Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

May 12, 1979
Zolder, Belgium

Legends in their own lunchtime, from left, Jean-Pierre Jabouille (Renault), Jody Scheckter (Ferrari), Gilles Villeneuve (Ferrari) and René Arnoux (Renault). Villeneuve was leading the F1 championship but Scheckter would take his first win of the ’79 season here at the Belgian GP en route to his sole drivers’ world title.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

2024 Bugatti Bolide

Sold by RM Sotheby’s, £3.5m

Chiron too tame? In that case, you might need a Bolide – but with just 40 built, examples of Bugatti’s track-only hypercar rarely come to market. With an output of 1578bhp and a weight of just 1450kg, the Bolide can hit 60mph in 2.1sec and keep on going up to 230mph. In addition to the original £3.5m asking price, this one was equipped with a further £250,000 worth of optional extras – including an £85,000 paint job. But despite its bespoke finish, spectacular looks and eye-watering performance the car’s original owner clocked up a mere 215 miles. Must have got bored…


Red Honda NSX supercar parked on country lane

 

Iconic auctioneers

2004 Honda NSX

Sold by Collecting Cars, £95,501

First-generation examples of Honda’s Ferrari-bashing NSX appear for sale rarely these days – especially those that have been as scrupulously maintained as this (13 services in 56,000 miles).


White Porsche 911 GT3 RS 4.0 with rear wing

 

RM Sotheby’s

2011 Porsche 911 GT3 RS 4.0

Sold by Broad Arrow Auctions, £737,000

As the last GT3 RS model to feature manual transmission and with just 600 made, the ‘four-litre’ was always destined to be an appreciating modern classic. This fetched seven times its original price.


Volkswagen XL1 ultra-efficient diesel-electric aerodynamic coupe

 

Collecting Cars

2016 Volkswagen XL-1

Sold by Bonhams, £25,900

No need to worry about the cost of fuel with one of these – the ultra-aerodynamic XL-1 combined a single-cylinder diesel engine with an electric motor to achieve 375mpg. Just 250 were made.


Grey Alpine A110 lightweight French sports coupé

 

Hbonhams

2019 Alpine A110 Légende

Sold by Iconic Auctioneers, £27,030

With Alpine about to go all-electric, prices for ICE models are only set to rise, meaning this well-cared-for, low-mileage example of the more luxurious Légende version may have been a shrewd buy.


Historic MV Agusta 500 Grand Prix racing motorcycle

 

Broad arrow auctions

1965 MV Agusta 500CC

Sold by Bonhams, £967,000

Raced by Mike Hailwood and Giacomo Agostini and then sold to John Surtees, this remarkable bike was always going to make a mint; it’s the second-most expensive motorcycle sold at auction.


Healy Enigma sports car with Mazda and Lexus underpinnings

2016 Healy Enigma

Sold by The Market, £18,399

With a Lexus engine and Mazda MX-5 underpinnings, the Healy Enigma carried hints of Mini and DB5. Powered by a V8, it offered a modern take on the Austin-Healeys of the past.


Forthcoming sale highlights

Bonhams, Online, June 5-15
Run out of the Milton Keynes motorcycle storage facility, this online sale majors on more affordable, less exotic machines than some of the high-end lots that are generally offered at Bonhams live auctions. Plenty of chances to bag some two-wheeled fun for the summer, with multiple lots estimated at £1000 or less, and most falling below the £10,000 mark.

WB & Sons, Newcastle, June 13
WB & Sons has cemented its reputation as a seller of interesting classics for the ‘real-world’ collector through its regular auctions on Tyneside. Often a source of the unusual, this sale will include a 1996 Land Rover Discovery V8 which is in unusually fine condition on account of being a Japanese import with fewer than 65,000 miles on the clock.

RM Sotheby’s, Epsom, July 8
RM Sotheby’s teams up with the Royal Automobile Club to stage a sale at the genteel RAC concours in the grounds of Woodcote Park, its ‘country seat’ on the Epsom Downs. The auction will be replete with thoroughly British, pre-war offerings, including a 1932 supercharged Bentley, a 1934 MG K3 Magnette racer and a 1935 Frazer Nash TT Replica.

Iconic Auctioneers, Silverstone, July 24-25
Iconic will stage a two-day sale at the BRDC Classic which takes place on the Silverstone circuit across the weekend. The first auction day will be dedicated to full-blown competition cars and the second to road-going collector’s models. This is the 16th year that Iconic has partnered with the celebrated home of the British Grand Prix.


Ferrari 642 Formula 1 car at Fiorano test circuit entrance

1991 FERRARI 642

Sold by RM Sotheby’s. £3.3 M

This was one of five cars built for Ferrari’s lacklustre assault on the 1991 F1 championship, but only served as a spare for Alain Prost and Jean Alesi at the Brazilian and San Marino GPs. The buyer got a Prost seat insert thrown in.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

As the wider world of driving is taken over by cars that do more and more to control themselves, niche manufacturers are offering models that deliver a true analogue experience.

Rear view of RUF BTR 3.8 whale-tail spoiler and light bar

1.Turbo-style ‘whale tail’ was a RUF addition

While that’s good news, it’s difficult to imagine any 21st century supercar being quite as ‘analogue’ as a Porsche 911/964 to Carrera RS N/GT specification – except for one that was subsequently treated to the laying on of hands at the legendary tuning house of RUF. Which is exactly the car on offer at RM Sotheby’s German summer sale.

Minimalist RUF BTR 3.8 door panel with pull strap release

2.Weight-saving features include thin glass and minimal door cards

Finished from new in spectacular Maritime Blue with black interior, it left the Stuttgart production line in June 1992 as one of just 290 911 RS N/GTs, and one of even fewer to include the Club Sport package which added Recaro seats, Schroth harnesses, extended fuel tank, thin glass, lightweight wiring, interior cut-off switch and a rollcage.

RUF five-spoke alloy wheel with performance brake setup

3. OZ Racing wheels look almost standard

The original German owner lived with it that way for seven years before sending the car to RUF for its famous BTR conversion – which adds a turbocharged 3.8 litre engine making more than 400bhp, a RUF six-speed manual gearbox, upgraded brakes and suspension, Turbo-style rear spoiler, RUF exhaust end pipes, OZ Racing wheels and countless other mods.

RUF BTR 3.8 cockpit with bespoke steering wheel and analogue gauges

4.Interior remains to Club Sport MOO 3 specification, other than for the addition of RUF instruments

Surprisingly, however, the car was then stored for the best part of 25 years before being revived by its current owner within the past 12 months – an exercise said to have cost in excess of £25,000.

Front luggage compartment of 1992 RUF BTR 3.8 Porsche

5.High capacity fuel tank gives extended range

Now on the button, fully operational and still with just 32,000 kilometres under its belt (around 20,000 miles), it’s begging to be driven in the way that RUF intended.

Maritime Blue paint code sticker inside RUF BTR 3.8 bodywork

6.Maritime Blue paint is original, and favoured

Although the natural inclination to rip it around the Nürburgring at 200mph is probably best resisted.

Rear engine bay of Maritime Blue Porsche RUF BTR 3.8 with lid raised

Turbocharged Type M64/50 engine uprated to 3.8 litres

LUKAS MAGERL ©2026 COURTESY OF RM SOTHEBY’S

1992 PORSCHE RUF BTR 3.8
RM Sotheby’s, Tegernsee, Germany, July 4.
Estimate: £310,000-£390,000. rmsothebys.com

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

Mention Carroll Shelby and Ken Miles and thoughts invariably turn to Ford GT40s and Shelby Cobras – but not many remember the pair’s involvement with the less-celebrated Sunbeam Tiger.

Shelby’s success at shoehorning a Ford V8 into the British-built AC Ace made him the obvious man to consult after Australian race legend Jack Brabham saw the potential for upgrading the Rootes Group’s anaemic, 1725cc Sunbeam Alpine in a similar way.

As it happened, Ian Garrad, the Rootes sales boss on America’s West Coast, lived near Shelby’s workshops and asked him to create a prototype in March 1963, for which the Texan estimated a £4000 build cost and six-week timeframe.

Rear three-quarter view of a light blue Sunbeam Tiger V8 coupe.

A rollcage was added in 2008

Godin sporting cars & motorcycles

While Shelby’s team got underway, Garrad, eager to see if the project was feasible, approached Brit racing driver Miles to produce a more basic, working mule – a task he completed in around a week on a £285 budget, proving the idea had legs.

Shelby’s more refined effort hit the road at the end of April with a 260ci Ford V8 and a four-speed manual gearbox, a combination that turned the benign Alpine into a fire-breathing animal with performance to match Jaguar’s XK sports cars.

Rootes Group Sunbeam badge mounted on light blue bodywork.

Rootes, but built by Jensen

The octane collection

It’s said that the irascible Lord Rootes was peeved to learn that the project had got off the ground without his knowledge, but after he drove the Shelby prototype he sanctioned production of the car and put his name down for 3000 small-block V8s – Ford’s largest ever order of its type.

Shelby’s hopes of being employed to build the new Tiger in the US failed to come to fruition when the contract was handed to the Jensen Motors factory in West Bromwich, where production began in earnest in June 1964.

While Tigers have never been deemed as glamorous or as valuable as AC Cobras, they were quick enough to set quarter-mile records with the United States Hot Rod Association and to hold their own in European rallies.

Ford V8 engine installed in a Sunbeam Tiger engine bay.

4.7-litre engine

Godin sporting cars & motorcycles

This example on offer with Anthony Godin is an original, right-hand-drive Mark I (in production from 1964-67) which left the Jensen production line in January 1965 although it wasn’t registered for a further two years.

Since then its original 260ci/4.3-litre engine has been upgraded with the 289ci/4.7-litre unit used in the rarer Mark II model, only 633 of which were built before Tiger production ceased.

Sunbeam Tiger cockpit with bucket seats, harnesses and wood dashboard.

40,000 miles on the clock

Godin sporting cars & motorcycles

Converted to rally specification some time after 2008, the car now features a sump guard, rollcage, limited-slip differential, long-range fuel tank and dash-mounted timing gear – modifications which helped it to a respectable finish in one edition of the Classic Marathon and a second in class at the Rally of the Tests.

With just 40,000 (unconfirmed) miles on the clock and said to be in good running order, it will be sold with a substantial history file containing bills to the tune of £40,000, hard and soft tops and a small selection of spares.

And all for just a fraction of the price of a Shelby Cobra 289.

1967 Sunbeam Tiger
On sale with Godin Sporting Cars & Motorcycles, Kent. Asking: £35,995. anthonygodin.co.uk

Dealer News

We will IROC you: the unbeatable 911

Looking for a bona fide race winner? This 1974 PORSCHE 911 RSR, inset, right,is literally hard to beat, with a 100% success rate in the ’74 International Race of Champions. It was originally a spare for the US one-make series but took victories in Rounds 2 and 3 with GEORGE FOLLMER and MARK DONOHUE. It’s on sale at THE OCTANE COLLECTION in Horsham, West Sussex for £994,995.

Green Aston Martin DB4 grand tourer parked outside a brick-built garage.

Good news for owners of CSLs, 2002s, E28s, et al. The BMW CLASSIC PARTNER PROGRAMME has launched, meaning owners of beautiful ageing Beemers can get heritage assistance from four UK dealers. These are: DICK LOVETT Bristol; GROUP 1 Hailsham; HALLIWELL JONES Wilmslow; and SYTNER Stevenage.

Scottish post-war folk revivalist and artist RORY McEWEN (check his work at the Tate) had a good eye when it came to cars. He was the first owner of this 1960 ASTON MARTIN DB4,left, which he used to drive between his London home and family seat in the Borders. A 2013 restoration was in excess of £300,000, reveals PHOENIX GREEN GARAGE in Hartley Wintney, Hampshire, where it’s on sale for £395,000

Black Porsche 911 Turbo race car photographed in studio with wide-body styling.

A record 42.6 million vehicles are on our roads, up 1.4%, says the SOCIETY OF MOTOR MANUFACTURERS AND TRADERS. A quarter are of German origin, 10% are electrified, while the average age is 9.7 years.

The 2026 Reliability Index by car warranty provider WARRANTYWISE shows that the TOYOTA YARIS is a driver’s best friend – the most reliable used car in the UK. Topping the rogue’s gallery of least reliable? The LAND ROVER DISCOVERY. LG

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

It wasn’t entirely no holds barred, but the original Can-Am race series wasn’t far from being a free-for-all in terms of eligible cars. That meant some of the wildest-looking, most radically engineered and most powerful competition machines ever to take to the track, notably the legendary Porsche 917/30 ‘Turbopanzer’ which dominated the series in 1973 – helped by an engine capable of producing more than 1500bhp.

One of the highlights of this year’s Monterey Motorsports Reunion will be a celebration of 60 years since Can-Am was inaugurated in a joint effort by the Sports Car Club of America and the Canadian Automobile Sport Clubs. The two bodies had to lay down some rules but they agreed to keep them as simple as possible in order to attract a wide range of entries and to allow a large variety of often wildly different cars to compete under the same umbrella.

Being run under the FIA’s Group 7 category meant no restrictions on engine capacity and the freedom to use forced induction and bolt on as many wings as a designer wished – so all a Can-Am car really needed to meet the rules were two seats and four wheels that were enclosed by its bodywork. As a result, Can-Am produced some technically pioneering and radical-looking cars which created a spectacle of speed, power and sound like no other race series before or since.

Despite being killed off in its original form in 1974 due to a combination of the ongoing oil crisis, soaring costs and a mediocre season the year before, Can-Am is still remembered for providing nine years of wonderfully raucous racing between stars such as Bruce McLaren, Parnelli Jones, Mario Andretti and Dan Gurney, and for putting marques including Chaparral and Lola on the map.

The 60th anniversary celebration at Laguna Seca will bring together around 30 cars which raced in the original Can-Am series, among which will be a 1970 McLaren M8D ‘Batmobile’ that was campaigned by Dan Gurney and Peter Gethin. Gurney raced the papaya car three times, taking the chequered flag on two occasions – at Mosport Park and Mont-Tremblant – while Gethin drove it to victory at Road America.

Historic race car number 48 with Gulf and Goodyear pit crew

Peter Gethin was second in a McLaren 1-2 at Can-Am round four, Edmonton, 1970

LAT IMAGES, KLEMANTASKI COLLECTION

Look out, too, for the unique Sting GW1 from 1974, the series’ last year. Built for wealthy rancher Gary Wilson, it was the largest Can-Am to take to the track and combined a big block Chevrolet engine with four-speed Hewland transmission, a one-off aluminium monocoque and McLaren suspension.

A 1970 Lola T70 Mk3B, meanwhile, further demonstrates some of the ingenuity that went into Can-Am builds. In his 1975 book The Unfair Advantage, driver Mark Donohue recalled how the fitting of giant side draft Weber carburettors in the pursuit of more power necessitated a pair of ‘pontoon-shaped’ cold air boxes to be bolted to either side of the rollbar. The car will appear at the anniversary event in its original, dark-blue Sunoco livery.

Related article

Since no tribute to Can-Am would be complete without the presence of a Porsche 917, Florida museum Revs Institute will provide the 1969 car that Porsche effectively cobbled together for its last-minute debut in the series. Essentially a 917 endurance racer with the coupé top cut off, it was driven for the works by Jo Siffert and, despite having missed the first five races of the season, it placed fourth overall in that year’s championship thanks, in part, to its unrivalled reliability. It was acquired by collector Vasek Polak who gradually upgraded the car to run the 1100bhp motor used in the 917/30.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

After a record-setting run of 20-odd auctions at the swish Quail Lodge golf and country club, Bonhams relocates to Laguna Seca for this year’s Monterey Car Week. The move comes just three months after the arrival of auto industry veteran Julie David (ex-vice president of Stellantis Premium Brands) as managing director of the motoring department. She gives an exclusive insight into her views on the move, motor sport and Monterey.

Bonhams Quail car auction with blue sports car on stage

You arrived as MD right at the start of the busiest season of the year. Exciting or daunting?

JD: I joined at a hugely busy time with auctions in quick succession at Goodwood Members’ Meeting, Monaco, Stafford, Miami and now Monterey. It has been a great opportunity to learn about the business.

Tell us about the move from Quail Lodge to Laguna Seca.

JD: Bonhams has partnered with Quail Lodge for many years, and the location has worked well for us. But The Quail, A Motorsports Gathering has grown exponentially in terms of cars and audience numbers, which squeezed space. While the audience growth should be a positive, with so many other things going on we saw that attendees had less time to view and to bid. Laguna Seca has the same passionate collector car and motor sport audience demographic, and almost infinite space to host the sale. We’d already been partners for many years, so the switch was logical.

Will being at Laguna Seca bring a new type of clientele?

JD: We expect a similar audience at Laguna Seca to The Quail because both are key Car Week destinations. Looking at lots such as the ex-Dan Gurney Lola T70 Mk2 Can-Am car, and the 1967 Vollstedt-Ford 67B IndyCar, above left, driven by the great Jim Clark, it is tempting to say we have a strong race car focus – but I expect to see a good balance on the day.

How important are the sales that take place during Car Week as a gauge of the global market?

JD: Very important. We monitor and analyse every sale to understand performance and trends in the market, but all eyes are on Monterey. Anyone who is anyone in the car collecting world attends and it’s where the finest cars transact, so it’s probably the best barometer of market conditions.

Is the US the most important market for collector cars?

JD: The US is outperforming other regions in terms of the quality and provenance of cars sold and prices achieved. That’s partly because the performance of the US financial markets has increased the demographic of affluent buyers and their propensity to invest in collectible cars, making the market more competitive. Add in the appearance of collector cars at charity sales and you start to understand why we’re seeing high values, far in excess of what we see in Europe.

Portrait of person with long blonde hair and earrings

Julie David hit the ground running when she joined Bonhams|Cars earlier this year, with major auctions in the UK, Miami and Monaco

What types of classic are hot at the moment?

JD: Modern supercars and hypercars made in limited numbers are achieving record values. The market is always buoyant for classic Ferrari, Porsche and Lamborghini road cars. There’s also much interest in racing cars with exceptional history – especially if there’s the opportunity to race them.

Any predictions for the year ahead?

JD: I can certainly predict I’ll have learned a lot more about the auction world in that time! But overall everything points to a generally buoyant market in the US and positive trends in the EU and UK for the right cars.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

Broad Arrow

Quail Lodge – West Farm Field, Carmel, August 13-14. broadarrowauctions.com

It may be a mere five years since Broad Arrow was founded, but it soon muscled its way in to some of the key events in the classic car calendar, including the Amelia Concours in Florida, the Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este in Italy, Belgium’s Zoute Grand Prix and, as of now, The Quail, A Motorsports Gathering in Monterey Car Week.

Taking over from Bonhams’ decades-long run as official auction partner of The Quail, Broad Arrow will field cars from across the collector spectrum at what will be the 23rd edition of the prestigious event, which is backed by Rolex and organised by leading auto enthusiast Sir Michael Kadoorie’s Peninsula Signature Events.

This year’s sale is set to comprise 175 lots, with one of the most appealing offerings coming in the form of a 1987 Porsche 928 Clubsport, above, that’s estimated at $250,000-$350,000 (£185,000-£260,000) and which is being sold without reserve. It’s a pre-production model, so ultra rare – but there’s added appeal in the fact that it originally belonged to motor racing legend Jochen Mass, who died last year at 78.

Mass owned the factory-built lightweight from new, keeping it for more than a decade and using it to clock up thousands of miles as his main form of transport to and from Group C endurance races – making the Porsche a familiar sight at circuits around Europe.

It was the first of just four lightweight Clubsport prototypes produced, with the other three going to factory drivers Bob Wollek, Derek Bell and Hans-Joachim Stuck – who, along with Mass, were given the cars as part of the deal for racing the Rothmans 962s.


Rear three-quarter view of 1979 Ferrari 512 BB LM endurance racer

RM Sotheby’s

Monterey Conference Center, Monterey, August 13-15. RMSothebys.com

This year’s auction at Monterey will be its 29th in succession – and it has plenty to live up to, not least the success of last year’s sale which grossed just short of $120m (£94m) and saw an as-new Ferrari Daytona SP3 cross the block for $26m (£19.1m). It remains the most expensive modern Ferrari ever sold and was the top lot at Car Week in 2025.

We’re unlikely to see such a record this year, but for anyone with a seven-figure sum burning a hole in their pocket, there’s plenty to spend it on – notably a 1979 Ferrari 512 BB LM, above, the seventh of 25 cars built. It could fetch up to $3.5m (£2.6m), with a similar amount expected for a very different offering: a 1931 Duesenberg Model J Tourster, one of eight by Pennsylvania coachbuilder Derham.


