Scuderia Ferrari is the name
for the Gestione Sportiva, the division of the Ferrari
automobile
company concerned with racing. The racing team has competed
in numerous classes of motorsport since its formation in
1929. Currently the team races in Formula One only,
under the team name "Scuderia Ferrari". The Scuderia and Ferrari
Corse Clienti also manage the racing activities of numerous Ferrari
customers and private teams in other categories of
motorsport.
Scuderia Ferrari is statistically the most successful F1 team in
history (with a record of 15
drivers'
championships and 16
constructors'
championships won). It is also the oldest surviving team,
having competed since 1948. The team is one of the most popular in
motorsport, with a great number of supporters known as
tifosi.
The team's current drivers are
Felipe
Massa and
Fernando Alonso, and
its test drivers are
Luca Badoer and
Marc Gené, who, ironically, were
teammates at
Minardi back in 1999. Massa
sustained a serious head injury during qualifying for the
Hungarian Grand Prix and has since
been unable to race.
Giancarlo
Fisichella is Massa's temporary replacement. On 30 September
2009 Ferrari announced that they had signed
Fernando Alonso to a three-year contract to
drive for them starting in 2010. Alonso will replace
Kimi Räikkönen.
Early history
Originally founded by
Enzo Ferrari in
1929 to enter amateur drivers in various races, in 1933 Scuderia
Ferrari became the acting racing team of
Alfa
Romeo. In October 1939 Enzo Ferrari left Alfa when the racing
activity stopped and immediately began work a racecar of his own,
the
Tipo 815 (eight
cylinders, 1.5 L displacement). The 815s, designed by
Alberto Massimino, were thus the first
Ferrari cars.
World War II put a
temporary end to racing, and after the war, Ferrari constructed the
12-cylinder, 1.5 L
Tipo 125,
the first racing car to bear the Ferrari name. Ferrari entered the
Formula One World Championship on its formation in 1950.
Headquarters
The
Scuderia Ferrari team is based in Maranello
, Italy, adjacent to Ferrari's road car
factory. The team owns and operates a test track on
the same site, the Fiorano Circuit
built in 1972, which has been used for testing road
and race cars.
Formula One
1950s
Ferrari debuted in the
Formula One World
Championship in the
1950
Monaco Grand Prix with the
125
F1, sporting a supercharged version of the 125 V12, and two
experienced and successful drivers,
Alberto Ascari and
Gigi Villoresi.The company later switched to
the large-displacement naturally-aspirated formula for the
275, 340, and 375 F1 cars. The Alfa Romeo
team dominated the
1950 Formula
One season, winning all eleven events it entered (six World
Championship events and five non-Championship races), but Ferrari
broke their streak in 1951 when rotund driver
José Froilán González
took first place at the
1951
British Grand Prix.
After the
1951 Formula One
season the Alfa team withdrew from F1, causing the authorities
to adopt the
Formula Two regulations due
to the lack of suitable F1 cars. Ferrari entered the 2.0 L
4-cyl
Ferrari Tipo 500, which went
on to win almost every race in which it competed in the
1952 Formula One season with drivers
Ascari,
Giuseppe Farina, and
Piero Taruffi; Ascari took the World
Championship after winning six consecutive races.
In the 1953 Formula One season, Ascari won
only five races but another world title; at the end of that season,
Juan Manuel Fangio beat the
Ferraris in a Maserati
for the
first time.
The
1954 Formula One season
brought new rules for 2.5 L engines; Ferrari's new car,
designated the
Ferrari Tipo 625,
could barely compete against Fangio with the Maserati and then the
Mercedes-Benz W196 which appeared
in July. Ferrari had only two wins, González at the
1954 British Grand Prix and
Mike Hawthorn at the
1954 Spanish Grand Prix. In
1955 Formula One season Ferrari did
no better, winning only the
1955
Monaco Grand Prix with driver
Maurice Trintignant. Late in the tragic
1955 season the Ferrari team purchased the
Lancia team's D50 chassis after they
had retired following Ascari's death; Fangio,
Peter Collins, and
Eugenio Castellotti raced the D50s
successfully in the
1956 Formula
One season: Collins two races, Fangio won three races and the
championship.
In the
1957 Formula One
season Fangio returned to Maserati. Ferrari, still using its
aging Lancias, failed to win a race. Drivers
Luigi Musso and the Marquis
Alfonso de Portago joined Castellotti;
Castellotti died while testing and Portago crashed into a crowd at
the Mille Miglia, killing twelve and causing Ferrari to be charged
with manslaughter.
In the
1958 Formula One
season, a
constructor
championship was introduced, and won by
Vanwall.
Carlo Chiti
designed an entirely new car for Ferrari: the
Ferrari 246 Dino, named for Enzo Ferrari's
recently deceased son. The team retained drivers Collins, Hawthorn,
and Musso, but Musso died at the
1958 French Grand Prix and Collins
died at the
1958 German Grand
Prix; Hawthorn won the World Championship and announced his
retirement, and died months later in a road accident.
Ferrari hired five new drivers,
Tony
Brooks,
Jean Behra,
Phil Hill,
Dan Gurney,
and occasionally
Cliff Allison, for
the
1959 Formula One season.
The team did not get along well; Behra was fired after punching
team manager Romolo Tavoni. Brooks was competitive until the end of
the season, but in the end he narrowly lost the championship to
Jack Brabham with the rear-engined
Cooper.
1960s
1960 Formula One season
proved little better than 1959. Ferrari kept drivers Hill, Allison
and
Wolfgang von Trips and added
Willy Mairesse to drive the dated
front-engined 246s and
Richie
Ginther, who drove Ferrari's first rear-engined car. Allison
was severely injured in testing and the team won no race.
In the
1961 Formula One
season, with new rules for 1500 cm³, the team kept Hill,
von Trips and Ginther, and débuted another Chiti designed car, the
Ferrari 156 based on the Formula 2 car
of 1960, which was dominant throughout the season. Ferrari drivers
Hill and Von Trips competed for the championship.
Giancarlo Baghetti joined in midseason
and became the first driver to win on his debut race (the
1961 French Grand Prix). However, at
the end of the season, von Trips crashed at the
1961 Italian Grand Prix and was
killed, together with over a dozen spectators. Hill won the
championship.
At the end of the 1961 season, in what is called "the walk-out",
car designer Carlo Chiti and team manager Romolo Tavoni left to set
up their own team,
ATS.
Ferrari promoted
Mauro Forghieri to
racing director and Eugenio Dragoni to team manager.
For the
1962 Formula One
season, Hill and Baghetti stayed on with rookies
Ricardo Rodriguez and
Lorenzo Bandini. The team used the
1961 cars for a second year while Forghieri worked on a new design;
the team won no race.
Ferrari ran smaller lighter 156 cars for the
1963 Formula One season, this time
with drivers Bandini,
John Surtees,
Willy Mairesse and
Ludovico
Scarfiotti. Surtees won the
1963 German Grand Prix, at which
Mairesse crashed heavily, rendering him unable to drive
again.
The new 158 model was at last finished in late 1963 and developed
into raceworthiness for the
1964
Formula One season, featuring an eight-cylinder engine designed
by Angelo Bellei. Surtees and Bandini were joined by young Mexican
Pedro
Rodríguez, brother of Ricardo (who had been killed at the end
of 1962), to drive the new cars. Surtees won two races and Bandini
one; the Ferrari was slower than
Jim
Clark's
Lotus but its vastly superior
reliability gave Surtees the championship and Bandini fourth place.
In the last two races in North America, the Ferrari were entered by
private team
NART and
painted in the US-color scheme of blue and white, as Enzo protest
against the Italian sporting authority.
