Disappointing, but not unexpected, news last week that the Manor Formula 1 team had closed its door after failing to find a buyer to keep it afloat, added further evidence to the charge that motorsport’s top tier’s financial management needs a major overhaul. With the frontrunning teams having hundreds of millions in the bank to fund R&D, development and resources, and the tail-end squads barely scraping together millions, it’s no wonder they could no longer – literally and metaphorically – keep up.
What’s extra galling for British-based Manor and its hundreds of talented staff is that F1 is going through unprecedented change and with it comes real hope that the division of wealth among competing teams can finally be more equitable. A proper incentive for talented race teams to come and play could well be just round the corner.
Since the World Championship began in 1950, well over 100 teams have come and gone. That’s the nature of the beast, of course, thanks to financial hardship, takeover or, in the early years, injury or death.
While scouring the list of defunct teams, several big names leapt out at us – those squads that we wish were still in the game. We’ve picked out our favourite 10 long-lost names and run the rule over the whos, whats and whens, with a classic moment from each team’s history.
Get in touch with us and tell us which F1 teams you wish were still around and why.
Founded: 1962
Closed: 1992
Races: 394
Wins: 35
Pole positions: 39
Fastest Laps: 41
World Championships: Four Drivers’ (1966, ’67, ’81, ’83); two Constructors’ (1966, ’67)
Classic moment: Niki Lauda won the 1978 Swedish GP in a BT46B with a huge fan that sucked the car onto the ground. It was the novel machine’s only race.
Founded: 1951
Closed: 1977
Races: 197
Wins: 17
Pole positions: 11
Fastest Laps: 15
World Championships: One Drivers’ (1962); one Constructors’ (1962)
Classic moment: By winning the South African Grand Prix at the end of 1962 Graham Hill became the first Briton to become World Champion at the wheel of a British car.
Founded: 1966
Closed: 1969
Races: 25
Wins: 1
Pole positions: N/A
Fastest Laps: 1
World Championships: N/A
Classic moment: Team founder Dan Gurney gave his eponymous marque its only victory in the Belgian GP at Spa in 1967 aboard the exquisite Weslake V12-powered T1G.
Founded: 1974
Closed: 1978
Races: 52
Wins: 1
Pole positions: N/A
Fastest Laps: 1
World Championships: N/A
Classic moment: Withholding race-long pressure from Ferrari rival Niki Lauda, James Hunt gave Hesketh its only World Championship win in the 1975 Dutch GP at Zandvoort.
Founded: 1976
Closed: 1996
Races: 326
Wins: 9
Pole positions: 9
Fastest Laps: 10
World Championships: N/A
Classic moment: From 14th on the grid, Olivier Panis kept his cool on the wet-dry streets of Monaco in 1996 aboard the Mugen-Honda-powered JS43 to give the team its final win – 15 years since it last tasted victory.
Founded: 1958
Closed: 1994 (not including ‘New Lotus’ from 2010-2015)
Races: 491
Wins: 79
Pole positions: 107
Fastest Laps: 71
World Championships: Six Drivers’ (1963, '65, 68, ’70, ’72, ’78); seven Constructors’ (1963, ’65, ’68, '70, ’72, ’73, ’78)
Classic moment: Ayrton Senna took his maiden F1 win at a rain-lashed Portuguese GP at Estoril in the JPS 97T, beating everyone by over a minute.
Founded: 1967
Closed: 1972
Races: 60
Wins: 9
Pole positions: 4
Fastest Laps: 12
World Championships: One Drivers’ (1969); one Constructors’ (1969)
Classic moment: Jackie Stewart and MS10 mastered the rain and fog at the fearsome Nürburgring Nordschleife to win the German GP – by more than four minutes!
Founded: 1973
Closed: 1980
Races: 104
Wins: 1
Pole positions: 3
Fastest Laps: 3
World Championships: N/A
Classic moment: The team’s only victory came in the Austrian GP at the Osterreichring in 1977 with Australian Alan Jones, who went on to win the title with Williams.
Founded: 1970
Closed: 1998
Races: 430
Wins: 23
Pole positions: 14
Fastest Laps: 20
World Championships: Two Drivers’ (1971, ’73); one Constructors’ (1971)
Classic moment: The very first proper Tyrrell chassis, 001, took pole position for its first race – the Canadian Grand Prix at St Jovite in 1970 – courtesy of Jackie Stewart.
Founded: 1977
Closed: 1979
Races: 47
Wins: 3
Pole positions: 1
Fastest Laps: 2
World Championships: N/A
Classic moment: Out of nowhere, Jody Scheckter gave the Austro-Canadian squad a debut win in Argentina in 1977. He won twice more that year to finish second in the Drivers’ Championship.
In fact, this game could go on for a lot longer…
Images courtesy of LAT
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