Team Lotus was the motorsport sister company of
English sports car manufacturer
Lotus
Cars. The team ran cars in many motorsport series including
Formula One,
Formula Two,
Formula
Ford,
Formula Junior,
IndyCar and
sports car racing.
More than ten years
after its last race Team Lotus remains one of the most successful
racing teams of all time, winning seven Formula One Constructors'
titles, six Drivers'
Championships, and the Indianapolis 500
in the United States
, between 1962 and 1978. Under the direction
of founder and Chief Designer
Colin
Chapman Lotus was responsible for many innovative and
experimental developments in critical motorsport, in both technical
and commercial arenas.
1950s
Colin Chapman established Lotus
Engineering Ltd in 1952 at Hornsey
, UK
.
Lotus achieved rapid success with the 1953
Mk 6 and the 1954
Mk
8 sports cars. Team Lotus was split off from Lotus
Engineering in 1954. A new
Formula Two
regulation was announced for 1957 and in Britain several organizers
ran races for the new regulations during the course of 1956. Most
of the cars entered that year were sports cars and they included a
large number of
Lotus 11s, the definitive
Coventry Climax powered sports racer, led by
the Team Lotus entries for Chapman, driven by
Cliff Allison and Reg Bricknell.

A 1955 Lotus MkIX.
The following year the
Lotus 12 appeared.
Driving one in 1958
Allison won the F2 class in the International Trophy at Silverstone
beating Stuart
Lewis-Evans's Cooper. The remarkable Coventry Climax powered Type 14,
the Lotus Cars production version of
which was the original Lotus Elite, won
six class victories, plus the "Index of Performance" several times
at the 24 Hours of Le
Mans
race.
As the Coventry Climax engines were enlarged in 1952 to 2.2-litres
Chapman decided to enter Grand Prix racing, running a pair of Lotus
12s at Monaco in 1958 for
Graham Hill
and
Cliff Allison. These were replaced
later that year by
Lotus 16s.
In 1959 - by which time the Coventry Climax engines had been
stretched to 2.5-litres - Chapman continued with front-engined F1
cars but achieved little, and so in 1960 Chapman switched to the
milestone mid-engined
Lotus 18.
By then
the company's success had caused it to expand to such an extent
that it had to move to new premises at Cheshunt
.
Domination in 1960s and 1970s
The first
Formula One victory for Team
Lotus came when
Innes Ireland won the
1961 United States Grand
Prix. A year earlier
Stirling Moss
had recorded the first victory for a Lotus car at
Monaco in his
Lotus 18 entered by the independent
Rob Walker Racing Team.
There were successes in
Formula Two and
Formula Junior. The road car business
was doing well with the
Lotus Seven and
the
Lotus Elite and this was followed by
the
Lotus Elan in 1962, during which year
the entire Lotus enterprise moved to their current facilities at
Hethel in
Norfolk. More racing success
followed with the 26R, the racing version of the Elan, and in 1963
with the
Lotus Cortina, which
Jack Sears drove to the
British Touring Car
Championship title, a feat repeated by
Jim
Clark in 1964.

Lotus 77
In 1963 Clark drove the
Lotus
25 to a remarkable seven wins in a season and won the
World Championship. The 1964 title was still for the taking by the
time of the last race in Mexico but problems with Clark's Lotus and
Hill's
BRM gave it to Surtees
in his Ferrari. However, in 1965, Clark dominated again, six wins
in his
Lotus 33 gave him
the championship.
When the Formula One engine size increased to 3 litres in 1966,
Lotus was inexplicably caught unprepared. They started the season
fielding the uncompetitive 2-litre
Coventry-Climax engine, only switching to
the
BRM H16 in time for the Italian Grand
Prix, with the new engine proving to be overweight and unreliable.
A switch to the new
Ford Cosworth DFV, designed by former Lotus employee
Keith Duckworth, in 1967 returned
the team to winning ways.