The
1965 Formula One season
was the last year of the 1.5 L formula, so Ferrari opted to
use the same V8 engine another year together with a new flat-12
which had debuted at the end of 1964; they won no races as Clark
dominated in his now more reliable Lotus. Surtees and Bandini
stayed on as drivers, with odd races for Rodriguez, Vaccarella and
Bob Bondurant.
For the
1966 Formula One
season with new rules, the
Ferrari
312 of Surtees consisted of a 3.0 L version of the
3.3 L V12 which they had previously used in
Ferrari P sports car racers, mounted in the back
of a rather heavy F1 chassis. Bandini drove a
Tasman Series 2.4 L V6 car early in the
season. Surtees won one race, the
1966 Belgian Grand Prix, but
departed after a row with manager Eugenio Dragoni; he was replaced
by
Mike Parkes.
Scarfiotti also won a
race, the 1966 Italian Grand
Prix at Monza
, with an improved 36-valve engine.
In the
1967 Formula One
season, the team fired Dragoni and replaced him with Franco
Lini;
Chris Amon partnered Bandini to
drive a somewhat improved version of the 1966 car. At the
1967 Monaco Grand Prix Bandini
crashed and suffered heavy injuries when he was trapped under his
burning car; several days later he succumbed to his injuries.
Ferrari kept Mike Parkes and Scarfiotti, but Parkes suffered
career-ending injuries weeks later at the
1967 Belgian Grand Prix and
Scarfiotti temporarily retired from racing after witnessing his
crash.
The
1968 Formula One season
was better;
Jacky Ickx drove with one win
in France and several good positions, which gave him a chance at
the World Championship until a practise crash in Canada, and Amon
led several races but won none. At the end of the season, manager
Franco Lini quit and Ickx went to the
Brabham team.
During the summer of 1968, Ferrari worked out
a deal to sell his road car business to Fiat
for $11
million; the transaction took place in early 1969, leaving 50% of
the business still under the control of Ferrari
himself.
During
1969 Formula One
season, Enzo Ferrari set about wisely spending his newfound
wealth to revive his struggling team; though Ferrari did compete in
Formula One in 1969, it was something of a throwaway season while
the team was restructured. Amon continued to drive an older model
and
Pedro
Rodríguez replaced Ickx; at the end of the year Amon left the
team.
1970s
In
1970 Jacky Ickx rejoined the
team and won the Austrian, the
Canadian
and the Mexican Grand
Prix to become second in the driver championship.
After three poor years, Ferrari signed
Niki
Lauda in 1974, and made the momentous decision to pull out of
sportscar racing to concentrate upon F1. However, poor reliability
with the 312B3 kept them from taking victory that year.
The new
Ferrari 312T, developed fully
with Niki Lauda, introduced in 1975 brought Ferrari back to winning
ways, Niki taking the drivers' crown and Ferrari the
constructors'.
In 1976 Lauda crashed at the
German Grand Prix.
Carlos Reutemann was hired as a
replacement, so with
Clay Regazzoni
driving the other car, Ferrari had to run three cars in the
1976 Italian Grand Prix when
Lauda returned unexpectedly soon (only six weeks after his
accident). Lauda scored points in the races following his severe
crash, but voluntarily withdrew from the season-ending Grand Prix
at Fuji after two laps because of heavy rain, and
James Hunt won the title by a single point.
In 1977 Lauda, having come back from his near fatal crash the
previous year, took the title again for Ferrari (and the team won
the Constructors' Championship), overcoming his more fancied, and
favoured, team mate. His relations with the team, especially the
team manager
Mauro Forghieri
continued to deteriorate, and he decided finally to leave for
Brabham.
In
1978, Ferrari raced with
Carlos Reutemann and
Gilles Villeneuve, and while they managed
to produce a solid car it, like everyone that year, was outclassed
by the
ground effect Lotus 79.
Jody Scheckter replacing the Lotus
bound Argentinian in 1979, took the title, supported by Gilles
Villeneuve (who dutifully followed the South African home at Monza,
having been ordered to do so), and won the last World Drivers'
Championship in a Ferrari until
Michael Schumacher twenty one years
later. The car was a compromise ground effect design due to the
configuration of the Ferrari wide angle V12, which was overtaken in
due course by the extremely successful
Williams FW07, but not before racking up the
necessary points to take both title that year.
1980s
Ferrari and
Jody Scheckter's title
defence was unsuccessful, as the team's rivals made up ground at
the expense of the reigning champions. The team scored a meagre
total of eight points all season, and Scheckter elected to retire
at its conclusion. For the season, Ferrari signed
Didier Pironi to partner
Gilles Villeneuve and also introduced its
own
turbo-charged engine, which
provided more power in a more compact design than the previous
normally-aspirated, twelve-cylinder arrangement. The season was a
distinct improvement on the last, Villeneuve winning the
Monaco and
Spanish Grands Prix, but a potential
championship challenge was stymied by the difficult handling of the
chassis. However, the lessons learnt from the team's first racing
experience with a turbo car in F1 prepared it well for . Throughout
this season, the Ferrari was the best package, in terms of a
balance between speed and reliability.
The year was, however, marred by the loss of both of Ferrari's
drivers. Team leader and favorite driver of
Enzo Ferrari, Villeneuve, died in a crash
during qualifying at the
Belgian
GP, whilst Pironi suffered career-ending injuries before the
German GP later in the
season. Ferrari first called up
Patrick
Tambay, in place of the late Villeneuve, and later
Mario Andretti in an effort to protect
Pironi's lead in the championship, but to no avail. Ferrari did,
however, win the constructors' championship.
In that same year the
Formula One works moved partially out of the original Maranello
factory into its own autonomous facility, still in Maranello but
directly next to the Fiorano test circuit
.
Four wins by
René Arnoux and
Patrick Tambay won the team another constructors' title in 1983,
but neither driver was consistent enough to challenge for the
drivers' title.
Patrick Tambay took an especially emotional
victory at San Marino in front of the Tifosi, but left to join the
Renault
team at the
end of the season. Michele
Alboreto was hired for following his impressive performances
during previous year driving a Cosworth-powered Tyrrell.
He won
the Belgian GP, but the
team's performance was not competitive enough to challenge the
dominant McLaren
of Niki Lauda and Alain
Prost. In the
following year, however, Alboreto
was Prost's closest challenger for the championship, leading it at
one stage before the team's competitiveness slumped in the final
races. Arnoux, meanwhile, fell out with the team and was replaced
by
Stefan Johansson after the first
race of the season. continued the disappointing trend of the
previous season as neither Alboreto nor Johansson could win a race,
and never looked like doing so. For , Johansson moved to McLaren
and replaced by
Gerhard Berger, who
got the better of Alboreto as the season progressed and won the
final two races of the championship as the car's form improved
towards the end of the season. The team remained competitive into ,
finishing second in the constructors' championship, but a long way
behind McLaren, who once again dominated the season.
The season also witnessed the end of
Enzo
Ferrari's ownership of the team. On August 14, 1988, Enzo died
at the age of 90. Fiat's share of the company was raised to 90%
with Enzo's only remaining son,
Piero
Ferrari, inheriting the remaining share from his father. A week
after Enzo's death, Berger and Alboreto completed an historic 1–2
at the
Italian Grand Prix,
the only time a team other than McLaren won a Grand Prix in the
1988 season. Berger
dedicated the win in memory of the late Enzo Ferrari.
saw the end of turbo-charging in Formula One. From this date, the formula was for 3.5 litre normally-aspirated engines of no greater than 12 cylinders, which was a direct consequence of lobbying by Ferrari for the previous few years. The team went so far as to construct an Indycar, the Ferrari 637, as a threat to the FIA that if they did not get what they wanted, namely the allowance of V12 engines under the revised formula, they could take part in another series. Due to the expected extreme high revs and consequent narrow power band expected of the new engines, technical director John Barnard insisted upon the development of a revolutionary new gear-shifting arrangement - the paddle-operated, semi-automatic gearbox. In pre season testing it proved extremely troublesome, with newly arrived driver Nigel Mansell being unable to compete more than a handful of laps, but nonetheless they managed a debut win at the opening round in Brazil. Horrendous unreliability led to Berger being unable to score a point until a run of podiums at Monza, Estoril and Jerez including a win at Estoril. Mansell scored a memorable win at Budapest where he overtook world champion Ayrton Senna for the win after qualifying far down the field in fourteenth. He then dedicated the race to the memory of Enzo Ferrari as the win came a year after the latter's death.
