• Goodwood - The history of F1: the 1970s

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    Damien Smith
    The history of F1: the 1970s

    Bernie Ecclestone was little more than a minor player up until the early
    1970s. A sometime racer in 500cc Formula 3, he’d befriended and advised
    the promising Stuart Lewis-Evans, until the south Londoner succumbed to
    burns sustained in a crash at the 1958 Moroccan Grand Prix. The
    second-hand car trader subsequently withdrew from the race tracks to
    focus on… empire building, let’s say – until Jochen Rindt rocked up in the mid-1960s. As the Austrian’s star rose in the first year of the new decade, so too did Ecclestone’s – but in a quieter, less demonstrative,
    but by no means less effective manner.

    Read part one of this series here: The history of F1: The 1950s


    Again, Bernie lost a good friend to this bloodthirsty sport, when Rindt
    was killed at the wheel of his Lotus 72 at Monza on 5th September 1970,
    having already gathered enough points to become F1’s only uncrowned
    world champion – a ghoulish honour that will remain forever unique (we
    hope). But this time, Ecclestone chose not to drift back into the
    shadows. Instead, he bought Brabham, for a snip from designer/engineer
    Ron Tauranac, who had no hope against such a man. Bernie had now thrust
    his well-heeled boot firmly into the F1 door – and the rest of him would
    soon follow.

    From our supposedly enlightened perspective, the early 1970s seem
    endearingly colourful, uncomplicated, raw and refreshingly untamed – at
    least from an F1 perspective. But the reality was a wider world that had
    been made drab and brought low, in stark contrast to the sunny optimism
    of the preceding decade, by the lingering grind of the Vietnam War,
    increasing social and trade union unrest, deepening political cynicism
    and a fuel crisis that led to the economic stall of the three-day week.
    Life was grim for many. Much like David Bowie, racers and jetsetters
    Jackie Stewart, Emerson Fittipaldi and Clay Regazzoni must have looked
    to most like they had beamed in from another planet.

    The cars they drove were ever closer to the ground, sitting on wide,
    slick tyres and gripped by ever-expanding wings on the noses and hung
    out the rear. And national colours were suddenly passe. Tyrrells were
    Elf deep blue, Brabhams turned Martini white, Lotuses were first red,
    white and gold in deference to the Gold Leaf tobacco brand, then
    unforgettably, dramatic fag-packet black and gold. And Colin Chapman
    wasn’t troubled to sign away his team’s name either when there were
    sponsor dollars to be had – so the Lotus 72 became the John Player
    Special. Nothing was sacred in the gauche 1970s, including, it seemed,
    the life of racing drivers.

    As Stewart and Fittipaldi shared world titles, their friends and
    colleagues perished around them: Piers Courage, Jo Siffert, Roger
    Williamson, Helmuth Koinigg, Peter Revson – and for Jackie, the final heartbreak. Francois Cevert. Worn down by the stress, fear and sheer
    numbers of those he’d lost, Stewart had already decided to call it a day
    at the end of 1973, telling only Ken Tyrrell of his intention. Wife
    Helen didn’t need to know, she’d only live in greater fear, counting
    down the races. Then at the last one, his friend, protégé, team-mate and anointed successor crashed through the steel barriers in practice at
    Watkins Glen. Stewart, his career numbers forever frozen on 99 GP
    starts, 27 wins and three world titles, never raced again.

    F1-1974-Nurburgring-Emerson-Fittipaldi-McLaren-M23-MI-Goodwood-17112020.jpg

    Fittipaldi, disenchanted by Chapman and the loss of a title he felt
    should have been his, left for McLaren and in 1974 became champion for a
    second time. But now here was a new threat, like Rindt, another
    straight-ahead character from Austria, a buck-toothed oddball at first dismissed as a ‘pay driver’. There were hints at March and BRM, but once
    he was in a Ferrari all doubts were banished: Niki Lauda was the real deal.

    Read part two of this series here: The history of F1: The 1960s

    F1-1975-Silverstone-Niki-Lauda-Clay-Regazzoni-Mauro-Forghieri-Luca-di-Montezemolo-Ferrari-312T-David-Phipps-MI-Goodwood-17112020.jpg

    Ferrari had slumped to a low ebb by ’73, cushioned to the bosom of Fiat
    but riven by politics and malice. Bespectacled genius Mauro Forghieri
    had paid for the failures (not for the first time) but now was ushered
    back, by a smooth-talking lawyer with energy and a vision. He’d seen an
    ally in Lauda, who knew Forghieri was the key – and the perfectly
    packaged and proportioned 312T was unlocked. Nine pole positions, five
    wins: this was as close to domination as it got in the cut-and-thrust of (mostly) Cosworth DFV-powered F1 in the mid-’70s. Ferrari, against the
    grain, had put the garagistes back in their place.

    But then Fittipaldi pulled the pin and sensationally quit McLaren to
    join his brother Wilson in a Brazilian dream-team (that would slowly
    turn into a nightmare). Who on earth would replace him? James Hunt was
    all that was left.

    F1-1976-Japan-Niki-Lauda-James-Hunt-Barry-Sheene-David-Phipps-MI-Goodwood-17112020.jpg

    But McLaren had inadvertently struck gold with the lanky English public
    school boy, who had been so error-prone early on he’d been nicknamed ‘Shunt’. At Hesketh, for anyone who cared to look beyond the champagne patriotism, he’d proven his worth, most notably beating Lauda fair and
    square at Zandvoort in ’75. Now Fittipaldi had unknowingly gifted him an
    M23 – and Hunt was ready to fly.