1931 Miller Bowes Seal Fast Special vintage racing car in period livery

Gooding Christie’s

Pebble Beach Parc du Concours, Pebble Beach, August 14-15. Goodingco.com

This is the second Pebble Beach sale to be held under the Gooding Christie’s banner following the historic auction house’s acquisition of David Gooding’s eponymous business in 2024. Gooding had already been the official auctioneer of the Pebble Beach Concours for 20 years so, other than the double-barrelled name, little has changed.

One car that’s more or less guaranteed to pass the seven-figure mark is the 1931 Miller ‘Bowes Seal Fast’ Special, above, that won that year’s Indy 500 in the hands of Louis Schneider. It was sold at Pebble Beach by Mecum in 2011 for $2.1m (£1.3m).


1969 Lamborghini Miura S displayed on the Mecum Auctions stage

Mecum Auctions

Del Monte Golf Course, Monterey, August 13-15. Mecum.com

In typical style, Mecum’s Car Week auction is so extensive that seeing it properly would require several days of dedication – the final catalogue will include at least 600 cars and a further 100 motorcycles, plus a few hundred lots of automobilia (or ‘road art’ as Mecum calls it). Cars will include NASCAR racers driven in period by top stars, road-going Italian exotica such as last year’s near $2m (£1.5m) Lamborghini Miura P400 S, above, and everything else from pre-war saloons to traditional and modern classics. And while Car Week auctions are traditionally perceived as being aimed mainly at the ultra-well-heeled, Mecum’s efforts are invariably peppered with surprisingly affordable offerings for the ‘normal’ enthusiast.

Early Harley-Davidson single-cylinder motorcycle with white tyres and leather saddle

1935 Bentley Park Ward Darby saloon crossing the Mecum Monterey auction stage


Historic Porsche racing cars share the track during a special reunion event

Bonhams Cars

Laguna Seca, August 13. cars.bonhams.com

Bonhams’ new move from being resident auctioneer at The Quail to official auctioneer of the Monterey Motorsports Reunion brings the house into the thick of Car Week’s race scene. That could mean a potential captive audience of competition car enthusiasts, and they may be spoilt for choice by this year’s Bonhams catalogue – among which will be two historically important US racers.

The first is a Can-Am Lola-Ford T70 Mk2, left and below right, which was driven in period by the legendary Dan Gurney who took the chequered flag in the car at Bridgehampton in 1966 for the All American Racers team – marking the only Ford-powered victory during the nine years of the original Can-Am championship, which ran from 1966 to 1974 (the series was revived in 1977 and ran until 1987).

Gurney-Weslake Ford Can-Am race car in Bardahl Special livery

Said to feature “well-preserved” historic patina, the car retains the modified bulkhead at the rear of the cockpit that enabled the 6ft 4in Gurney to settle into a comfortable driving position.

The T70 will be sold alongside the
1967 Vollstedt-Ford 67B Indycar, left, which was driven by double-Formula 1 champion Jim Clark, who competed in it at the 1967 Rex Mays 300 road race held at Riverside, California.

The car features a 500bhp, 4.2-litre, quad-cam V8 – which forced Clark to retire from the race when it failed while he was leading the field. The eventual winner? That man again – Dan Gurney.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

We in the west tend to think Japanese motor sport didn’t really exist until the fledgling Honda motorcycle team first appeared at the 1959 Isle of Man TT races – before going on to win both the 125cc and 250cc world championships a mere two years later.

In reality, Japan had become hooked on competition of the two and four-wheeled variety as far back as the 1920s when horse tracks, wasteland, mountain roads and quiet city streets were first adopted as unofficial race circuits. The country didn’t get its first purpose-built venue until 1936 after Seattle-raised Gunji Fujimoto returned to his homeland and led the creation of Tokyo’s Tamagawa Speedway.

It was there that Soichiro Honda was badly injured during the inaugural race when he crashed his turbocharged Ford – an incident said to have spurred him on to design and build meticulously engineered vehicles. It was Hondasan, too, who was the brains behind the creation of the celebrated Suzuka circuit which opened in 1962.

Black-and-white close-up of man in glasses and Honda cap, smiling.

Honda founder Soichiro Honda

And it was also during the early ’60s that Japanese racing drivers such as Tetsu Ikuzawa and Kunimitsu Takahashi first began to garner global attention. Ikuzawa is celebrated for his epic drive behind the wheel of a Prince Skyline GT S54 at the Japanese Grand Prix in 1964, achieving a third-place finish that is said to have been the foundation of the Nissan Skyline’s legendary status as a competition car. Takahashi, meanwhile, was the winner of the first Japanese motorcycle grand prix in 1961 – but a serious accident in ’62 saw a switch to cars which led to him developing a tail-out driving style that some say gave rise to the first ‘drifting’ events for which the country has since become famous.

With all that history and Japan’s decades-long involvement in all branches of racing, it’s no surprise that the theme of this year’s Monterey Motorsports Reunion will celebrate some of the country’s greatest automotive hits.

Held at Laguna Seca, the Motorsports Reunion dates back to 1974, when a mere 66 cars turned out to take part in on-track events that made a serious contribution to the atmosphere around Monterey as a sideshow to the more genteel Pebble Beach Concours.

As the decades passed, the number of entries grew exponentially to the point that a limit of around 400 was imposed in 2020, both on safety grounds and to make the event more enjoyable for all those concerned.

An undisputed highlight of Monterey Car Week and still its largest happening, the Motorsports Reunion is often described as “a museum springing to life” – and is the only one at which cars are seen being driven on the absolute limit in serious racing competition.

Related article

Never before, however, has the event set out to celebrate the cars of a single country and, if the idea is well received this year, its focus on Japan could see other countries being similarly selected in the future.

“The Rolex Monterey Motorsports Reunion continuously evolves to reflect the growing interest in all forms of motor sport,” says Mel Harder, president and general manager of Laguna Seca race track. “This year’s aim is to celebrate the icons of Japanese motor sport. The only previous time we have highlighted a Japanese marque was in 2018 when we shone the spotlight on Nissan.”

Fittingly, 2026’s grand marshal will be the celebrated car designer Peter Brock, who is best known as the man behind the ’split-windscreen’ Corvette Sting Ray and the Le Mans-winning Shelby Daytona Coupé – but also helped to establish the Datsun name in America.

Nissan R92CP Group C prototype race car number 83

Far East ferocity from F1, rally, IndyCar, NASCAR and endurance will descend on California, including a Nissan GTP ZX-T

Nissan

In 1968 Brock hired Illinois-born John Morton to drive for the new BRE Datsun team, which put the 240Z on the map by dominating the SCCA C Production class to win the 1970 and ’71 National Championships, as well as winning the 2.5 Trans-Am category in ’71 and ’72 with the 510 Bluebird.

A special curated selection of some of the most significant Japanese race cars and motorcycles will be presented in the heritage display to take visitors through the country’s involvement in a century of competition.

Among those on show (and also taking to the Tarmac) will be one of the legendary Toyota Celica ST185s, the turbo-charged, four-wheel-drive weapon that was created specifically to homologate the design to compete in the World Rally Championship.

Yamaha racing heritage

Bikes will feature

Prepared by Toyota Team Europe in Cologne, Germany, the works ST185s were developed from the ST165 that made its WRC debut in the 1988 Tour de Corse and took its first victory the following year in Australia.

The ST185 won Toyota the World Drivers’ Championship in 1992, and both the drivers’ and manufacturers’ championships in ’93 and ’94, establishing the marque’s long-term WRC dominance.

“Grand marshal Peter Brock helped establish the Datsun name in America”

Also on show and on track will be a 1992 example of the Toyota Eagle MkIII (one of the most successful of all IMSA prototypes and the winner of 21 out of 27 races), the actual BRE Datsun 510 driven by John Morton to victory in the aforementioned 1971 SCCA championship, and the remarkable Honda HSV-010 GT from 2010.

Older individual in blazer holding detailed red-and-white racing car miniature outdoors.

Car designer Peter Brock is grand marshal

Created to meet new rules requiring all GT500 cars to have a front-engine, rear-wheel-drive set-up, the HSV-010 GT took the Super GT championship laurels in its first season in the hands of Loïc Duval and Takashi Kogure. The car remained in use for three further seasons, with 2011 and 2013 wins in the Suzuka 1000Kms.

Perhaps the most spectacular Japanese offering of all, however, will be a Nissan GTP ZX-T , an example of the IMSA GT Porsche-beater of 1985-90. This particular car, chassis 8801, clocked up no fewer than nine poles, 10 wins and seven fastest laps in 1989.

 

Japan’s pioneer racers to roar again at Laguna Seca

Look out for these Mazda and Honda legends

Mazda 787B Renown race car number 55 on track

MAZDA 787B

Groundbreaking and history-making, the Mazda 787B Group C racer of 1991 became the first Japanese car to win Le Mans and the only car to win without a typical, reciprocating engine. Instead, it used Mazda’s 2.6-litre, four-rotor Wankel motor that, while not capable of the same pace as its traditionally powered competitors, ensured an inherent reliability that enabled Johnny Herbert, Volker Weidler and Bertrand Gachot to scorch to victory in the 1991 event, completing 362 laps – two more than the second-placed TWR Jaguar XJR-12. Herbert didn’t get to revel in his victory straight away. As the driver who took on the last stint – and having failed to sleep throughout the 24 hours – he got out of the car and keeled over from exhaustion.

Honda RA272 Formula 1 car number 11 driven by Ginther

HONDA RA272

Honda didn’t sell its first production road car until 1963 – but just two years later designer Yoshio Nakamura’s RA272 rolled out of the competition department to make an assault on that year’s F1 World Championship. Developed from the previous year’s RA271, it featured exotic materials to reduce weight by 27kg (to just 498kg) and was powered by an upgraded version of the original’s 1.5-litre V12. American Richie Ginther was signed as Honda’s lead driver, with the less experienced Ronnie Bucknum as number two. Not until the last race of the season, however, did the RA272 enjoy its finest hour when Ginther made it the first Japanese car to win an F1 race, taking the chequered flag at the Mexican GP after leading the event for all 65 laps.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

This year’s Car Week runs from August 7-17, marking another 11 days of automotive immensity that evolved from the world famous Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance which, in turn, was founded in 1950 as an aside to the Pebble Beach Road Races.

The one-day concours has taken place every year save for 1960 due to a scheduling clash and 2020 due to Covid – making the 2026 event the 75th edition.

The concours remains the jewel in the crown of this wheeled feast and sees 200 of the world’s finest and most valuable veteran, vintage and classic cars line up on the Pebble Beach golf links to be ogled by more than 15,000 spectators as leading experts examine each vehicle with forensic care before choosing the winners in a range of categories – and finally selecting the best in show.

Exhibition display featuring Porsche, Ferrari, Lamborghini, and Route 66 signage.

Along with Car Week’s usual wheeled displays and rallies, automobilia collectors are well catered for at Monterey Bay’s Embassy Suites – which includes an auction

STEPHAN COOPER

But while concours day will always be both the climax of Car Week and the reason for its existence, the satellite events taking place during the build-up have become just as eagerly anticipated. Here are a few worth experiencing.

AUGUST 3-12 PEBBLE BEACH MOTORING CLASSIC

For those who like to make Car Week into a fortnight-long indulgence, the Pebble Beach Motoring Classic offers a 1500-mile drive that starts in Seattle and winds down the coast of the Pacific Northwest before arriving at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance. Of the hundreds of owners who apply to take part, only those with the best and most interesting cars are selected, with some going on to compete in the Concours proper. Spectators can see them arrive at the swish Casa Palmero hotel on Wednesday (August 12).

AUGUST 8-9 MONTEREY PRE-REUNION & CORKSCREW HILLCLIMB

This is the first on-track event of the week at Laguna Seca, with more than 300 race cars competing for two days prior to the Monterey Motorsports Reunion in a more relaxed and less-crowded environment – and the paddock is open to spectators. Sunday serves as a ‘community day’ highlighted by the Corkscrew Hillclimb in which cars race ‘reverse course’ up the infamous series of turns.

AUGUST 10-12 AUTOMOBILIA COLLECTORS EXPO, EMBASSY SUITES, MONTEREY BAY

Serious collectors converge in the hope of being first to find bargains and rarities ranging from motoring art to parts and garage mementoes. Walk the floor to discover original race posters, factory literature, vintage signs, models and curios from exhibitors that show here and here alone. This year will also see an automobilia auction on Tuesday, August 11.

AUGUST 10 PORSCHE MONTEREY CLASSIC EVENT, DEL MONTE BOULEVARD, SEASIDE

Organised by Porsche Monterey, this event is for existing enthusiasts of the marque and for those who have yet to be converted. The Heritage and Horsepower section charts the timeline of the 911, while other attractions include a line-up of current models and interactive experiences.

AUGUST 10 MONTEREY BRITISH, CARMEL VALLEY COMMUNITY PARK

Given the parlous state of the UK car industry, it’s difficult to imagine the days when hundreds of thousands of British sports cars were exported to the US – but this spectacle proves it really did happen. Organised by the Jaguar Associate Group, the show aims to celebrate the rich legacy of British motoring against a backdrop provided by the rolling hills of the Carmel Valley. Expect Jaguars, Triumphs, MGs and Aston Martins galore.

AUGUST 11 CAMP OVERCREST, CARMEL VALLEY

If nights under canvas with your trusty classic parked alongside are your thing, Camp Overcrest could be for you. Described as “a place for car enthusiasts to slow down, connect and camp with their cars”, it features glamping tents pegged-out beneath mighty oak trees and plenty of chances to chat around the fire over morning coffee. It’s billed as the ideal antidote to the velvet ropes and ultra luxury of the main Pebble Beach events – and it’s a whole lot more affordable than any of Monterey’s eye-wateringly expensive high-end hotels.

AUGUST 12 THE LITTLE CAR SHOW, LIGHTHOUSE AVENUE, PACIFIC GROVE

This is themed around micro, mini and arcane vehicles with a maximum engine capacity of 1600cc and which are at least 25 years old. Entries are capped at 100 and need to be pre-registered – but if not enough sign up, drop-ins are accepted on the day. The slightly loose rules also mean custom machines that don’t quite meet the main criteria can be entered into a special interest category, with all participants taking part in a parade along the coast road.

Iconic concrete arch bridge spanning canyon along Highway 1.

More than 150 entrants are taking part in this year’s Pebble Beach Tour d’Elegance along the stunning Pacific coast

TOM O’NEAL

AUGUST 12 MOTORLUX, MONTEREY JET CENTER

Organised by Hagerty, this is the annual Car Week opening party at which up to 3000 people indulge in fine food, wines, dancing and entertainment among a selection of exotic, vintage and classic cars, aircraft and motorcycles worth hundreds of millions. If you’re not invited by one of the partner brands or a well-connected friend you’ll be paying around £1100 for a pair of tickets – but business types will appreciate the unparalleled networking opportunities…

AUGUST 13 FERRARI CONCOURS, CARMEL-BY-THE-SEA

Organised by the Ferrari Owners Club, this gathering of 150-plus cars offers a chance to see some of the rarest models from across the marque’s history. The event opens to the public at 10am with concours judging happening from 9.30am-2.30pm, after which prizes are awarded before closing time at 4pm. This is the concours’ fourth edition.

AUGUST 13 PEBBLE BEACH TOUR D’ELEGANCE, PORTOLA ROAD, PEBBLE BEACH

Presented by Rolex, this two-and-a-half-hour tour attracts 150 cars that are also entered for the Sunday concours and aims to prove that they are more than mere show ponies – finishers gain extra credits with the judges and, in the event of a class tie, will be selected as winners over and above cars that didn’t take part. The scenic route leaves Pebble Beach at noon, heads along 17-Mile Drive and then takes in the Big Sur before returning.

Bright red and black-striped convertible displayed outdoors near stage and audience.

You’ll find something for everybody at the one-day Monterey Motorsports Festival – from muscle cars to electrics and 4x4s to army tanks

AUGUST 13 WOODIES IN THE WOODS, PACIFIC GROVE

The lush forestry of Pacific Grove makes an appropriate setting for this decidedly groovy display of wood-panelled classics from the Santa Cruz Woodies club, all of which can be viewed to the accompaniment of live music and top quality food and drink. Entry is free.

AUGUST 13 PRANCING PONIES CAR SHOW, OCEAN AVENUE, CARMEL-BY-THE-SEA

There’s no denying that Monterey Car Week is a male-dominated event, so it’s good to see testosterone levels being reduced by Prancing Ponies, a display of classic, muscle, sport and electric cars owned (or co-owned) by women. The Prancing Ponies Foundation aims to help young women on the road to becoming business leaders, a cause that benefits from the show’s proceeds.

AUGUST 15 MONTEREY MOTORSPORTS FESTIVAL, MONTEREY COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS & EVENT CENTER

A vast line-up of exotic, sports, retro, muscle, race and classic cars as well as motorcycles and aircraft will be displayed around the 22-acre site. Off-road vehicles, historic 4x4s and pick-up trucks can also be seen at the back of the arena, along with an army tank collection and SWAT trucks. There’s an emphasis on new technology too, with displays of electric vehicles and green energy systems.

AUGUST 15 EXOTICS ON BROADWAY. BROADWAY AVENUE, SEASIDE

This informal car show covers five blocks on either side of Broadway Avenue to showcase products and services dedicated to everything to do with luxury and high performance cars. Expect tuners, wheel manufacturers, transport companies, painters and wrap specialists.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

Abrighter scene than Brooklands on August 7th, 1926, would be hard to imagine; sunshine, dresses, sumptuous cars, grass, trees, advertisements, and lastly the little green and blue projectiles themselves, such is the picture retained in the mind, of this great event. One was impressed by the resemblance to a horse-racing meeting, even to the parade of cars burbling out to the starting line from the paddock, to the delight of the huge crowd, many of whom did not again have an opportunity of examining the vehicles at such close range. The antics of the mechanics when climbing in to accompany the drivers to the start, were most amusing, some just retaining their seats as the driver “trod on the gas”.

At length the cars were lined up at the end of the finishing straight, and with commendable promptitude Mr. Ebblewhite’s little red flag was raised and dropped to the accompaniment of a crescendo of exhausts and the shrill whine of nine, no, twelve superchargers (the Delages each had two superchargers).

Almost at once the terrific acceleration of the Talbots became obvious, all three shooting to the front, and Divo, in particular, handsomely outstripping even his team mates. In an incredibly short time the competitors came screaming off the Byfleet banking, the three Talbots in the van, but, to everyone’s dismay, Moriceau’s car was seen to be in trouble. With wildly wobbling front wheels the car was gradually pulled over to the left of the track and stopped. It was then observed that the front axle had collapsed, allowing the front wheels to sag inwards in a most pathetic manner. There was no time to ponder over this misfortune, however (which naturally caused Moriceau to retire), for the rest of the field came snaking through the bends, Divo, Segrave and Benoist (Delage) leading, with the other two Delages at the tail end of the procession, and temporarily behind, the three British drivers, Campbell (Bugatti), Halford (Halford), and Eyston (Aston Martin), who completed the procession.

The first change in the order resulted in Senechal on the Delage overtaking Eyston, and this order was maintained for about six laps, during which time the three leaders, now in close formation, averaged 82 m.p.h.

At this early stage of the race several interesting facts were noted: Segrave’s Talbot exhaust pipe belched wicked yellow flames in the most ominous manner without apparently affecting his speed; Senechal appeared to delight in violent skidding on all the corners, whereas all the other drivers restrained themselves from this amusing and destructive policy; it was interesting to note that Segrave and Divo shot away from Benoist’s Delage on leaving the last sandbank, but owing to unreliable brakes and lack of faith in their front axles, they cut out much earlier than Benoist, approaching the bends, so that the Delage lost no ground to them on the whole lap.

Motor Sport magazine pages documenting the 1926 British Grand Prix at Brooklands

Louis Wagner stopped on his third lap and fitted a set of new plugs to his Delage, an operation which he repeated several times during the next few laps. However, it seemed that the much-maligned sparking plug was once more not to blame, and the trouble was something deeper. To everyone’s surprise, Wagner was announced as retiring with feet burnt by his exhaust; surely Delage had not ignored their San Sebastian lesson? Actually, however, the hot exhaust pipe set fire to the body of the car, thus contributing to the causes of its withdrawal. About this time Divo also called at the pits for plugs, allowing Segrave to take the lead, which he held until the thirteenth lap, when he shed a tyre tread and stopped to change both back wheels.

Segrave’s stop gave the lead to Benoist, who had been quietly biding his opportunity in second place, and who continued to lap at 82-83 m.p.h. Senechal and Segrave, who had restarted, were running level, about two laps behind, in second and third positions respectively, followed by Halford, Campbell, Divo and Eyston in the order named.

