One of the most exciting motor racing stories to
have emerged of late is that of Rene Arnoux and Patrick Tambay
sharing a 575 GTC in the 2004 FIA GT Championship.
For the benefit of our younger readers, these two
august gentlemen (now 56 and 55 respectively) were Ferrari F1
team mates in 1983, one of the most poignant and significant ever
seasons for the Scuderia. This followed the appalling season in
which Gilles Villeneuve was killed and Didier Pironi suffered
the injuries which ended his F1 career. Tambay joined the team
after Villeneueve’s death and is credited with helping to
pull them together sufficiently to win the Constructors’
Championship that year.
Arnoux joined him for ’83. A wild man, a tyre-burning
out-and-out racer whose wheel-banging battle for second place
with Villeneuve, whilst driving for Renault, denied his team-mate
Jean-Pierre Jabouille much of the TV glory which he deserved when
taking Renault’s first (modern) GP win in the 1979 French
GP, after years of struggle. This was not only Renault’s
first win, it was the first win for a turbocharged F1 car, which
started the death knell (albeit protracted) for the Ford Cosworth
DFV. It was also the last season in which Ferrari won the F1 Driver’s
title (Scheckter) until MS finally did it in 2000.
The 126 C2 & C3 that Arnoux and Tambay raced
were essentially “English” Ferraris, designed by Harvey
Postlethwaite (Ferrari having a long-established proclivity to
recruit English drivers and engineers when they lose their way)
and the C3 was also Ferrari’s first carbon-fibre car. Heady
stuff for a British Ferrarista!
For the record, Arnoux won three GP and finished
third in the Drivers' Championship whereas Tambay won one and
took fourth place. Ferrari took their second constructors' title
in a row. Tambay was replaced by Michele Alboreto for the following
season and Arnoux was fired after the first race of 1985. Tambay
later drove for Renault, but they were a spent force and he ended
his F1 days with the disastrous Beatrice team. Arnoux sat out
the rest of 1985 and joined Ligier in '86, staying until 1989
when his F1 career too petered out.
In the cold light of day, I put nostalgia behind
me to search for more facts behind today’s story. If the
“Google” translator can be believed, this is a Spanish
initiative; Scuderia Cavallinó is based near the Circuit
de Catalunya and is headed by Antonio Cano to promote young driving
talent. They plan to compete at all levels, from karting, through
National F3 to GT racing. Tambay and Arnoux are “professors”
who will compete in European GT in one of two Ferrari 575 GTCs.
The other will be driven by Spaniards Javier Diaz
(runner-up in the 2002 European Ferrari Challenge) and Carlos
Palau (ex- GT champion of Spain) and a Ferrari 360 GTC to be driven
by Iñaki Goiburu in European and National GT.
Arnoux and Tambay both have extensive sportscar
experience, featuring in Renault’s successful Le Mans programme
in the 1970s. Arnoux was also entered in a 333SP in the 1995 Le
Mans 24 hrs, the car retiring after 7 laps with engine failure.
He had better luck in the Maserati Trofeo race at Monza in September
2003, finishing on the podium in third place.
Tambay was Can-Am Champion and drove the Jaguar
XJR-9 with success, but has latterly been better known a TV commentator
and Deputy Mayor of Le Cannet, a suburb of Cannes. Both Arnoux
and Tambay have competed in the Paris-Dakar.
As always in motor racing, the really interesting
question is: “Who is paying for it and why?" A figure
of € 8 million is mentioned on the web. Maybe, given recent
articles on Ferrari’s customer base click
here, one could argue that Arnoux and Tambay are ideal role
models...
When it comes to grand schemes in motor racing,
experience teaches caution. However, the prospect of Arnoux the
wild man and Tambay the sophisticated racer sharing a 575 GTC
is one to be savoured. Let us hope it happens.