former Ferrari team principal the team intends to fight for championships by 2030. “That journey takes time, the right people and a mindset of continuous improvement.”

Audi F1 R26 Concept nose

Ringing the changes

The car itself is silver with dashes of bare carbon and ‘Audi red’. As well as the complex 2026 hybrid engine having a near 50-50 split of around 1000bhp between internal combustion and electric power, active aerodynamics feature on the front and rear of a car which will be both smaller and lighter than the current generation.

Though Audi has had a three-and-a-half year run-up to building this car after buying Sauber in 2022, proceedings have not been smooth. Midway through 2024 the board sacked the original management team of Andreas Seidl and Oliver Hoffmann after being unhappy with progress. On track the race team was a failing operation too, eventually finishing the season in last position with just four points.

Binotto, recently having departed as Ferrari’s Scuderia boss, and Jonathan Wheatley, the long-time Red Bull sporting director, were brought in to right the ship. Sauber has since improved with this season being its best in 12 years, but will the feelgood factor transfer carry it through 2026? The bosses are hoping so.

When asked about the new ruleset, Binotto admits that they are so complex that almost no one knows what’s going to happen on track in 2026 – least of all Audi. The only vague promise is that a large performance spread across the field is likely.

A Jonathan Wheatley, Mattia Binotto, Gernot Döllner, Massimo Frascella, Nico Hülkenberg and Gabriel Bortoleto

Jonathan Wheatley, Mattia Binotto, Gernot Döllner, Massimo Frascella, Nico Hülkenberg and Gabriel Bortoleto

“All the parameters we knew before are not true any more,” he says. “What was important before in terms of performance, may change today or tomorrow. For decades we have fine-tuned our tools around the regulations, so we know what’s going to be fast and what’s important to be fast. That’s the biggest change for the future.

“What will be more important is a question mark, because if you ask our tools today, they may give you an answer, but I think the reality and the facts may be different when we start racing.”

On the ground in the factory the enormity of the task that Audi faces – and the potential for it all to go horribly wrong – really hits home.

Fabrizia Pons and Michèle Mouton with WRC

Fabrizia Pons and Michèle Mouton with an old WRC friend.

Audi F1 R26 Concept rear wing

Engine development began in 2022

Audi F1’s chief operating officer Christian Foyer tells us that the demand in terms of sheer quantity is far more than anything it ever experienced in sports cars, Formula E or Dakar. Neuburg has been asked to produce the 50-100 F1 engines needed for next year and has “aggressively” increased its staff numbers to do so.

The team is split between the engine department in Neuburg with about 450 personnel and a car and chassis department based in Hinwil, Switzerland, which employs between 700 and 900 depending where the season is up to. There’s a smaller satellite unit operating out of Bicester to utilise talent that doesn’t fancy leaving the UK’s motor sport valley just yet.

“We believe that the actual racing will be improved through the new regulations”

To create the test bench centre which forms part of Neuburg’s gigantic recent increase, 33 prefabricated containers were stacked up on one another. Teams are normally restricted to around 400 hours a season of engine dyno running, so Audi has created a one-cylinder version of its engine that it can first test for an unlimited amount of time.

Time really is of the essence, but try telling that to the engineers. Just two people build each power unit, It’s a tricky job keeping track of which components have gone where, while working quickly but with the utmost care. The aforementioned room in which they work has vast windows to let in as much natural light as possible to illuminate the task.

Audi F1 R26 front

Audi isn’t expecting immediate success.

Audi Inductively coupled plasma analyse

Inductively coupled plasma analyser

During our visit to Germany in mid-November the first pre-season test was still two months away.

Foyer admits that the brand’s expertise in the electrical element from running in sports cars, Dakar and Formula E has come in useful, but that the internal combustion end of the deal is proving trickier. “We have nothing to fear, but we are six years behind everyone else,” he says.

Audi is quite literally burning the midnight (engine) oil as it works around the clock to be ready for the start of the F1 season. One room contains an intriguing machine snappily called an inductively coupled plasma analyser, from which a curious green flame emanates. It conflagrates the black stuff at 6000˚C, testing for any impurities.

Audi Test facilities, simulation of race conditions.

Test facilities allow simulation of race conditions.

Audi F1 R26 Concept vent

F1 is seen as the next chapter in the company’s history

Elsewhere various precious metals are broken down in research for their usefulness, while electronics boffins with furrowed brows clutch large battery packs, their lab coats billowing as they rush past.

