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Archive for the tag “Ferrari”

World Class Fernando

In one of the year’s most dramatic weekends of sport, Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso emphasises his global stature

And so Fernando has won another.  Those of us who predicted he would win the 2012 World Drivers’ Championship, even as the F2012 was furrowing brows and giving early-season pace away to the McLarens, Red Bulls, Lotus-Renaults and Mercedes, are in no way surprised.  Ferrari were always going to regroup; and there’s no-one better than Fernando when it comes to maximizing the good qualities of a car, minimizing its bad ones and stringing together a race weekend.  Spin on Fridays, win on Sundays.   The wonder, looking back, is that anyone didn’t think that a tight year like this would go Fernando’s way.

Hockenheim was standard Fernando fare:  changeable conditions and rain (defying the highly-rated weather forecasters) on Friday and Saturday afternoon.   No problem.   Push the car hard on both inters and wets, find the grip wide of the conventional racing line, stay quiet, smile the smile, wear the shades and take the pole – take two poles, as it happened, because his last two laps were good enough for P1.  Said timing was perfect, too:  quickest of all before the rain fell on Saturday morning, Fernando in the afternoon took advantage of the tracks left by other cars, the more so as time wore on.  He was out there, hunting for a lap, even as the chequered flag was unfurling.

The blue skies of a sparkling Sunday brought new tests.  Remember the dry-weather pace of Saturday morning.  Win the start.  Pull out a DRS-free lead.  Manage the tyres.  Manage the back-markers!

He did all of that.  In perhaps the truest test we’ve had yet of  the F2012’s current status, he was able to handle all aspects of Seb Vettel’s Red Bull (with margin to spare).  He could even enjoy a nice little cameo, courtesy of his old mate, Lewis Hamilton.  Delayed by an early-lap puncture, Lewis rejoined just behind Fernando and Seb on the road (but a lap down in reality) before proceeding to show his pace, using DRS to pass Seb without issue into the hairpin.  Incensed, Seb half-heartedly fought back, confused, I think, about whether he was “racing” Lewis or letting him go;  that is what his waved arms seemed to suggest, at any rate.   Fernando, in front, could only smile inwardly as his gap to Seb began to grow.  (It was difficult to see what Seb’s problem was:  if a guy like Lewis Hamilton isn’t allowed to unlap himself and race to the flag, then what was the 1967 Italian GP all about?)*

It was when Jenson Button jumped Vettel in the second pit stop (in part thanks to the time Seb had spent faffing around with Lewis, in part to McLaren’s amazing 2.3sec tyre change) that Fernando’s job description changed.   Suddenly he had a silver car in his mirrors, all over him, potentially butting into his DRS zone.

Suddenly Fernando, the great Manager of Races, had to become a Racing Driver, pure and simple.  Pit stop strategies had been played out. Radio messages from the pit wall about KERS or diff settings became superfluous, mere smokescreens.  Somewhere, somehow, he needed to dig deep, to find an advantage.

It came on the only sections of Hockenheim  worthy of the description “decent corners”: the last two right-handers of the lap and then Turn One – the quick right-hander followed by a shortish straight.  If Fernando could be perfect here for lap after closing lap then maybe he could generate enough space to protect himself from DRS detection out of the hairpin.  The McLaren would be better in and out of the slow stuff on the other parts of the lap;  no question about that.  The Ferrari is still no MP4-27 or RB7 – not when it comes to grip vs balance vs traction.   On the quicker corners, though, Fernando could impart some magic.

And so it began.

Avoid the mirrors out of the second hairpin and into the third one.  Use all the road and  perhaps a fraction more.  And then settle into those last two right-handers.  Run a little wide in the middle if necessary.  Fernando could manipulate the weight transfer, there, between the two corners, with a subtle nudge to create torque twist.   Minimise load for a clean run out of the last corner.  Into Turn One: again create that weight shift with an early turn-in, thus minimizing the amount of steering required mid-corner and leaving him free to adjust brake and throttle according to bumps, or the exit kerbs.  Behind, Jenson would be doing what he always does superbly well – turning in late, line-locking the McLaren into a soft apex/early power application zone, hitting a high minimum speed – but then paying a penalty with more load on exit.  The Ferrari, “lighter” from mid-corner to exit, would gain advantage as Fernando straightened out.   In freeze-frame it was all too clear:  Fernando was turning-in to One perhaps three kerb stripes earlier than Jenson’s McLaren.