An interesting feature at this period of the race was the ugly behaviour of Segrave’s front wheels on approaching the first corner. The axle appeared to judder badly, the wheels wobbled and sometimes locked, as though the brakes were seizing. Halford was very fast through the bends, swinging out wide just by the bridge and menacing the timekeeper’s box. His car appeared to roll somewhat. Very little change in the order took place during the next twenty laps; Benoist changed his rear tyres without losing the lead, and Divo stopped now and again to carry out adjustments.

Towards the 50th lap Segrave’s Talbot began to cough and splutter, at one time almost stalling by the last sandbank; Segrave stopped to alter the mixture, but no great improvement was noticed. When the leader completed 50 laps the order was :

1 Benoist (Delage). 80.41 m.p.h.; 2 Senechal (Delage); 3 Segrave (Talbot); 4 Halford (Halford); 5 Campbell (Bugatti); 6 Divo (Talbot); 7 Eyston (Aston Martin).

After this Eyston stopped to investigate the overheating, and found a blown cylinder head joint and water pump trouble. After an attempt to repair matters he retired. A very creditable effort, when it is known that the engine was only installed two days before the race.

Segrave now began to stop on almost every lap, and was passed by Halford; thereafter he made spasmodic attempts to continue, but eventually retired “before he broke everything.” Among other troubles, his car had been on fire at the pits, but was quickly extinguished.

The crowd now settled down to watch the extraordinary skids performed by Robert Senechal, who seems to delight in this method of cornering. One of the most exciting incidents of the race occurred at the second series of bends: Senechal was being closely followed by Divo, who was usually most unspectacular; on the right hand turn Senechal skidded broadside, nearly stopping in front of Divo; in perfect time Divo executed an exactly similar skid, checking his car when it was parallel to the Delage; both cars then proceeded to turn, left on to the main track, where the same thing took place again, except that Divo slipped past Senechal on the inside and stole a useful lead.

Malcolm Campbell now began to drive the Bugatti faster”

On another lap, the exuberant Senechal waved both his arms in the air in the middle of a very lurid skid, or, as the lay press stated, “Threw up his arms in despair.”

Malcolm Campbell now began to drive the Bugatti faster, and he and Halford changed places several times owing to replenishment stops; meanwhile Divo seemed to have got over his troubles and was working up, eventually attaining third place after about 70 laps.

Benoist now began to lose ground, his engine was misbehaving and the old exhaust pipe trouble was recurring; however, he had a substantial lead, and in spite of a depot stop he was not displaced. Senechal was the next to suffer, as his pedals and floorboards began to scorch his feet. The race thus assumed a curious aspect. The three leaders were all in some form of trouble, while the two tail enders, Halford and Campbell, were running well; in spite of this, however, the Divo Talbot was the fastest car running, although misfiring. On his 83rd lap Senechal stopped and leapt into a foot bath of cold water, and Wagner took his place in the Delage, getting away in company with Divo, who had stopped for replenishment.

Related article

It appeared that the Halford stood a good chance of winning, as it had been performing with such reliability, but it was not to be; on its 83rd lap it stopped between the bends with a broken universal joint and caused Wagner, behind, to take the middle arch of the bridge. Halford pushed back to the pits and retired.

Just before 90 laps Benoist came in to try and rectify various troubles, and Wagner took the lead on Senechal’s Delage. Benoist’s car was on fire, and spent some time at the pits, eventually restarting in the hands of Dubonnet, an amateur, who drove hatless! Wagner was soon in trouble with his feet, and stopped every few laps to bathe them, but managed to retain an ever decreasing lead. Divo in the meantime stopped once more, and after many fruitless attempts to restart eventually gave up, thus eliminating the last British hope. Excitement rose to fever pitch during the last 15 laps, with Campbell overhauling the crippled and flaming Delage driven by Dubonnet, who was evidently suffering greatly, tongues of flame belching from the bonnet. Both these cars were catching up to Wagner’s Delage, which kept on stopping on account of the driver’s feet. On the 102nd lap the Bugatti passed the Delage, thus securing second place, which it maintained to the end. Wagner was too far ahead to be caught, and eventually won at 71.61 m.p.h., a remarkably good speed considering the number of stops.

Malcolm Campbell (Bugatti), who only had three stops, finished second at 68.82, just in front of Benoist’s and Dubonnet’s red-hot Delage, which averaged 68.12 m.p.h.

Thus finished the greatest race ever seen at Brooklands; at the conclusion the Delage drivers had to have their feet treated for burns, Benoist announcing that unless the design was altered he would not drive again.

During the course of the race it was announced that the Stanley Cup for the fastest lap was won by Major Segrave, who covered one circuit at 85.99 m.p.h.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

With apologies to David Byrne and Talking Heads:

And you may find yourself Watching someone lift and coast And you may find yourself Watching cars slowly decelerate down the straights And you may find yourself in another part of the world At a beautiful track but hearing a lot of flak About so long a trip just to hear super-clip And you may tell yourself, “This is not my beautiful F1” And you may ask yourself, “Well, how did we get here?”

The 2026 Formula 1 regulations have proven to be a ‘once in a lifetime’ phenomenon.

No new formula has ever created the controversy of this one – and nor has any been significantly modified after just three races. Not only that, but the regulations are set to be much more seriously altered into next year and we already have senior FIA officials, from the president down, pushing to get a replacement new V8 formula in place as soon as is practically possible. One with much more contribution from the internal combustion engine and much less from the battery.

Formula 1 car circulates Miami circuit amid concerns over energy management

All of which might lead one to the conclusion that the ‘50/50’ electric/combustion regs have been a catastrophic mistake. Well, there is a degree of nuance about that. Some fans like the much greater frequency of overtakes engendered by one car suddenly being almost 500bhp more powerful than the one it’s dicing with. They are not too bothered about the fastest way of doing a qualifying lap being for the driver to cruise through key corners nowhere near the limit in order to have more energy to deploy on the straights. But F1’s core following detests these regulations – and that puts its currently massive global popularity at risk longer term. The popularity upon which its business model is built.

So, how did we get here? Conspiracy? Cock-up? Neither? Both?

Formula 1 energy storage battery highlighting increased electrical power dependence

Battery power has been the villain of the piece in F1’s new regulations. Few core fans wanted a 50/50 ICE/electric split

Alberto Vimercati/Eric Alonso/Dppi

Economics of automotive and F1

Automotive holds powerful sway in F1 because of the money it brings, the value to the sport of its own marketing of its involvement in it. And in marketing terms, for the car manufacturer F1 is cheap. We think of F1 as a huge-budget sport. But its costs are a drop in the ocean to the marketing budget of a major automotive manufacturer.

The power unit cost cap is set at £96m per year, the team cap around £160m. Around £100m of that will come back in FOM payments (depending on constructors’ championship position). Net of any external sponsorship, that circa £156m compares to a typical annual marketing or R&D budget of around £400m for an automotive. F1 – the biggest, highest-profile marketing platform in the world – would therefore represent only around 39% of a typical marketing or R&D budget of an automotive. By the time external sponsorship is factored in, the cost could be as little as 20% for a global marketing value calculated as vastly more.

From the archive

Formula 1 has long been attractive to road car manufacturers but is particularly so in the Netflix era as the sport’s following has exploded. Back in 2018 F1 claimed an already-impressive 500 million fans. Today that number is well over 800 million, the average age has dropped from 44 to 32 and 42% of that fanbase is female. Even better, whereas F1 has traditionally been under-represented in the US, it now hosts three sell-out events in Miami, Austin and Las Vegas. Sponsorship revenues have risen accordingly from around £1.5bn in 2018 to around £2.7bn now, with rate card values 175% higher.

Of the Formula 1 teams not owned by manufacturers, many of them have been transformed in the Liberty era from borderline insolvent to hugely successful franchises. So they are keen to go along with F1’s wishes and those of the manufacturers. There’s way less dissent and wrangling than there used to be. They’ve been tamed by the money. The valuation of the Mercedes F1 team (based upon Toto Wolff selling 5% equity) is now a theoretical £4.6bn. A decade ago, that would have bought you the entire sport twice over…

Formula 1 not only has the manufacturers investing directly in the sport in funding the teams but also benefits from the marketing campaigns of those manufacturers activating their F1 involvement. Because of the respective scales of automotive and F1, F1 is fantastic value to manufacturers but the manufacturers are a source of fantastic income for F1. Because of the latter, when the manufacturers make requests of F1, the sport listens and responds.

Camera crew films Haas pitlane activity during Formula 1’s Netflix era

The ‘Netflix era’ has fuelled interest in F1 while dropping the average age of fans by 12 years

Automotive electrification

What automotive requested of F1 over a decade ago was hybrid power. What it requested more recently was a much bigger electrical contribution to that hybrid equation. That and a few other crucial details (notably the removal of ERS-h) to make being competitive simpler and to guard against the embarrassment of a manufacturer being wholly uncompetitive (which no one wants as it would threaten to derail the whole delicate equilibrium).

Increased electrification was the direction road car manufacturers – by force of legislation on both urban pollution and global greenhouse gas emissions – were having to take. Logically, they wished their Formula 1 involvement would reflect that change in technology.

The old rebellious, noisy, tyre-smoking, fuel-burning excitement of F1 therefore needed a tweak. The softer direction of travel was appropriate also to a younger Netflix audience which was generationally not as much ‘into’ cars as previously, and more environmentally aware, but which loved the entertainment of Formula 1: Drive to Survive. So the move to increased electrification met both agendas.

But there’s a complication.

Mercedes and McLaren race closely while managing electrical energy deployment

For the 2026 Miami Grand Prix – Round 4 – tweaks to the regs were introduced primarily concerning energy management

Xavi Bonilla/Dppi

Electrification & downforce

Petrol is remarkably energy-dense. For an equivalent weight it has 50 times the energy of an electric battery.

Battery power can just about be stretched to an acceptable combination of range and performance for a road car – 250 miles from a 370kg battery is fairly typical. Even though an equivalent petrol car might do 500 miles on one-tenth of the fuel weight, it produces emissions from the tailpipe. So the electric car has been legislated in is a feasible replacement.

But getting an open-wheeled aero car, with what by road car standards would be an appallingly high drag coefficient, through the air at super-high speeds (remembering that drag squares with speed) is incredibly energy-thirsty. Downforce and its associated drag absolutely devours energy. Pre-hybridisation, the energy density of petrol allowed an F1 race of 190 miles to require a 150-litre fuel tank. But even though that’s around three times what would be required for a road car to do 2.6 times the distance, the fuel still didn’t take up a lot of space. Because it’s so dense.

“Back in 2018, F1 claimed an already-impressive 500 million fans. Today it’s over 800 million”

To make a battery F1 car feasible would require a drastic slashing of the downforce and much shorter races – which essentially is Formula E. Hence F1’s choice of a hybrid of internal combustion and electric.

A road car battery pack will weigh anything between 350-700kg. That of a Formula E car – which is essentially a battery pack on wheels – is 280kg. The Formula 1 battery pack is around 30kg. Hence its storage capacity is limited and it has to be recharged by energy recovery either from braking or by using the internal combustion engine as a generator.

The battery is designed to enable big bursts of power (the equivalent of almost 500bhp) but due to its limited storage capacity cannot do so for very long. So within those constraints the regulations have defined a baseline state of charge and relatively small harvesting and deployment rates to the ERS-k (termed the capacity-to-swing ratio). So both deployment and harvesting are rationed over the lap.

You can never simply use full deployment all the time you are on full throttle. Nor can you always get enough harvest to fill the battery just from the amount of braking on the lap. So the fastest way around the lap is to deploy heavily at the start of the straights before the drag builds up too much and then to tail it off or even to begin harvesting when still on full throttle (super-clipping).

The more battery charge you have coming onto the straight, the longer you can deploy down the straight. This in turn means that you will often need to cruise through key corners so as not to use up valuable charge which can be put to better lap time use on the next straight. This has given us the ridiculous situation of whole chunks of the ultimate qualifying lap being driven nowhere near the driver’s limits, striking at the very heart of the essence of the sport. Another side effect is the yo-yo style of racing where one car is suddenly 500bhp down on the other – giving meritless overtakes nothing to do with driver skill. That momentary power mismatch also gives potentially dangerous speed differentials.

The energy could be less thinly spread if the ERS-h feature – an electric motor spun by or spinning to the turbo – had not been deleted. Tweaking the deployment, harvesting and storage limits since the Miami GP has improved the situation. But essentially, there is way too much electrical and not enough combustion power to make for an F1 car which requires a driver to be on the limit for the best qualifying lap.

Alpine leads Haas as drivers balance battery deployment and harvesting strategies

Ollie Bearman’s 50g crash in the Japanese Grand Prix to avoid a rapidly slowing Alpine driven by Franco Colapinto sparked discussions

Well, how did we get here?

Short answer: the outside world took it here. It’s just of its time, the way the energy world has evolved. F1 did its best to accommodate, assimilate, to retain those lovely dollars.

F1 was so successful the automotive manufacturers wanted to be part of it and that attraction was mutual; F1 wanted the automotives. But the automotives also wanted an energy source totally unsuited to F1 and F1 complied. It tried to accommodate the conflicting requirements because it can usually find a way. But it’s up against a harder physical limit than any it’s ever faced before.

The energy density of the batteries was even more incompatible with fast, open-wheeled downforce cars once the automotive request of removing ERS-h was granted – i.e. automotive’s second request ensured that its primary request would fail. Should F1 have known that? Well, its engineers did. But the engineers weren’t directing the commercial decisions. And maybe they didn’t automatically grasp how philosophically damaging it was to have the contest of driving on the limit so reduced in importance – after all, they spend their lives chasing lap time and aren’t all that bothered where it comes from. The drivers knew – once they’d tried these cars on the sims. But the drivers do not have a seat at the table.

“F1 wanted the automotives. But the automotives also wanted an energy source unsuited to F1”

So there was a structural weakness in F1’s Liberty era which made it particularly vulnerable to a freak convergence of challenges – driven by the outside world – which were underappreciated by the commercial and engineering factions. Commercial, in holding all the sway, didn’t grasp the scale of the engineering challenge and insisted on ploughing ahead, falsely confident the engineers would make it all work. Engineering didn’t grasp the philosophical damage inherent in meeting the challenge by way of reducing the importance of driving on the limit. And the drivers didn’t have the Lauda or Ayrton Senna figure to galvanise their peers into rebellion against this. Max Verstappen saying he doesn’t really like driving these cars and he may leave isn’t quite the same as a unified driver power front.

Red Bull engineers inspect high-voltage energy storage system beneath Formula 1 car during maintenance work.

F1 has been given a nasty shock caused by the demands of automotive manufacturers. Expect a V8 engine in the future – with less electrical power

Eric Alonso/Florent Gooden/Dppi

But that was just the way it unfolded, how F1 reacted to a sequence of situations. There is much in F1 that is better, fairer and cleaner now than in the Bernie Ecclestone era and we at Motor Sport were among those calling for radical change. But would Bernie have led F1 down this path? No, he was always very specific in his belief that automotive manufacturers should not unduly influence F1. What’s best for them is not necessarily what’s best for the sport and sometimes it’s wise not to let the riches they bring hold you hostage.

That’s how we got here. Where are we going? Towards a refinement that hears the manufacturers but is not beholden to them, probably. The V8 formula the FIA president talks of will almost certainly still have an electrical element, but a less powerful and disruptive one. There may well be further complications arising out of any political struggles between the FIA and Liberty’s representative, Formula One Management, as the Concorde agreement comes up for renegotiation. Things never stay the same and are changing faster than ever. F1, as always, mirrors its environment.


Drivers versus F1

F1’s speedy U-turn after stars spoke out

February

Max Verstappen

“As a driver, the feeling is not very Formula 1-like. It feels a bit more like Formula E on steroids… The proportion of the car looks good, I think. That’s not the problem. It’s just everything else that is a bit, for me, anti-racing.”

Max Verstappen after day two of Bahrain testing in February

“If you look at Barcelona, for example, we’re doing 600m lift and coast on a qualifying lap. That’s not what racing is about… I sat in a meeting the other day and they’re taking us through it. And yeah, it’s like you need a degree to fully understand it all.”

Lewis Hamilton

Lewis Hamilton during Bahrain testing

“I’m totally positive that there will be another incredible year. I don’t feel this anxiety. We need to stay calm because as always when there is something happening as a new regulation there’s always the doubt that everything is wrong… I don’t understand all the panicking going around because there will be incredible racing, there will be a lot of action and that’s the most important thing.”

Stefano Domenicali

F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali hits back at driver criticism in Bahrain


March

“We’ve come from the best cars ever made in Formula 1 and the nicest to drive to probably the worst. It sucks, but you have to live with it and just maximise what you get given. It’s certainly different. It’s certainly not like it was last year.”

Lando Norris

Reigning world champion Lando Norris after qualifying in Australia

“It’s completely against what Formula 1 is about – flat-out, full attack – and you’re lifting and coasting and stuff. That element is not very good and I don’t think the drivers particularly like it.”

Lewis Hamilton

Hamilton weighs in after qualifying ahead of the Australian GP

“I think it’s wrong, in general terms, to talk bad about an incredible world that is allowing all of us to grow. And that’s the only thing that I would say is not right.”

Stefano Domenicali

Stung by criticism Domenicali asks the drivers to pipe down ahead of the Aussie GP

“It’s still terrible. I don’t know, if someone likes this, then you really don’t know what racing is about. It’s not fun at all. It’s playing Mario Kart. This is not racing.”

Max Verstappen

Verstappen ignores Domenicali’s pleas after the China round in March

“We’ve been warning them [F1 and the FIA] about this happening. This kind of closing speeds and these kind of accidents were always going to happen [and] I’m not very happy with what we’ve had up until now. Hopefully we come up with a better solution that doesn’t create these massive closing speeds and a safer way of going racing.”

Carlos Sainz

GP Drivers’ Association director Carlos Sainz reacts after the crash involving Ollie Bearman at the Japanese GP – exacerbated by differing energy deployment strategies


April

“There are meetings next week before Miami, to see what can be done to improve or to adjust the situation. I think my conversation with the drivers is definitely very open, and they know that I do care about their opinions. I want for them to be involved.”

Stefano Domenicali

Ahead of the Miami GP, Domenicali appears to change tack and stresses the importance of the drivers’ feedback in the talks

“A number of refinements to the 2026 FIA Formula 1 World Championship regulations were agreed today. The final proposals were the result of a series of consultations over the past few weeks between the FIA, technical representatives and extensive input from F1 drivers.”

FIA Flag

F1 on the FIA changes ahead of the Miami GP

“It’s going in the right direction for the stuff that we are asking. That’s the most important [thing]. I don’t think it’s a game-changer.

Alpine’s Pierre Gasly

Alpine’s Pierre Gasly cautiously welcomes the changes

“It’s a tickle. It’s not what we need yet to really make it flat-out, but it’s complicated to get everyone to agree. I just hope for the next year we can make really big, big changes.”

Max Verstappen

Max Verstappen remains unconvinced…


Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

At the dawn of motor sport, it was one of the most famous racing cars in the world. From 1909 to 1916, iconoclastic American inventor J Walter Christie’s one-off, 20-litre, front-wheel-drive Christie set and reset national and world lap-distance records all across the United States. It did this with an early racing superstar, ‘Master Driver of the World’ Barney Oldfield, at the controls. So advanced was the Christie that in 1916, seven years after its creation, it recorded the first 100mph lap of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the result of a drunken wager at a local bar between Oldfield and his friend, Speedway impresario and Miami Beach developer Carl Fisher.

The car’s fame exploded a hundredfold thanks to a nationwide tour criss-crossing America, in which Oldfield and his Christie squared off against equally famous aviator Lincoln Beachey in his Curtiss biplane – the man Orville Wright called “the most wonderful flyer of all”. The events were typically staged at local horse tracks or fairgrounds. Promoted immodestly as the ‘Championship of the Universe’, they consisted of Oldfield’s Christie lapping the oval at breakneck speed with Beachey close overhead. They were seen by hundreds of thousands in person and followed by millions more in newspapers and newsreels.

After Oldfield sold the Christie in 1916, it became part of Ruth Law’s Flying Circus. Law, one of the most renowned early female aviators, also toured the country, incorporating car-versus-plane events similar to Beachey-Oldfield. Among her drivers? Nineteen-twenty Indianapolis 500 winner Gaston Chevrolet and 1916 runner-up Wilbur D’Alene.

Early 20th century race car skidding on dirt track

Known as the Christie C7, J Walter Christie’s 1909 racing car was a one-off.