The whole place has a whiff of chaos and creation about it – in the most Germanic, organised way possible, naturally.

Will Audi make it in time? Binotto is still an engineer at heart, and while at Ferrari oversaw the introduction of KERS in 2009 and the first hybrid turbo units five years later. He says he relishes the chance of a new technological problem to solve.

“[The new F1 regs] are the biggest change in 30 years at least,” he says. “Is it good or bad?

Audi F1 R26 Concept back

“Myself, I believe it’s a great challenge. I think all technicians across the teams at the moment are enjoying some new change of regulations.

“We may have heard some criticism, but what I can see on drivers’ comments, they’re starting to enjoy it. I’m sure it will be, at the end, a good show because we believe that the actual racing will be improved through the new regulations.

“We may need some patience at the start, because big changes may bring gaps between teams, but certainly there will be a very quick catch-up from all the teams, and I’m expecting those rules may be adapted if required.

“That’s part of the normal process. In every season the FIA has always adapted to needs, and that may happen again.”

Audi has succeeded almost everywhere it’s competed. And yet, in all its glorious 126-year history, F1 will be the greatest test it has faced yet. Judging by all we’ve seen so far, this German powerhouse is more than up for the battle. Whether it will succeed is another question.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

Soon we’ll know the outcome of what has turned out to be a fascinating three-way title fight. Someone has to win it. And by the final race the fascination will be in how we got there. The grands prix in Mexico and Brazil signalled that Lando Norris was far from the delicate flower many had written off against the tougher cookies Max Verstappen and Oscar Piastri. These two races set a tone, especially as they illuminated moments of competitive distress for Norris’s two title rivals – as well as a sensational back-from-the-dead recovery by Verstappen in São Paulo. In particular these GPs beautifully encompassed the sheer volatility of a seasonal contest which had initially looked like a straightforward exclusively McLaren affair.

The front four cars of Lando Norris, Charles Leclerc, Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen went into Turn 1 of the Mexico City Grand Prix side-by-side

The front four cars of Lando Norris, Charles Leclerc, Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen went into Turn 1 of the Mexico City Grand Prix side-by-side

DPPI

“The altitude of Mexico City makes the surface of the Hermanos Rodriguez track unpredictable”

The high altitude of Mexico City makes the surface of the Hermanos Rodriguez track unpredictable in the extreme in this temperature-sensitive Pirelli era. Because the air contains fewer molecules, the slightest bit of sunshine heats the surface up super-fast (less blockage through the thin air) and a bit of cloud cover reduces it equally quickly (thinner air means less absorption of the heat).

All of which means that the sensitivity of these cars to getting the tyre temperatures balanced between the two axles is even more acute than normal. Any car which can do that relatively easily (the McLaren much more than the Red Bull) will be at a significant advantage here. So long as the driver can get the whole ball rolling in generating front temperatures in the tyre’s core. So Norris had a bigger advantage than normal over both Verstappen and his own team-mate Piastri. Why so?
In the case of the Red Bull, Verstappen’s race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase gave a great summary of their challenge after the Friday practices in which Verstappen was super-quick over a qualifying simulation but slow over a long run as the surface of his rear tyres overheated. “The challenge we are working on at the moment is really trying to find that combination of tyre inner and surface temperature… Over one lap we were quick but it’s the high-fuel run pace we are really having to focus all of our attention on this evening. We feel we are not really in a happy place with our tyre deg and thermal control of the tyre.”

Norris’s win in the thin air of Mexico City pushed him a single point ahead of his McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri – game on!

Norris’s win in the thin air of Mexico City pushed him a single point ahead of his McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri – game on!

LAT Images

The balance between the tyre’s core temperature and its surface is crucial in allowing it to work properly. The mechanical grip element of the tyre relies upon the structure to bend to oppose the loads being fed into it by the tread, a process known as hysteresis. To do that effectively the core needs to reach an optimum temperature. Too cold and it will remain inflexible and gripless. But if the track surface is as smooth as in Mexico, the tread doesn’t have much to bite into – and it can be that it provides insufficient load into the core to get it up to the required temperature. Without much supporting help from hysteresis, the tread will then tend to overheat. Especially when the downforce loads are 25% less than normal because of the thin air. The combination of hot tread and cold core is what Verstappen and Red Bull were suffering. To prevent the rears from wildly overheating over a race stint, it was necessary to engineer-in understeer, limiting the car’s potential in qualifying. Verstappen qualified fifth, 0.5sec slower than Norris’s pole.