1990s
The 1990s started in a promising way.
Alain
Prost replaced
Gerhard Berger at
Ferrari to partner Mansell for the
season. As reigning world champion,
Prost took over as the team's lead driver and was said to have
played on Mansell's
inferiority
complex. Mansell recalls one incident where at the
1990 British Grand Prix, the car he
drove didn't handle the same as in the previous race where had
taken pole position, and later found out from team mechanics that
Prost saw Mansell as having a superior car and had them swapped
without Mansell knowing. Prost won 5 races and pushed
Ayrton Senna to the controversial final race,
where a collision forced him to settle for second. A disgruntled
Mansell left the team at the end of the season.
Mansell's replacement was Frenchman
Jean
Alesi, who had been impressive during the previous two years at
Tyrrell. However, Ferrari had entered
a downturn in 1991, partially as their famous V12 engine was no
longer competitive against the smaller, lighter and more fuel
efficient V10s of their competitors. Prost won no races, only
getting onto the podium five times. He afterwards publicly
criticized the team, described his car as harder to drive than "a
truck", and was fired prior to the end of the season, right before
the
Australian Grand
Prix.
Prost was replaced by Italian
Gianni
Morbidelli.The team won no races in 1991–1993.
Popular driver
Gerhard Berger
returned to Ferrari in 1993 to help it out of the doldrums. That
year, Berger was instrumental in hiring
Jean
Todt as team principal, laying the foundations for the team's
future successes. With the
Ferrari
412T,
Gerhard Berger and
Jean Alesi proved the car's competitiveness
throughout the two seasons, with a brace of podium places and four
pole positions. Bad luck limited the number of wins to one each for
both Berger (1994 German Grand Prix) and Alesi (1995 Canadian Grand
Prix), particularly Alesi who was in a position to win at Monza and
the Nürburgring in 1995, but the car was a solid and competitive
proposition.
In 1996, Ferrari made a landmark decision in its history by hiring
two-time defending world champion
Michael Schumacher for an astronomical
salary of around $30 million a year. Schumacher also brought with
him the nucleus of his hugely successful
Benetton team, mainly in the form of Ross
Brawn (technical director) and
Rory Byrne
(chief designer). Teaming up with Jean Todt (team principal), they
set about rebuilding the Scuderia. After Berger and Alesi, who were
sent to Benetton in exchange, the traditional V12 had to go also,
in favour of a more modern V10 engine, as the rules reduced the
capacity from 3500cc to 3000 anyway. At the same time,
Eddie Irvine from
Jordan was hired.
While these huge changes resulted in a very unreliable car,
Schumacher did manage to score 3 wins in the 1996 season, all of
which were memorable. In torrential conditions at
Spain, after almost stalling and
dropping to ninth, Schumacher went on to win the race by a
comfortable margin to Jean Alesi. Following this, Ferrari had 2
incredibly embarrassing retirements at France and Canada, both
before the races had even started. However, at
Spa-Francorchamps Schumacher used
right timed pit-stops to fend off the Williams of Jacques
Villeneuve. Following that, at Monza, Schumacher scored a momentous
win in front of the tifosi. As reliability greatly improved the
Ferrari became the second strongest looking package in the hands of
Schumacher ending with a strong fight with the Williams of champion
Damon Hill for the win at Suzuka.
For 1997, the increased reliability of the previous year's
development, the F310B, lead to some very strong performances when
faster cars, notably the McLaren Mercedes of
David Coulthard and
Mika Häkkinen, retired.
Schumacher took
memorable wet weather wins at Monaco and Belgium, combined with
outstanding drives at France and Japan, to force the slightly
superior Williams Renault
of Jacques Villeneuve to a last round title
fight. However, Schumacher was disqualified from
the 1997 standings for swerving into the car of Villeneuve who had
just made a lunge down the inside of the Dry Sac corner of the
Jerez
circuit.
Following the dramatic 1997 season, Ferrari came out with an all
new car to fit the new regulations for
1998. Although it was a competitive
package, the McLaren-Mercedes
MP4/13
was most often stronger. Schumacher won six races that season
including three in a row at Canada, France and Great Britain. The
Hungarian Grand Prix was won after a tactical master-stroke by
Brawn decided to make the car run a 3-stop strategy as opposed to
McLaren's 2. Schumacher then went on to lead Irvine home to
Ferrari's first 1–2 at Monza since the memorable 1988 race after
Enzo Ferrari's death. Schumacher lost the title to McLaren's Mika
Häkkinen at Suzuka after he stalled on the front row then suffered
a mid-race puncture. Irvine was fourth in the championship with
Ferrari second in the constructors' title.
Irvine had been forced to play second fiddle to Schumacher, losing
out on points and positions in order to place Schumacher higher in
the Drivers' Championship, in the rare occasions when he was in
front, notably Suzuka 1997 which lead critics to remark "So Irvine
can drive!". The leg injury of Michael Schumacher in 1999 reversed
the roles however. It appeared to be the year Ferrari would regain
the championship with Ferrari winning 3 of the first 4 races of the
season.
While Ferrari did win the constructor crown
that year, a crash at the Silverstone Circuit
in the British Grand Prix
resulted in Schumacher breaking a leg and missing 7
races of the season, and being replaced by Mika Salo. The new championship challenger
was Eddie Irvine, who once again took the Ferrari challenge to the
final round in Japan before missing out to Häkkinen who also scored
more points in the races where Schumacher had taken part.
2000s
In 2000 Schumacher had a close battle with rival Mika Häkkinen of
McLaren but won the championship in the
Ferrari F1-2000, winning 9 races out of 17
that year. He was Ferrari's first World Driver's Champion in 21
years, since
Jody Scheckter in 1979.
Teammate
Rubens Barrichello finished
fourth in the championship, taking his maiden win at the German Grand
Prix
at the Hockenheimring
after Schumacher was taken out in the first corner
and Barrichello qualified 18th.
In 2001 Schumacher won the World Championship with four races to
go, having claimed nine victories. Teammate Barrichello finished
third in the championship. This was the first year in which the
notorious A1-Ring incident occurred, where Barrichello was told to
let Schumacher through for second place by team boss Todt, to the
consternation of the FIA, fans and media.
In 2002, Schumacher and Ferrari dominated F1, the Ferrari duo
winning 15 out of 17 races (Schumacher 11, Barrichello 4). However,
their run was tainted by a second A1-Ring incident. In a replay of
2001, Barrichello was asked to give way to Schumacher, except this
time for the win. An embarrassed Schumacher then pushed Barrichello
to the top step of the podium, and was subsequently fined $1
million by the FIA for interfering with podium procedures. This
debacle eventually led to the banning of team orders. Schumacher
matched Juan Manuel Fangio's record of five world championships,
set back in the 1950s.