Old Fort Museum

The Christie was finally scrapped in 1919. Even that made headlines. “For distances up to two miles,” eulogised the Chicago Daily Tribune, “it was probably the fastest car of its generation. It carried to the graveyard the official world’s speedway records for these distances.”

The Christie’s passing also ensured that no one alive today has seen it. Nobody has laid eyes on its fascinating, almost freakish technology, heard the roar of its 20-litre V4 with its reported 200-300bhp or felt the ground tremble under its spell for over a century. But that extinction event has now been reversed. Oldfield’s Christie is reborn. And you can see it at its world premiere at the Goodwood Festival of Speed on July 9-12. When that happens, a portal will be opened to the earliest days of motor sport.

The Christie’s resurrection began with two men for whom it became an obsession: Lee Stohr and Jim Bartel. Bartel, 81, a University of Wisconsin-trained mechanical engineer, has long experience with historic race cars. His Shadows have been featured at Goodwood and Amelia Island, where his 1974 Can-Am champion DN4 won the 2021 grand prize in the Concours de Sport. He started at Ford and later founded ARBOC Specialty Vehicles, which manufactures small-to-medium low-floor ramp buses. Based on his patents, they provide quick, convenient access for passengers of all mobilities.

After going for a spin in a friend’s 1911 National, Bartel became curious about the early days of motor sport: “I ran across an article about the Christie written by Lee Stohr. In it, he noted that he was in the process of recreating it. I called to see if the project had been completed and found his customer had decided against it. I was so intrigued that I decided to step in if Lee would support it.”

1914 Emeryville racing and aviation championship ticket

Car vs plane Championship of the Universe, 1914

Stohr, 69, is also a mechanical engineer whose first job was working on NASA spacesuits. In the 1990s he started Stohr Racing Cars, whose products won more than 25 sports car championships in the United States and Australia. About 15 years ago he began reproducing historically significant pre-World War II car components using CAD and 3D printing technology, including engine parts for Bugattis, Millers and Pierce-Arrows.

“Back around 1995,” says Stohr, “I read a story about Walter Christie in Automobile Quarterly. I began tracking down everything I could find about Christie’s automobile years. I visited the Henry Ford collection and the National Automotive History Collection at the Detroit Public Library. Along the way I was able to acquire probably all the archives of Christie information that exist.”

Why were they both so fascinated? “The 1909 Christie was one of the last racing cars built for what Laurence Pomeroy called ‘the Age of Monsters’ in his classic 1954 book The Grand Prix Car,” answers Stohr. “The era of racing cars with huge displacement motors was coming to an end in Europe [think Blitzen Benz and Beast of Turin] but Christie decided to build one more. I think it was the most technically fascinating racing car of that era.”

Carlo Demand, Lee Stohr Collection, Oregon Historical Society

Barney Oldfield was one of America’s great racing drivers of the day, here in the Christie.

Carlo Demand, Lee Stohr Collection, Oregon Historical Society

Its creator was equally fascinating. Born on May 6, 1865, in Milford, New Jersey, a month after the end of the American Civil War, J Walter Christie produced a handful of cars incorporating unique and advanced features for the time. None of them ever entered volume production. They had one common design element: they were all based upon his 1904 patent for a front-wheel-drive vehicle.

Like many of his rivals, Christie went racing to promote his progeny. He qualified for and competed in the 1905 and 1906 Vanderbilt Cup races in a car of his own design, where he challenged the world’s greatest automobile manufacturers. In 1907, he took his latest creation to France, where he competed in the second French Grand Prix, impressing all with its speed but retiring after four of the 10 laps – 10 laps was 478 miles.

Christie retired from driving in 1910, shortly after completing his most successful vehicle, the subject of this story, and which is referred to by latter-day fans as the C7. The Christie C7 offered performance so sensational that the previous August he scored a stunning victory over Oldfield, one of the sport’s first superstars, in a race in Grosse Pointe, Michigan. Referred to by one newspaper as “the most famous speed annihilator in the Western Hemisphere”, Oldfield came away deeply impressed with Christie’s machine.

Rear view of vintage red Firestone racing car with exposed tires and wooden steering wheel

Scrapped in Chicago in 1919, the Christie racer has now been resurrected; modifications have been kept to a minimum

Christie’s next adventure in the C7 was an assault on the Land Speed Record at Ormond Beach, Florida. Known as ‘The Birthplace of Speed’, the central Florida coastal town is where many attempts took place before the transition to Bonneville in the mid-1930s. Henry Segrave set world bests here in his Sunbeam 1000 HP and Golden Arrow. So did Malcolm Campbell with his Blue Birds.

While Christie got the C7 to 118mph, Oldfield lead-footed the Blitzen Benz to a record 131mph at the same meet. (Simultaneously, on the other side of the Atlantic, Fiat’s Beast of Turin gave it a go but fell short of its Florida rivals.) Thereafter, Christie parked the C7 until Oldfield approached him in 1912 and asked, “Would you sell it to me?”

“No one alive today has seen it. Nobody has laid eyes on its freakish technology for over a century”

It is in Oldfield’s hands that the Christie achieved its greatest speed and fame. Oldfield had a team that toured the US and Canada putting on race exhibitions. Oldfield owned all the cars, and the races were staged to make the best show. However, the Christie had a different role: Oldfield used it to set official track records wherever the caravan appeared. Thus, it set literally scores of national and world lap records for tracks of half, one and two miles in length. “The Christie raced on every type of American track,” notes Stohr, “from the sand at Daytona Beach to the bricks at Indianapolis, dirt ovals and the high-speed board tracks. Very few racing cars can claim to have done all that.”

How it came to record the first 100mph lap at Indy is a story unto itself. In 1916, Oldfield was set to compete in the 500 in a different car. The Christie was seven years old and its 20,333cc motor ineligible for the Memorial Day Classic. But Speedway founder Fisher, distressed that none of the contestants could lap his Brickyard at 100mph, convinced his old friend Oldfield to attempt the feat in the Christie to stir interest in the race – the last to be held before World War I shut down operations. Keep in mind, by 1916 the 500 was dominated by the latest European grand prix cars, which had modern, double-overhead-cam racing motors that could turn three times the rpm of the old Christie.

Sepia-toned vintage Firestone racing car speeding on dirt track with two drivers

Christie ended his car racing adventure in 1910, with his 20-litre V4 bought by Oldfield in 1912. It would run on dirt, bricks, boards and beaches

Equipped as always with sponsor Firestone tyres, Oldfield wrestled the beast around the Brickyard to record the first ever 100+mph lap. He was rewarded for his achievement with a solid gold medal, which will accompany the Christie at its upcoming appearances. The Christie’s success at Indy later inspired Harry Miller to build his front-drive, DOHC Miller 91, a car so dominant it won the 1930 500 and multiple AAA national championships (the Christie had spent time in Miller’s shop).

Bartel and Stohr had the same mindset as the resurrection got under way. “I wanted to only do the project if the car could be recreated as close as possible to the original,” says Bartel. “I have seen other so-called recreations that are patched together from some existing base car and painted to look like the original. I wanted nothing to do with that type of enterprise. What I found in Lee was someone who was extremely knowledgeable about the Christie and, also, only wanted to pursue it if it was done as close to the original as possible.”

That presented enormous challenges. Recreating a Porsche 917 or Lola T70 is simple by comparison. For those cars there are blueprints, records, components from third-party suppliers and sibling vehicles you can look at, photograph and measure. There are people still around who built them who can answer the thousand-and-one questions.

Side view of vintage red Firestone racing car with “My Only Life Insurance” text and exposed mechanical design

Christie’s unique creation could lap the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in excess of 100mph – and there were no seatbelts

Lee Stohr Collection

None of that existed for the Christie. Everything about it aside from its tyres and twin Bosch magnetos was unique to the car. “What I did not appreciate is that, unlike other, more modern restorations I had done before, we had to make everything from scratch,” says Bartel.

The front-wheel-drive system? Unique to the Christie. The front wheels are connected to the front axle, which also serves as the crankshaft for the unique 20,333cc SOHC 20-degree V4 engine, with massive 77.5cm long connecting rods and pistons the size of coffee tins. The sliding-pillar front suspension and rack-and-pinion steering system? Unique to the Christie. The transmission, with two forward gears plus reverse, operated by separate clutches and gearing? Unique to the Christie. The differential? There is none.

Historical figure in heavy leather clothing, blurred greenery background.

Engineering pioneer J Walter Christie would later shift his attention to military tank design

All of which meant that recreating the car was like a Jurassic Park experiment involving a creature that shared no DNA with any other creature on Earth. The C7 was bespoke from the spokes of its 20in and 23in wheels to its steering wheel. Stohr and Bartel had to do massive research. “One valuable source of information was an article in a 1909 issue of The Automobile,” reveals Stohr. “It includes a multi-page description [and diagrams] of the car with 100 critical dimensions and specific materials used in the construction.”

Collections belonging to Christie’s adopted son Edward and early Christie stockholder Henry Hewlett Treadwell also were useful. And, of course, Christie’s original 1904 front-drive patent helped explain the operation of his three-clutch transmission system. “Christie’s driver controls,” says Stohr, “are unlike anything we are familiar with today.”

“Oldfield wrestled the beast around the Brickyard to record the first ever 100+mph lap”

“Nothing on the Christie was normal,” adds Bartel. “It was front-wheel drive, independent suspension, overhead cam when almost every other car in America was a flathead or L-head engine.”

The next step was to turn Stohr’s painstakingly researched 3D models into a car. The two leading the effort were Kirt Bennett and Shane Fagan. Bennett, 56, owns Quantum Manufacturing in Auburn Hills, Michigan. Quantum does high-end work in aerospace, defence, automotive and medicine. But Bennett is also a hardcore racer who has built and taken on track some of the most famous historic Can-Am, IMSA and Formula 1 cars. Whenever he runs at major vintage events, he’s usually at the front of the pack.

Side profile blueprint showing engine, transmission, radiator, and chassis measurements.

A 1909 drawing found in The Automobile proved invaluable when building a faithful recreation

Fagan, 37, and his wife Leanne run Speakeasy Speed Shop in Howell, Michigan, an hour west of Quantum. Fagan’s credentials are similarly blue-chip. A first-class welder and fabricator, he joined an elite group of craftsmen straight out of college at Pratt & Miller, a long-time resource for General Motors’ racing programmes across IMSA, NASCAR, IndyCar and FIA World Endurance. It was a tenure, he says, “where inherently I got pretty good at building race cars”.

They knew this would take much longer than a traditional restoration. “We spent the first year converting the available engineering data into a 3D model,” says Bartel. “We worked out the basic mechanical issues with the unique motor and transmission to assure we had a possibility of making the car functional before we released parts for manufacture.”

The two shops co-ordinated and at times commiserated about what would be involved in building something not just to the right specs, but using the materials and processes used on the original car. “The Christie made extensive use of manganese bronze castings,” explains Bartel, “which had much superior mechanical properties to the steel of the early 1900s but today is very expensive and very few casting companies use it. It is also difficult to machine. The crankcase was a 500lb rough casting and it took six months to find a source that would tackle it.”

Related article

Once machined, the crankcase was about 250lb and is one of the reasons why the C7 is so much smaller and lighter than its rivals. Long before Colin Chapman applied it to Formula 1, Christie introduced the concept of ’simplify, then add lightness’. Therefore, the crankcase serves multiple purposes: in addition to its role in the engine, it is also a load-bearing member of the chassis, supports the front suspension, and houses part of the transmission as well. The result? The Beast of Turin and Blitzen Benzes weigh over 3000lb. The Christie comes in a full 500+lb below. “It’s amazing when you start rolling it around how light it is,” says Bartel.

Did they make changes? A few. For practical and safety reasons. “We tried to determine what the original design would have been, based upon existing technology of the day,” explains Bartel. “We then assessed what changes we needed to do to make the car functional. An example is the oiling system. The original motor used splash lubrication. There was no pressurised oil supply.”

“The 1904 front-drive patent helped explain the unique, three-clutch transmission system”

In 1909, cars still used splash or ‘total loss’ oiling systems, which flung oil onto critical moving parts which then dripped to the ground. The first car to feature a modern, pressurised, recirculating oiling system is generally considered to be the 1912 Franklin.

Even among cars with splash lubrication, the Christie was wanting. In their search of contemporary articles and newspaper reports, Stohr and Bartel learned that the C7’s motor frequently seized due to poor lubrication. “We redesigned the motor internals by adding a two-stage oil pump,” says Bartel. “One stage pressure-feeds the main and rod bearings. The second sprays the cylinder bores.

Two individuals holding large and small pistons with connecting rods, alongside a detailed engine view.

From left: Kirt Bennett and Bartel with a Christie and Cosworth DFV piston for comparison; maganese bronze castings were favoured instead of steel

William Curtindale

“Due to the motor being inclined at 20 degrees from horizontal and its unusual length, the connecting rods are over 30in long. The original car tried to solve this by adding external oilers with limited success. We spray the bores continuously for reliable operation. None of these improvements will change the appearance of the car from the original.”

It’s not the car’s shortcomings that left their mark on Bartel but how advanced it was. “The sophistication within the limitations of existing knowledge at the time was impressive,” says Bartel. “This car and at least five other designs were completed by Christie’s small company, with a new model produced each year it existed.”

“It shows just how smart they were back then,” agrees Bennett. “What they did was amazing with the technology and especially the materials they used.”

Newspaper headline with racing article and photo.

Clockwise from top left: The Christie was front-page news in 1916; 3D drawings were created before work could start on the car.

Lee Stohr Collection

Make no mistake, though. The Christie’s advanced technology didn’t make it any less of a handful to drive. Imagine getting behind the wheel of a bucking bronco. No seatbelts. No front brakes. No differential. No protection of any kind. The massive, throbbing V4 – Bartel estimates actual horsepower in the low 200s, still impressive for the day – trying to rip the wheel from your hands when you even think of steering. Not to mention the driveline vibration and violent shocks from the primitive suspension, which has no dampers up front. Oldfield drove with an unlit cigar in his mouth to keep his teeth from chipping.

“I’ve raced some pretty crazy things,” says Bennett, including that Can-Am champion Shadow DN4. “Even when I was younger, I wouldn’t even think of driving this car at the speed they did back then.”

So how did the Christie remain so fast for so long? In large part because Christie and/or Oldfield came up with workarounds that turned some of its weaknesses into strengths.

Group of men gathered around a red car with Firestone branding on a dirt road.

Oldfield behind the wheel; Indianapolis Motor Speedway founder Carl Fisher is second bottom from left

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Race and production cars then typically had only rear-wheel brakes. You can imagine how this affected lap times. But the Christie had kill switches on the steering wheel for each magneto, meaning Oldfield could summon two levels of compression braking from the engine which, because the Christie was front-wheel drive, meant he had the equivalent of four-wheel braking that he could proportion from the cockpit. “In that sense,” says Bartel, “the Christie engine was like two motors with a common crank.”

Likewise, the differential-less direct drive to both front wheels meant each was travelling at the same speed, which could have been a handicap in turns. But here, too, they turned that liability into an advantage. There are clutches between the axle/crankshaft and each front hub. According to some accounts, Oldfield could pull back the clutch on the inside wheel entering a turn to simulate a differential effect. As he could control the rate of slippage, the effect was more like a limited-slip, which wouldn’t be invented until ZF and Ferdinand Porsche developed one for the Auto Union grand prix cars in 1935.

Exposed steering wheel, pedals, copper pipes, and brass fittings.

A 20-litre engine, but the C7 is small compared to the Beast of Turin – which has also visited Goodwood

All concerned hope that racing fans everywhere appreciate this portal to the past, to a car built three years before the first regularly scheduled radio broadcast, seven years before the invention of stainless steel, and 18 before the first commercial ‘talking’ picture or Lindbergh’s historic flight across the Atlantic. “I hope modern audiences will appreciate seeing this famous racing car reborn,” says Stohr. “I think they will be surprised by the compactness of Christie’s design. It will look tiny next to the Beast of Turin, and yet they have similar-sized motors.”

Christie C7

Engine 20-litre SOHC transverse 20-degree V4

Chassis Load-bearing manganese bronze crankcase and rear bulkhead integrated with pressed steel, channel section frame

Power 200-300bhp

Transmission Two-speed with three clutches

Suspension (Front) Independent sliding pillar with coil springs

Suspension (Rear) Solid axle with leaf springs

Weight 1250kg

Another interested party is Oldfield’s great-nephew Wayne Carroll Petersen, 73, who has dedicated his life to preserving his legacy and helped introduce Bartel to Stohr. “It’s a dream come true to see the Christie reborn,” he says. “I think Barney would be so proud to know the Christie and his accomplishments are going to be enjoyed again by the public.”

But you don’t have to imagine what this 1909 Christie race car looks and sounds like in action. You just have to go to Goodwood.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

Chris Amon seated in his Ferrari race car, wearing striped helmet

 

Grand Prix Photo, Getty Images

1. Amon: bad-luck magnet

It all started so well: with Lorenzo Bandini, the New Zealander took victory in the 1967 Daytona 24 Hours, his first start for Ferrari. But in Formula 1, Chris Amon’s bad luck started to become legendary, his best result a second in the 1968 British GP. To his fortune, add bad career choices: he went to March in 1970, just as Ferrari began to come good again. But back home in the Tasman Series, he was a force at the wheel of Ferrari’s 2.4-litre Dino 246: two wins in ’68 and a narrow defeat in the title to Jim Clark; four wins and the crown in ’69. A Ferrari legend? Too right. MS


Ferrari 333SP prototype racing car with driver, front view

 

Grand Prix Photo, Getty Images

2. The 333SP’s crucial role

The 499P may have ended the wait for a first outright Ferrari Le Mans 24 Hours victory in nearly 60 years, yet the 333SP might be the more important car. The only prototype developed by the Prancing Horse between the 312PB and today’s Le Mans Hypercar saved sports car racing in North America. In Europe it helped re-establish prototype racing. Without it, there might have been nowhere for the 499P to race! That’s not to forget the 51 races it won, or that it looked great and sounded even better. No one who heard the scream from its 4-litre V12 at full revs can forget the 333SP. GW


Ferrari F2004 Formula 1 car with sponsor logos and aerodynamic design

 

Lat Images

3. Dominance of F2004

The F2004 epitomised the Todt-Brawn-Byrne-Schumacher era at Ferrari. Never before or since has a team combined a bespoke chassis, engine and tyres fully designed to suit one genius driver’s style, and the results were devastating. After a 2003 season where Juan Pablo Montoya and Kimi Räikkönen pushed Michael Schumacher until the end, nobody else stood a chance in 2004 as Michael romped to his unprecedented seventh world championship. The following year, F1 went to the bizarre no-tyre-changes rule before the mighty V10 engines were outlawed, replaced by the V8s. These two alterations meant that 2004 remains the peak of F1 performance in my view, with cars that were 193kg lighter than in 2025, with roughly the same amount of power! KC


Patrick Tambay celebrates 1982 German Grand Prix win with laurel wreath on podium

 

Ercole Colombo

4. Tambay’s emotion

This suave, urbane Frenchman lifted Ferrari out of its post-Villeneuve fatality/Pironi injury depression with victories in the 1982 German Grand Prix, below, and 1983 San Marino GP. Two decades later, I interviewed Patrick Tambay for this magazine and, while describing the momentous events of Imola and “winning for Gilles”, he broke down crying while remembering his friend. A moment of fragility from a boyhood hero. And he loved the stat that, from mid-1982 to Ferrari’s mid-1983 slump, his F1 points tally over that period was higher than anyone else’s. MS


Ferrari 312 B Formula 1 car racing on track with driver in cockpit

 

Getty Images

5. 312 B: missed champion

Had the 312 B’s best races of 1970-71 been compressed into one season, instead of split across the two, we’d have seen Jacky Ickx as F1 champion. Mauro Forghieri had led development of the flat-12 engine to 3-litre F1 form. His concept slung it beneath a boom high on the rear of a typical Ferrari ‘aero’-style monocoque with stressed-skin panelling over a lightweight tube inner frame. Test failures delayed its debut until the 1970 South African GP. In the second half of ’70 they won four GPs, with two championship GP wins in ’71. The 312 Bs remained the most elegant and best packaged Ferrari until – arguably – the Postlethwaite-era 156 turbos of ’85. DCN


Luigi Chinetti driving Ferrari 166 MM at 1949 Le Mans pit stop

6. The wily Chinetti

‘The Old Man’ came to rate a Le Mans win as being of greater promotional benefit to his company than any F1 title. Luigi Chinetti was a wily and persuasive technician/driver/dealer who played a critical role in convincing Enzo Ferrari of the American market’s commercial potential, but only after he had ’sold’ the sceptical Modenese on supporting the revived Le Mans 24 Hours race from 1949. Chinetti was already a two-time Alfa Romeo winner there, and for Ferrari in ’49 he won again – driving a 166 MM, above. Mr Ferrari made him his North American concessionaire, and the two hard-bitten tough guys maintained a hard-nosed commercial relationship for decades thereafter. DCN


Gerhard Berger wearing Ferrari racing suit with sponsor logos

7. Berger on the right road

It’s the 1987 Portuguese GP. Gerhard Berger is on course for Ferrari’s first F1 victory in over two years, and Murray Walker yells: “If he wins this, Berger will have the freedom of Italy.” Moments later he throws it away, and James Hunt chuckles: “Now he’ll have the freedom of an Italian prison cell.” The Austrian atoned with success soon after at Suzuka and Adelaide, the first two of his five Ferrari wins. A straight-talker, whose deeds in red set Maranello back on the road towards the title close-call with Alain Prost. MS


Two Ferrari Formula 1 cars racing side by side at Monza 1988

 

DPPI

8. Miracle of Monza ’88

“I’m surrounded by cheering, gesticulating, overjoyed Italians – and the atmosphere here is unbelievable.” Murray Walker, in the BBC commentary box, was summing up the scene at the Italian Grand Prix at Monza as Gerhard Berger led Michele Alboreto to a remarkable Ferrari 1-2. McLaren’s Ayrton Senna, leading comfortably with two laps to go, had awkwardly clipped Jean-Louis Schlesser’s Williams, subbing for Nigel Mansell (suffering from chickenpox), thereby preventing a 1988 McLaren clean sweep. A month after Enzo Ferrari’s death, it was as if a giant finger of fate had pointed down at the Rettifilo chicane to ensure the ‘Old Man’ was sent off in style. SS


Nigel Mansell in red Ferrari racing suit with mustache and serious expression

9. Nigel Mansell on 1989 and the 640

“The gearbox was prehistoric initially. There was a delay in the synchronisation with the throttle. The reliability as you know was catastrophic. At least for another year it would have been better staying manual.