Fernando’s replication was thereafter breathtaking.  Small errors were adjusted with such delicacy that they became “events” rather than mistakes; they made no dents in the sector times.   He looked from the outside to be “silky-smooth”;  his combined hand- and footwork made it so – but there was no excess there, no edge.  All of the movement was exactly apportioned;  all of it happened in anticipation of what would next unfold.  To the outside world, the Ferrari was a slot car.

He would try to be 0.6 – 0.7sec ahead before that DRS detection point.  He could feel the gap in his bones.  And there was traffic!  There were the red cars – the Marussias – and then some others.  Wait, wait, DRS them – and then time the pass  in an attempt to delay Jenson.  Not easy, but another lap gone.

Jenson was often there as they hit the brakes.  Fernando was obliged to run centre-right into the second hairpin.  Ease out of the brakes, apply initial steering, delay slightly, feel the grip, apply the substance of the lock – then accelerate hard but without jink.  No way Jenson would try him out on the outside into the next right.  No-one tries that outside stuff with Fernando…

He held that gap for two laps and then three – for three and then five.  And then an unexpected thing happened.  More and more, as the race wound down, Fernando could pick up a couple of tenths through those last three corners.  Jenson’s tyres were beginning to fade, just as Lewis’s had in Valencia.  Seb Vettel began to distract Jenson.  Fernando could once again breathe.

Fernando dipped down to the pit wall as the flag waved.  Three wins – and this one had come after a clear straight shoot-out with Red Bull and McLaren.  He’d taken the pole and he’d won the race.  Thankyou.  Thankyou.

It was good to see Jenson and McLaren back up there, for all that.  This is his sort of circuit – nice and sheltered, some dinky slow corners, none of those Valencia-style ch-of-ds that can be so tedious – and the McLaren, dressed in new side pods, in both the dry and on intermediates (but not wets, oddly), always competitive.  Seb Vettel, by contrast, was unable to do anything about Fernando in the early laps (despite those who predicted RBR walkaway domination after Valencia) or about JB until right at the end, when the McLaren’s Pirellis finally faded.  Seb’s driving looked strangely ragged this day, in front of his home crowd  (and Mark Webber, penalized by a gearbox change, was also surprisingly low-key).  Jenson protected the inside after being DRS’d but Seb passed him on the outside-exit of the hairpin, up on the kerbs. Seb argued that he would have run into the back of the McLaren if he hadn’t darted to the outside kerb but the key thing here, in judging whether or not this was an illegal drag race, is the phrase in article 20.2 of the Sporting Regs which says, “a driver may not deliberately leave the track without justifiable reason.”   I suspect that the stewards (who included Derek Warwick) would have asked Herr Vettel:  “Ah.  And you couldn’t have just backed off….?”

Kimi Raikkonen had one of his better days of the year so far, racing aggressively in the early stages to finish a convincing fourth for Lotus-Renault (if there is such a thing as a “convincing fourth”; the P3 Kimi inherited thanks to Seb’s penalty actually makes much better reading); and both Sauber drivers – Kamui particularly – drove well to finish fourth (ahead of Seb on penalty time) and sixth, beating Michael Schumacher’s three-stop, P3-starting Mercedes in the process.  Nico Hulkenberg also looked very good for Sahara Force India, particularly in wet qualifying, but faded in the dry eventually to finish ninth; and Scuderia Toro Rosso  had their best race in a long while.  In the context of 2012 that doesn’t say much but full credit is due to Franz Tost and the boys nonetheless for making solid progress.  The Caterhams, too, were tantalizingly close to the mid-field, their recent updates clearly buying them some ground.

One race to go, then, before the summer break – and still Fernando sets the gold standard.  On a weekend when Bradley Wiggins won the Tour de France; when Hashim Amla, in an astonishing example of self-control for spiritual reasons drank no fluids nor consumed food whilst scoring 311 not out for South Africa at a sun-baked Oval in London;  and when another great South African, Ernie Els, won The Open at Royal Lytham and St Annes, Fernando in Germany was able to stand right up there with the best of them.  F1 has its own, very brilliant, Class Act.