Norris’s McLaren was working beautifully. Because this car inherently has great control of its rear tyre temperatures (with a trick brake duct design worth more than usual because of the thin air making cooling so much more difficult), McLaren was able to give Norris a great front end for qualifying in the confident knowledge that the increased moments and loads onto the rears would not overheat them in the race.

But you still need to be able to initiate the process, which on such a low-grip surface is not a given. It’s where Piastri was struggling. Norris will typically overlap his braking and cornering more than Piastri whose style is more binary. Where the grip is low, this really comes into its own and Norris was even overlapping braking with throttle early in the lap, feeding the loads into the front tyres progressively to give him the front tyre temperature which then allowed him to rotate the car early in the turn. Piastri could not take anything like as much speed into the early part of the first turn with his fronts not yet up to temperature – and this snowballed through the whole interlinked sequence of Turns 1, 2 and 3, losing him a quarter-second to his team-mate before the lap had barely begun. More steering lock required to get the turns meant more oversteer on the exit and by the end of the lap his rears were overheating, losing him another chunk through the traction sections there. It left him only eighth on the grid, 0.1sec slower than Verstappen.

Haas’s Oliver Bearman had his best result to date in Mexico.

Haas’s Oliver Bearman had his best result to date in Mexico.

So that was the backdrop to Norris disappearing off into the distance after calmly controlling the two Ferraris snapping at his heels into Turn 1. Hugging the inside, with Lewis Hamilton tucked right up behind him, Norris backed off early. Hamilton flicked left, expecting team-mate Charles Leclerc to make room for him, but he couldn’t – because Leclerc had Verstappen to his left. Four-abreast up to Turn 1, Verstappen was forced over the kerb and onto the grass on the corner’s outside, rejoining at Turn 3. Hamilton was ahead of Leclerc as they headed in to Turn 1 but Leclerc then opted to take the short cut across the run-off, emerging in the lead out of Turn 3. He backed off to allow Norris back into the lead while Verstappen allowed Hamilton to re-pass for third through Turns 4 and 5. Hamilton was expecting Leclerc to give him back second place, but Leclerc had other ideas and pressed on in forlorn chase of the dominant Norris.

Hamilton was repeatedly questioning the team about what it was going to do about the Leclerc situation when Max ambushed him from a long way back into Turn 1 on the sixth lap. They ran through there side-by-side, Verstappen slightly ahead but now on the outside for the interconnected Turn 2. There wasn’t room for both and Verstappen took to the run off and emerged ahead. Hamilton tried to retaliate into Turn 4 but locked up – and took the escape route. He chose not to give the place back, which earned him a 10sec penalty at his pitstop.

McLaren performance engineer Andrew Jarvis joined the Mexico podium

McLaren performance engineer Andrew Jarvis joined the Mexico podium

DPPI

All the various off-track excursions kept the stewards busy and many fans were enraged but none of it affected Norris. Piastri was running fifth when McLaren pitted him for a second time, trying to get him by the two Mercedes, triggering Merc into covering him off with Kimi Antonelli and George Russell. It got Piastri ahead of Antonelli, allowing the McLaren to chase down Russell who could find no way by Oliver Bearman.

Piastri put a big move on Russell into Turn 1 and set off after Bearman. But the flurry of second stops had vaulted the one-stopping Verstappen up to third – and with a big tyre offset advantage over Leclerc. Unlike the others, Verstappen had started on the mediums rather than the softs and so they were now inverted and Verstappen quickly closed the Ferrari down as Piastri did the same to Bearman. Both dices were discontinued by a late VSC for the broken-down Williams of Carlos Sainz. Leclerc thereby held onto second place – but half a minute behind Norris.


 

At Interlagos two weeks later Norris was not quite as dominant but still managed to take maximum points from the sprint weekend, winning both the 24-lapper on Saturday and the 71-lap main event. Both times Antonelli’s Mercedes followed him across the line.