“Like anything else, when you are developing something, you have to go in the whole way, otherwise it never gets developed. The start of it was an horrific experience. Whoever drove, whether it was Gerhard [Berger] or myself, the car ran three laps or five laps and failed.

“The thing is, with the expectations that I went with, knowing what was being developed, it was OK. Yes, of course it was frustrating, but on the other hand it wasn’t, because we were working together and we knew what the problems were. Just like when I went back to Williams in ’91 – the semi-automatic box lost the championship for us in the first half of the year.

“It’s development. It’s just back then the reliability of F1 cars was different. Thirty per cent of the cars used to fail all the time and, whether you were winning or losing, the cars were not reliable. It was a challenge, but it was an exciting challenge.

Nigel Mansell driving Ferrari 640 Formula 1 car number 27 on track

Nigel Mansell won the 1989 season-opener in Brazil but the 640 lacked reliability

“I think what is fantastic is you get one chance to win first time out with a new team, and I won first time out in Rio on pure luck and destiny. It’s an historic, almost unbelievable thing that happened. It’s like, how on earth did that happen? Especially when you see your team-mate on the sidelines out of the race already after half a dozen laps. You think, ‘How many laps is mine going to last?’ It was really strange.

“The race was very vivid, because I can remember getting up to third, getting up to second, and being pleased – equally being pleased and totally ticked off, because I think it’s going to break down in a minute! In the warm-up before the race, I didn’t even make one lap – I broke down in half a lap, and I sat the entire warm-up on the sidelines, watching it. So there was very little confidence in it continuing.

“Going down the straight, the steering wheel completely dropped to one side, the bolts were falling out. I thought, ‘Oh my God!’ I just pushed it back on and got back to the pits very, very quickly, and changed four wheels and the steering wheel.

“We didn’t finish another six or seven races because we kept breaking down. If you don’t finish a whole number of races, you know the championship is out of the door. What I did feel is that if we worked hard enough we could win races, and obviously we had a great race win in Hungary later on that year, and a few second places as well.

“I really do believe it was a championship contending car, if we’d had reliability, but you needed Lady Luck in those days.” AC


Tazio Nuvolari driving vintage Ferrari race car number 22 in action

10. Tazio the legend

Mr Ferrari always declared the great Tazio Nuvolari to be his yardstick for judging drivers. The legendary little Mantuan built his reputation racing motorcycles before aspiring to cars. His style was utterly spectacular, total commitment in every turn, and he was equally determined to see his talents rewarded. He and Mr Ferrari would as often clash over money as provision of truly competitive cars, but they developed a history of recognising when they needed one another’s services. Nuvolari proved himself capable of winning in any kind of car or race, from Mille Miglia and Targa Florio to German GP or Vanderbilt Cup. DCN


Gilles Villeneuve driving Ferrari number 27 during 1981 Spanish Grand Prix at Jarama

11. Battle of Jarama ’81

The legend of Gilles Villeneuve has been built around this flamboyant driver who did spectacular powerslides, drove around with wheels hanging off and took incredible risks. However, the race around Jarama in 1981 showed that beyond all that bravado, Gilles could be a very smart racer who had the ability to play to his car’s strengths, and put on a defensive masterclass without the drama that he is revered for. A quick look at the highlights on YouTube underlines Enzo Ferrari’s philosophy: build a great engine with loads of power, and the drivers will just have to manage with whatever the chassis is. KC


Clay Regazzoni driving Ferrari 312 B3 Formula 1 car, front view on track

12. Harmony of 312 B3

I still vividly remember the sight – and the sound – of the very first Formula 1 car I ever saw, at Brands Hatch in 1974. As my stepfather and I took our seats on the Clearways grass bank for the race morning warm-up for the British Grand Prix, on Saturday (yes, Saturday) July 20, the first car that flashed – and screamed – into view was Clay Regazzoni’s Ferrari 312 B3, its flat-12 engine barking raucously as Regazzoni heel-and-toe braked for Clark Curve. I was 11 at the time, and instantly transfixed. Now, more than half a century later, I commend my 11-year-old self for his good judgment, for that wonderful racing car still represents for me a harmony of F1 beauty, music and power that will never fade. MB


Juan Manuel Fangio and Enzo Ferrari smiling together after 1956 Grand Prix victory

Monza, 1956: Enzo Ferrari with his Formula 1 champion, Fangio. The two were not always on such good terms

13. Fangio in ’56

A celebrated love/hate relationship through 1956 was coloured by Fangio’s sense of Mr Ferrari taking advantage of him financially when he was down – Mercedes had just opted out, back home President Perón had been overthrown, and Fangio’s finances were frozen for investigation by the new regime. When Ferrari F1 service fell short of what Fangio felt was reasonable, all bets were off. After trouble in the 1956 Argentinian and Monaco GPs, he pressed ‘The Old Man’ to provide a dedicated mechanic for his car alone. Failure in the French GP preceded victory in the British and German GPs, and in Italy Fangio clinched the fourth of his five Formula 1 World Championship titles. Relations with Mr Ferrari remained strained before a fragile rapprochement in old age. DCN


Stack of Michelin racing tires with blue and white branding on alloy rims

14. A Bridge too far?

I was in the Hungaroring press room in 2003, when, while Fernando Alonso was cruising to his maiden F1 win for Renault and Michelin, the message “waved blue flags for car #1” came up on the data screens. When that happened, Michael Schumacher (for the No1 car was his Bridgestone-tyred Ferrari), Jean Todt and Ross Brawn decided that they would enlist the support of the FIA’s Max Mosley in an effort to nobble the leading Michelin runners – Renault, Williams and McLaren. The FIA suddenly required Michelin to reprofile tyres that had been deemed legal for two years, and in the FIA press conference at Monza all hell was let loose as Flavio Briatore, Patrick Head and Ron Dennis eviscerated Brawn. MB


Felipe Massa wearing red Ferrari racing suit and cap with sponsor logos, hand on chest

15. The dignity of Massa

Dignity is a quality little celebrated in Formula 1, an arena more readily sustained by baser instincts. Yet on the top step of the Interlagos podium after the 2008 Brazilian Grand Prix, amid champagne spume and the pop of flash guns, it was in plain view. Felipe Massa had just won his home race, raised a hand in acknowledgement as his Ferrari F2008 crossed the line, and reached out to lift the world champion’s crown… only for McLaren rival Lewis Hamilton to snatch it away with his unlikely fifth place, 38.097sec later. There was no fury, few tears from Felipe. Just a moment in the spotlight that enshrined something vanishingly rare. AR


Blue March 761 Formula 1 car number 18 driven by racer wearing red helmet, cornering on track

16. F2 engine’s odd win

In a little-heralded byway of single-seater racing history, Ferrari became a European Formula 2 Championship winner as engine supplier in 1977. Maranello had produced successful F2 cars in the 1950s and ’60s, then threw a new dimension into the category by developing a 2-litre version of the Dino V6 to take on BMW, Renault and Hart. At Misano that August, Elio de Angelis, making his F2 debut with Scuderia Everest (soon to be Minardi) in a Ralt led Lamberto Leoni’s Trivellato Racing Chevron, above, both Ferrari-powered. De Angelis spun and Leoni won. The engine was heavy, oil pump problems didn’t help and, by the end of ’78, Ferrari was gone from F2. MS


Crowd of fans taking photos near racetrack fence as Ferrari team members wave from the other side

 

Lat/Sutton Images

17. Romance of Fiorano

No other team can boast its own track, where it can lock the gates to the pesky media and tease the adoring fans peering over the fences from the nearby trees. It creates a carnival atmosphere on the bridge outside the circuit, where the tifosi hang around for hours to see the cars do five laps. Red Bull or Mercedes definitely don’t get the same buzz at Silverstone… I often wonder whether it’s the nationalistic feeling invoked by Ferrari, where the fans feel it’s their home team taking on the world, and that therefore the first glimpse of a new car, and the gladiators who will take it into battle, is incredibly powerful. Just ask Lewis Hamilton – the most recent Ferrari driver to get the full Fiorano treatment. KC


Jim Clark wearing light blue Dunlop racing suit with hands on hips and thoughtful expression

18. Surtees and his fallout

To this writer, John Surtees was not only a legend but also a great fan of the sport and supporter of young drivers: we had discussions over young talent we were watching, he in his ambassadorial role for the Racing Steps Foundation. The experience he could pass on… He was a Ferrari hero for winning the 1964 world title, and could well have taken another in ’66 (and more beyond then?) had his mid-season fallout with team manager Eugenio Dragoni not driven him to fury – and departure from Maranello. To Italians, he remained ‘Il Grande John’, a nickname from his bike days with MV Agusta, and, of course, a Ferrari talisman. MS


Mika Häkkinen’s silver McLaren and Michael Schumacher’s red Ferrari racing side by side at Spa-Francorchamps during the 2000 Belgian Grand Prix

 

Bernard Cahier/Getty Images

19. Michael vs Mika

In 2000, Michael Schumacher was desperate for another world title – his last was in 1995. Just how desperate became obvious in that year’s Belgian GP. Mika Häkkinen, who had pipped ‘Schumi’ to the 1998 and ’99 titles, attempted to pass him for the lead on the Kemmel Straight. Michael squeezed Mika. They touched. Häkk forced back. Mika was stung. A lap later he surged past at the same spot, separated from Schumacher by an unwitting Ricardo Zonta, to complete one of F1’s most celebrated passing manoeuvres. Mika won the day, but Michael won the war, claiming the title at the Japanese GP. But that misty Spa Sunday proved that Schumacher’s hunger for victory knew no bounds. AR


Ivan Capelli smiling in red Ferrari racing suit with sponsor logos including Marlboro, Agip, and Ferrari emblem

20. Capelli and… refuelling

“Obviously for an Italian to become a Ferrari driver is a great experience. Immediately you are making a big jump forward for the media and the public. You are going to be known by nearly everybody in Italy.

Red Ferrari Formula 1 car number 28 producing sparks from undertray while speeding on track

Italian driver Ivan Capelli joined Ferrari in 1992 – a special moment, although his season lacked spark and he was dropped

Dppi

“On the morning of the press conference I was driving to Maranello with a journalist friend of mine. We stopped just before the highway to refuel, and it was no problem. In the evening when we came back to Milan we stopped again to refuel at the same place, and in five seconds my car was surrounded by people, asking for autographs. This was in just eight hours!

“The first time that I tested the car at Fiorano, when I started from the pits with the little black horse in the middle of my steering wheel, I just couldn’t believe it. On your skin you have a feeling that is fantastic and you can’t really find the words to describe it.” AC


John Barnard wearing light-colored sweatshirt with Ferrari logo, looking serious with short dark hair

21. John Barnard on the 412 T2

“We called it the Type 646. A good car. There was nothing standout different about it, although it had a low nose when most cars didn’t. The later V12s had seven-bearing crank, which was a much better arrangement than the four we had previously. Fundamentally it was a better engine. But it still had significantly more internal friction than the V10 they built later.

“When we first ran it, we didn’t have bargeboards on it, as we were still trying to optimise them in the tunnel. I think it was the second or third race where we put the bargeboards on – that made a fairly big step aerodynamically. The thing that both Alesi and Berger said was that it was a good car to drive. You could really hustle it.

Red Ferrari Formula 1 car number 28 with Marlboro and Agip sponsorships cornering on track, driven by racer in helmet

Round 1, 1995 – the debut of the John Barnard-designed Ferrari 412 T2. Gerhard Berger made the podium

Lat/Bernard Cahier/Getty Images, Rm Sotheby’s, Mcklein, Dppi, Sutton

“Perhaps we didn’t win that many races, but often they were up there and going quite well. Alesi won in Canada in June 1995. In Italy they were 1-2 and the camera fell off Alesi’s car and smashed Berger’s suspension. Then Alesi had a wheel-bearing failure.

“I think speed-wise they were evenly matched. Alesi was quite erratic. He was potentially super-quick, but he was also not consistent, not 100% reliable. Don’t get me wrong, I love Jean, I think he’s a super bloke, but sometimes he’d lose it a bit in the race or have a mad moment, whereas Gerhard was more consistent and stable throughout.

“That car, towards the end of 1995, was the first Ferrari that Schumacher drove. We were in Estoril with him. We had a regular 1995 car with the V12, and a mule with the new V10. He liked the V12. He said, ‘I could have won the world championship easier with this car than the Benetton!’ He went faster than Alesi and Berger.

“But when he drove the V10 he didn’t like it as much. When you came off the throttle the internal friction within the engine was less than in the V12. With the V12, when you went on and off the throttle it used to make the back of the car react.

“Berger and Alesi didn’t like that. They used to say in high-speed corners if we lift off a tiny bit the engine has got so much internal friction that it upsets the car. But Schumacher liked that. He was driving like a rally car, on the throttle. That always stuck in my mind. He liked it, they didn’t.” AC


Red Ferrari 312PB race car number 3 with blue and yellow stripes surrounded by drivers and crew in paddock area before race

22. Peterson’s bonus

Ronnie joined Ferrari for sports car racing in 1972-73. He thought driving the 312 PB looked more fun than hefting around the alternative Alfa Romeo T33: “And then we woss winning everything. Woss a bonus – you know?” Co-driving with Tim Schenken, he won the 1972 Buenos Aires and Nürburgring 1000Kms and was second to team-mates at Daytona, Sebring and Watkins Glen. ‘SuperSwede’ then concentrated on Formula 1 with Lotus from 1973. In the Spa 1000Kms he’d emerged unhurt after a huge accident. When asked about it he looked confused: “What accident? Noooo – an accident is when you wake up in hospital…” That was Ronnie. DCN


Classic red Ferrari 750 Monza race car side view with open cockpit, wire-spoke wheels, and yellow prancing horse emblem on the door

23. Scheufele on 750

Although I’m fortunate enough to own several great cars, the 750 Monza is something special. People who are unfamiliar with the model often see it simply as a small barchetta and assume the ‘750’ in the name means it isn’t especially powerful. But those who know about them appreciate the fact that this was built purely as a racing car and is fitted with a 3-litre version of the four-cylinder engine used in the earlier 500 Mondial. It develops more than 250bhp in a car that weighs just 760kg, so it’s extremely powerful and demanding to drive well, but always extremely thrilling. Being a true competition car, it requires care and attention to keep it running properly. But the effort is more than worth it and, almost 35 years after I first drove it, I still can’t believe that I actually own a car as amazing as the 750 Monza – which, of course, got its name from Mike Hawthorn and Umberto Maglioli driving one to victory at Monza in its first race. Karl-Friedrich Scheufele, Chopard co-president


Ferrari 308 GTB rally car with Pioneer and STP livery driving through narrow village street during race, spectators watching from stone walls and buildings

24. Rallying the troops

Jean-Claude Andruet was the only man ever to put the Cavallino on the podium in the WRC, finishing second overall on the 1982 Tour de Corse in a 308 GTB. Having tasted success at Italian and European championship level, the 308 never hit the sweet spot on the world stage until Corsica, where Andruet led overall before being overhauled by the Renault 5 Maxi Turbo of Jean Ragnotti and finishing second. Ferrari beat the entire Lancia factory squad that day – which caused a minor uproar in Italy – as well as the mighty Audi Quattro. Ferrari planned to homologate the twin-turbo 288 GTO under Group B rules, but that wasn’t to be either. AP


Red Ferrari Formula 1 car number 12 driven by Niki Lauda, viewed from front with wide tires, large rear wing, and visible Agip and Heuer sponsor logos

25. Villeneuve – by Forghieri

It’s hard to find adequate words to describe Villeneuve here, so let’s leave it to somebody infinitely better qualified: Ferrari’s legendary designer, the late Mauro Forghieri. “Gilles was a special case. I told him so many times that he was driving beyond the limits of the car. One time, he arrived at Fiorano for a test in his helicopter, in fog so thick you couldn’t see in front of you. Young Jacques was with him too. I said to him: ‘Gilles – are you completely mad? Of course we’re not testing today.’ He didn’t think there was any problem, but just got back into his helicopter and flew off again. That was Gilles.” AP


Enzo Ferrari standing beside team members at Monza paddock, one smoking and another mechanic working on a Goodyear tire, with spectators and Pepsi-Cola banners in the background

26. Gozzi the confidant

Franco Gozzi, above, left, was Mr Ferrari’s long-time ’secretary’ and confidant of over 30 years’ standing. He was a friendly, urbane figure who acted variously as press officer, works team sporting director and personal assistant. He became renowned as spokesman of ‘The Old Man’, and was regarded by many in the business, and in the media, as being the one person most likely to know where any bodies were buried… He came across to many in the wider Ferrari world as helpful and charming. DCN


Ferrari 499P number 51 crossing the finish line at Le Mans 2023 with team members leaning over the pit wall in celebration, their arms reflected on the barrier wall alongside the car

Ferrari’s comeback in the Le Mans 24 Hours, in 2023, read like a Hollywood film – with a first win since 1965

27. Winning return at Le Mans

Ferrari’s return to the Le Mans 24 Hours in 2023 as a full works effort in the top class for half a century couldn’t possibly result in a fairy-tale win, could it? It did. The new Hypercar rules had brought manufacturers flocking to sports car racing, and the 499P’s first attack on the big race featured a thrilling battle with Toyota. An electronics problem delayed the Ferrari for a minute with a few hours remaining, but Alessandro Pier Guidi rejoined and passed Sébastien Buemi in the Toyota for the lead. Ryo Hirakawa’s dink into the Arnage barrier then ensured victory for Pier Guidi, Antonio Giovinazzi and James Calado. MS


Red Ferrari 412T2 Formula 1 car number 28 driven by Gerhard Berger waving to the crowd during 1995 Hockenheim race with spectators and Mobil 1 banner in background

28. The 412 T1 ‘Spitfire’

Ferrari romantics swoon for the 1995 412 T2: the last 12-cylinder F1 Ferrari and the car in which their darling Jean Alesi won his only grand prix. But its direct forbear, the 412 T1, has a place in the heart of its designer, John Barnard. It was the first JB car of his second Ferrari stint; its low-drag, organic form drew inspiration from the World War II Spitfire fighter. Barnard has modestly described it as “one of the best-looking F1 cars ever” and it became a winner at the ’94 German Grand Prix, where Gerhard Berger howled into the distance from pole, aided by the car’s prodigious top speed. It was Ferrari’s only win that year, but its first since Spain in 1990. AR


Alain Prost smiling in dark jacket over red collared shirt, curly hair visible against plain white background

29. Prost’s rise and fall

Everything so nearly fell into place for Ferrari and Alain Prost in 1990. The John Barnard-designed 641 was a superb car, its innovative semi-automatic gearbox honed the previous season. Rejuvenated after the stressful end to his McLaren career, Prost continued his battle with former team-mate Ayrton Senna. He won five races, including a charge from 13th on the grid in Mexico, and stayed in the title fight until the penultimate race at Suzuka, where Senna barged him off the road. It all went wrong in 1991, when he fell out with the Maranello management and was booted out before the end of the season. AC


Black-and-white photo of racing driver Peter Collins wearing white overalls and goggles around his neck, standing beside Louise King and team members smiling after a race victory celebration

30. 1950s Brit soulmates

Recalled as soulmates, the two British stars found Ferrari at different times – Mike Hawthorn, above, left, invited for 1953-54, then Peter Collins, above, right, joining in 1956. Hawthorn was a more unpredictable figure; Collins genial, engaging and friendly. Mike was better organised as a ’semi-professional’ driver; Peter, from a wealthier background, more chaotic, signing conflicting contracts. Collins crashed fatally when challenging for the lead of the 1958 German GP. Hawthorn raced on, and became the first British world champion at year’s end. Peter’s widow Louise once told me: “They were great friends around the circuits, that’s true, but back home in England they hardly saw one another.” DCN


Front view of red Ferrari F40 supercar with sharp angular lines, pop-up headlights, large rear wing, and yellow prancing horse badge centered on the bumper against white background

31. F40: 200mph road car

The last road car to be personally signed off by Enzo Ferrari was the F40 in 1987, which went from drawing board to production in just 13 months. At the time it was groundbreaking – the first road car ever to crack the 200mph barrier, and the first to use a Kevlar carbon construction. Pirelli even created the P Zero tyre especially for it. Just as Enzo wanted, the new car leaned heavily into motor sport heritage, so the utterly brutal lightweight F40 LM was also built for GT racing. It competed mainly in IMSA courtesy of Jean Alesi, Jean-Pierre Jabouille and Jacques Laffite, among others. AP


Nigel Mansell celebrating on Formula 1 podium wearing red Ferrari racing suit and Goodyear cap, arms raised in victory with sponsor logos visible in background

32. Hungary heart

Why win from pole at one of F1’s most sinuous tracks, when you could win from 12th on the grid? Why do things the easy way when you could do them à la Nigel Mansell? His Hungary 1989 victory, in the pioneering semi-auto Ferrari 640, was box-office even by Mansell standards; the reflex-jink pass on Ayrton Senna for the lead unforgettable. The legend of the 640 had been born with its against-all-odds debut win, for Mansell, in that year’s Brazil opener. Nigel’s Hungaroring smash-and-grab deepened its mystique. Even ‘Prince of Darkness’ John Barnard, the 640’s designer, was impressed: “For all of Nigel’s melodramas, he was a big-balls driver. That move was quite amazing.” AR


Jacky Ickx wearing cream racing suit with Heuer and Kent sponsor patches, large aviator sunglasses, and standing in front of Marlboro signage at a racetrack

33. Jacky Ickx’s F1 years

“Scuderia Ferrari’s first world championship grand prix victory was at Silverstone in 1951, where José Froilán González took the chequered flag, and second place went to Juan Manuel Fangio in an Alfa Romeo.

