Posts Tagged ‘Garagistas’

3 March

WilliamsF1: Back in Black

Every success WilliamsF1 achieve is a testament to the spirit of the garagistas. WilliamsF1 is a racing team amongst corporate giants. Sportsmen fighting against businessmen. David versus Goliath. They are you and me. They are the heart and soul of what F1 should be.

A decade ago WilliamsF1 peaked with a string of nearly uninterrupted championships. Since then, success has been fleeting but with a quiet dignity, the team has soldiered on. Today, surrounded on the grid by the world’s largest automotive manufacturers, WilliamsF1 is the last of their breed - garagistas. Pure racers. Simply, WilliamsF1 exists, not to sell more Honda Civics or BMW M3’s but to win races and championships. Period.

Where a team like Honda or Toyota can simply quit F1 if they become disenchanted with not winning, WilliamsF1’s existence remains tied to sustainable success on the track. That ethos demands a level of commitment that few in the paddock demonstrate.

How much commitment does Renault’s Flavio Briatore have to ‘his’ team’s survival? Some, but it’s not his team - he’s an employee with a salary and benefits. Frank Williams is a team owner. To demonstrate the difference, consider this: Frank Williams sold his private jet last year to fund a second, state of the art wind tunnel. As a quadriplegic, Frank benefited more than most would from the use of a private jet to get back and forth to races. It was more than a luxury but it was also a means to an end.

How many ‘employees’ would do that for an employer? For that matter, how many owners would do that for their teams? Eddie Jordan, owner of Jordan Racing, sold his team when they were in financial trouble. Selling the private yacht and other toys was not an option for Eddie.

That new wind tunnel was built to make the race cars go faster, end of story. Was it worth it? Well, the team have put what might be their best designed car in years on the track. Certainly in winter testing, it has been consistently fast during every test. The question is, can Frank’s team humble the corporate juggernauts like Ferrari, McLaren-Mercedes and arch rival BMW?

I think they already have - just by continuing to exist and thrive as racers.

The heart of F1 is no longer Italian red, it is blue - the midnight blue of the new WilliamsF1 team colors. Incidentally, the team launched their new livery today - see below.

2008 FW30

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18 February

The Return of the Grandees

 

One of the great paradoxes of Formula 1 is that because of the introduction of so-called cost cutting measures designed to keep teams from ‘buying success’ through massive spending on research, the rules are in actuality creating an environment where only the richest teams can compete.

In its infancy, F1 was ruled by ‘Grandee’ teams like Alfa Romeo and Maserati who were also car manufacturers. These grandees were initially the only ones who had the resources to build race cars but within a decade they were facing strong competition from small, specialty companies who would build a few race cars and compete for prize money. Enzo Ferrari scornfully called these teams, ‘Garagistas.’

From the early sixties until the turn of the century, ‘Garagistas’ like Cooper, Lotus, Tyrrell, and McLaren (before the Mercedes partnership) were the kings of F1, staying one step ahead of the Grandees by adapting new technology into their cars. Because the technology was cheap and available, nearly anyone could participate and be successful. So successful that Ferrari, the longest competing ‘Grandee’ of them all, failed to win a World Championship for 21 years before the pendulum started to swing back.

The reemergence of the grandees like Honda, Renault, BMW, Toyota Mercedes (via McLaren) and Ferrari at the top of the sport has coincided directly with the introduction of the cost cutting rules that dictate the type of engine, transmission, tires and electronics that can be used in F1.

This standardization has created the perfect environment for the grandees to compete in. Because there are so few areas where teams can introduce new innovations (something the Garagistas excelled at) the manufacturers have found an advantage in exploiting small performance gains found only by exhaustively refining their static designs. This process can cost millions of dollars per tenth of a second of performance – millions the independents don’t have.

For those fans that admire the drive and passion of the independent teams of F1, these are dark days in the shadow of the Grandees. The last best hope for survival of the Garagistas doesn’t lie in cost-cutting but in throwing out the design rules altogether.

 

Grandee Logos

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