Although they failed to win the title in 1967, by the end of the
season the Lotus 49 and the
DFV engine
were mature enough to make the Lotus team dominant again. However
for 1968 Lotus had lost its exclusive right to use the DFV. The
season-opening 1968 South African Grand Prix confirmed Lotus'
superiority, with Jim Clark and Graham Hill finishing 1–2. It would
be Clark's last win. On 7 April 1968 Clark, one of the most
successful and popular drivers of all time, was killed driving a
Lotus 48 at Hockenheim in a
non-championship Formula Two event. The season saw the introduction
of wings as seen previously on various cars including the
Chaparral sports car. Colin Chapman
introduced modest front wings and a spoiler on Hill's Lotus 49B at
Monaco.
Graham Hill won the F1 World
Championship in 1968 driving the
Lotus
49.
Around the
same time, Chapman moved Lotus to new premises at Hethel
in Norfolk. A new factory was built on the site, the
former RAF
Hethel
bomber base and the old runways were converted into
a testing facility. The offices and design studios were
based at nearby Ketteringham Hall which became the headquarters of
both Team Lotus and Lotus Cars.
Additional car testing was carried out at
Snetterton
, a few miles from Hethel.
In 1970
Jochen Rindt was posthumous
World Champion having driven a "49" and the
Lotus 72 to victory. The new wedge-shaped
Lotus 72 was a very innovative car featuring
torsion bar suspension, hip-mounted
radiators, inboard front brakes and an overhanging rear wing. The
72 originally had suspension problems, but when anti-dive and
anti-squat were designed out of the suspension the car quickly
showed its superiority and Rindt dominated the championship until
he was killed at Monza when a brake shaft broke.
The cause of Rindt's death was not fully understood. The rest of
the 1970 season was somewhat desultory, with various young drivers
such as
Emerson Fittipaldi
appearing in the cars. The team spent a lot of time experimenting
with a
gas turbine powered car, and with
four wheel drive again. Lotus' 1971 experiments did not bring any
serious advance in technology but allowed Chapman to test several
drivers. For 1972 the team focussed again on the type 72 chassis,
with Imperial Tobacco continuing its sponsorship of the team under
its new
John Player Special
brand. The cars, now often referred to as 'JPS', were fielded in a
new black and gold livery - considered beautiful by many, but
coffins by others. Lotus took the championship by surprise in 1972
with 25-year old Brazilian driver
Emerson Fittipaldi who became (at the
time) the youngest world champion, a distinction he held until
2005, when 24 year-old
Fernando
Alonso took the accolade. Team Lotus also won the
F1 World Championship for Manufacturers for a
sixth time in 1973. Then, the 72 became outdated, while successor
models like the Lotus 76 were disappointing.
The first ever
Formula Ford car was
built around a Formula 3 Lotus, the
Type 51.
The company, now permanently situated at Ketteringham Hall,
continued to do well financially as the demand for sports cars in
the 1960s, before the US Federal Government introduced the sweeping
regulations of the '70's, seemed to be endless.
Chapman was also successful at Indianapolis with the
Lotus
29 almost winning the 500 at its first attempt in 1963 with
Clark at the wheel. The race marked the beginning of the end for
the old front-engined Indianapolis roadsters.
Clark was leading when
he retired from the 1964 event with suspension failure, but in 1965
he won the biggest prize in US racing driving his Lotus 38; The first ever mid-engined car
to win the Indianapolis
500
.
Many of Chapman's successes came from innovation. The
Lotus
25 was the first
monocoque
chassis in F1, the
49 was the first car of note to
use the engine as a stressed member, the
Lotus 56 Indycar was powered by a
gas turbine engine and was fitted with
four wheel drive, the
Lotus 63 was the first mid-engined F1 car
to race with four wheel drive, and the
72 broke
new ground in aerodynamics. Chapman was also an innovator as a team
boss. For 1968 the FIA decided to permit
sponsorship after the withdrawal of
support from automobile related firms like BP, Shell and Firestone.
In April, Team Lotus was the first major team to take advantage of
this, with Clark's Type 48 F2 appearing at Hockenheim in the Red,
Gold and White colors of
Imperial
Tobacco's Gold Leaf brand.
The F1 followed at Jarama
.
Team Lotus was first to achieve 50 Grand Prix victories. (Ferrari
was the second team to do so, having won their first Formula One
race in 1951, seven years before the first ever Lotus F1
car.)