In 2003, Ferrari's domination of F1 was brought to a halt at the
first race, the
Australian
Grand Prix, where for the first time in 3 years, there was no
Ferrari driver on the podium. Rivals McLaren had an early lead in
the championship, but Ferrari closed the gap by the
Canadian Grand Prix. However, their
other rivals Williams won the next 2 races and the driver
championship went down to the wire at the last race, the
Japanese Grand Prix, between Kimi
Räikkönen (McLaren) and Michael Schumacher; Schumacher eventually
won the championship by two points, surpassing Fangio's record. In
2003, F1 magazine reported that Ferrari's budget was
$443,800,000.
2004 saw a return of Ferrari's dominance. Ferrari teammates
Schumacher and Barrichello finished first and second respectively
in the
driver
championship, and Ferrari easily wrapped up the constructors'
championship. Schumacher won 13 of the 18 races, and 12 of the
first 13 of the season – both F1 records. Barrichello won two of
the other races.
2005 Season
2005 saw a change of fortune for the previously dominant Ferrari.
The team's practice of starting a new season with a modified
version of the previous year's car (F2004M) pending full
development of their new car (F2005) was one of the main causes for
a poor start to the season. While this worked well in previous
years, it seems Ferrari underestimated both the full effect of the
new 2005 regulations and the pace of development of other teams
(particularly McLaren and Renault who started the year with brand
new cars).
Alarmed by poor performances in Australia
and Malaysia
the new F2005 was rushed into service in Bahrain
(the introduction was previously scheduled to be
race 5 in Barcelona). This move saw Schumacher retire for
the first time due to mechanical failure since
Hockenheim 2001 ending a run of 59
Grands Prix without technical failure.
Another factor was the poor relative performance of the team's
Bridgestone tyres, which failed to give
performance for single lap qualifying and were not as durable as
their
Michelin rivals during races.
However, the tyres provided for
San Marino Grand Prix were more
competitive, and the Bridgestone tyres supplied for the
United States Grand Prix
allowed the three Bridgestone teams to race, while the seven
Michelin teams were forced to withdraw due to Michelin's advice
that the tyres would not last the race distance.
Near the end of the 2005 season, Rubens Barrichello announced that
he was leaving the team at the end of the year and joining the
Honda F1 team. Barrichello's departure was
partly due to his dissatisfaction with his continued "Number 2"
status at Ferrari. At the 2005 Monte Carlo Grand Prix Schumacher
managed his way past Barrichello with a breathtaking manoeuvre (on
a track where overtaking is highly difficult and dangerous) near
the end of the race. Ferrari named former Sauber-Petronas driver
Felipe Massa as Barrichello's
replacement for the following season.
2006 Season
With the 'one set of tyres per race' rule no longer in force,
Ferrari, after a poor 2005 and a troubled start to 2006, were again
close contenders for both Drivers' and Constructors' titles by the
latter part of the 2006 season. Unlike some recent seasons, they
started 2006 with their new car, the
248
F1.
At the
Bahrain Grand Prix
Schumacher finished second. At the
Malaysian Grand Prix problems with
the engine's piston rings meant that both drivers had to change
their engines, Massa needing two changes (a ten-position penalty at
the start of the race is enforced for an engine change prior to a
legal engine change). In Australia both drivers crashed out of the
race. At the
San Marino
Schumacher took pole position in qualifying and won the race. At
the
European race,
Schumacher won again. At the
Spanish Grand Prix Fernando Alonso won, with Schumacher
finishing second.
At
Monaco Schumacher's
qualifying times were deleted for stopping his car during the
qualifying session. Schumacher started from the back of the grid
but finished fifth (on a track where overtaking is highly difficult
and dangerous). At both
Silverstone and
Canada Schumacher finished second.
At the
United States Grand
Prix the Ferraris of Schumacher and Massa were dominant all
weekend, finishing the race first and second.
At the French Grand
Prix
Schumacher was first, followed by Alonso and
Massa.
At the Hockenheimring in Germany Räikkönen took pole position,
however in the race both Ferraris overtook Räikkönen at the first
round of pit stops and Schumacher went on to win. At the Hungarian
GP Massa qualified second and Schumacher eleventh due to a two
second penalty from Saturday practice. At the start of the wet race
the Ferraris initially struggled. Later in the race Schumacher
continued to drive on intermediate tyres while other drivers on dry
tyres like
Pedro de la Rosa and
Nick Heidfeld passed him easily. When
Heidfeld passed Schumacher he collided with the BMW Sauber of
Robert Kubica, and retired in ninth, promoting Massa to eighth. The
subsequent disqualification of Kubica gave Massa seventh and
Schumacher eighth.
At Turkey, Massa achieved his first ever pole and victory. Having
locked out the front row, Ferrari lost a potential 1-2 when the
safety car appeared early in the race, forcing them to pit both
cars at the same time, meaning Schumacher had to queue behind
Massa, allowing Alonso to get ahead. Schumacher pressurized the
Spaniard late in the race but was unable to overtake, missing out
on second place by less than a tenth of a second. This left
Schumacher twelve points behind Alonso with four races remaining.
The race was therefore disappointing from Ferrari's championship
perspective, despite Massa's win, although they closed to within
two points of Renault in the Constructor's Championship.
At Monza, Schumacher scored a win at Ferrari's home Grand Prix,
closing to within two points of Alonso in the Driver's
Championship. Massa lost a potential fourth place when he ran over
debris left behind by the failure of Alonso's Renault V8,
puncturing a tyre and forcing him to pit, which left him in ninth
place at the finish. Despite Massa not scoring any points, the
combination of Schumacher's win, Alonso's DNF, and a mediocre
fourth-place finish for
Giancarlo
Fisichella allowed Ferrari to pull ahead of Renault in the
World Constructors'
Championship for the first time in the 2006 season. Following
the race at Monza Ferrari announced Schumacher's retirement
effective at the end of the 2006 season and that Räikkönen, whom
they had signed months before, would replace him in 2007.
At the Chinese Grand Prix Ferrari and the other
Bridgestone-running teams again suffered in wet
conditions. However, Schumacher managed to qualify in sixth place,
seven places ahead of the next Bridgestone car. Despite taking pole
position and setting the fastest lap, a poor tyre choice by Renault
and a pit stop error allowed Schumacher to beat Alonso, his main
rival for the Championship. This allowed Schumacher to draw level
on points with Alonso, and lead the championship by virtue of
having won more races. Despite this, the combination of Renault's
2-3 finish and Massa failing to score after retiring due to a
collision with
Red Bull Racing's
David Coulthard meant that Ferrari
lost the lead of the Constructor's Championship to Renault, albeit
by a single point.
At the Japanese Grand Prix, Ferrari again showed superiority in the
qualifying stages, lapping up to 1.4s faster than the nearest
competitors. Massa qualified first and Schumacher second. However,
in the race Alonso capitalised on Massa's early puncture and took
second place. On lap 37 Schumacher suffered his first in-race
engine failure since 2000, forcing him to retire. Alonso won the
race and opened a 10-point lead in the driver's championship with
only one race to go. Massa finished second.
At the Brazilian Grand Prix Massa claimed pole position. Schumacher
suffered a fuel pressure problem in the last qualifying session
which left him unable to put in even a single lap in this session.
Schumacher ended up tenth on the grid and the championship leader
Alonso at a comfortable fourth. The race itself was a dramatic one,
with Schumacher making up four places in the first few laps, and
then a safety car period followed. Once the race restarted
Schumacher suffered a puncture while trying to overtake the Renault
of Fisichella. This puncture virtually ended Schumacher's bid for
the race lead and any hope of winning the 2006 Drivers' title. The
final result saw the first victory for a Brazilian driver in home
soil since Ayrton Senna in 1993, with Massa first, Alonso second,
clinching the Drivers' title, followed by Honda's Jenson Button,
who finished third after putting in an impressive performance from
fourteenth on the grid. Schumacher, having come from the back of
the field (following his puncture), finished fourth and set the
fastest lap on the penultimate lap of his career, but with
Fisichella finishing sixth Ferrari lost the Constructors' title
too.
