Editorial, June 2003

Author

admin

Browse pages
Current page

1

Current page

2

Current page

3

Current page

4

Current page

5

Current page

6

Current page

7

Current page

8

Current page

9

Current page

10

Current page

11

Current page

12

Current page

13

Current page

14

Current page

15

Current page

16

Current page

17

Current page

18

Current page

19

Current page

20

Current page

21

Current page

22

Current page

23

Current page

24

Current page

25

Current page

26

Current page

27

Current page

28

Current page

29

Current page

30

Current page

31

Current page

32

Current page

33

Current page

34

Current page

35

Current page

36

Current page

37

Current page

38

Current page

39

Current page

40

Current page

41

Current page

42

Current page

43

Current page

44

Current page

45

Current page

46

Current page

47

Current page

48

Current page

49

Current page

50

Current page

51

Current page

52

Current page

53

Current page

54

Current page

55

Current page

56

Current page

57

Current page

58

Current page

59

Current page

60

Current page

61

Current page

62

Current page

63

Current page

64

Current page

65

Current page

66

Current page

67

Current page

68

Current page

69

Current page

70

Current page

71

Current page

72

Current page

73

Current page

74

Current page

75

Current page

76

Current page

77

Current page

78

Current page

79

Current page

80

Current page

81

Current page

82

Current page

83

Current page

84

Current page

85

Current page

86

Current page

87

Current page

88

Current page

89

Current page

90

Current page

91

Current page

92

Current page

93

Current page

94

Current page

95

Current page

96

Current page

97

Current page

98

Current page

99

Current page

100

Current page

101

Current page

102

Current page

103

Current page

104

Current page

105

Current page

106

Current page

107

Current page

108

Current page

109

Current page

110

Current page

111

Current page

112

Current page

113

Current page

114

Current page

115

Current page

116

Current page

117

Current page

118

Current page

119

Current page

120

Current page

121

Current page

122

Current page

123

Current page

124

Current page

125

Current page

126

Current page

127

Current page

128

Current page

129

Current page

130

Current page

131

Current page

132

Current page

133

Current page

134

Current page

135

Current page

136

Current page

137

Current page

138

Current page

139

Current page

140

The International rules of our sport are written in French. There is an English translation in the FIA’s Yearbook, but when the inevitable loophole leads to the inevitable bout of semantics, it is the Gallic interpretation that ‘settles’ the argument.

Why? The French were first off the mark, that’s why. They hosted the first recognised motor race (the 1894 Paris-Rouen), the first three Gordon Bennett Cups and the first grand prix. Panhard, De Dietrich, Renault, Peugeot, Mors and Richard-Brasier swept all before them bar the occasional Mercedes onslaught – and SF Edge’s 1902 Gordon Bennett success for Napier. It would be 21 years before a British marque scored another win of equal note – Henry Segrave’s French GP victory for Sunbeam (page 50) – and a further 33 before a British car was clearly the class of a Formula One field.

The French dominance lasted until the arrival of the 8C Alfas in the early 1930s. It, i.e. Bugatti, held its own against the ‘Monza’, was put in the shade by the subsequent Tipo B – and totally buried by the arrival of the Silver Arrows. France had run out of inspiration, instead putting its faith in mystery cars that rarely turned up or overhyped machines that broke on the start-line.

Sportscar racing offered some solace, Bugatti (1937 and ’39), Delahaye (’38) and Talbot (’50) winning Le Mans four times in five runnings either side of WWII. But even this, France’s greatest race, the world’s most prestigious endurance event, then slipped from the host’s grasp.

You’d think that Renault and Peugeot would be falling over themselves to win it year in, year out. Instead they have just three victories between them. It’s as though the threat of a home humiliation outweighed the value of an ‘expected anyway’ victory. Certainly, both Renault (page 28) and Peugeot (page 42) tasted bitter defeats before savouring the champagne. Matra, which won three times in a row (1972-74), and Rondeau, the victor in ’80, were smaller companies with less to lose.

Less angst surrounded France’s earlier successes in this race. When Chénard et Walcker won the first running of it in 1923, and Lorraine-Dietrich took the spoils in ’25-26 (page 36), the only surprise was that upstart Bentley had beaten them in ’24. That was not the preordained way of things.

Such confidence, however, is fickle. Losing it is easy, gaining it and keeping it is decidedly not. Peugeot’s rally hero Marcus Gronholm and Renault’s bright new F1 star Fernando Alonso both have it in spades right now. But even success does not guarantee it, as the F3 legend Don Parker (page 66) and BMW’s rally programme of the early ’70s (page 60) proved. It is a ‘language’ that defies translation, but which is universal – and devoid of loopholes.

Motorsport’s je ne sais quoi