It was a win for Norris in Mexico City – his first since the Hungarian GP in early August. Now the drivers’ championship was wide open

It was a win for Norris in Mexico City – his first since the Hungarian GP in early August. Now the drivers’ championship was wide open

LAT Images

Around this track the tyre demand was very different to that of Mexico, but still highly influential in the competitive order. The challenge here was pushing the tyres hard enough to get them up to temperature and keeping them there – and on a track where the downforce was compromised by the increased ride height needed to accommodate the bumps. The McLaren, as the most flexible performer, was untroubled by that demand and Norris was in confident form after his Mexican victory. Piastri was closer to the pace than he had been there but was still suffering a little more understeer on entry and, with more lock applied, more snaps on exit. After crashing out of the sprint race – ironically on water brought onto the track by Norris – he qualified fourth, 0.3sec adrift of his team-mate, with Antonelli and Leclerc between them.

“Max started from the pitlane as Norris took off in the lead from Antonelli, Leclerc and Piastri”

But that was way better than Verstappen who, for the first time in his Red Bull career, was unable to graduate from the Q1 part of qualifying on sheer pace. The Red Bull was nowhere and was taken out of parc fermé so as to change its set-up for a third time – and a new power unit was fitted. Verstappen started from the pitlane as Norris took off in the lead from Antonelli, Leclerc and Piastri.

Verstappen barely had the opportunity of judging if the latest set-up worked before there was a safety car (for local hero Gabriel Bortoleto who had also crashed his Sauber – very heavily – in the sprint race). Upon the resumption of racing from that, Norris sprinted away. Piastri got great momentum on Antonelli and made for his inside into the Senna Esses, with Leclerc to their outside.

Another pole for Norris in Brazil; he’s starting to look like an F1 world champion

Another pole for Norris in Brazil; he’s starting to look like an F1 world champion

Antonelli defended by taking up a tight line, knowing Piastri was there somewhere and assuming he’d be forced to tuck in behind before the apex. But Piastri was already too committed for that and as the Mercedes kept moving across, the McLaren locked up and slid into Antonelli when there was no further room. This slewed the Mercedes sideways but what would have been a spin was arrested by hard contact with Leclerc’s front left wheel. This righted Antonelli’s car and he continued (now behind Piastri) but it ripped away the tyre on the Ferrari, fatally damaging its suspension. Leclerc pulled off to the side and a Virtual Safety Car was deployed while marshals moved the car.

This was perfect for Verstappen – especially so since the team was seeing he had a slow puncture in his right-rear. So he was brought in and the set of hards on which he’d started were switched for mediums. He rejoined at the back but now on the best tyre around F1’s best circuit for overtaking. Now, he began to feel – finally – that the car was working. The set-up changes had worked and the new Honda power unit was singing. Another Verstappen Interlagos masterclass was about to unfold.

Norris also dominated the São Paulo sprint race, winning the 24-lapper from pole, closely followed by Mercedes’ 19-year-old Kimi Antonelli

Norris also dominated the São Paulo sprint race, winning the 24-lapper from pole, closely followed by Mercedes’ 19-year-old Kimi Antonelli

LAT Images

In the 23 laps before his first pitstop in what was a two-stop race, Norris pulled out around 7sec over team-mate Piastri, by which time it had been confirmed that Piastri would serve a 10sec penalty at his pitstop for the Antonelli incident. Meantime, although Verstappen’s fourth place was flattered by cars taking their first stops (he was still 20sec adrift of Norris), he’d made great progress on his first set of medium tyres. He replaced them with another set, making his second stop just four laps after Norris made his first, at which the McLaren driver had been obliged to switch to softs.

Verstappen, by starting on his quickly discarded hards, had already met the requirement of using two compounds in the race – which was a huge advantage on this day when the medium tyre was so much better than either the (very quick-wearing) soft or the hard (way too slow). Verstappen took 9sec out of Norris in this stint – and Norris still had to stop again. He did so on the 50th lap and emerged 8sec behind Verstappen but on medium tyres fitted 16 laps later than Verstappen’s. Behind Norris ran the two Mercedes of Antonelli and Russell, both of which had been able to pass Piastri as he took his 10sec penalty.

Norris and Piastri led Verstappen at the start of round one in Australia back in March – a taste of what to expect for the rest of the year

Norris and Piastri led Verstappen at the start of round one in Australia back in March – a taste of what to expect for the rest of the year

DPPI

It was obvious that Norris would catch the race-leading Verstappen fast, but could Verstappen hang on to win? At the 0.5sec per lap Norris was gaining, he was set to be with the leader three laps from the end. But there were now two crucial tyre questions. Could Verstappen’s mediums actually do what would be a 37-lap stint? If they could, would Norris still have a grip advantage by the time he’d used up his tyres erasing that 8sec deficit?