*At Monza, in 1967, Jim Clark famously unlapped himself after an early-race pit stop.  He then drove flat out in his Lotus 49, re-taking the lead of the Italian GP in the closing stages.  Jim ran short of fuel on the last lap, handing victory to John Surtees, but the die for posterity had been cast.

             

              

Chatting with Felipe

At a very pleasant function staged by Shell in London yesterday I had a quick word with Ferrari’s Felipe Massa…

St Jovite, Canada

I recently joined a few friends in a quiet corner of F1 paradise that used to be called St Jovite

Part One: “It’s idyllic…”

Part Two: “It was that sort of circuit…”

Peter Ryan scrapbook

Although Peter raced  for Canada on snow and Tarmac, he was actually an American citizen

Peter’s smudged caption says it all.  John was tragically killed at the Garmisch downhill in 1959

No doubt about Peter’s national loyalties when he raced the Porsche Spyder

Stirling Moss struck trouble with third gear and a damaged radiator at Mosport in 1961, but Peter Ryan was right up there with him in a similar car (Lotus 19).  Peter won the race – the September 30 Canadian Grand Prix for the Pepsi Cola Trophy.  Note maple leaf logo on the door

Having caught the attention of Colin Chapman, Peter was invited to race a third works Lotus 18/21 (to be entered by J Wheeler Autosport)  in the US Grand Prix at Watkins Glen the following week.  He qualified on the seventh row (ahead of such names as Olivier Gendebien, Roger Penske and Jim Hall) and finished an excellent ninth.  Peter moved to Europe for 1962 but was killed in a Formula Junior slipstream race at Reims when his Ian Walker Lotus 22 touched wheels with Bill Moss’s Gemini.  Wrote Peter Garnier, the Sports Editor of Autocar: “During his all too-brief-spell on British and Continental circuits, he had proved himself to be extremely skilful and fast, with just that touch of fire which can often indicate the makings of a great driver.” 

All photos courtesy of the Ryan Family Collection

Modena in the spring

One only has to look briefly at today’s world news to recognize that most of us are extremely fortunate to be living the way we do, and that each calamity, both man-made or otherwise, brings with it its own story.  I make no claim here about the level of importance  of the current spate of earthquakes in northern Italy.  Having recently spent a few glorious days there in the spring, however, I can but feel a small part of the reality of the tragedy of the region.  Modena today is like a ghost-town;  hospital staff are being obliged to work in half-strength facilities. Buildings have been demolished;  people are living on a knife-edge, wondering when the next shock will arrive.

I hope our “Modena in the Spring” trilogy (below) – recorded with my friend and colleague, Nigel Roebuck, before the quakes – provides at least some of the flavour of this wonderful part of the world. For those interested, Jonathan Giacobazzi has researched the best possible way of helping those caught up in the misery:  the link to the Italian Red Cross, and other details, are published below.  Thanks for your support.

With special thanks to Jonathan Giacobazzi, Nigel Roebuck and Diego Merino

Pictures:  Nigel Roebuck and Peter Windsor Collections; SuttonImages

Italian Red Cross: http://www.cri.it/flex/cm/pages/ServeBLOB.php/L/IT/IDPagina/1

Bank details:
TO: “Croce Rossa Italiana, Via Toscana 12 – 00187 Roma”
BANK:  Banca Nazionale del Lavoro – Filiale di Roma Bissolati
TO SPECIFY : “Sisma Emilia Romagna”
SWIFT BANK CODE:  BIC/SWIFT: BNL II TRR

Ferrari have also created an on-line auction in aid of the earthquake victims: the team’s full statement is as follows:

“Maranello, May 31: Ferrari will open an international on-line auction to raise funds for the families of the victims of the earthquakes that have rocked the Emilia- Romagna region since May 20.

In the days leading up to the auction next week, http://www.ferraristore.com will dedicate a section to this important initiative which sets out to contribute significant sums to those families who have lost loved ones.

The auction will include important and rare items, such as a 599XX Evo, the extreme, non-homologated sports berlinetta with a commercial value of €1.3 million. This extreme sports car incorporates the very best of Ferrari technology, the result of on- going Research and Development activities in the GT division and advanced experimentation in F1. The 599 XX Evo features a package of performance-enhancing technical features for the exclusive, dedicated track-based research and development programme for the 2012-2013 seasons.