In the mid-1970s Lotus engineers began to investigate
aerodynamic ground effect. The
Lotus 78, and then the
Lotus 79 of 1978 were
extraordinarily successful with
Mario
Andretti winning the F1 World Championship. Lotus attempted to
take ground effects further with the
Lotus 80 and
Lotus 88. The team developed an all
carbon fibre car, the
Lotus 88 in 1981. The 88 was banned from
racing for its 'twin chassis' technology. McLaren's
MP4/1 beat it as the first all carbon fibre
car to race. Chapman was beginning work on an
active suspension development programme
when he died of a heart attack in December 1982 at the age of only
54.
1980s
After Chapman's death the racing team was taken over by
Peter Warr but a series of F1 designs proved
unsuccessful.
Midway through 1983 Lotus hired French
designer Gérard Ducarouge and, in five weeks, he built the Renault
turbo powered 94T. A
switch to
Goodyear
tyres in 1984 enabled
Elio de
Angelis to finish third in the World Championship, despite the
fact that the Italian did not win a race. The Team also finished in
3rd place in the Constructors' Championship. When
Nigel Mansell departed at the end of the year
the team hired
Ayrton Senna.
The
Lotus 97T was another
solid achiever with de Angelis winning at Imola
and Senna in Portugal and Belgium. The Team,
although it had now won three races instead of nil, lost 3rd in the
Constructors' Championship to Williams (who beat them on countback
with 4 wins). Senna scored eight pole positions, with two wins
(Spain and Detroit) in 1986 driving the evolutionary
Lotus 98T. Lotus regained 3rd in the Constructors'
Championship, passing Ferrari. At the end of the year the team lost
its long time
John Player &
Sons Ltd backing (John Player Special) and found new
sponsorship with
Camel. Senna's
skills attracted the attention of the
Honda
Motor Company and when Lotus agreed to run
Satoru Nakajima as its second driver a deal
for engines was agreed. The Ducarouge-designed 99T featured
active suspension, but Senna was
able to win just twice: at Monaco and Detroit, with the Team again
finishing 3rd in the Constructors' Championship, like the previous
year behind British rivals Williams and McLaren, but ahead of
Ferrari.
The Brazilian moved to McLaren
in 1988 and Lotus signed Senna's countryman and
current (1987) World Champion Nelson
Piquet from Williams. But he and Nakajima failed to make
any impressions in terms of fighting for victories.
1990s - The End
The
Lotus-Honda 100T was not a
success and Ducarouge decided in mid 1989 that he was going to
return to France. Lotus hired Frank Dernie to replace him. With the
new normally-aspirated engine regulations in 1989 Lotus lost its
Honda turbo engines and moved to
Judd
V8 engines. In the middle of the year Warr departed and was
replaced as team manager by Rupert Manwaring, while long time Lotus
senior executive Tony Rudd was brought in as chairman. At the end
of the season Piquet went to
Benetton and Nakajima to
Tyrrell. A deal was organized for
Lamborghini V12 engines and
Derek Warwick and
Martin Donnelly were hired
to drive for 1990.
The Dernie design was not a success with
Warwick scoring all the three points for a 6th in the 1990 Canadian Grand Prix and a 5th
in the 1990 Hungarian Grand
Prix and Donnelly was nearly killed in a violent accident at
Jerez
. At the end of the year Camel withdrew their
sponsorship.

The Lotus Type 102B as used in the F1
season.