2007 Season
Ferrari launced a new car, the
F2007
for the 2007 season.
Kimi
Räikkönen won the inaugural race of the 2007 season at
Albert Park, becoming the first
Ferrari driver to win on his début since
Nigel Mansell.Ferrari attracted some criticism
for running a moveable floor system in Melbourne, later confirmed
to be illegal by the FIA after a rule clarification, though no
punishment was applied. After a disappointing third for Räikkönen
and fifth for Massa in the
Malaysian Grand Prix, the team
recovered to finish first and third in
Bahrain, with Massa taking his first
victory of the season.
Massa won again at the Spanish
Grand Prix
but Räikkönen retired with a hydraulic
failure. This left Ferrari second in the constructors'
championship and Massa and Räikkönen third and fourth respectively
in the drivers championship despite having won three of the first
four races.
However, Ferrari would play second fiddle to McLaren for the next
few races, scoring just 22 points from the
Monaco,
Canadian and
United States Grands Prix.
McLaren scored 48 points in the same period. This left Ferrari 35
points behind McLaren in the constructors' championship, and
Räikkönen and Massa 19 and 26 points respectively behind
championship leader Lewis Hamilton. After seven races, it looked as
though Ferrari's championship hopes could already be over.
Luca Colajanni, the Ferrari PR manager, claimed this lack of pace
was due to the team's wind tunnel was badly damaged in a testing
accident, leaving the team unable to introduce new aerodynamic
refinements to its cars until the wind tunnel was rebuilt, which
took several weeks.
With the tunnel rebuilt and a new
aerodynamic package (notably adjustments to the front wing) the
cars was seemingly on par with the McLaren
.
Ferrari
scored a 1–2 at the French Grand Prix (Räikkönen winning ahead of
Massa) followed by a dominant win for Räikkönen at the British Grand Prix at Silverstone
with Massa coming fifth after stalling at the start
of the race, consequently having to start in 22nd
place.

Räikkönen celebrates his race win and
Drivers' Championship at the 2007 Brazilian GP.
At the
European Grand Prix
Räikkönen claimed pole position with Massa third. Early rain in the
race caused the teams to change to intermediate tyres. Massa
emerged in first, Alonso second and Räikkönen third. On lap 34,
Räikkönen retired with hydraulic problems. In the last few laps
Massa was overtaken by Alonso and finished the race second, and 11
points adrift in the driver's championship to leader Lewis
Hamilton.
At the controversial
Hungarian
Grand Prix McLaren was stripped of its 15 constructors'
championship points. The Ferrari team forgot to fuel the car of
Felipe Massa who was forced to start the race fourteenth, at a
track where overtaking is regarded as very difficult. Räikkönen
finished the race second with Felipe Massa thirteenth. At the
Turkish Grand Prix Massa took pole with Räikkönen third. Räikkönen
passed Lewis Hamilton into the first corner. Massa and Räikkönen
pulled away from the field and the two battled it out for the win.
Massa prevailed, staying ahead of Räikkönen at both pitstops and
winning.
The next race was Ferrari's home race in Italy, but the McLarens
took a 1–2 in qualifying with Massa third and Räikkönen fifth,
after a crash in practice. Räikkönen got ahead of Nick Heidfeld at
the start, moving up into fourth. Massa was third until he retired
with hydraulic failure. Räikkönen was sent on a one-stop strategy
and so when the McLarens stopped for a second time, Räikkönen was
second between Fernando Alonso and Hamilton. However, Hamilton
passed Räikkönen after a few laps, and Räikkönen had to settle for
third.
At the
Belgian Grand Prix
the qualifying went well, Ferrari taking their first 1–2 of the
season, Räikkönen on pole with Massa second. Räikkönen maintained
the lead during the pitstops and won, with Massa second. The 1–2
gave Ferrari the constructors' championship as a result of
McLaren's disqualification.
At the
Japanese Grand Prix
the McLarens took 1–2 in qualifying with Räikkönen third ahead of
Massa. The start was under the safety car in treacherous
conditions, and both drivers, unlike the rest of the field, were on
intermediate tyres. Massa spun on these tyres and Nick Heidfeld
went ahead of him. Massa then passed Heidfeld under the safety car
to keep his place. Ultimately both drivers pitted under the safety
car for wets, and were 20th and 21st at the back, with the McLarens
first and second. Finally the race started in a standing start, and
Massa collided with Alexander Wurz while trying to pass him, taking
Wurz out while Massa had to rejoin after a spin and was 10 seconds
away from the field. Massa was then given a drive-through penalty
for passing Heidfeld under the safety car. After that, the Ferraris
charged up the order, as they were also refueled during the stops
for wets and did not have to stop when the others did. Räikkönen
did stop for fuel again at the right time, as Alonso brought out
the safety car after crashing into a wall. This left Massa (who did
not pit) in fifth and Räikkönen in ninth. This became third and
seventh when Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel collided behind the
safety car, putting both out. Räikkönen then passed Nick Heidfeld,
Giancarlo Fisichella and David Coulthard to take fourth. Massa was
forced to pit for a splash and dash, dropping down to seventh.
Räikkönen challenged Heikki Kovalainen for second but could not
make it and was third. Massa took sixth by passing Robert Kubica on
the last lap.
Going into the
Chinese Grand
Prix, Massa was already out of the title race, but Räikkönen
still stayed in it, five points behind Alonso and seventeen points
behind Hamilton with two races to go. Hamilton took pole while
Räikkönen was second and Massa was third. The race was in damp
conditions but nothing changed at the start. During the first round
of stops, Hamilton and Massa used the same wet tyres but Räikkönen
and Alonso changed into a new set. Räikkönen then passed Hamilton
while Alonso passed Massa at the same time, as Hamilton and Massa
were felling the effects of grained tyres. Massa pitted early, but
Hamilton stayed out late in the hope that it would rain. It did
not, and Hamilton got beached in the pit lane gravel trap while
trying to enter the pits. Räikkönen won ahead of Alonso and Massa
to keep his championship hopes alive.
The last
race of the season, the Brazilian Grand Prix, was in
Massa's hometown in Brazil
.
Räikkönen was seven points behind Hamilton and three points behind
Alonso going into the race. In qualifying, Massa took pole with
Hamilton second, Räikkönen third and Alonso fourth. At the start,
Räikkönen took second while Hamilton dropped back to eighth after
going into the gravel. He was up to seventh but then dropped to the
back of the field in 18th after a gearbox glitch cost him around 20
seconds. The battle for the win was between Massa and Räikkönen
with Alonso third. Massa kept the lead during the first round of
stops but Räikkönen was able to get ahead of him in the second
round. Behind, Hamilton had already charged his way up to seventh
but was lapped. Räikkönen won the race and the championship, ten
points compared to Alonso's six and Hamilton's two in the race
enabling him to get a point ahead of both with Massa finishing
second to make it the team's fourth 1–2 finish.
2007 Espionage allegations
On 3 July
Nigel Stepney was dismissed
by Scuderia Ferrari. Later the same day Ferrari announced it was
taking legal action against Stepney and a McLaren engineer named by
Autosport.com as
Mike Coughlan; A
Ferrari press release stated:
On his
return from holiday in the Philippines
on July 5, Stepney was interrogated by the Italian
police as part of the industrial espionage case. On 6
July
Honda F1 released a statement
confirming that Stepney and Coughlan approached the team regarding
"job opportunities" in June 2007. Since the revelation of
Coughlan's involvement in the affair McLaren provided a full set of
drawings and development documents (estimated to be around 800
pages) to the FIA, detailing all updates made to the team's chassis
since the incident occurred at the end of April.