There will also be a strong Formula 1 theme, starting with a V8 engine along with racing suits and helmets donated by the Scuderia’s drivers, Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa, as well as numerous items of memorabilia from the works racing cars from past seasons.

Also featuring in the auction will be a selection from the Ferrari Store, including Prancing Horse watches.

As soon as news about the earthquakes came out, Ferrari clients and collectors from around the world spontaneously contacted the Maranello headquarters to offer their contribution. Once again the generosity of Ferrari’s enthusiasts will enable the company to provide support to those most hit by the tragedy. A demonstration of solidarity that, in recent years, has contributed to the reconstruction in Abruzzo after the earthquake, as well as the building of two after-school facilities in Ishinomaki in Japan after last year’s disaster for which Ferrari contributed over 80 million Japanese yen.”

 

Time with M. Todt

At the FIA’s Paris headquarters in la Place de la Concorde, I spoke recently to the FIA President about motor sport, the politics of motor sport and F1 in particular

The august offices of the FIA are undergoing renovation.  New floor tiles lie neatly stacked in the lobby entrance; workmen come and go, lugging timbers and assorted wiring through the narrow corridors and stairwells.

All, however, is calm.  There is a serenity that suggests efficiency-combined-with-pace.  Outside, la Place de la Concorde is still the centre-point of a world map you may like to draw, a cobblestoned tribute to architectural elegance that has transcended the ages.  The pavements are wide, the Parisiens altogether in a hurry: the homeless are not avoided but then neither are they indulged.

I am greeted by Norman Howell, Jean Todt’s urbane, multi-lingual Communications Director.  The conversation quickly turns to the nearby Jardin des Tuileries and its Galerie Nationale du Jeu de Paume – the exquisite ‘Palm Juice’ contemporary art gallery – in which many a short lunchhour has happily vanished.

It is difficult, in short, to picture now the F1 world-changing…conflagrations… that characterized the FIA’s tenure in this little corner of the world during the 80s, 90s and early 2000s.   This is a different place.   This is the old beauty restored.

We walk into the office of M. Todt.  The paint is new, the space vast.  To the President’s left sits la Place de la Concorde, to his right a small courtyard.  We are on the first floor.  A few functionary items colour the expansive desk  – a carriage clock, filing trays, Mont Blanc pens.  Behind, a row of photographs bear testament to the President’s career.  Alpine-Renaults and Peugeots in various states of rally wear mingle with Michael Schumacher’s Ferrari and the Le Mans-winning Peugeot.  Jean Todt and Timo Makkinen beam from the bonnet of a mud-smeared Mercedes;  and there, over the left, is Jim Clark.  It looks like the 1965 German GP and the Lotus 33.

My previous experience with M Todt is unsettling.  I once began a TV interview with him with the words, “M Todt.  We’re now at the half-way point of the season so could we ask you for a mid-term assessment from Ferrari’s perspective?”

“Impossible,” he said tersely.  “There are 17 races this year, so how can you call race eight the half-way point?”

“Ah,” Norman had said when I recounted the story over lunch.  “M Todt is very precise with numbers.  To his credit, he is numerically brilliant.  Amazing brain.  But he is a stickler for detail.”

M Todt is wearing a sports jacket, tie and grey slacks. He shakes hands, sits back in his chair and invites me to do likewise.  All is quiet.  I begin with a subject close to my heart:

“What do you think about the current route for young drivers to Formula One?  Are there are too many championships, too many one-make series?  And is it is too expensive for the returns offered by the non-F1 oriented media?

His eyes sparkle; he sits forward a little.

“We are really into that,” he says with the Franglais emphasis.   “We are involved in many projects and it is amongst our priorities.  The subject is addressed but not covered.  So, for me, we have to create a strong link between the karting organizations and the new single-seater commission – a new commission that I created just over a year ago.  Barry Bland was originally Chairman but when he realized that he couldn’t devote the necessary time to the work he was replaced by Gerhard Berger.  We really want to build the ideal road from karting to F1.   It is easy to say that;  it is much more difficult to achieve it.  We have to make an inventory of the situation and then build an action-plan and then apply that action-plan.  So at the moment we are at the first step – the assessment of the situation.  But the idea is quite clear and I am quite optimistic that, over the next five years, we will see a strong outcome.”

Other leaders in other worlds talk about “action-plans” and “assessments” in a way that clearly suggests they’ll never happen.  With Todt, there is no such inference.  He enunciates the words “action-plan” almost as if he is barking an order, underlining the “action”.