“I tell you this because, when I was eight years old, I met Fangio at the 1953 Belgian Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps where my parents had arranged for me to present him with some flowers for qualifying on pole position. I remember finding the whole thing very boring and begging them not to take me back to that noisy, smelly place – I didn’t want to be a racing driver, I wanted to be a gardener or a gamekeeper.

“But the reality was different. I ended up driving for Ferrari and after leaving to go to Brabham, I became the only driver to return to Ferrari after being away for a year. And the question that is always asked of people who worked for Enzo Ferrari is ‘What was he like…?’

Red Ferrari 312B Formula 1 car number 7 racing at Spa-Francorchamps in 1969 with gold wheels, exposed rear engine, and BP-branded timing booth in background surrounded by trees and fencing

The first F1 victory for Jacky Ickx came in a Ferrari 312 at Rouen midway through 1968

Ferrari, Lat/Bernard Cahier/Ercole Colombo/Getty Images, Dppi, Grand Prix Photo

“The response is not always positive, but I am one of the few people who only had a good experience with him. I considered him to be a very tender, sweet person who was also a little bit shy – and probably for a good reason: he lived in an era during which there was a great likelihood of drivers being killed. For that reason I think Ferrari found it hard to make friends with drivers, because there was a high chance he would end up getting hurt emotionally. That’s why, in my opinion, he kept a distance.

“It was for the same reason that he never showed up at any of the grands prix except for Monza, where he would sometimes watch us testing. But most of the time he would just wait by the phone in his office for a race report.

“I moved to Ferrari in 1968 and took my first Formula 1 win in the 312 at the French Grand Prix. I didn’t see that car for 58 years until this year’s Monaco Historic at which I was invited to drive it for three laps on each of the three days.

“Although the past is interesting, I don’t live in it because I think our privilege is to be in the present. But seeing that car again – just as it used to be with its white-painted exhausts that we called ’spaghetti’ – was very emotional.

“It was like meeting an old lady friend. Although, at 81, it was a lot more difficult to get in and out. But driving it? That came back, just like riding a bicycle. Unlike the complex modern racing cars, you just have a few basic instruments to watch and a manual gearbox. Get in and go.” SDB


Red Ferrari 126C4 Formula 1 car number 28 driven by René Arnoux on track, showing sponsor logos including FIAT, Agip, and Longines, with driver wearing white helmet and red racing suit

34. Arnoux falls short

Two races out from the 1983 Formula 1 finale, René Arnoux was in touching distance of the drivers’ title. Only two points off his ex-Renault nemesis, Alain Prost, and ahead of eventual champion Nelson Piquet. It might so easily have been René, not Nelson, who finished the year as the first turbo-powered champ. It wasn’t to be – a loose ignition wire spiked what had a looked a certain win in Detroit – but ’83 was ‘peak Arnoux’. His inimitable head-down style in the stubby 126 C3 brought three wins. With Patrick Tambay alongside, ‘French Ferrari’ took another teams’ title. Arnoux, though, had maxed out. Better to remember the peaks in red than the Ligier blues. AR


Sebastian Vettel smiling and raising his fist in celebration while wearing red Ferrari racing suit with Shell, UPS, Puma, and Lenovo sponsor logos

35. Vettel’s fine fettle

Received Formula 1 wisdom does not place Sebastian Vettel’s Ferrari tenure alongside his four Red Bull world championship years, but that is an injustice. When Vettel arrived at Maranello in 2015, Ferrari was not the force that it needed to be, yet he nearly delivered F1 titles in 2017 and ’18. Also often overlooked is the emotional, cultural and developmental leadership that Sebastian provided: rebuilding belief within Ferrari while carrying on his shoulders immense expectation. Errors crept in, but they were the by-products of his pushing those tricky cars to the limit. So Vettel’s Ferrari story is less about failure and more about valiant effort. He won 14 grands prix in Rosso Corsa; only Michael Schumacher and Niki Lauda have a better tally. MB


Massive crowd of Ferrari fans dressed in red celebrating at a Formula 1 event, waving flags and creating red smoke near grandstands with Pirelli and DHL banners under a partly cloudy sky

36. Joy of Monza ’24

Ferrari’s strategy has taken a bit of a beating in recent years but, on a sunny September day at the Italian Grand Prix, Charles Leclerc delivered a brilliant victory on a one-stopper against the two-stopping McLarens. Monza has stories, soul and character pouring out of every nook and cranny of its parkland setting, intrinsically linked to the red cars of course. Leclerc is hugely popular with the tifosi, and seeing the sea of fans below him on the podium was a memory I won’t easily forget. This also felt like a truly justified Leclerc Monza victory, since the one from 2019 will always be somewhat tainted by the controversial fuel flow controversy. KC


Black-and-white profile portrait of racing driver Chris Amon wearing a Firestone-branded racing suit with high collar and sponsor patches, looking to the right against plain background

37. Derek Bell and Enzo’s raincoat

“I never really understood how I ended up driving for Ferrari. Being told they wanted to give me a test in a Formula 2 car was a pinch-yourself moment. I’d won races in Formula 3 and then gone quite well in F2 at the start of 1968, getting a second at Thruxton in our Church Farm Racing Brabham BT23C. Keith Ballisat from Shell called and told me I was going to test that lovely little Dino 166 after the Crystal Palace race. The problem was Jacky Ickx only goes and crashes it. So the test didn’t happen. I thought that was that, my chance gone.

“Keith was back on the phone soon after saying I had to go and meet Enzo Ferrari at Maranello. I was met at those famous gates by a little bloke who started showing me around the factory, which was completely empty. There was no one there, not a soul. When I asked the guy where everyone was, he told me it was a national holiday. I learnt over the following year that a ‘national holiday’ actually meant everyone was on strike. At one point Enzo, raincoat draped over his shoulders, comes around the corner with his assistant. My guide turns to me and says, ‘“Il Commendatore” is the one on the left.’ As if I didn’t know!

Red Ferrari Formula 1 car number 7 racing on a curving track surrounded by trees, featuring wide tires, high rear wing, and exposed engine components with driver wearing helmet in open cockpit

Derek Bell in F1 in 1968, here taking Ickx’s seat in the US GP

“I went down to Monza for a test; there was no Fiorano back then. There were a lot of drivers there and I didn’t know who half of them were. I got the drive and suddenly was racing a Ferrari at Monza in the Lotteria non-championship F2 event, which was quite a big deal. I ended up sticking it on pole.

“Driving for Ferrari was an amazing experience, even if I did a handful of races in F2, a couple of grands prix and some non-championship F1 events, and the 1969 Tasman Series, which was actually a deal Chris Amon put together. We flew the cars out to New Zealand for the opening races from England, so I ended up towing them up from Maranello with our mechanic from Church Farm, Ray Wardell, behind our van.

“In the middle of 1969, Ferrari said, ‘Thanks for nothing, go away.’ The following year I was invited to drive Jacques Swaters’ Écurie Francorchamps Ferrari 512 S at the Spa 1000Kms. I did quite well and was going to do the Le Mans 24 Hours with him, but then suddenly Enzo wanted me in one of the factory cars. I told Jacques I’d prefer to do it with him after the way I’d been treated, but he said he wouldn’t get the spares he needed if I turned down Ferrari.

“I’m not sure I ever forgave Ferrari for dropping me. But there’s a romance to that team, a mystique to it all. I don’t hang onto my little part in Ferrari history, but I couldn’t help but love it when I was in the middle of it.” GW


Kimi Räikkönen in red Ferrari cap and jacket, shown in profile against vivid red background with Shell, FIAT, and Puma sponsor logos faintly visible, his shadow cast on the wall

Perhaps Kimi Räikkönen’s shortest ever magazine interview came on his first day at the Scuderia…

Lat, Sutton Images, Dppi, Grand Prix Photo

38. Elusive Räikkönen

Imagine you’re sent to track down Kimi Räikkönen on his very first day as a Ferrari driver for a magazine feature – but you’re not actually allowed inside the Fiorano circuit as he drives his first laps on a chilly January day in 2007. You join the fans on the other side of the fence, hang around the factory gates: even take a quick look round the famous Cavallino restaurant at lunchtime. Nothing doing. Still, there’s enough to write about, so it’s time to pack up and leave the hotel. And then, just as the final camera has been carefully put away, the lift door opens and an elusive yet familiar figure in sunglasses steps out. Cue disbelief, followed by panic. The snapper tears into his bag to retrieve the first camera he can find – this was before everyone had camera phones – while I scamper to catch up with our quarry just as he ducks into a revolving door. “Hi Kimi,” I say frantically, pressed into the door compartment behind him, like something out of a Charlie Chaplin movie. “Hi,” he replies guardedly, before getting into a waiting car. At this point, said snapper catches us up, camera in hand. But he never got the picture. And nobody ever believed us… AP


Ferrari emblem featuring black prancing horse on yellow shield with green, white, and red stripe at top and stylized letters “S” and “F” below

39. The badge of honour

As a society, we like the human story of mavericks who create something grandiose and unique. Enzo Ferrari was undoubtedly a pioneer in this. Il Cavallino Rampante is arguably one of the 10 most recognised logos on the planet, and probably battles Mercedes for the top spot in the automotive world. The mystique around Enzo Ferrari comes from the fact that there aren’t many public-facing video interviews or footage at races. He was clearly someone who led a very full and sometimes controversial life marred by tragedy, both personally and in his race team. Despite brilliant books such as Richard Williams’ biography, there are so many people in the world who don’t really know anything about him. KC


Front view of red Ferrari 330 P4 race car with number 21 on hood, featuring low aerodynamic body, curved windshield, and covered headlights, representing classic 1960s endurance racing design

40. Sartorial 330 P4

Christmas Day, 1973, and a six-year-old unwraps a Scalextric set. The cars? Ford GT40 and a swooping, red Ferrari 330 P4. The GT40 was supposed to be mine; the P4 my little sister’s – but that soon became mine too. For sheer late-1960s style, in my eyes there is nothing the sartorial equal of a car that was an update of the preceding P3, powered by a much reworked version of the Franco Rocchi-designed V12 engine. Research during my working life unveiled another gem: the P4’s 1-2-3 domination of the 1967 Daytona 24 Hours was happening while I was being born! MS


Leclerc with Ferrari engineer at pit monitors

41. Terrible strategies

I’m standing in the commentary box opposite the pitlane in Brazil. Everyone knows rain is coming, and you’ll have one qualifying lap to get it right on slicks, but it’s most definitely still dry. The blankets come off and I see Charles Leclerc on intermediates, which instantly gives a flashback to the pre-emptive call Ferrari made with Kimi Räikkönen in Malaysia all those years ago, leaving him sliding around on a roasting hot track on the tyres more suited to the downpour that was coming, but hadn’t yet! It later emerges that Ferrari wanted to do the same with Carlos Sainz, but the Spaniard and his race engineer Riccardo Adami opted to take the decision into their own hands. Watching this scene unfold says as much about Ferrari’s strategy in recent years as the messes with Leclerc in Monaco in 2019 and ’22. Sometimes, you don’t need to overcomplicate things. KC


Ferrari 250 GTO front view

Is the Ferrari 250 GTO the most beautiful car ever made? Many would agree, and it’s a pleasure to drive too

42. 250 GTO: ’60s style

For most ‘car people’ of my generation and probably the two before, I feel that the choice of most beautiful road car ever made lies between a Ferrari 250 GTO and a Jaguar E-type. I absolutely love the lines of the 250 GTO and have been very lucky to have driven an original – and valuable – one around the Goodwood race circuit. The engine sounds absolutely wonderful and that wooden steering wheel and gate around the gearlever just screams 1960s style. Although the GTO version is my favourite, I also love that Ferrari produced a range of 250s including the short wheelbase (immortalised by Stirling Moss) and even convertibles. KC

Ferrari 250 GTO side view


Ferrari crew member in Firestone suit

43. Calm of Schetty

A great mountain-climb contender who won the European championship in the 2-litre flat-12 Ferrari 212 E in 1969, Peter Schetty featured less successfully in the cumbersome ’70 Ferrari 512 S team, before slipping seamlessly into direttore sportivo team management duties for 1971-72. After the often capricious, sometime hilarious, certainly turbulent times under Forghieri and others, Peter’s Swiss calm and competent organisation skills paid off through the works 312 PB season of 1972, when Ferrari won all 10 World Championship of Makes rounds contested. When family textile company duties called for ’73, he retired from the sport. DCN


Vintage Ferrari race cars at Le Mans Hunaudières

 

Bonhams, Grand Prix Photo, Afp Via Getty Images

44. Thriller of Reims ’53

Motor Sport billed this Reims classic as The race of the age, at the end of which Ferrari new boy Mike Hawthorn pipped Maserati pair Juan Manuel Fangio and José Froilán González to victory. What was officially known as the ‘Grand Prix de l’ACF’ very nearly started without any Ferraris, owing to a dispute with the organisers regarding the 12-hour sports car race on the same bill. Thank goodness the team relented at the last minute. Of this first world championship grand prix won by a Briton, our report said: “Hawthorn can feel justifiably proud at having beaten the world’s finest drivers. Let us hope that every Englishman is equally proud of his effort.” MS


Niki Lauda smiling in Ferrari racing suit

The latter half of the 1970s was a golden era for the Scuderia, with Niki Lauda winning two F1 world titles

45. Lauda – all-round 1970s hero

To my seven-year-old eyes and ears, the wailing red Ferrari leading the first grand prix I attended – Brands Hatch 1974 – seemed impossibly exotic. And when, on looking at the programme mugshots, I saw that the driver was a young man rather than a grizzled veteran, I became a fan of Niki Lauda from that day on. What dramas would play out, not only on that July afternoon, but also through the next three and a half years… Lauda, through his relationships with Luca di Montezemolo, Mauro Forghieri and revered mechanic Ermanno Cuoghi, would galvanise Ferrari from a sleeping giant to become 1975 and ’77 world champion. MS


Patek Philippe chronograph with Ferrari heritage

46. Trossi’s watch legend

In May 2008, one of the most remarkable Patek Philippe chronographs ever offered for sale crossed the block at Sotheby’s Geneva – a watch that came to be known as the Trossi Leggenda on account of it being sold in 1932 to Count Carlo Felice Trossi. A young, aristocrat driver, Trossi had just been elected president of Scuderia Ferrari and was pictured on the front cover of its periodical wearing his watch over the top of his left shirt cuff. There is little doubt that the image was not just for show: Trossi likely wore his watch at race meetings – yet he managed to preserve it in such good condition that it sold for £1.1m. SDB


Carlos Sainz celebrates Ferrari Formula 1 victory

47. Sainz at Silverstone

Ferrari had arguably the fastest car at the start of a new ruleset. In early 2022 the Red Bull was overweight, Mercedes was bouncing along too much and McLaren hadn’t turned the corner on its resurgence. Charles Leclerc emerged as the title contender for Ferrari but at Silverstone, Carlos Sainz delivered his first pole and victory for the team. It was a tricky race with the weather and tyre choice. In the final phase, ahead of a late safety car restart, Leclerc was in the lead but Sainz was on the preferred and fresher tyres. Inexplicably, the team asked the Spaniard to hold position, which he duly ignored. As the race went green, Sainz pulled off a great move to take a popular feel-good win while Leclerc dropped down the order. KC


Ronnie Peterson racing the Ferrari 312 PB prototype on track

48. Redman: nice boy!

The only time Lancashire’s finest met ‘The Old Man’, Mr Ferrari reached out, squeezed his cheek between thumb and forefinger and beamed, “Nice boy.” Brian repaid the approval by co-driving 312 PBs with Art Merzario to win at Spa and Jacky Ickx at the Österreichring in 1972, then with Ickx again at Monza and Nürburgring ’73. Brian rated the ’72 Ferraris but the ’73 PBs, with little development and unpredictable handling, less so. Perhaps his most vivid memory is of team orders to secure himself and Ickx victory at Nürburgring, Merzario forcibly removed from his second-placed car by the team during a pitstop. DCN


Juan Manuel Fangio racing the Ferrari D50 on Monza banking

49. Myth of Monza ’56

The handover of his Ferrari D50 to Juan Manuel Fangio by Peter Collins at Monza has gone down in history as one of the sport’s most selfless acts. Collins had foregone his crowning as world champion, gifting it to Fangio, whose own car, above, had succumbed to steering arm failure. But it doesn’t quite stack up. Collins, part of a Ferrari team suffering tyre problems due to the concrete Monza banking, would have had to pass the Maserati of Stirling Moss for victory to even equal Fangio’s points total. Motor Sport never acknowledged the act of Collins. “I am not saying that Collins is not a good driver,” sniffed Denis Jenkinson, “but this has been his first season of first-line racing and no one in their right mind would say he was a better grand prix driver than Moss.” MS


Michele Alboreto smiling on the podium holding up a trophy

50. Jean Alesi: Ferrari is a country

“Ferrari is not just a team, it’s a country. You belong to a world where, as soon you are driving for Ferrari, it becomes Italian. Even Lewis [Hamilton], I’m sure they talk to him in Italian, the fans, and adopt him. And it stays forever.

Jean Alesi driving the Ferrari 412 T2 in Canada

Strap into a Ferrari seat and you are forever associated with the marque, says Jean Alesi

“Now it’s been a long time I’m not driving for Ferrari, but when people see me in a paddock, they identify me as a Ferrari driver. There are so many moments in the time you are there, not maybe related to a race, where there is this magic of Ferrari. Even if you are with your girlfriend and having a good time not going fast on the motorway, the police go next to you, they recognise you, and they ask you to go faster.