“Norris was 10sec up the road and on the way to his seventh victory of the season”

Red Bull decided there was a better chance of making the new set of softs in Verstappen’s garage be fast for long enough to pit and catch Norris than there was of getting the mediums to last long enough to hold him off. There was surprise on the pitwalls of the other teams as Verstappen peeled in for a third stop. He rejoined behind Russell and quickly passed him but as he set off after Antonelli, the softs had already given their best. The gamble had failed and although he pressured the 19-year-old Merc driver hard over the last few laps, he didn’t have enough of an advantage to put a pass on him. It had been a sensational Verstappen performance regardless, but Norris was 10sec up the road and on the way to his seventh victory of the season, extending his lead in the championship by 24 points over Piastri. Now, Norris was looking like a champion in the making.


 

The season’s opening race in Melbourne was actually an uncannily accurate microcosm of the season to come: the McLarens way faster early on, with Verstappen coming back at them hard in the late stages, threatening to ambush victory from nowhere. Around Albert Park it was the rain and a safety car which gifted Verstappen that opportunity. In the dynamics of the season, it was a breakthrough late development on the Red Bull RB21 after McLaren had switched off any improvements to their car – to concentrate on ’26.

The MCL39 was so good, it had McLaren making arrangements for how to win it more than ensuring that they did. In terms of the constructors title that worked fine – as Red Bull was essentially a one-car team while McLaren had two heavy hitters in Piastri and Norris. In fact McLaren set a new record by sealing that title with six races still remaining. But in the drivers’ contest, while it was indulging itself in internal fairness policies which attempted to give absolute equality between Norris and Piastri, McLaren was blindsided by Verstappen’s late rampage.

“McLaren was beginning to creak as the Verstappen onslaught gained momentum”

There were occasions where that fairness gatekeeping explicitly compromised McLaren. In Singapore and Austin in particular, points and possible victories were lost to it. While at Monza, Piastri was requested to give a place back to Norris that had been gained through a problem at Norris’s pitstop. But there were other, less obvious, consequences. The backstory to the aftermath of Monza was Piastri, back at the factory, making his feelings very clear and not in a gentle way. At the next race – in Baku – Piastri for the first time lost his composure and could do no right, crashing out of both Q3 and the race. McLaren was beginning to creak as the Verstappen onslaught gained momentum.

Monza was the start of Verstappen’s unlikely title challenge; he’d win the next two of three races

Monza was the start of Verstappen’s unlikely title challenge; he’d win the next two of three races

So much for the competitive dynamics of the season which led to the outcome. But they were based upon technical hard points: why was the McLaren so good? And how do we explain the Red Bull’s variable form?

There’s a lot of legacy in the answers to those questions. The ground effect car of the 2022 regulations – in its final season in ’25 – is a tricky beast. Getting an aerodynamic balance that works through the full range of corner speeds places a false ceiling upon downforce creation. More than previous cars, they naturally want to understeer at low speeds and oversteer at high and the bigger a circuit’s corner speed spread, the more of a limitation that becomes. Whichever car can achieve that speed range balance at the highest downforce will have the advantage – one which is multiplied by the concomitant tyre behaviour. That’s because the balancing of tyre temperatures between front and rear axles gives a big race day advantage on a control tyre which in its conception degrades through a thermal mechanism – i.e. it loses performance through heat more than wear but is also reluctant to switch on if it doesn’t reach a certain temperature threshold.

This is all very relevant to the respective performance profiles of the McLaren and Red Bull. In the first couple of years of the regulation set, mastery of underbody design and suspension had given Red Bull a huge advantage over everyone, making its car relatively immune from the bouncing phenomenon which restricted how low the others could run and therefore the downforce their underfloors could generate.

Christian Horner departed Red Bull after the British GP

Christian Horner departed Red Bull after the British GP

But as the others caught up with that, so it became about retaining that spread of corner speed balance as everyone increased their downforce, no longer limited by the bouncing. Partway through ’24 Red Bull’s attempts at increasing downforce to match McLaren took it down a dead end of ill balance. The latter part of last year and the conception of the 2025 RB21 was all about reversing out of that.