McLaren was eventually excluded from the 2007 Constructors'
Championship, in breach of Article 151(c) of the
International Sporting Code, all
but guaranteeing Ferrari the title. Ferrari won their 15th
Constructors' Title in
Belgium the following weekend.
At the end of the season Ferrari would have finished one point
ahead of McLaren and hence won the constructors' title on
merit.
This takes into consideration that McLaren was docked the 15
constructors' points they would have earned at
Hungary, as a penalty for a
qualifying pit incident; prior to that McLaren had a 27 point lead
over Ferrari.
2008 Season
After the end of the 2007 seaon, Ferrari President
Luca Cordero di Montezemolo
announced team's new structure, with
Jean
Todt departing the team principal role and moving up to his
senior role as CEO of the company,
Stefano Domenicali will be taking over as
team principal as
Ross Brawn declined a
return following his sabbatical (later on the same day being
announced as the new Team Principal of
Honda
F1),
Aldo Costa as technical director
and
Mario Almondo as Operations
Director. It had been reported that this completed a shift in
Ferrari personnel where the older foreign leadership was replaced
with a new one comprised mostly of Italians.
On 6 January, Scuderia Ferrari launched the
Ferrari F2008.
On the 2008 Season's first race the
Australian Grand Prix Kimi
Räikkönen suffered a fuel pressure problem which forced him to stop
on the entrance of pit lane preventing engineers from repairing the
car. He started in 16th place on the grid. Massa qualified in
fourth place. During the twenty-fifth lap, Felipe Massa collided
with
Red Bull Racing's
David Coulthard, putting the Scotsman out of
the race on the spot and forcing Massa to pit into retirement.
Räikkönen retired several laps before the end of the race through
engine failure, but was classified eighth overall, having completed
over 90% of the race distance, and thus received one point. It was
Ferrari's worst performance in a season-opening race since they
drew a blank in the
1992
South African Grand Prix.
At the
Malaysian
Grand Prix
, Kimi
Räikkönen won the team's first race of the season. In
qualifying, Massa had taken pole-position, with Räikkönen placed
second. Massa took an early lead but was overtaken by his teammate
at the first round of pit stops. It looked to be an easy 1–2 but
Massa spun off into a gravel trap midway through the race and
retired, with Räikkönen going on to win.
Ferrari went to
Bahrain
confident, as they had tested there during the
winter. Massa was quick in Q1 and Q2 but was pipped to pole
by BMW's
Robert Kubica, with Räikkönen
fourth. The Brazilian took the lead at the start, with his
team-mate following on to make a 1–2.
Round 4
saw the Spanish
Grand Prix
, where qualifying was dominated by Ferrari and
McLaren. When it came to the race, the Ferraris shot out in
front, with Räikkönen leading Massa to the finish.
In the qualifying for
the Turkish
Grand Prix
, Massa beat Hamilton to the pole position and on
the Sunday Massa got away from the line well, holding his lead down
to turn 1 with Hamilton and Räikkönen pushing from behind.
Massa managed to hold onto his lead throughout the race, taking the
win in Turkey for the third year in a row, with Hamilton leading
Räikkönen home. Out of a possible 30 points in three races Massa
had scored 28.
Monaco saw a race, in the
early laps, between Hamilton and Massa, until Hamilton clipped a
wall on the exit of the chicane, allowing Massa to secure his lead.
Pit stop strategy for Hamilton, combined with a slow third pit stop
for Massa, resulted in Massa dropping to third on the podium. When
the Formula One calendar took them to North America at the
Canadian Grand Prix, the Ferraris
had a poor qualifying show followed by a tawdry race for Räikkönen
when he was shunted from behind by Hamilton, who was in turn
shunted by Rosberg, while waiting for the light at the end of the
pit lane. Massa appeared to lack pace during the race, though he
proceeded up the pack as other cars retired.
At the
French Grand Prix
Ferrari got a 1–2 in qualifying, and it stayed that way during the
race until Kimi Räikkönen's exhaust broke, causing Massa to take
the lead, and for him to hold up drivers he'd lapped. He eventually
finished second.
The
British Grand Prix took
place in the wet, with Massa qualifying tenth and Räikkönen third.
Massa spun five times during the race and Räikkönen three.
Räikkönen finished fourth and Massa thirteenth. After this Massa,
Räikkönen, and Lewis Hamilton were tied at 48 points.
At
Hockenheim, Räikkönen
qualified fourth and Massa second. Lewis Hamilton took a big lead
in the first stint from Felipe Massa, but had the gap reduced in
the first safety car period. Massa and Räikkönen pitted in when the
safety car was out, but Hamilton pitted afterwards and lost his
lead. Nelson Piquet, Jr. had jumped from seventeenth to second and
was in front of Massa. Hamilton chased both down and won the race
with Massa third and Räikkönen sixth. On the weekend of the
Hungarian Grand Prix, Massa qualified third and Räikkönen sixth.
Massa took the lead at the first corner and stayed roughly five
seconds ahead of Hamilton for most of the race. Three laps before
the end of the race Massa retired with engine failure from first
place.
Heikki Kovalainen won the
race and Räikkönen finished third.
Over the
Valencia weekend,
Massa got pole position with Räikkönen fourth. Massa took the lead
at the start and held it for the entire race, but Räikkönen dropped
to fifth at the start. At his second pit stop Räikkönen left the
pit box with the fuel hose still attached and injured a mechanic;
he then retired two laps later with engine failure. At Massa's
second pit stop, he was released alongside the Force India of
Adrian Sutil and had to back off and let him pass. After the race
Massa was fined 10,000 euros for unsafe release.
At the inaugural
Singapore
Grand Prix, Massa qualified on pole with Räikkönen third on the
start grid. Massa led until the first pitstop proved a disaster
when he drove off with the fueling rig still attached. The rigging
snapped knocking a pit mechanic to the ground. Massa was then
forced to stop at the end of the pit lane and wait for his
mechanics to run from their garage at the entrance of the pit lane
to where he was to remove his ripped off fueling rig, causing Massa
to lose minutes of time and thus dropping of contention for the
race. Video replay revealed the Ferrari mechanic operating the
automatic pit light signal system suffering because of the pressure
of a race. He was later seen crying because of his
mistake.Räikkönen eventually crashed out four laps before the end
of the Grand Prix with Massa finishing second-to-last.
At the
Japanese Grand Prix
Räikkönen finished third, while Massa finished seventh. More
importantly, Lewis Hamilton finished out of the points in twelfth,
meaning that Massa closed to just five points behind Hamilton in
the World Championship.
At the
2008 Chinese Grand
Prix, it was a very different story. In qualifying Räikkönen
was second and Massa was third with Hamilton on pole. Ferrari came
second and third in the race, over 10 seconds behind the victor who
was Hamilton. Massa was second, owing to Räikkönen letting him
through because of the championship situation.
On 27 October 2008 Ferrari issued a statement saying that they
would review their participation in Formula 1 at the end of the
2009 season because the FIA said for the 2010, 2011 and 2012
seasons they wanted to introduce standardised engines. Ferrari have
been in Formula 1 since it began in 1950.
At the last race of the season, the
Brazilian Grand Prix the situation
for Ferrari was: Felipe Massa was seven points behind Lewis
Hamilton, meaning that Massa had to either finish first or second
to win, and Hamilton had to be outside the top five. Massa
qualified on pole, with Räikkönen qualified third, ahead of
Hamilton. Massa led virtually the entire race, losing the lead only
briefly during pit-stop sequences. Hamilton, meanwhile, raced
conservatively in order to safely secure the necessary points.