Thus it is refreshing to hear his words.  He is not irretrievably wedded to the concept of the F1 world also controlling GP2 andGP3.

“Do you envisage just one championship in every tier?”

“Yes.  Ideally – and again on paper – it’s very easy:  karting,  Formula 4, Formula 3,  Formula 2,  Formula 1.   The problem is to assess the situation and to see how you can achieve that – and with whom you can achieve it.”

“So how do you feel about the current situation?  F3 and GP3.  WSR and GP2…?”

“In my opinion,” he says, “there are at the moment too many single-seater categories.  So we need carefully to re-assess that.   And motor racing is too expensive, so we have to address that, too.  Then we will come to some conclusion and to an action-plan.  But it’s too early to get into that now.”

Topic over.  I move on.

“Why did you seek the FIA Presidency?” I ask.

“Maybe because I was crazy!  No, seriously – you can see the photographs behind me.  I was interested in motor racing since I was a boy.  I was not able to forsee what I was able to do – and maybe I was hoping to do some things I did not do.  I was elected President in 2009 but I first became involved as a co-driver in 1966, so I felt that after 43 years it was a good opportunity to go for the election.  I did not know if was going to be elected;  you cannot choose to do this job, so I was always very cautious.   I thought it would be a good payback to an industry, to a sport, to which I had given a lot and from which I had gained a lot.  So I think it was fair to give that back and, rather than criticising from the outside, I am in the position to contribute to constructive changes as I think they should be.  That’s why I went for it.  I was not thinking it would be so time- and brain-consuming. (You know, one of the reasons I stepped out from Ferrari was because it was difficult to achieve more and I wanted to have some time for ‘me’.   As it has turned out, I probably have less time ‘for me’ than I had in the past, acting as a volunteer, but it’s a choice I made without maybe thinking about all that was behind.)”

“How different has reality been?”

“I was quite open in my mind before I began.  I knew it was a difficult job, a difficult position.  But I didn’t know a lot about the background, even though I had been in involved in the sport for a few decades.  Until you get into the position you do not know all that is behind it.  I can now say that it is a very complex, heavy organization, because you have the elected people, you have the management, you have one headquarters in Paris, one in Geneva, one organization in Brussels, another in the UK, you have the Mobility side, which is a side very unknown to outsiders, you have the sport organization.  Myself, I committed to travel  – to visit our clubs located in 132 different countries.  So far, in the first two years, I’ve visited 104 countries, so hopefully by the end of the year I will have visited all of our FIA community – all of that combined with the daily work in Paris and Geneva and attending some F1,  some raliies, some Endurance, some Touring Car, some GT….it makes life busy.”

Indeed.  If I had a sense of M Todt’s work ethic in the Ferrari years I have it the more so now.  For the first time, I concede to myself, I am intrigued by the President’s trademark Road Safety programme.  How on earth has he found the time to energize it?

“You must be very humble, and that is why I took such a risk in getting so involved with road safety – to give some attention to road safety.  The assessment is easy.  You have 1.3m people who die every year on the road. 50m people are injured on the roads.  If nothing is done properly by the governments, by 2020 we will have 2m dead and 80m people injured every year.    Road accidents will be the world’s Number One cause of fatalities and injuries.   In front of malaria – in front of every illness.   The first responsibility does, of course, lie with each country.  In developed countries like France and the UK a lot has been done and something still remains to be done.  But, for example, I was recently in Kinshasa, Congo, where there are no roads and a modern car is at least ten years old.  No education.  No safety belts.  Not enough fuel.  No traffic lights.  No helmets for bike riders who sit sometimes five on a bike because there is no public transport organization.

“At the FIA we must be realistic.  I’m sure we can give a strong contribution by working very closely with the World Bank, working very closely with the World Health Organization,  by talking with governments, talking with the Red Cross – talking with all the institutions.  I don’t want to say that we can provide ‘leadership’ – because, again, that’s very presumptuous – but I really feel that we can have some good input, you know, to promote a bigger awareness.  Sometimes people say, ‘financially, what can you do?’  The FIA has not the means but we can contribute with lobbying.  For example, I’m quite happy to have initiated the combined support of all the sporting federations around the world, including the Olympic Committee and our top drivers and competitors, claiming Action for Road Safety.  If you speak to any sort of sporting champion, if they drive their car now, they think they have a bigger responsibility.  So, slowly, slowly, things have started to move.  It’s such a big programme, but I think the first step is to take it into consideration and then to start to move slowly forwards with education, road infrastructure and vehicles.  Those three parameters have to be worked together.”