McLaren meanwhile had developed along a path which prioritised retaining an acceptable balance through slow and fast corners. That has been McLaren’s path since 2023. In surrendering the peak, they devised an underfloor which would keep the car in balance over a bigger speed range. It didn’t have the Red Bull’s grip at speed and it didn’t have the slow-corner agility of Ferrari. But it was a better compromise than either and that took them to the ’24 constructors’ title.
For the ’25 MCL39 McLaren developed that foundation aggressively, with a front suspension featuring an enhanced anti-dive angle, allowing the car to run lower. An underfloor with a more forwards centre of pressure got around one of the downsides of reducing the dive – i.e. front end load at low speeds. The layout of the front suspension arms and steering rack formed a cascade of aerodynamic surfaces which fed the tunnel inlets for the underfloor. Furthermore, there was real innovation in the cooling of the car and of its brakes. The McLaren needed far fewer external cooling vents than other cars in hot weather, giving an aerodynamic benefit. Innovative internal brake duct design helped generate the optimum tyre temperatures at the front (where the challenge is quickly transferring heat through the rims into the tyres) and rear (where the challenge is to direct the heat away). McLaren’s advantage in rear tyre cooling was big. How much performance this translated to depended upon the track and conditions but was sometimes the mechanism of superiority.

“The Red Bull was especially good if the fast corners were combined with a low wing demand”

In the respective technical evolutions of McLaren and Red Bull is much of the explanation of the season’s volatility. The McLaren was competitive pretty much everywhere, sometimes dominant, the Red Bull would be quick at fast-corner tracks. It was especially good if the fast corners were combined with a low wing demand, such as at Jeddah or Silverstone where the car was notably aero-efficient, retaining good downforce for low drag. And of course it was driven by Max Verstappen, a driver capable of amazing feats of virtuosity. But even he would not be able to override a car which was fundamentally slow – which the Red Bull was at circuits such as Bahrain, Monaco or Budapest where the limitation was rear tyre temperatures. It was a car with a much narrower set-up sweet spot than the McLaren – or even the Ferrari or Mercedes – needing more manipulation to find the optimum compromise in corner speeds and types. This could still bite even in the car’s much improved post-Zandvoort spec – as Verstappen’s São Paulo Q1 exit showed.

Piastri led by 34 points following his win at Zandvoort

Piastri led by 34 points following his win at Zandvoort

DPPI

That update was all about a new front wing with a notably big plan area (introduced at Zandvoort) and a new floor (appearing at the following race, Monza) which in combination gave Verstappen a car with which he could have an aggressively grippy front at low speeds with less of an instability on corner entry in high speeds. This came just as the championship visited the low wing demands of Monza and Baku and Verstappen’s consecutive victories there reignited the embers of his title challenge. In applying that pressure to McLaren, the internal strains began to show there.

This period of a rejuvenated Red Bull coincided with the departure of Christian Horner and replacement by Laurent Mekies. The reality was more technical and to do with physical updates in the pipeline well before Horner was ditched two days after the British Grand Prix. That said, Mekies did take the ball and run with it impressively well.


 

At Zandvoort the McLaren was in its element – Piastri had taken his seventh victory of 2025 and Norris had retired from second with an oil leak. At that point Norris had won five times, Verstappen twice and Piastri led the championship by 34 points. But it preceded a barren period for him, one where first Verstappen, then Norris came into the ascendant and Piastri’s difficulty was aggravated by the way McLaren’s attempted fairness policy hurt him.

But it was race control rather than the team which took away what was shaping up into a Silverstone victory by imposing a 10sec penalty. The way he’d bunched the pack by heavy braking upon the second safety car restart was judged to have been erratic – even though he’d done the same on the first restart. The only difference the second time was that Verstappen was caught unawares as he was looking at his dash and had to briefly overtake to avoid a collision. That and Monza were psychological blows as he fought for a world championship in just his third season of F1. Another arguably misguided penalty for his collision with Kimi Antonelli in Brazil didn’t help, but he was already on the competitive backfoot by then as Norris hit his stride.

Norris had not liked the way the car’s suspension gave him less steering feel and several times early season he overcommitted on corner entry, resulting either in lost lap time or occasionally – such as in Jeddah – a big crash in qualifying. Piastri’s more straightforward driving style wasn’t so compromised by this. McLaren created a new front suspension, introduced in Montreal, to enhance the steering feel which Norris used for the rest of the season. That played its part, as did Norris’s pushing of his engineering team after Singapore in getting him as well tuned into this car as he had been of last year’s. But it took much of the season to get there.