“Going from Avignon to Maranello I had to stop at the customs in Ventimiglia. Every single time I had to make a racing start!” AC


Close-up of a smiling Michael Schumacher wearing a red cap

Michael Schumacher’s 11 seasons at Ferrari brought five F1 world titles to add to his brace with Benetton

Lat Images, Getty Images, Dppi, Grand Prix Photo

51. Schumacher turns it all around

I remember hearing about Michael Schumacher leaving Benetton for Ferrari in the middle of 1995 and wondering, “Why on earth would he do that?” Ferrari had won two races in the previous five seasons, while Michael had dominated in 1995, with nine victories. As a simple-minded 11-year-old, I didn’t understand what he was doing but, as an adult looking back, there is no doubt that his legacy is infinitely greater for having delivered those long-awaited successes between 2000 and 2004. Michael wringing the red car’s neck around Monaco or Imola in 1996 in qualifying are awe-inspiring videos that I often look up online. Together with Jean Todt, he built that super-team with Ross Brawn and Rory Byrne. If a leader like Schumacher hadn’t gone to Ferrari and attracted all that top engineering talent, I genuinely don’t know how many more years it would have taken before the team got back to the top. In the 20 years since he left, Ferrari has won just one drivers’ title despite great budget and infrastructure… KC


Enzo Ferrari inspecting a front-engined racing car at Monza

52. Enzo and the rear-engined ‘oxcarts’

Enzo Ferrari was fond of pronouncements: “The ox does not push the cart,” was one favourite. At practice for the 1958 Italian Grand Prix at Monza, above, John Cooper was invited to join Ferrari and French journalist Bernard Cahier for a trackside lunch, a surprise for the Englishman, since Ferrari had recently dismissed him as a mere garagista. “I for one will never build a rear-engine grand prix car,” pronounced ‘Il Commendatore’, according to 1977 book Grand Prix Carpet-Bagger by John Cooper with John Bentley. “You are entitled to your opinion Signor Cooper, but I have the experience.” The rest is history. PG


Front view of the Ferrari-powered Lancia Stratos rally car

53. Stratospheric…

It seems a dream combination: Lancia, a huge force in rallying; engines from Ferrari; a chassis from Giampaolo Dallara, eventually to become motor sport’s dominant customer single-seater constructor. The LC2 of 1983-86 was also a beautiful Group C car, underdog against the Porsche 956/962 steamroller. Lancia’s Stratos rally car, above, had also been powered by Ferrari (the 2.4 Dino V6), but this weapon featured the twin-turbocharged, 2.6 308C V8. Unreliability meant it won just three top-level races but it was so quick. MS


Tony Brooks racing the classic front-engined Ferrari Dino at Reims

54. Brooks: a happy team

The runner-up in F1 in 1959 with Ferrari, Tony Brooks, had lunch with Simon Taylor in the May 2013 Motor Sport. “Ferrari was always a happy team and the mechanics were fun,” he related. “If you won a race you’d think you’d won the championship. And the drivers, Phil Hill, Dan Gurney, Cliff Allison, we were all competitive but easy-going as well. Jean Behra pretty much did his own thing; he didn’t speak English and his Italian wasn’t good. I think the longest conversation I had with him is when he tried to persuade me, with gestures, that the Testa Rossa he’d crashed at the Targa Florio was OK for me to take over.” MS


Stirling Moss driving a dark blue Ferrari 250 GT SWB

55. Close shave for Moss

The British superstar’s innate talent was recognised in Italy long before home entrants latched on. Mr Ferrari asked him to sign for 1952, but first offered a drive in the 1951 Bari Grand Prix. Stirling arrived to drive “a foreign car for the first time”. But at Ferrari’s garage he learned Piero Taruffi would be driving instead. Rebuffed, Moss tried David Murray’s private 1949 Ferrari 166, muddled its centre throttle position and crashed. For seven long years he was determined to beat “those bloody Ferraris”. But at Nassau in 1957 his assigned car was damaged, and privateer Jan de Vroom loaned his Ferrari 290 S sports car instead – Moss won two races. He happily drove the Rob Walker/Dick Wilkins 250 GT SWB to win the 1960 Goodwood TT and in ’61 he was victorious again, above. He would have had a Walker-prepared F1 ’sharknose’ for ’62. But what an outclassed disaster that would have been… DCN


A mechanic assembling the unpainted body of a Ferrari sharknose car

56. Form over function

The purity of Ferrari’s purpose, to go racing to win, and to fund racing by selling road cars, was so clear to see. On track, they were beautiful forms with a minimum of sponsors names, simple white numbers and that classic Prancing Horse badge. It mattered how good the cars looked. When the bodies were hand-formed by artisans they couldn’t fail to look great. Particularly, the cars from Mauro Forghieri and John Barnard attracted me because they looked so good. The Ferrari 640 really appealed to me as a designer. Someone described it as “looking like a pebble washed by the sea”. What could be better? PS


Fernando Alonso smiling on the podium holding up a large trophy

57. Alonso’s near-misses

Aside from Felipe Massa, no driver has come as close as Fernando Alonso did to delivering a Formula 1 world championship for Ferrari, and yet fail to do so. The Spaniard looked like a perfect fit when he arrived to replace Kimi Räikkönen in 2010. He won the hearts of the tifosi with victory first time out in Bahrain, only to cede the title to Sebastian Vettel at the Abu Dhabi finale owing to a poor strategy call. He would lose a second final race showdown to the German in 2012. Two years later, and after five fruitless seasons, he departed following a falling out with the management. AC


Niki Lauda driving his number one Ferrari 312 T2

58. Perfection of 312 T2

It was some time in late 1975 when I saw the picture on the front of my uncle’s copy of Motoring News. Ferrari’s new 312 T2 had been launched at Fiorano; upon its sidepods sat Niki Lauda and Clay Regazzoni; between them a white cockpit framed by Italian red-and-green pinstripes; the white radiator ducts; the red ‘deflectors’ ahead of the front wheels. This was exactly how a racing car should look. To its breathtaking beauty were added a Lauda title – and his shocking accident at the Nürburgring in 1976. It raced on into early ’78, Carlos Reutemann adding victory at Rio before the T3 replaced it. MS


Studio portrait of young Mario Andretti wearing his Ferrari race suit

59. Andretti: from Ascari to turbo

“When Alberto Ascari won the world championship in 1952, Aldo [Mario Andretti’s twin] and I were 12. Of course, there was Maserati and so forth, but there was always something magic about Ferrari. We gravitated to Ascari for some reason, and he was our absolute idol.

“In 1954 some friends took us to Monza and the die was cast! And to be honest with you, the impossible dream began. Going to America was a total blessing for us, because we could have never had the opportunity that we had there.

“I first met Mr Ferrari at the 1969 Monza 1000Kms, when I was teamed up with Chris Amon. in practice I dinged the front end, just the bodywork, but I thought, ‘Oh, no.’ As I pulled into the pits he had a smile on his face. I found this out later – he never faulted a driver that falls out. He knew you were trying.

Mario Andretti waving on the podium with the Questor GP trophy

After Mario Andretti’s win for Ferrari in the 1971 South African GP, he followed it up with victory here in California’s Questor GP

Lat, Klemantaski/Getty Images, Grand Prix Photo, Sutton Images

“So I had a relationship with Ferrari, and I asked if they’d be interested in me joining the F1 team in ’71. South Africa was the first race, and I won that. The Questor GP – I’ll tell you what, I won that race against Jackie Stewart. Jackie was the man! The 312 B was a good car – the balance it maintained. I could not afford to go F1 racing full-time. After I won South Africa and the Questor GP, Enzo called me at the factory and said, ‘This is all yours.’ And I couldn’t. Not that I dwelled on that, but deep down, I felt the responsibility – I had a young family.

“The one thing that I always held dear about Enzo was that we spoke directly. None of the drivers ever dealt directly with him, except for me, and that’s what I loved.

“In 1982 he called and asked me to do Monza and Vegas. I said ‘Yes’ in a nano-second! I was out of F1 that whole season, and I had never driven an F1 turbo. It felt good. I realised I was on pole because people started running on the track. I figured something good must have happened! In the race I lost a turbo, but at least I got a podium.

“To me, there was something surreal about Enzo, and just the fact that we could speak directly to one another calmly and so forth, and understand each other, was just something I always held so dear. I’m so happy that at least I had those moments.” AC


AF Corse team owner Amato Ferrari wearing headphones in the pitlane

60. AF Corse: endurance enablers

Batti Pregliasco, Team manager

“I think sometimes it’s easy for people to not realise just how much Ferrari means to people, particularly in Italy but of course now all over the world too. When you consider that the Ferrari and AF Corse story is now over a quarter of a century old and has raced in so many championships and achieved a great deal, it holds a really cool place in the whole legend and story of the Prancing Horse.

“I raced myself and then also worked with the JB Ferrari 333 SP team in 1998 to 2000. And around that time I was also with the Ferrari Challenge and then developing the Ferrari 360. But I think that the switch to a real link to the endurance side with the Ferrari factory came in 2000/2001 when Antonello [Coletta], together with the management of Ferrari, decided to switch strategies and push the endurance side.

“Antonello is a key figure in Ferrari in endurance, and of course the other key person is Amato [Ferrari], because his team was able to deliver a service in a higher level of professionalism.

“When you look at 75 years of history at Ferrari then sports car racing is a significant chapter. The great thing is that through some passionate people like Amato, Antonello, Giuseppe [Petrotta] and many others, Ferrari is creating these amazing things like the recent Le Mans wins and the WEC title, while also running many cars in many championships around the world still.”

Portrait of smiling Ferrari endurance chief Antonello Coletta

Giuseppe Petrotta, Managing/Technical Director

“I worked with Osella in F1 in the 1980s and then joined Ferrari in 1991. As an Italian, Ferrari is in my soul as a person and as a racing professional. It means a great deal to be representing the brand all over the world and I know all my colleagues at AF Corse feel the same way.

“When we decided to take the decision to do the Hypercar project with the Ferrari 499P, it was something that was based on a crew of people from AF Corse and some engineers involved inside Ferrari. For the Hypercar, they had to increase in technical structure. I think the history that Ferrari had achieved made it realistic for everybody to decide to go into Hypercar. Nobody could imagine something like the results we got, because winning Le Mans in the first year and then the championships [in 2025] is something that is very special indeed. SS


Side profile view of a classic red Ferrari 288 GTO

61. The thrilling 288 GTO

The 288 GTO was unveiled at the Geneva Salon in March 1984 with the numbers standing for 2.8 litres and eight (turbocharged) cylinders, and the letters for Gran Turismo Omologato. Longer and wider than the far tamer 328, its engine sat longitudinally with the five-speed transaxle and limited slip differential mounted behind it – a classic race car layout. At the time, the 288 GTO was the most powerful road car Ferrari had ever offered, producing around 400bhp in standard tune, but capable of being tweaked to more than 600 in full race trim. With a top speed of around 190mph, it was probably the quickest street legal car you could find in 1984 and remains both thrilling and usable today. SDB


Carlos Reutemann racing the Ferrari 312 T3 ahead of Niki Lauda

62. Reutemann magic

Carlos Reutemann, a Ferrari driver in 1977 and ’78, was my childhood hero all those years ago and he bewitched me as much for his enigmatic lapses in form as for the scintillatingly dominant performances that made me forgive him all his frailties. I was at the 1978 British Grand Prix at Brands Hatch, jumping to my feet as, before my awe-struck eyes, he hurled his gorgeous Ferrari 312 T3 past archrival Niki Lauda’s Brabham BT46 to victory. It was a magnificent drive – and, more than that for me at least, the freeze-frame image of that brave and brilliant passing manoeuvre is and will always be a memory indelible in my mind’s eye. MB


Enzo Ferrari shaking hands with carrozziere Pinin Farina turns out nicely

 

Rm Sotheby’s, Dppi, Getty Images

63. Pinin Farina’s intro

In 1951, when Pinin Farina invited Enzo Ferrari to the Cavallino San Marziano in Tortona, equidistant between Turin and Modena, he found him “closed as a walnut, disdaining the bonds the world proffered”. But the genial carrozziere prised him open, “using the common language of the machine shop and the background music made by engines on a test bench”. As Ferrari observed, they were a perfect fit: “One of us was looking for a famous and beautiful woman to dress, and the other was looking for a world-class couturier to dress her.” Just one month later, at the Paris Salon d’Auto, their first effort, the 212 Inter Cabriolet, was revealed. Ferrari’s collaboration with Pininfarina would long outlive both men. PG


Valentino Rossi sitting inside a Ferrari Formula 1 car during testing

64. Rossi’s bid for F1

When Michael met Valentino at Valencia’s Circuit Ricardo Tormo in January 2006, the chill of winter was eased by the luminosity of twin megastars. Ferrari was running a full pre-season test for its seven-time champion Michael Schumacher, alongside a fact-finding programme for the equally stellar Valentino Rossi, who continued his flirtation with a career switch from motorcycles. Rossi steered a 2004 Ferrari, its 3-litre V10 dialled down to mimic outputs of the 2.4-litre V8s mandated for ’06. He was scrappy – multiple spins – but quick. “Hats off to you for courage,” wrote Jarno Trulli in an open letter to Italy’s La Gazzetta dello Sport. AR


Jody Scheckter waving on the podium holding a bouquet of flowers

Jody Scheckter, hand raised after a win at Zolder in 1979; he’d take the title at Monza

65. Scarlet Scheckter

One season in scarlet was all it took for Jody Scheckter to become a Ferrari world champion. By 1979, this former firebrand had mixed pugnacious pace with composure to create a blend potent enough to lead the marque to a title double. His 312 T4 was long in the tooth and already losing out to either turbo power or ground-effect aero. But the flat-12 had grunt and reliability to deliver three wins apiece for Jody and Gilles Villeneuve. The sweetest came at Monza, where Ferrari secured both championships: “Gilles was behind me and there was still a chance that he could win the title, but he gave me his word that he wouldn’t try to pass and he had more integrity than anyone else I’ve ever met.” AR


Portrait of driver Andrea Bertolini in his AF Corse Ferrari suit

66. Andrea Bertolini’s dream job

“When I was growing up, I could hear the cars testing at Fiorano if the wind was in the right direction, even inside our family apartment. We lived six kilometres away. I could tell if it was a V12 or a V10. I didn’t have any choice but to fall in love with Ferrari. But it was a good choice, I think.

“Back then, Fiorano was more open; there was a fence rather than a wall. The tifosi would build these structures, like castles, to be able to see the cars better. When I was a kid, if my dad had a spare hour in the afternoon, he would take me to the track to watch. They used to say on the local radio who was testing that day. That’s how we would find out if an F1 car was running.

“I loved watching and listening to the cars, and every lap I would wave to the driver. I remember when I was about 10 or 11, Michele Alboreto was testing. It was probably 1984 or ’85. On his in-lap at the end of the day, Michele waved. Maybe he was waving to everybody, but in my mind he was waving to me and not the 399 other people. The emotion I felt that day was so strong.

AF Corse Ferrari 296 GT3 racing hard on track

AF Corse stalwart Andrea Bertolini has admired Ferrari since his childhood days – here racing a 296 GT3 at Misano in 2024

“Even more emotional was driving an F1 car at Fiorano for the first time in 2000 – it was the 1995 412 T2 – especially when I went through the corner where Michele had waved all those years before. I still feel it today whenever I drive at Fiorano and think of that kid watching from behind the fence. That’s why whenever I am testing, I ask the engineers when the last run of the morning or the afternoon is going to be, and on the last lap of my run, I always wave to the fans.

“I know what it means to them to have a connection with the drivers. When I was testing for the F1 team, the guys who looked after us asked me why I wanted a new pair of gloves every time I drove. It was because at the end of the day I would take out the service car and see the tifosi. If I saw some children, I would give one glove to one kid and the other one to another. I know what it means to them to have a connection to the drivers.

“My dream was to be a racing driver, but to dream to be a Ferrari driver was too big. I eventually did that, though I came to it a different way. My family could not support my dreams, but I got my opportunity through the Ferrari family. And now I have driven almost every type of Ferrari F1 car ever built.” GW


Enzo Ferrari watching track action with arms crossed at Monza

 

Bernard Cahier/Getty Image

67. Enzo Ferrari

In Turin, on a freezing night in the winter of 1918, de-mobbed, bereaved, with few skills beyond re-shoeing horses, Enzo Ferrari found himself in the Parco del Valentino next to the Po river. He swept a layer of snow off a bench and lay down. “Overcome by loneliness and despair, I wept.” After that, nothing got in his way, not fascism, nor the Depression, or World War II. A self-identified ‘agitator of men’, he excelled at team management, for Alfa Romeo, and for his own Scuderia. Surveying the bombed ruins of his works in 1945, he resolved to build his own V12 racing car.

The next time he visited the Parco del Valentino, almost 30 years later, it was to see his own car win the 1947 Turin Grand Prix. “I went and sat on that same bench. The tears I shed that day were of a very different kind.” PG


Rubens Barrichello giving a thumbs up in his Ferrari race suit

68. Rubens Barrichello: thumbs up for the F2002

“What I remember from 2002 was being told how much the car would be better. And it corresponded so well when it went to the race track, it was amazing how it developed. They said it was 1.5sec or something faster.

“It was so much better than the 2001 car. It was an amazing achievement. I had a feeling that it was the best ever translation from wind tunnel to track that I had in any car of my life. If you take the Brawn in 2009, the expectations were high, and it beat all that they had in mind. But this 2002 car was accurate. It was like having Monaco wings with a car that flew like on the Monza straight!

Rubens Barrichello driving the dominant Ferrari F2002 on track

Following team orders at Ferrari had a psychological effect on Rubens Barrichello, but he still looks back at the time with fondness

“In Austria people got to know what I was suffering from for a long time. But for me, the main point was that the year before I had to let Michael [Schumacher] by. David Coulthard won the race, and they made me change places with Michael, for him to go second. At the end of the race, I went to talk to them, and I said, ‘If I was winning would you have asked the same way?’ They said, ‘Never. We would never ask you to leave first place.’ I said, ‘OK’.

“That was exactly what happened the year after, and that’s what bothered me, more than anything else. What I eventually found out was that it was written in Michael’s contract, but not in mine. In mine, there wasn’t anything that said you’ve got to let him by. So that’s why I eventually decided that I was going to do it in front of everyone.

“Obviously, the one that suffered the most was me, because it was tough, psychologically, to see that people didn’t follow their hearts or their words that day. I’ve always been more emotional, and less rational. And for me, it matters what people say. It’s almost like I don’t have a contract for so many things, for me it’s done by words. For me, it was tough.

“I feel honoured that I was part of Ferrari. I kept saying they will see my work and then they’re going to let me do whatever I think is achievable. Then I saw that it wasn’t going to happen. That’s why I left. But it was one of the best things that ever happened to me.