At once, the rally co-driver who knew the East African Safari as well as he did the Rally of the Thousand Lakes or the Argentine Rally of the Codasur is mixing that earthiness with the skill of a politician honed by the French and seasoned by a over decade at Ferrari.  Who else in the world of motor sport is thinking in terms of the World Bank or the Red Cross?

I am wonder, then, about M Todt’s feeling for the insular world that has become F1.  It is effectively hermetically sealed (along with GP2 and GP3) from the rest of motor sport – and to some extent from the real world of Kinshasan road tolls.  I ask him about his feelings for F1 and about recent developments – about DRS, for example.

“For me, F1 is at a very high level,” he says. “In all of sport, F1 is a very strong category.   Obviously the different stakeholders have a responsibility to address the future – and the future is:  how to reduce the costs;  how to improve the show; and how you can implement new technologies.  Because F1 is the pinnacle of motor sport it must also be an ambassador of motor sport.  People will not understand if you do not put that on board.  As for DRS, it’s an interesting new technology  like the energy recovery system (KERS) and the new powertrain regulation from 2014.  So all that goes in the right direction, so, if, on top of that, we can apply a strong message from the stakeholders to road safety then I think we can be optimistic for the future.  But we have to consider very carefully the cost and the content of the technical and sporting regulations…and we are ‘on it’.”

“Are you ‘on it’ as much as you want to be?,” I ask, alluding to the autonomy of F1 and its stakeholders.

“The structure of F1 has taken quite a lot of influence of the FIA but this is something we are addressing and I must say we are building a very strong relationship with the teams and they are even asking themselves for support on cost control regulations that would be less demanding financially, so I feel we have started a very good partnership, if I may say so.  I’m against being a dictator, because it’s better to guide with harmony, by people sharing their views rather than people imposing their views.”

“How specifically can F1 reduce costs?”

“You have to address the number of parts you change every year.  I don’t think people on the outside would notice the difference if you limit the number of brake callipers or discs, for example – if you limit the things that do cost money.  I think there is quite a potential there and it is something that we are now considering.”

Bernard Ecclestone has famously been less than civil about M Todt in recent months – “We don’t need Todt in F1” – so how is the President’s relationship with the man who epitomises the word “stakeholder”(even if, technically, the rights are today owned by CVC Capital Partners)?

“I’ve known Bernie for many years.  In a way, he has been probably responsible for me joining F1 because I knew him from the sports and rally car times.   We always had a good collaboration and he was the one who gave my name to the board of FIAT, as a result of which I joined Ferrari.  Now I’m in a different position.  Of course he was used to working with Max Mosley for 30, 40 – 50 years – and it has changed!  But it is fine, you know.  I do respect him, because I think he has built something amazing, which is one of the best sports in all categories taken together, and for me I do respect his position as commercial rights holder.  My responsibility is to make sure that the FIA’s position is respected.   So sometimes we may have some discussions;  I’m not concerned with anything he may say about me.  My main concern is to look after the interests of the FIA, and of the sport, and to have a good leadership in the organization.”

I ask about M Todt’s current feelings for Ferrari.  How much as he been able to cut off from the team with which he won six World Drivers’ Championships (five with Michael, one with Kimi Raikkonen)?

“I love motor sport, so I follow any kind of category, and, in my position, it’s good because I have access to all the results, the times, etc.   It was exactly the same when I left Peugeot.  I was still interested in the results but it was behind me.   It was a chapter of my life – as Ferrari has been a great chapter of my life.   We have been suffering, sweating and enjoying, and now it’s something that I remember.  I still have some friends at Ferrari but I’m not any more involved in the business.  I always wish the best to everybody and I really wish the best to them.  Michael is a personal friend.  He’s a great human being, a great champion.   To succeed in motor racing and in F1 you must first have the car and the team and then be able to exploit it. Now he is somewhere near having that” – we spoke prior to Michael’s pole at Monaco – “I hope for him, for Mercedes, that 2012 will be continue to be as competitive.”