Going into the last few laps Massa led with Hamilton fifth. If the
race stayed as it was Hamilton would win the Championship. Then,
with three laps remaining, Hamilton, having made a mistake, was
passed by
Sebastian Vettel, moving
Hamilton down to sixth. Felipe Massa, meanwhile, crossed the finish
line and won the Grand Prix, and believed he had won the World
Championship. Hamilton was still sixth as he came up to the
second-to-last corner, but passed
Timo
Glock, who was struggling for pace with the rain that had been
falling during the last few laps on the dry tyres, moving Hamilton
into fifth. Hamilton crossed the line get fifth position and the
World Championship. It took Massa, Räikkönen, and Ferrari's team
and mechanics about 30 seconds to realise that Hamilton had won and
not Massa.
2008 Pit system
For 2008 Ferrari brought in a "
traffic
light" system to signal to their drivers when to leave the pits
after a pit-stop. This system was introduced and used only by
Ferrari; all other teams continued with the older "lollipop" system
(although
Honda did use a similar
device in Friday practicing in the later races of the season). The
traffic light system has red, orange and green lights and is
programmed to automatically go green when the fuel hose is taken
out of the car. The lights could also be operated manually by
pressing a button. At the
2008
Singapore Grand Prix the system had to be operated manually due
to the large number of cars entering the pit lane during a caution
period. During Felipe Massa's stop the mechanic controlling the
system pressed the button too early, causing Massa to drive away
with the fuel pipe still attached. After this incident Ferrari
reverted to the old lollipop system for the remaining three races
of the season. They have returned to the lollipop system for the
2009 season with Ferrari team principal
Stefano Domenicali commenting that "We
need to stay calm so we've decided to go back to the old
system."
2009 Season
With substantial changes to the Formula 1 regulations in 2009,
Ferrari's F1 challenger – the
Ferrari
F60 – did not have a favourable start to the season at the
Australian Grand Prix. After being off the pace of the superior
Brawn GP team all weekend, Kimi Räikkönen and Felipe Massa (both
retained from 2008) failed to finish the race, with Massa suffering
reliability problems on lap 46 (adding to the disappointment of
being even further off the pace due to an aggressive strategy being
ruined by the safety car and running the low-enduring Super-soft
tyre in the first stint of the race) and Räikkönen, who also ran
the super-soft tyres early on, spinning and breaking his front wing
on lap 43, before also retiring 3 laps from the end, due to
reliability issues.
The Malaysian Grand Prix one week later saw no improvement from the
team, again well off the pace of the leading cars. Räikkönen and
Massa qualified 9th and 16th respectively. Although Massa's early
exit from qualifying was down to a strategic error (the team
thought he was safely through to Q2), the poor pace of the F-60 was
shown when, on a similar fuel strategy to pole-position man Jenson
Button (seen in post-qualifying release of car weights, which
without fuel are limited to 600 kg), Räikkönen could only
manage laps roughly 5-tenths of a second slower. In the race, it
was widely expected that rain would hit the circuit at some point
during the 56 laps. With rain clouds looming, Räikkönen (who had
been lapping 6th and 5th) and the team chose to take a gamble that
rain would arrive within the next lap, and pitted to change to the
extreme-wet tyre. The gamble didn't pay off, with Räikkönen losing
20 seconds per lap, before pitting again later when the rain did
come. Massa meanwhile had a steady race, gaining positions until
the rain hit. The rain continued, and the safety car was not enough
to keep the race running, so the red flag was shown. As the race
was running during the late afternoon-early evening, there was not
enough time for the water to recede before darkness, and the race
was abandoned. Massa's final position was 9th, with Räikkönen
eventually classified 14th, despite effectively retiring during the
red flag situation due to his car's KERS system being
short-circuited due to the water.
The 3rd Grand Prix of the season was at China. Yet again the F-60
was several tenths off the pace of the leading cars (Red Bull and
Brawn), and in another wet race, things did not go well. Massa
retired from 3rd position on lap 21, after slowing and coming to a
halt on the back straight due to electrical problems, and Räikkönen
eventually finished 10th. The result confirmed that Ferrari had
failed to score a single championship point after the three races
of the season, the worst result since 1981.
In the fourth round of the Formula 1 World Championship in Bahrain,
Kimi Räikkönen managed to finish the race in sixth place (after
qualifying 10th), however, the result meant that 2009 became the
worst start to a season so far in Scuderia Ferrari's history, as in
the previous worst start in 1981, Didier Pironi finished fifth at
the San Marino Grand Prix (fourth race of the year). Felipe Massa
started 8th, but needed a new front wing and also had problems with
his KERS system, eventually finished a lap down in 14th.
The team brought some aerodynamic developments at the Spanish GP,
the fifth race of the season. The car was much faster in
qualifying, allowing Felipe Massa to start fourth on the grid. In
the race, he would have finished fourth if he had been given enough
fuel at his final pit stop, instead having to slow dramatically to
save fuel, helplessly allowing 2 cars past. He made it to the end
of the race but only finished sixth. Räikkönen was again hit by
reliability issues, and retired on lap 18 with a hydraulics
failure.
The team made substantial improvement at the Monaco GP, the sixth
race of the season. Kimi Räikkönen showed great raw pace to record
the fastest time of the weekend in Q2 of the Qualifying session,
and in Q3 (where competing cars have to carry race fuel), qualified
2nd, with Felipe Massa qualifying 5th. In the race, Räikkönen was
overtaken at the start by Rubens Barrichello of Brawn GP, but held
firm in 3rd place with Massa following in 4th. Both cars lapped in
similar times throughout the 78 lap race to the two Brawn GP cars
(who finished 1st and 2nd), however the unique nature of the Monte
Carlo street circuit may have had a hand in their
performance.
Indeed, the unique nature of the Monte Carlo street circuit had
enhanced the F-60's performance, with the team finding themselves
at a similar distance from the leading cars (Brawn GP) at the
Turkish Grand Prix to the gap seen at Barcelona two races previous.
After fairly competitive practice and qualifying sessions,
Räikkönen and Massa had earnt grid slots of 6th and 7th
respectively, only being roughly 4-tenths of a second behind. This
gap in pace grew in race situations to 6-tenths of a second, and
left Massa, before the leading
Jenson
Button coasted home, 46 seconds adrift in 6th position and
Räikkönen (also before Button slowed) 57 seconds behind in 9th
(with both eventually staying put and finishing 39 and 50 seconds
behind respectively). The race result was disappointing for
Ferrari, who had been expected to claw back even closer to Brawn
GP, on a more conventional circuit which Istanbul is.
The following Grand Prix at Silverstone saw Felipe Massa qualify a
disappointing 11th on the grid but he finished 4th in the race
behind the Red Bulls of Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber and behind
the Brawn of fellow Brazilian Rubens Barrichello. Kimi Räikkönen
finished 8th behind Jarno Trulli of Toyota, championship leader
Jenson Button of Brawn and Nico Rosberg of Williams. In Germany,
Felipe Massa claimed his first podium of the year from 8th on the
grid. Räikkönen retired after a collision with Adrian Sutil.
Felipe Massa was injured in an accident during qualifying at the
Hungarian Grand Prix, as he was knocked unconscious by debris from
Barrichello's car and subsequently crashed at high speed into the
side barriers. He missed the race at the Hungarian Grand Prix. He
missed the rest of the season as a result of his injuries. Kimi
Räikkönen went on to finish in second place to Lewis Hamilton in
the McLaren. Seven-time Formula One champion Michael Schumacher was
scheduled to replace Felipe Massa for the European Grand Prix in
Valencia on 23 August, however, he was forced to withdraw due to a
neck injury. He was replaced by 38 year old Luca Badoer. Räikkönen
finished 3rd in the race while Badoer finished 17th out of 18 cars
classified. The next race at the Belgian Grand Prix, Räikkönen
finally gave Ferrari their first win of the season after overtaking
Force India's Giancarlo Fisichella on the 5th lap. Badoer finished
last, in 14th place.
