Why unloved Lotus 76 may be Colin Chapman's most significant car
A wide variety of Lotus cars are often proffered as the ultimate F1 game-changer – but was the Lotus 76 an unusual candidate which trumps them all?
Williams at 40, Aston’s all-new Vulcan, Coronel’s 25g fire truck shunt and remembering the days when ‘no rules’ ruled racing.
Vettel faces further FIA investigation after Baku safety car incident
There’s bad news for Sebastian Vettel and potentially another twist in the world championship battle: the FIA has announced it will be further investigating the four-time champion after his antics under safety car in Baku. Vettel received a 10-second stop-go penalty for twice crashing into his main world championship rival Lewis Hamilton under safety car, after the Brit was unexpectedly slow off of a corner. But after many judged the penalty too lenient, the FIA is reassessing the incident. The German currently has nine penalty points on his race licence – three more, the number often given for infringements, and he would face a race ban.
Dennis cuts ties with McLaren
Ron Dennis has announced that he will be selling his remaining shares in the McLaren Technology Group, bringing to an end one of Formula 1’s longest partnerships. During his 37-year association with the team Dennis oversaw huge success, managing the team whilst the likes of Senna, Prost, Häkkinen, Lauda and Hamilton delivered the goods on the race track. A new company, McLaren Group, will now manage both the McLaren Technology Group and Automotive department.
Aston Martin announces all new-Vulcan
As if Aston Martin’s Vulcan wasn’t extreme-looking and fururistic enough already, the British marque has launched an even-higher performance version of its track-only supercar at the Goodwood Festival of Speed. The AMR Pro has an advanced track-hugging aerodynamic package and shorter gears than the original, making it ultra-fast through and off of the corners. The likely result will be breathtaking performance; the original Vulcan was already designed to be faster than the marque’s Le Mans-winning car. The first customer cars are expected to be ready by the Autumn.
Strakka invites fans to design Spa 24 livery
Art cars seem all the rage at the moment and following on from BMW’s and Aston Martin’s efforts, Strakka Racing is joining the party with an art car competition. Fans have been invited to design a livery for one of the team’s McLaren 650S race cars, which will feature during Blancpain’s showcase event: the Spa 24 Hours.
Peugeot launches 2018 Dakar challenger
It’s one of the world’s most gruelling rally raids and Peugeot is going for the Dakar hat-trick in 2018, having launched its latest challenger. Following two consecutive victories at the trans-South American event, the French marque has revealed its bigger and tougher 3008DKR Maxi, which nine-time World Rally champion Sébastien Loeb will hand its debut on the Silk Way Rally from Moscow to Xi’an in China next month.
Watch Peugeot’s latest Dakar challenger in action
Coronel’s Vila Real fire truck crash registered 25g
World Touring Car driver Tom Coronel suffered a horrible, freak accident at Vila Real last weekend, when a front-left wheel failure left him on a collision course with a fire engine. The Dutchman left the circuit on a fast downhill section and collided with the vehicle, with an impact measuring at an astonishing 25-g. The impact was more than enough to snap Coronel’s seat belts, but hankfully nobody was seriously injured.
Age is clearly just a number for F1’s evergreen double world champion Emerson Fittipaldi who, in a Royal Automobile Club Talk Show in association with Motor Sport, has revealed his plans to race his own GT car, the EF7, at Daytona and Sebring alongside his two grandsons. The Brazilian last raced in anger in 2014 behind the wheel of an AF Corse Ferrari at his home round of the World Endurance Championship and he hopes to realise this ambition in two years time. Should he win at Daytona, he would be the race’s oldest ever victor.
Read more about Emerson’s racing ambitions
A misbehaving headrest and an aggressive four-time world champion made the Azerbaijan Grand Prix a troubled affair for Lewis Hamilton, so you can forgive him for letting his mind wander after the race. “I’d love to get my hands on a MotoGP bike,” he told Monster Energy post-race. “I love bikes – I don’t really drive too much off-track, I tend to ride my MV Agusta bikes around.” Late last year five time world champion Jorge Lorenzo tested a Mercedes F1 car, so perhaps there’s a favour to be repaid.
Changing your team name in F1 is not a straight forward process. Over the years a team’s identity develops and changing the name can undo many years of work, but Force India has a good case. Having successfully brought F1 to India and having unfortunately been less successful in attracting Indian sponsors, the team is looking to rebrand internationally. Six company names of varying combinations of ‘Force One’ have recently been registered to a London address, with one of Vijay Mallya’s top associates the only listed company director. Having turned pink this year, the Silverstone-based squad could be set for another transformation next year.
Williams has become a quintessential Formula 1 icon. Since Clay Regazzoni secured the team’s first F1 win in Britain in 1979, success has followed in abundance with Mansell, Prost and Hill among the team’s greatest champions. The third most successful team on the F1 grid, only Ferrari has won more Constructors’ titles than this ambitious British team that continues to succeed at the sport’s pinnacle today.
‘Chaparral, Lola, McLaren, Porsche, Shadow… such marques gave us the big, bellowing, basically unlimited Can-Am sports-racers of 1966-1974. These mighty machines may be blazing into their golden anniversary years now, but they might well survive in the hearts of enthusiasts forever.
‘Why? Because they recall something now nearly extinct in motor racing: freedom of design.’
Read the full story on Can-Am’s heyday
Euro F3: Norisring, Germany
24H Series: Imola, Italy
BSB: Snetterton 300, UK
DTM: Norisring, Germany
WRC: Mikolajki, Poland
World RX: Höljes, Sweden
Festival of Speed: Goodwood, UK
We delve into the Motor Sport database to find the major events that have happened over the years, this week in motor sport:
June 27, 1985: F1 world champion Nico Rosberg is born. In profile
June 30, 1966: Giuseppe Farina, F1’s first race winner and world champion, dies. In profile
June 25, 1949: Patrick Tambay, twice an emotional victor with Ferrari, is born. In profile
June 25, 1939: Dick Seaman, Britain’s highest profile pre-war racing driver, dies. In profile
June 24, 1911: The great Juan Manuel Fangio is born. In profile
A wide variety of Lotus cars are often proffered as the ultimate F1 game-changer – but was the Lotus 76 an unusual candidate which trumps them all?
Finishing sixth in the Bahrain Grand Prix with broken wrists and a fractured toe, Lance Stroll is the latest racer to block out torturous pain rather than miss a race. Here are some of the most incredible stories
The hot pursuit of keeping up with Red Bull is causing serious headaches for Mercedes and Ferrari, with Aston Martin remaining realistic
Williams was the second-most improved F1 team at the Bahrain GP, with Alex Albon scoring a point. But new team principal James Vowles says that it will take years to break into the midfield fight, as he overcomes the legacy left by seasons of struggle