Italian Grand Prix  winner Verstappen –  with the McLaren duo now in his sights

Italian Grand Prix winner Verstappen – with the McLaren duo now in his sights

Neither Mercedes nor Ferrari really figured in the title hunt, though occasional race winner George Russell maximised a Merc which had a tendency to run its tyres too hot. Russell’s consistent pace provided something of an eye-opening revelation to his rookie team-mate Kimi Antonelli who nonetheless was making progress – including pole for the Miami sprint – until the team introduced a new rear suspension which lost him all feeling in the car and led to a mid-season slump. Once this had been ditched he began to recover to the extent that by Brazil he was able to be the quicker Mercedes driver.

“Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton was disqualified from the results in China for excessive plank wear”

The Ferrari just could not usually run at the ride heights around which its aerodynamics had been configured, the first sign of this coming when Lewis Hamilton was disqualified from the results in China for excessive plank wear. This was a day after he’d won the sprint. But it was a barren first season at Ferrari for Hamilton. Aside from the car’s shortcomings, he struggled to adapt his style to the heavy emphasis on engine braking the Ferrari used for corner entry rotation. This was a trait with which the incumbent Charles Leclerc was brilliantly adept at exploiting and he often put the car in places it had no right to be, not least pole in Budapest. Both drivers would typically be instructed to lift and coast a few laps into the race so as to limit plank wear. It was a disappointing season and predictably there were soon calls for change and criticism of the drivers from the corporate side. Couldn’t be Ferrari’s fault, after all.

There was a small performance gap between the top four teams and an incredibly close midfield, one which was dominated in the points table by Williams, with its strong Alex Albon/Carlos Sainz line-up. The irony was not lost on Sainz that he took a podium in his Williams (in Baku) before Hamilton could do so in the Ferrari he’d vacated for him. Red Bull’s junior team Racing Bulls delivered a driveable car in which Isack Hadjar starred. He took his first podium in Zandvoort.

It was a tough first year for Lewis Hamilton at Ferrari… but then there’s always next season with its new regs

It was a tough first year for Lewis Hamilton at Ferrari… but then there’s always next season with its new regs

The Newey effect wasn’t apparent as Aston struggled with an aerodynamically inefficient car while he concentrated on ’26. But on high downforce tracks it was often quite respectable. Fernando Alonso, 45, dominated Lance Stroll by a bigger margin than ever and still holds out hope of winning again once he gets into the Newey car. Haas and Sauber each delivered cars capable of running at the front of the midfield, providing the platforms for Oliver Bearman and Gabriel Bortoleto to show great turns of speed. The Sauber even allowed Nico Hülkenberg to take his first podium 15 years after setting his first pole. Alpine was something of an orphan team, running a Renault power unit for the final time and suffering because of it. It was something of a waste of Pierre Gasly’s talents.

So that was the last of the ground effect regulations and the long-running power unit format. The regs may not have fully achieved their aims, but they’ve been the bedrock of the sport as it has transitioned into an altogether higher place commercially than even Bernie Ecclestone ever imagined.


 

2025 key moments
Pivotal points month by month that shaped the season

Introduction of the MCL39 reveals McLaren to have been very aggressive, with extreme front suspension and new cooling technology.

Ferrari was disqualified from the Chinese Grand Prix just a day after Lewis Hamilton won the sprint race. Plank depth infringement the tell-tale of a fundamentally
flawed car.

Norris, Piastri and Verstappen winning the three opening races, signalling who the big-hitters were going to be.

Piastri winning three races on the bounce Bahrain to Miami, putting Norris on the back foot.

Great win for George Russell in Montreal, breaking up the Red Bull/McLaren duopoly.

Piastri’s race-losing 10sec penalty at Silverstone after dominating.

Christian Horner fired from his position of CEO of Red Bull Racing, replaced by Laurent Mekies.

Stunning win for Piastri at Spa after a committed first lap pass on Norris.

Great fight against the odds for Charles Leclerc in Hungary, taking pole and leading the first two stints of the race in the uncompetitive Ferrari.

Piastri’s dominant Zandvoort win and Norris’s smoky retirement puts the Australian 34 points clear at the top.

Monza the beginning of the Verstappen fightback with a very effectively upgraded Red Bull, clearly faster in the race than McLaren.

