ibsey wrote:Was it Enzo Ferrari still insisting that "Aerodynamics were for teams who couldn't build proper engines"?
Wouldn't surprise me. Old Enzo always came across to me as a massive stick-in-the-mud who wouldn't change anything about his team or his cars until they were thrashed so hard by the competition he'd be forced to do so, however grudgingly. And then, the changes would work, and they'd be back to winning ways. Take 1960: Ferrari, with their old-fashioned, front-engined car that had resulted from Enzo continuing to say "hmph, the horse pulls the cart, it does not push it" were given such a kicking by Jack Brabham and Cooper that they only managed to win in Italy because the Monza organisers shifted the goalposts so far in their favour by bringing back the banked track that half the field boycotted the race. Enzo had to change, so he did - and in 1961, with the rear-engined shark-nose 156, Ferrari were back on top again. But the old biffer didn't learn from his mistakes! Take 1973; Ferrari were yet again being trounced by those "garagistes" that Enzo must have arrogantly assumed he had a divine right to beat. The 312B2 was an elderly design; the Lotus 72 that had debuted at the same time wasn't, and it was one-way traffic. Never mind no wins; no podiums, either, and that should have been all the evidence that was needed to shelve the B3 for a newer car. It wasn't... and the main reason why 1974 was better were due to the words "Niki" and "Lauda". What could he do if he was finally given a contemporary car to compete with? The answer came in 1975 with the launch of the 312T... boom, championship. Lightning wouldn't strike three times, though, would it? I suppose we might be able to let Enzo off a bit for the 1980 disaster, given that the 312T4 was a championship winner in 1979, but the year before we'd all seen what the ground-effect Lotus 79 could do when it wasn't breaking down the way any Lotus was expected to, and in 1979 Ferrari were certainly aided by Lotus shooting themselves in the face with the 80. The real wake-up call should have come from Williams and the winning streak Alan Jones went on at the end of the season - plus, Renault had just racked up the first win for a turbo. Yet again, Enzo didn't see the writing on the wall, or maybe he did and he was still convinced that he would be proved right even though one of these new challengers wasn't a garagiste. I don't think anyone could have foreseen how badly wrong 1980 would go, though; Ferrari had two top-drawer drivers, one of whom was the World Champion and the other would surely be (we'd have said so at the time), the T5 was an update of the T4 so they hadn't stood completely still, but even so, if it hadn't taken all of Gilles Villeneuve's skill to wrench two fifth places out of it as its best result, if Jody Scheckter hadn't fallen to an ignominious DNQ in Canada, I can't help thinking 1981 would have seen Ferrari starting the season with the 312T6 instead of finally seeing the light. OK, the 126CK wasn't a great car, but look who hauled it to two wins, and when it was finally updated to be the car it always should have been in 1982, I have no doubt that Gilles Villeneuve would have driven it to the championship if he hadn't been killed at Zolder, despite the intra-team unpleasantness and the FISA-FOCA politics... despite the tumultuous 1982 season which Ferrari were right at the centre of, that car did eventually win the Constructors' Championship.
(Now, I wonder if there'll be an errant "Bathplug" with a capital B in there?)