    As punk created a ‘Year Zero’ effect in British sensibilities, so too
    did Hunt and Lauda in the closeted, niche sport of F1 during the long,
    hot summer of ’76. They’d been friends and flat-mates before all this,
    but now they were pitted in the middle of a raging Ferrari vs. McLaren
    rivalry. Early on, Lauda had the edge, but Hunt clawed his way into the
    fight, winning brilliantly in Spain – only to be disqualified on a technicality. At Brands, the feud boiled as fans pelted cans on to the
    track in protest that Hunt was to be barred from the restart, following
    chaos at Paddock Bend. The blue-blazered officials bristled, they’d
    never seen such a thing – and relented. Hunt won, and only months later
    would be disqualified.

    Then Niki had his accident at Bergwerk. The Nürburgring – the long,
    original one, dubbed The Green Hell by Stewart – was already an
    anachronism by August 1976. In the aftermath of Lauda’s fiery accident
    it would become revered, but no longer feared, F1 history.

    Lauda’s fight for life and brave comeback six weeks later at Monza – complete with gaudy images of him gingerly peeling a sweat and
    blood-soaked balaclava from his burnt, raw face and head – define that
    year, that decade, perhaps Niki himself, but only for a voyeuristic
    wider world attracted solely to the horror-movie adrenaline ride of this insanity that hid behind the name of ‘sport’. Ecclestone, growing in understanding of what F1 could become and increasingly a voice of
    cohesive influence among the British teams, took note.

    The live TV coverage of the soaking finale at Fuji was the culmination,
    as Lauda found a new level of mental fortitude by bravely walking away
    from the craziness. Hunt overcame a puncture and pitstop to become
    champion – to his initial disbelief – by a solitary point. It had been
    like a movie script (and would be one day).

    F1-1977-Zandvoort-Niki-Lauda-Ferrari-312T2-David-Phipps-MI-Goodwood-17112020.jpg

    On the back of 1976, Ecclestone negotiated TV deals that would make F1 a regular visitor to living rooms on Sunday afternoons, and began to
    unleash the potential. On track in ’77, Lauda – who had lost his ally di Montezemolo at the end of his first championship year – set aside his
    fury at Ferrari for its doubt and lack of loyalty in his darkest hours
    to claim another title, then exacted cold revenge by immediately
    quitting for Ecclestone’s Brabhams. He could have been champion again in ’78 – had Bernie not spotted the bigger picture and withdrawn Gordon Murray’s potentially game-changing BT46B fan car after its maiden
    victory at Anderstorp. Murray was exasperated, but Ecclestone was canny
    enough to recognise F1’s momentum would be lost by one-team domination.

    F1-1978-Brands-Hatch-Ronnie-Peterson-Colin-Chapman-Mario-Andretti-David-Phipps-MI-Goodwood-17112020.jpg

    Chapman was less concerned when his ‘Black Beauty’, the stunning Type
    79, swept through the rest of the summer in the hands of Mario Andretti
    and Ronnie Peterson. Here was the true force of the 1970s, as
    ground-effects aerodynamics began to be fully harnessed. But still the
    cruelty of this sport knew no bounds, as beloved Peterson was lost when complications set in to the leg injuries sustained at Monza. “Motor
    racing is also this,” said his sorrowful team-mate and new world
    champion Andretti.

    F1-1979-Kyalami-Jody-Scheckter-Ferrari-312T4-MI-Goodwood-17112020.jpg

    The final year of the decade would point the way towards the next one,
    as Chapman blew the Lotus advantage and lost his way, Lauda quit
    mid-season to run an airline and Frank Williams – once a no-hoper and so-called start-line specialist – unlocked the key to lasting F1 success
    in partnership with his new friend Patrick Head. The FW07 – a properly engineered and fully realised ‘copy’ of the Lotus 79 – broke through at Silverstone as Regazzoni claimed a swansong victory, then blunt
    instrument Alan Jones proved once and for all that his opportunistic win
    at the Osterreiching for Shadow back in 1977 hadn’t been a flash in the
    pan. After missing out at Silverstone, he won four out the next five
    grands prix.

    But it was too late to overhaul Jody Scheckter’s Ferrari 312T4, the
    South African finally securing the title he’d spent the whole decade
    chasing: wiping out the Surtees team by triggering a pile-up at
    Silverstone in ’73; maturing at Tyrrell; winning in the bizarre-looking
    but effective six-wheeled P34 he couldn’t love in ’76; then scoring first-time out in the new Wolf at the start of ’77. But the culmination
    for this former wild child would come in Ferrari red, in partnership
    with his new friend and team-mate, the mercurial Gilles Villeneuve. A
    pure-bred sportsman, Gilles would gallantly support Scheckter at Monza, reasoning that his own time would come. Wouldn’t it?

    As the decade turned, F1 eyed a new age of super-power, as the overblown
    boost of the new turbos threatened to end the long life of the
    dependable DFV – and the little bloke who owned Brabham wheeled and
    dealed his way into the heart of this increasingly epic tale. It was
    Ecclestone himself who would turn out to be the biggest super-power of
    them all.

    Images courtesy of Motorsport Images.

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