I ask if it saddened him at all to see Michael struggling to out-qualify and out-race his team-mate in 2010-11.

“No,” he says emphatically.  “People are living for the media coverage every day.  And every day there is something new.  At first Michael was murdered, then it seems that he improved a little.  One day it will be completely forgotten but what will never be forgotten is what he has won as a seven-times World Champion.”

The conversation turns to the new-look World Endurance Championship.  Sports car racing has suffered over the past 20 years because of the growth of F1 and because of F1’s penchant for seizing the cream from every bottle.  How important is the WEC to the new FIA President?

“I’m very happy, because that was one of the things I wanted to restore.  The FIA World Endurance Championship now has a link with the ACO for them to be the promoter of one of the most dynamic races on our calendar – the 24 Hours of Le Mans.    We must never forget that we are not yet over the world economic crisis and that there is still a strong interest for this category.  It will not be easy. It’s never easy.  But I’m confident that we are able to do a good job.”

With so much TV coverage directed towards F1, however, I ask M Todt how the WEC can in its own right generate the sort of media exposure it needs in order to prosper.  His answer surprises me:

“We are just starting the business of New Media.  I’m not familiar with it;  I’m probably too old for it; I have not the culture.  Internet, webtv,  website, twitter, facebook….I’m sure there are a lot of developments here that will be very good for motor racing.  Now we are addressing that and I’m optimistic that we will have good results.”

So here is a President who by his own admission has not embraced the internet – and who still carries his luggage because he feels that wheeled luggage is “too modern” –  here he is, saying that New Media and the internet could yet be the new global audience for the WEC and other categories on the rise.    (If ever you needed a sign of the changes in the air, this is it:  our discussion did not embrace the future of the World Rally Championship, but I understand that the FIA are looking closely at developing their own web-based support coverage of the series.  In this respect, of course, the F1 world lives on a very different planet.  For them, network TV is everything.)

So what of Jean Todt the man?  How does he view the future?  How does he live his life?

“I’m elected for a further 19 months.  I still have a lot of things to do before I can be asked whether I will stand for re-election or not.

I’m very fortunate in my life – particularly when virtually every day I can appreciate how lucky I am compared with most of the people in this world.  So I would never complain.  Saying that, it takes a lot of my time but I’m very lucky.  I have a fantastic wife, a fantastic son, I have our Brain and Spinal Cord Institute, which is another pleasing development, so I’m in the category of lucky people.  I’m healthy – although you never know what can happen – so I have nothing to complain about.”

Famous for wearing brown Tod’s slip-ons with his Ferrari uniform, Todt is his own man;  no doubt about that.  He is at once “modern” and a man of his generation.  He is conscious of staying fit but jokes that he only has the willpower to exercise “when it’s convenient”.   He regularly walks the five floors of stairs to his Paris apartment and the Geneva office.  And he travels.  Travels.  Different time zones.  Different cultures and foods.

What drivers – rally and racing – mean the most to him?

“It’s always a combination, as I said earlier:  car and driver.  Timo Makkinen.  Hannu Mikkola.   They were very talented drivers.  I’ve been a co-driver for 20 drivers or even more.  Maybe my most spectacular experience was the 1978 Round South America rally I did with Timo in a Mercedes.  That is why I have a picture of it here.  30.000km in 30 days.  Probably that was a very special rally in my career.

“When I was a teenager, Jim Clark was one of the drivers who made me fascinated with the sport.  Jim and Dan Gurney, so, for me, they became the ‘profile’ of the driver.   We were talking about Michael earlier, but when Michael joined Ferrari in 1996 he was just coming from two world championships.  He then hardly managed to win three Grand Prix and he had to wait until 2000 to win the championship again.   Was it because he wasn’t motivated?  No.  It was because he didn’t have the car to enable him to be World Champion.”

Practical and logical.  Car and driver.  We talk some more – about M Todt’s parents (his father was a doctor, his mother an artist); we talk about his perception of himself – “I’m a very structured and organized person and hopefully very reliable”;  we talk about backgammon – his game of choice; and we talk about life – about the passage of time and the way he views it:

“I always like to live with what is going in front of me,” says M Todt, rising to bring the interview to a close.

Photographs:  SuttonImages

Remembering Gilles – Part 3: “He was allowed into the playground…”

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