On September 3, 2009,
Giancarlo
Fisichella was confirmed as Ferrari's replacement for Luca
Badoer, given the fact that Felipe Massa would be unable to rejoin
the team before the 2010 season. At the Italian Grand Prix, Kimi
Räikkönen was running 4th for the final part of the race, having
started 3rd, but Lewis Hamilton's last lap crash promoted him to a
podium place in third to the delight of the tifosi in Italy.
Meanwhile Giancarlo Fisichella started 14th after spending the
weekend learning to drive the F60 and its KERS system. He had a
steady run to finish 9th, just outside the points.
The team had a mediocre performance throughout the weekend in
Singapore, as the
low-speed nature of the circuit did not disguise the deficiencies
of the slow F60, the cars only qualifying 12th (Räikkönen) and 17th
(Fisichella). Räikkönen could only finish 10th, with Fisichella
13th out of 14 cars classified.
In
Japan, after a fairly
respectable performance by Räikkönen to start 5th for the race, he
managed to finish in 4th. Giancarlo Fisichella had another
anonymous race, qualifying 14th and finishing 12th.
Giancarlo Fisichella spun off in the thunderstorm during qualifying
in
Brazil and started only
19th. He had another quiet race to finish 10th. Meanwhile Kimi
Räikkönen qualified 5th and finished 6th, just behind the new world
champion
Jenson Button.
At the final race of the season in the Yas Marina circuit, the
undeveloped F60, couldn't match the pace of the leaders, so
Räikkönen and Ferrari's hopes of finishing 5th and 3rd in both
championships respectively were rather unlikely. Following a poor
qualifying performance neither of the teams managed to score any
points, leaving Räikkönen 6th in the drivers championship and
Ferrari 4th in the constructors, just 1 point behind McLaren.
Giancarlo Fisichella failed to score any points for his limited
time in Ferrari, after another disappointing performance by
qualifying last and finishing 16th out of 18 cars classified.
Meanwhile Kimi Räikkönen finished only 12th, failing to beat even
the fellow KERS car of
Heikki
Kovalainen, the only McLaren finishing the race after
Lewis Hamilton retired earlier in the race
with rear brake failure.
Sponsorship

A Ferrari truck displaying Ferrari's
Sponsors
The
Ferrari Formula One team was resistant to sponsorship for many
years, it was not until 1977 that the cars began to feature the
logo of the Fiat
group (which
had been the owners of the Ferrari company since 1969).
Until the 1980s, the only other companies whose logos appeared on
Ferrari's F1 cars were technical partners such as
Magneti Marelli and
Agip.
The Ferrari formula one team has been sponsored by
Marlboro since 1984. Marlboro has been
the title sponsor since 1997, although its name does not currently
appear on the team's cars. In September 2005 Ferrari announced they
had signed an extension of their sponsorship arrangement with
Marlboro (
Philip Morris)
until 2011. This comes at a time when advertising of tobacco
sponsorship has become illegal in the European Union and other
major teams have withdrawn from relationships with tobacco
companies, for example McLaren have ended their eight year
relationship with
West. In
reporting the deal,
F1 Racing
magazine judged it to be a "black day" for the sport, putting
non-tobacco funded teams at a disadvantage and discouraging other
brands from entering a sport still associated with tobacco. The
magazine estimates that in the period between 2005 and 2011 Ferrari
will receive $1 billion from the agreement.
In December 2005 Vodafone announced that it was withdrawing its
sponsorship of Ferrari in favour of title sponsorship of McLaren
beginning in 2007.
The Times said
Ferrari were "stunned" by the decision. Vodafone's position on the
car has been taken over by
Telecom
Italia's broadband Alice brand.
Other
companies currently sponsoring Scuderia Ferrari include: Fiat
(Fiat car
brand, part of the Fiat car group which is the largest stakeholder
(85%) in Ferrari), Shell - Royal
Dutch/Shell Group, Alice, Bridgestone, AMD
, Acer, and several others among which are
Mubadala Development Company (an investment
company owned by the Emirate of Abu Dhabi which also owns 5% of
Ferrari shares as of the 2007 season) Etihad Airways (until 2011),and Piaggio Aero. As part of the deal with
Acer, they are allowed to sell Ferrari-badged laptops. On the other
hand, in early 2009 semiconductor chipmaker AMD announced it had
decided to drop their sponsorship of the team and is just waiting
for its contract to expire after its former Vice President and
Sales Executive (who was an avid fan of motorsports) had left the
company.
On 10 September 2009, Ferrari announced that they would be
sponsored by
Santander from 2010 on
a five year contract.. It is believed that Santander will pay
around 40 million euros per season to sponsor Ferrari.
Apart from sponsors, Scuderia Ferrari currently have the following
companies as official suppliers:
Magneti
Marelli,
OMR,
SKF,
Europcar,
Iveco,
NGK,
Puma,
Tata Consultancy Services,
Brembo,
BBS, SELEX Communications,
Technogym,
Schuberth and
Microsoft
(note: the sponsors/suppliers information is accurate for the 2009
season).
Formula One results

2 Classic Ferrari F1 cars on the
Homestead-Miami Speedway pit lane during the 2006 Ferrari
Challenge
The Ferrari team has achieved unparalleled success in
Formula One.
Ferrari cars and Ferrari drivers have also
won the Mille Miglia eight times, the
Targa
Florio
seven times, and the 24 hours of Le Mans
nine times. In F1, the Italian team has the
unique distinction of owning nearly all significant records (as of
the
2009 Abu Dhabi Grand
Prix), including:
- Most constructor championships: 16
- Most driver championships: 15
- Most Grands Prix started (all-time): 793
- Most wins (all-time): 210
- Most
wins (season): 15 (shared with McLaren
)
- Most podiums (all-time): 628
- Most podiums (season): 29
- Most one-two finishes (all-time): 79
- Most pole positions (all-time):
203
- Most points (all-time): 4,995.27
- Most points (season): 262
- Most fastest laps (all-time): 219
- Highest winning percentage: ~26% (for teams with at least
10 wins)
- Most F1 fatalities: 7 (4 race, 1 qualifying, 2 testing)
In 2004, Ferrari also surpassed
Ford as the most successful F1 engine
manufacturer, with 182 wins (to Ford's 176 wins). Due to the
availability of the
Cosworth V8 to private
teams, a total of 6,639 Ford-powered cars were entered between 1967
and 2004, compared to 1,979 starts for Ferrari and
Petronas-badged engines during the same
period.
Team name and logo
Scuderia is
Italian for a stable
reserved to racing horses, and Ferrari refers to
Enzo Ferrari, the founder of the company. The
prancing horse was the symbol on Italian
World War I ace
Francesco Baracca's fighter plane, and
became the logo of Ferrari after the fallen ace's parents, good
friends with Enzo Ferrari, asked him so, to continue his tradition
of sportsmanship, gallantry and boldness.
See also
References

A classic Ferrari F1 car (a 1967 312)
at the 2006 Ferrari Challenge at the Homestead-Miami Speedway
- Mansell, Nigel My Autobiography page 222 Collins
Willow ISBN 0-00-218497-4
- Murray Walker & Simon Taylor, Murray Walker's Formula
One Heroes p. 115, lines 6–9. Virgin Books, ISBN
1-85227-918-4
- Autosport Article: Ferrari Announce Change in
tech structure
- BBC Sport's report of the Singapore Grand Prix
Retrieved 9 October 2008
External links
Ferrari's facilities at Maranello with Fiorano test track are at
coordinates