Former Team Lotus employees Peter Collins and Peter Wright
organized a deal to take over the team from the Chapman Family and
in December the new Team Lotus was launched with
Mika Häkkinen and
Julian Bailey being signed for the 1991
season. Bailey was soon replaced by
Johnny Herbert, although Bailey had finished
6th in the
1991 San Marino
Grand Prix, where Häkkinen finished 5th to make that the first
race since the
1988 Brazilian
Grand Prix with two Lotus Cars in the points and a deal was
struck for the team to use Ford V8 engines in 1992. The team was
now short on money and this affected performance, but it did well,
Häkkinen scoring 11 points (with two fourth places, in the
1992 French Grand Prix, where he had
failed to qualify the previous year, and in the
1992 Hungarian Grand Prix), whilst
Herbert could due to crashes and a lot of bad luck only score two
Points for 6th Places in both
1992 South African Grand Prix
and
1992 French Grand Prix
and the team finishing 5th in the Constructors' title. Häkkinen,
who finished 8th in the 1992 Drivers Championship, moved to McLaren
in 1993 and after his replacement
Alex
Zanardi crashed heavily at the
1993 Belgian Grand Prix, where
Herbert scored the last two points of a Lotus Car ever, the Briton
was joined by
Pedro Lamy. The team scored
12 points despite the tight budget and finished 6th in the 1993
Constructors' Championship due to more 4th Places than
Sauber. Herbert also finished 9th in the Drivers
Championship with three 4th Places : in the
1993 Brazilian Grand Prix, where
he lost 3rd to Benetton's Michael Schumacher shortly before the end
of the race, in the
1993
European Grand Prix, where he managed with only one pit stop to
finish the race and in the
1993
British Grand Prix, where he was not far behind Riccardo
Patrese's 3rd placed Benetton at the end. That caused that time BBC
Commentator Murray Walker to think, that the Lotus team would be
back, but Herbert benefited from the Retirements of
Ayrton Senna,
Martin
Brundle and
Damon Hill. Zanardi only
managed one 6th Place : in the
1993 Brazilian Grand Prix, the
last race with both Lotus Cars in the Points.
Unfortunately debts were mounting and the team was unable to
develop the
Lotus 107,
which had been designed by Chris Murphy. The team gambled on
success with
Mugen Honda engines.
Herbert and Lamy struggled with the old car. The Portuguese driver
was seriously injured in an accident in testing at Silverstone and
Zanardi returned. The hope was that the new
Lotus-Mugen Honda
109 would save the day. In an effort to survive the team took
on pay-driver
Philippe Adams at the
Belgian GP. At
Monza Zanardi was back in the car,
and the new
109 was ready. Herbert qualified fourth but at
the first corner he was punted off by the
Jordan of
Eddie
Irvine. Herbert later commented that he felt he could have won
the race. The following day the team applied for an Administration
Order to protect itself from creditors.
Tom Walkinshaw pounced and bought Johnny
Herbert's contract, moving him into
Ligier and then Benetton.
In October the team was sold to
David
Hunt, brother of 1976 World Champion
James.
Mika Salo was
hired to replace Herbert. In December, however, work on the design
of a new car (the
Lotus 112) was halted
and the staff laid off. In February 1995 Hunt announced an alliance
with
Pacific Grand
Prix and Team Lotus came to an end. Pacific were initially
referred to as Pacific Team Lotus and their car featured a green
stripe with the Lotus logo but as the season wore on and Pacific's
performance and finances were poor most observers felt it unfair to
mention Lotus in the same name as Pacific so the team was more or
less still referred to as Pacific.
Pacific left Formula One after the
1995 Australian Grand Prix. The
last race for Lotus was the
1994 Australian Grand Prix.
2010 - Return to Formula One
Following the 1994 collapse, the rights to the name Team Lotus were
purchased by
David Hunt, brother
of former F1 champion
James Hunt. In
2009, when the FIA announced an intention to invite entries for a
budget-limited championship in 2010,
Litespeed acquired the right to submit an entry
under the historic name.
Lotus Cars, the
sister company of the original Team Lotus, distanced itself from
the new entry and announced its willingness to take action to
protect its name and reputation if necessary. When the 2010 entry
list was released on 12 June 2009, the Litespeed Team Lotus entry
was not one of those selected. In September 2009, reports emerged
of plans for the Malaysian Government to back a Lotus named entry
for the 2010 championship to promote the Malaysian car manufacturer
Proton, which owns Lotus Cars. On 15 September 2009 the FIA
announced that Lotus F1 Team (note that this is
not Team Lotus) had been granted
admission into the 2010 season.
Formula One results
References
- http://www.gglotus.org/ggrace/ggfaq/general.html retrieved on 1
May 2008
-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/motorsport/formula_one/8084475.stm
-
http://fia.com/en-GB/mediacentre/pressreleases/f1releases/2009/Pages/f1_2010_entrants.aspx
- http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/78284 Malaysians
pushing for Lotus F1 entry
-
http://www.fia.com/en-GB/mediacentre/pressreleases/f1releases/2009/Pages/2010_f1_entries.aspx
Lotus to be 13th team on F1 grid in 2010
External links