Picture the scene: northwestern France, summer of '65. England has yet to win the World Cup and the Apollo space programme is still four years shy of the moon, but Ferrari? Ruling the globe even in the face of bloodthirsty competition. And its own hobbled prototypes. You see, everyone expected Ford's six GT40s (including two 7.0-litre monsters) to muller the opposition, but in the event, none of them lasted beyond the sixth hour. And when Ferrari's main challengers followed suit later on, it was the NART entry of Masten Gregory, Jochen Rindt, and (depending on who you believe) reserve driver Ed Hugus that triumphed in a car that had qualified almost 13 seconds off the pace. Staggering.
Anyway, imagine looking Old Man Enzo in the eye and telling him - after a seventh victory in eight years - "Ferrari won't win here again". A ludicrous notion. Absurd. But fast forward to the present day and it remains Ferrari's most recent success. All dynasties die, but few endings have been as sudden and everlasting.
Maranello has decided the clock has ticked long enough, and more than half a century later the shifting landscape has given it a chance to kill the stopwatch at last. Chiefly, the FIA has developed a leading World Endurance Championship class that strikes the right balance between engineering freedom and financial restraint. However, you also suspect that FI's cost cap has left the sport's giants with more excess coins in their equally giant pockets than they really know what to do with. What, you thought Red Bull announced that £5 million track toy on a whim?
Esta historia es de la edición September 2022 de Top Gear.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición September 2022 de Top Gear.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
ELECTROMECHANIC
Meet the electric restomod that you can create at home it's so easy you can do the conversion in a day, apparently
ALL THE SMALL THINGS
Word is there's no such thing as a decent, small, simple, reasonably priced car these days. Allow TopGear to investigate
VOLKSWAGEN ID.BUZZ 7-SEAT
Volkswagen’s new seven seater ID.Buzz is now the family mover it always should have been
BMW M5
TO THE POINT: THE NEW BMW M5 IS AN excellent car. It's very fast, confident, endlessly configurable and now offers a not inconsequential 40ish miles of electric-only running for happy tax returns.
VAUXHALL GRANDLAND vs FORD EXPLORER
These two brands have been the 'pile it high, sell it cheap' kings of the UK market for decades, but their new core models take a very different tack...
CAR OF THE YEAR - 5 STAR
Yep, Renault's retro-chic new supermini with an optional wicker baguette holder Scoops the grand prix...
MEANWHILE... IN THE FUTURE
Catching rockets with chopsticks isn't the only autonomous tech going on in Elon Musk's world...
KING OF THE HILLS
You wait for one 800+bhp super GT, then two rock up at once. It's the Aston/Ferrari showdown we've all been waiting for...
PACKAGE
What better way to test the Hyundai Santa Fe's SUV-ness than hand delivering TopGear magazine to each and every subscriber in... New Zealand?
MYTH BUSTER
\"THE GOLF GTI WAS THE OG HOT HATCH\"