“It was just that Michael Schumacher had this protection at Ferrari. And I saw that I wasn’t going to get any further. So I said, ‘OK, the time has come, and then I will leave.’ But I had the best time of my life for sure, because it was something else.” AC


Alain Prost navigating a corner in the beautiful Ferrari 641

69. The semi-auto 641

In 1989, Ferrari attempted to strike back at McLaren’s dominance, and John Barnard’s 640 pioneered the semi-automatic gearbox and paddle shifts in F1. Unreliability cost results and, the following year, Barnard was gone, but he and the team had already penned the 641, which in my opinion is the most beautiful F1 car of all. Alain Prost fought a brilliant campaign against Ayrton Senna. The title battle ended in the gravel at the first corner in Japan, but the 641 signed off with a double podium in Adelaide after Ferrari’s most competitive season since ’82. KC


Phil Hill smiling while sitting in his Ferrari sharknose car

70. Hill’s climb to glory

Like Dan Gurney, Phil Hill, above, was a product of a flourishing US West Coast sports car scene of the 1950s at the wheel of Ferrari machinery. Little could he guess that by 1961 he would become his nation’s first world champion in F1 machinery. Hill’s tragic title, clinched at Monza when team-mate Wolfgang von Trips lost his life, was assured with the last of what would be just three points-paying grand prix wins. His sports car success with Ferrari easily outweighed this, capped by three Le Mans 24 Hours wins (1958, ’61, ’62) with Belgian great Olivier Gendebien. MS


Gilles Villeneuve driving the ultra-clean Ferrari 126 C2 on track

71. The ultra-clean Ferrari 126 C2

Is the 126 C2 the best-looking Ferrari F1 car ever? It certainly was to my 15-year-old eyes. The ultra-clean lines of the Harvey Postlethwaite-designed machine ingrained themselves a place deep in my psyche even before the tragedy of the 1982 season unfolded. It should have won more than just the constructors’ title; one or other of Gilles Villeneuve or Didier Pironi would, to my mind, have become world champion in what was the best package that year. There were two wins for Pironi and one for Patrick Tambay. Yet no matter how good it was, the 126 C2 is, most of all, a thing of beauty. My eyes still tell me that today. GW


Front view of the distinctive Ferrari 156 Sharknose race car at Monaco with a mechanic working on it

Carlo Chiti’s Ferrari 156 ‘sharknose’ made its world championship debut at Monaco in 1961

Bernard Cahier//Ercole Colombo/Klemantaski/Getty Images, Dppi, Rm Auctions

72. The 156 shark attack

A year after Scuderia Ferrari at last adopted rear-engined design, Carlo Chiti developed ’sharknose’-bodied successors for the new 1961 1.5-litre Formula 1. He also perfected a new 120-degree V6, lighter than not only the 65-degree Dino unit but also the rival British four-cylinder Climax FPF. Drivers Phil Hill, ‘Taffy’ von Trips and Richie Ginther were joined by Giancarlo Baghetti and later Ricardo Rodríguez. Baghetti’s car was run by the Federation of Italian Teams, and its ’sharknose’ won its debut Syracuse GP. At Naples he won again… and in the French GP he sensationally won too. Sharknoses qualified on pole everywhere they went but Monaco, where Moss took victory for Lotus. Poor von Trips lost his life at Monza, where Hill became the sport’s first American world champion. Sharknoses raced on through 1962, but could not match the latest British V8s from BRM and Climax. No original cars survive. DCN


Ferrari technical director Mauro Forghieri wearing a headset and sunglasses on the pit wall

73. ‘Furia’ Forghieri

Nicknamed ‘Furia’ by Ferrari’s technical staff, Mauro, above, was effectively a rookie engineer – son of long-serving Ferrari machinist Reclus Forghieri – given a unique chance by ‘The Old Man’ when preceding direttore tecnico Carlo Chiti was fired late in 1961. Then only 27, Forghieri learned apace, benefited from the backing of veteran consultant engineer Vittorio Jano, and repaid Mr Ferrari’s faith many times over. But as an intensely hard worker utterly dedicated to his role, Forghieri always had an extremely short fuse. Even Mr Ferrari himself could become the target; Furia was also fearless if he felt criticism was due. Sometimes it was not. As The Old Man aged and fresh engineering blood was brought in, the love affair waned and Mauro sought new horizons, with Lamborghini – and Bugatti. DCN


Alberto Ascari driving his number 10 Ferrari 500 on a cobblestone track section

74. The 500’s dominance

When Alfa Romeo opted out of racing at the end of 1951, the FIA swapped world championship status to unsupercharged 2-litre Formula 2 for 1952-53. Alberto Ascari, below, and Ferrari’s four-cylinder 500s ran riot. These Aurelio Lampredi-designed cars dominated, with 30 wins from 33 races entered, 81 finishes from 109 starts, Ascari becoming the first double world champion driver through 1952-53. At least six, possibly seven, works 500s appeared, plus five Starlet customer cars. All but one were later uprated as 2.5-litre Ferrari 625s for the new F1 of 1954-57. Simple and effective – these cars cemented the infant Ferrari marque’s reputation. DCN


Studio shot of a classic bright yellow Ferrari 365 GTB/4 Daytona Berlinetta with its reflection on a polished dark floor

75. 365 GTB/4 Daytona

There are faster Ferraris, rarer Ferraris, and certainly more technologically sophisticated Ferraris, but few possess the operatic charisma of the 365 GTB/4 Daytona. It arrived at a time, 1968, when the mid-engined 1966 Lamborghini Miura had already begun to make front-engined supercars look a bit old-fashioned, yet still it embodied everything Maranello stood for: speed, style and unapologetic excess. Its long, tapering bonnet concealed a masterpiece of a Colombo V12 engine, while its taut but aggressive lines aft of its A-pillar spoke of intent rather than ornamentation. When I first saw one, aged 12, I asked the owner if he’d give me a spin in it. He did, hurling it and me around empty West Sussex B-roads. It is possible that I have never been happier. MB

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

The Volvo ES90 is a big family saloon, a modern interpretation of those charming old land yachts that used to collect from boarding school those of us whose parents had decided to outsource their children’s upbringing. I felt nothing but derision for these old barges and pity for my friends who had to travel in them, but I was only seven at the time. It never occurred that they were actually quite cool.

I wonder if, half a century from now, people will look at the ES90 in quite the same way. I think probably not because I suspect that all early EVs (which by then this will be) will be about as desirable as a wad of chewing gum stuck to the sole of your loafer.

But I still feel well-disposed towards the Volvo brand, if not all it has produced of late. I think it still retains some of the old values and I think its commitment to producing a car that cannot be crashed is more than just marketing guff: I think it really matters to them. And I like the fact there is still something slightly iconoclastic about passing by all those premium German brands to buy something from Sweden’s sole surviving volume carmaker, even if the company is now Chinese owned and, indeed, the ES90 made in Chengdu, not Gothenburg.

It has many of the attributes of those old Volvos – it feels strong, it is notably spacious and commendably comfortable – and a few they’d not recognise: its shape has clearly come out of a design studio, not a primary school art project, while inside it is as minimalist and clean as an Apple designer’s bathroom.

I drove the least powerful model with just one electric motor producing 328bhp. Upgrade to the twin motor and power leaps to 451bhp plus you get all-wheel drive and a bigger battery into the bargain, and all for an additional £4000. Extraordinarily another £4700 will park you behind the wheel of the Performance model with 670bhp – a five door Volvo with more power than a McLaren F1. Though why you might want one is a question that remains unanswered in my head.

Volvo ES90 electric saloon rear view on rural road, modern LED tail lights and Scandinavian EV design heritage

The view from the back window is negligible

The reason I was drawn to the base model is it’s already plenty fast enough. I can remember when a 0-62mph time of 6.6sec was the mark of a genuinely fast car, and just because you can now buy cars that’ll do it in half that time doesn’t make this one feel any slower. Indeed when I was told in error that the car I was driving was the more powerful twin-motor, I had no trouble believing him, the mistake only coming to light when it briefly broke traction.

The ride is as plush as you’d expect from a modern Volvo saloon, the hatchback boot is a real bonus and, like many other expensive EVs, it is eerily quiet at speed. It’ll also charge at up to 300kW.

So the assets are totting up, and were we to leave it there, the conclusion might be that this is indeed a car worthy of its solid, honest, unpretentious heritage. But we can’t.

“This is a car that has more range and is quicker to charge than the BMW i5”

Because there are problems here and what it so infuriating about this car is seeing how easily they could be avoided. I accept that the weirdly high floor is not easy to change and, in the XE90 SUV, which sits on exactly the same SPA2 platform, you don’t notice it at all. But at least you can see out of the back of the SUV. I can see more out of the back of my Caterham with the hood up than I can out of the ES90 unless you fold down the rear centre headrest, and even then there’s not the view I’d like.

Is that minimal design so essential that even adjusting the steering wheel or the wing mirrors requires you to dial up the correct menu on the big centre screen and then use the same controller to make the desired adjustment? And in which Volvo safety committee did they sign off forcing the driver to execute no fewer than five different actions just to turn on the rear fog lights? How does that contribute to the ‘collision-free’ future of Volvo’s dreams when you’re making multiple inputs into a screen far from your line of sight having driven into a pea-souper? Or is Volvo happy to let its cars crash so long as they’re not the ones doing the crashing?

Related article

Do such concerns really spoil the car? I think it very much depends on the individual, but to me they did. It is such a shame because it didn’t need to be this way.

This is a car that has more range and is quicker to charge than the benchmark BMW i5. It has a hatchback too and is at least as quiet and comfortable. It doesn’t bother me that it’s no fun to drive because that’s not what I want a Volvo to be.

But I know the ergonomics would irritate me on every drive and that’s enough of a reason all by itself to put me off this. Which is a shame, because there is a good car trying to escape here, but without an interior rethink that allows function at least an audience in the mood palace of form, captive it is likely to remain.

Volvo ES90 Single Motor Ultra

MFS06761-Edit

Need to switch on the fog lights? Take your eyes off the traffic and tap the screen

Price £81,460
Engine Rear electric motor, 88.0kWh battery
Power 328bhp
Torque 354lb ft
Weight 2335kg
Power to weight 140bhp per tonne
Transmission Single-speed, rear-wheel drive
0-62mph 6.6sec
Top speed 112mph
Range 398 miles (WLTP)
Charging speed Up to 300kW
Verdict Ergonomically challenged.


Review

Jaecoo 7 SHS-P Luxury SUV driving through mountain landscape, metallic blue finish with bold grille and modern styling

Not for All the Tea in China

On test: Jaecoo 7 SHS-P Luxury, £35,170

In one respect the Jaecoo 7 is remarkable: it’s one of Britain’s best-selling cars. The interior is attractive in a minimalist way but the problem comes when you move. The chassis is genuinely poor: the ride finds lumps and bumps you didn’t know existed. I’d recommend not going near it.

Verdict: Bad chassis equals awful ride.


Coming soon

Lightweight alloy car chassis with visible suspension and brake components, modern EV platform engineering and safety design

Alpine’s Electric Future?

A110 successor set for late 2026 debut

It seems certain that the replacement for the Alpine A110 will be unveiled in October. It will be bigger, at around 1400kg the best part of 300kg heavier and powered by electricity – at first. Alpine says the new APP (Alpine Performance Platform) could be equipped with an engine.


Insider News

Up From the Depths…

Son of Godzilla Nissan GT-R R36 on its way

It seems that ‘Godzilla’, the name given to the R35 Nissan GT-R, is to get a son. The R36 should arrive by 2028. There was speculation about it being an EV, but the smart money is on it being a hybrid, using a heavily revised version of the VR38DETT 3.8-litre engine, with up to three electric motors to produce at least 750bhp.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

I have spent the last month being swept from place to place by a Bentley Arnage, some 17 years after the last one was built – this one as it turns out. Today you can buy an immaculate, late, low mileage example for around £40,000, which is quite a lot less than many a faceless modern crossover tin box. But your tin box won’t make the best part of every day those minutes and hours you spent behind its wheel. Yes, I picked just about the worst time to be knocking about in something with such atrocious fuel consumption and, no, it’s not very connected, but I really could not have cared less.

What it did was remind me that you don’t need wide, open, empty roads to enjoy whatever you’re driving. Indeed the key to a genuine and enduring experience is to find yourself in something that provides an intensely and innately pleasurable place to be, whatever you happen to be doing. I got stuck in plenty of jams in the big old Bentley and they troubled me not at all. I just sat back in its peerless seats, swaddled by the finest leather and admired the view across the walnut dash, down the imperious bonnet to the ‘Flying B’ mascot at its end. I’d get home after a few hundred miles and just sit there, not wanting to get out.

Above all, this is a car from which character seeps from every join. It looks and feels handmade because it is, and like all things created by passion, knowledge and expertise and from the finest available materials, the sheer quality of what results creates that sense of occasion. Robots will make cars to far finer tolerances, much more quickly and for a lot less money, but they could never create the interior ambience of a Bentley Arnage.

Something else about that Bentley, rarely if ever discussed these days: its smell. Manufacturers devote so much time to ensuring their cars look right, sound right and feel right, but there is one other critical sense that appears entirely ignored these days unless you happen to enjoy the aroma of synthetic upholstery and chemical adhesive. I am told too that, of all the senses, smell is the one with the longest recall. We will all have found ourselves somewhere, got a whiff and instantly be transported back years or even decades.

“Giving cars the right pong might be a small step in the right direction”

This happened to me quite recently: wandering down Oxford Street I smelled the same perfume an old girlfriend had worn 40 years ago; the recall was instantaneous and with it came back all the memories of our brief time together. Odd thing is I didn’t much like it then and still don’t. It’s the same with cars: every time I find myself in the company of an early Porsche 911, just like those my father drove, I’ll open a door and instantly be transported back half a century. When there has never been a greater need to make cars more appealing, perhaps giving them the right kind of pong might be one small step in the right direction.

I was chatting to Mark Blundell at the recent Bicester Scramble and discovered his extraordinary route to the top. His first home was a static caravan; his first bed the bottom drawer of a chest of drawers. He never competed in a kart and was 17 before he did his first car race. His route was through motocross bikes where he learned not only about balance and managing mass but, “when there are 30 of you all heading into the same narrow funnel that leads to the first corner, you learn to get your elbows out”.

What chance of someone from such a background making it all the way today? If you look at the best F1 drivers of 2026 – Max plus the Mercedes, McLaren and Ferrari boys – each was racing karts while still in short trousers, a couple of them signed to an F1 team driver development programme and trained for the top. It makes me admire all the more what Mark achieved despite such disadvantages.

Related article

I became engrossed in one of those silly but captivating conversations. Someone retold a story that Ginny Williams once vetoed the appointment of a driver because when he came to stay with her and Sir Frank he made the mistake of making his bed in the morning, showing himself to be courteous and unsuited to the world of F1. And I’d bet plenty that, because of this title’s unique audience, someone reading could tell me whether it’s true.

This then led to speculation about which drivers were bed-makers, bed-strippers or bed-leavers. We agreed that Stirling would undoubtedly have been a bed-leaver, but Jim Clark and JYS were both bed-makers. James Hunt would have left it but Niki Lauda would have stripped it. We concluded that there was a generational split around the mid-80s, with those before that time being more likely to be bed-leavers and those who rose to prominence thereafter being bed-makers.

But is the era a greater factor than genes? We concluded it was, because while we could never see Rosberg and Hill senior making the bed, nor could we see their sons just walking out of the house leaving it unkempt. Damon, Nico, feel free to tell me just how wrong I am.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

The Isle of Man hosted its last round of motorcycling’s world championships – now known as MotoGP – 50 years ago this June. To help explain the TT’s demise as a grand prix event, the 1976 Senior TT, counting towards that year’s MotoGP world championship, was won by Tom Herron, chased home by fellow Irishman Billy Guthrie (third) and Englishman Ian Richards (second).

At that time the TT was very much a local thing, viewed elsewhere with increasing repugnance due to its soaring death rate. Motorcycle racing’s governing body – the Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme – finally lost patience in the 1970s.

During the two weeks of the 1970 TT, six riders lost their lives tackling the 37.73-mile street circuit. Among the fatalities was Spaniard Santi Herrero, contesting his third TT and hoping to protect his lead in that year’s 250cc championship.

Two years later, Italian newcomer Gilberto Parlotti suffered the same fate, trying to extend his advantage in the 1972 250cc world championship. He was the 99th rider to die on the Isle of Man.

Herrero fell at the tricky 13th milestone, suffering multiple injuries. Parlotti crashed while leading his race in heavy rain, ploughing into a concrete fence post. There’s no way any TT newcomer can know the circuit’s 200-plus corners, which is why current lap-record holder Peter Hickman didn’t win a race until his fifth TT.

“During the two weeks of the 1970 TT, six riders lost their lives on the circuit”

Herrero and Parlotti were the first Spaniard and Italian to die at the TT, causing an outcry from their national federations and ultimately sealing the TT’s fate as a grand prix meeting. Riders petitioned the FIM to remove the event from the world championships, so they would no longer be obliged to risk their lives there.

When their number was joined by reigning MotoGP champion Giacomo Agostini, a 10-times TT winner between 1966 and 1972, the event’s future was bleak.

The event’s fate was sealed in the spring of 1975 during an FIM meeting that proposed the sport’s first proper safety code. Among the new rules was a maximum circuit length of 6.2 miles, one sixth of a TT lap.

However, the FIM couldn’t bring itself to fully kill off the meeting that had been bike racing’s biggest deal since the early days of the 20th century. Working with the hugely pro-TT British federation, the FIM created a series of single-race world championships specifically around the TT. This solution wouldn’t make the course any safer, but it ensured that only those riders who actually enjoyed the island’s unique challenges would contest these new championships.

The new series was christened Formula TT, with three classes: Formula 1, for 1000cc motorcycles, and Formula 2 and 3, for 600s and 400s. All Formula TT machines were powered by production engines, reconnecting the event to its roots. The inaugural 1907 TT was christened the Tourist Trophy because riders rode touring machines, not specially prepared racing motorcycles.

Ironically, the inaugural 1977 TT F1 race was won by former grand prix rider Phil Read, who had joined Agostini in boycotting the races following Parlotti’s death. Read was in the twilight of his career and fancied the generous start and prize money on offer. The 37-year-old thereby became an eight-time world champion, adding to the seven titles he had won in the 500, 250 and 125cc grand prix classes, riding against the best in the world.

Was Read’s latest crown worth the same as those earlier successes? Obviously not, but Formula TT did allow the Isle of Man to at least retain an aura of prestige.

Read’s latest Isle of Man success didn’t only lack significance, it was also unpopular, because most TT fans still hated him for having turned his back on the event.

Related article

You might argue that the TT regained at least some of its standing the very next year, when the great Mike Hailwood returned after more than a decade away.

Nine-time world champion Hailwood had quit bike racing and moved into cars in the late 1960s, contesting Formula 1 for Surtees and McLaren until a 1974 accident forced him into retirement. Hailwood soon grew bored of the quiet life and decided on a TT return.

Hailwood’s comeback ride – defeating Read in the 1978 F1 race – was a fairy-tale, one of the island’s greatest stories.

Over the next decade or so, TT F1 grew into a proper world championship, with up to eight rounds. This gave a new lease of life to other street circuits that had lost grand prix status, such as Barcelona’s Montjuich Park, which had hosted motorcycle and F1 car GPs in the 1960s and 1970s.

The final TT F1 world champion, in 1990, was Briton Carl Fogarty, one of the last bike racers to successfully combine racing on short circuits with racing on the streets. Fogarty later won four World Superbike championships, the series that effectively replaced TT F1.

Issue Contents Archive - Motor Sport Magazine

Jabouille, Scheckter and Villeneuve: F1 legends in their own lunchtime

Regular readers of Precision may be all too familiar with the TAG Heuer Monaco – there have been so many versions of it that it crops up here with almost monotonous regularity. So, if you feel you’ve had a bellyful of Monaco musings, forgive us for bringing you more. This latest incarnation merits a mention since TAG Heuer says it represents “one of the most significant movements in the history of watchmaking for the time recording function”.

That means it contains an all-new type of chronograph mechanism, inset, that does away with the usual levers, wheels and springs in favour of a simplified set-up of two flexible components: one for starting and stopping, the other for re-setting.

It has taken five years to develop and features an oscillator (or balance wheel, the component driven back and forth by the hairspring) made entirely from carbon, with the movement inverted so that the winding barrel, gear train and aforementioned Carbonspring balance are on the dial side.

Rear view of TAG Heuer TH80-00 movement through sapphire caseback

The use of carbon for the oscillator improves the new TH80-00 calibre’s resistance to magnetism and results in less friction than a conventional beryllium bronze set-up, making for greater accuracy and reliability.

But the real game-changer, says the brand, is its ‘compliant chronograph mechanism’. Designed to reduce friction while improving durability and precision, the Evergraph movement almost eliminates the need for lubrication and – unlike some of TAG Heuer’s past concept watches – is a fully formed package which is already in production.

As the various elements of the mechanism are produced using LIGA technology (that is, lithography, electroplating and moulding) they could be made on a large scale that would enable it to be used in other TAG Heuer models such as the Carrera. For now, it’s available only in the Monaco, which has regularly been used to showcase ingenious new mechanisms since the turn of the century.

Memorable models include the flip-case Monaco 69 of 2003 with analogue time-telling on one side and a digital stopwatch on the other, and the ultra shock-resistant Monaco 24 with a floating dial held in place by a car-like suspension system. Most of these have disappeared without trace – but the Evergraph may well be around, well, forever…

TAG Heuer Monaco Evergraph, £20,750. tagheuer.com


Eberhard Tazio Nuvolari chronograph with tachymeter bezel and patterned dial

Eberhard launched its first watch dedicated to Italian racer Tazio Nuvolari back in 1992, establishing a collection that has become a multi-model lynchpin of the brand. This latest Nuvolari tribute features a 40mm steel case housing a dial with decoration in the form of a repeat pattern of a 3D pyramid and the initials ‘TN’ in yellow within a tortoiseshell shape – a reference to the driver’s trademark yellow racing sweater and the gift of a small, gold tortoise given to him by Italian aristocrat, poet and playwright Gabriele D’Annunzio.

Eberhard & Co Tazio Nuvolari, £4250. eberhard-co-watches.ch


Chopard Mille Miglia Patina chronograph featuring salmon dial and weathered finish

Chopard’s involvement with the Mille Miglia as a main partner and timekeeper since 1988 means new MM chronograph designs are launched annually to coincide with the 1000-mile rally, which runs from Brescia to Rome and back. One of the fresh models honours the old car world’s appreciation of ‘preservation’ with a case made from Chopard’s patented Lucent Steel that has been finished with a DLC coating and gently roughed-up – to give an impression of ‘weathering’. Just 100 examples are available.

Chopard Mille Miglia Classic Patina, £10,300. chopard.com