Piastri under team instructions to hand back second place to Norris after a problem at the latter’s pitstop.

Further Norris/Piastri controversy in Singapore as Russell takes his second win of the season.

Norris hits a rich vein of confident form as Piastri struggles around the low grip surfaces of Austin and Mexico.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Pre-race at the 1961 Italian GP

What has MG done to have incurred your displeasure to such an extent that you seem to seldom miss an opportunity to ignore their past achievements.

It was virtually them alone who held the flag flying in the years between the two world wars and who at Abingdon built the Austin-Healeys and Minis that you seem so willing to praise.

Who knows what they could have achieved were it not for the petty ego of William Morris (later Sir and then Lord Nuffield) and the mindless team of vindictive senior managers he put in post in subsequent years. Leonard Lord and Lord Stokes to name but two.

Your article 50 greatest drives by women [November] seems to do it again by omitting to consider and mention George Eyston’s all-girl MG team that competed in and completed the 1935 Le Mans 24 Hours in three P-type MG Midgets.

Eyston’s team of ladies consisted of Mesdames Skinner, Evans, Simpson, Richmond, Eaton and Allan.

After the La Sarthe event the three cars were successfully used as trials cars showing the remarkable adaptability, usability and reliability of Cecil Kimber’s remarkable little cars.

Rex Pengilly, Poole


Brands Hatch 1980, Stirling Moss Juan Manuel Fangio in a 300 SLR

Brands Hatch 1980 saw Stirling Moss driving his old team-mate Juan Manuel Fangio in a 300 SLR

I thought this photo of Stirling Moss driving Fangio around Brands Hatch, above, would go with the article featuring the Mercedes which Moss drove to victory [“Just me, in a 300 SLR on an empty track”, November]. I can never recall those two greats being in the same car together at all! I think it was taken at a meeting which was a tribute to Stirling with Fangio as an invited guest. What a day!

Terry Fletcher, Standon, Hertfordshire


Watching F1 has become an endless discussion about tyre choice, graining, heat management, etc, etc, ad nauseam, as if that is the primary consideration separating the cars which are in many respects so close. Has the time come to take tyre choice completely out of the equation, making the playing field identical for all each race weekend. For example, aside from intermediates and wets, let’s have all teams run on just one type of tyre per race weekend – soft, medium or hard – determined in advance by the authority running the event, with each team getting exactly the same number of identical sets of tyres for the entire weekend.

Tyre management in its truest sense would then come into play, rather than lady luck favouring, for example, someone like Max Verstappen who due to his and the Red Bull team’s bad choices of set-up missed out in Q1 at Brazil and so landed up with great tyre choices in the race.

Michael J Crofton, Naples, Florida


1-20 Lotus 35 Christmas

How many would like to see this detailed 1:20 Lotus 35 underneath the tree this Christmas?

I enjoyed Doug Nye’s article about the Lotus 33 and Lotus 35 [1965, December]. Here in Ireland in 1967 Luke Duffy appeared in a Lotus 35 fitted with a twin cam engine and as a 12-year-old I recall it clearly. About 10 years ago I was buying some old slot cars and the dealer also had a number of static models made by Ron Platt, the chief designer of what eventually became Wills Finecast – the model maker. These were approximately 1:20 scale and included a plastic Lotus 18 FJ, a Lotus 25 and the Lotus 35. I bought all three of them.

As can be seen from the photo, above, the Lotus 35 is highly detailed, painted beautifully and even included brake hoses front and rear. Just a lovely model.

Simon Thomas, Comber, County Down


The From the Archives item in the October issue [Nigel Mansell interview from 2015] prompted memories of a visit in 1995 to a London bookshop where Nigel Mansell was signing copies of his autobiography. Some hefty individuals were part of the publisher’s team, and one of these snatched my book and thrust it in front of Nigel who provided his signature.

Roseanne Mansell was present, but, to quote Mauro Forghieri, she was definitely “not part of the circus”. She was chatting with an elderly gentleman who seemed to be pleased to be receiving her undivided attention.

Later, I saw the Mansell entourage emerge, and two of the heavies tried to usher Nigel towards the offside rear door of the car waiting to collect him. But he walked purposefully to the nearside rear where he opened and held the door for Roseanne to enter the car first. Actions often speak louder than words.

John Parr, Romsey, Hampshire