Think racing drivers are all one-trick ponies these days? Think again. Outside of F1, they’re diversifying more than at any time since the 1960's.
Everyone’s heard the ‘it-was-better-in-the-old-days’ motorsport bores reminiscing about the era when Formula 1 stars used to compete in every race on the support programme to grands prix. The fact that this pretty much died out from the 70's – the BMW M1 Procar series of 1979-80 excepted – was an inevitable consequence, not only of F1 drivers’ contracts becoming increasingly exclusive and their salaries ever greater, but also the vast rise in professionalism of most high-profile series demanding their own specialists. Not to mention that the enormous improvements in safety meant that the pool of top-line drivers across all disciplines grew exponentially simply because they were enjoying longer careers.
That’s begun to change over the past decade. OK, F1 drivers remain mostly F1-only, but look beyond the sport’s pinnacle to the top tiers of professionals and they’re becoming increasingly versatile. Partly, this has been a product of the logjam of drivers and high costs at GP2/Formula V8 3.5 level, together with the collapse of several F1 junior-driver programmes. The effect of this has filtered ever lower down the ladder, and now even Formula 4/Renault 2.0 graduates are jumping over to GT and tin-top categories in a bid to become a professional driver rather than forlornly chase the F1 dream.
Bu hikaye Autosport dergisinin February 09,2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Autosport dergisinin February 09,2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
The Shock Of The New
If the spectacle of Lewis Hamilton carving his way to the world title seems familiar, much is changing off-track in the new Liberty era.
Vettel Proves Ferrari Is Back
FORMULA 1'S NEW ERA IS ALL ABOUT BIGGER CARS, WIDER TYRES, MORE downforce, and greater performance than ever before. But this category remains one defined by small margins, and ultimately it was minor details that meant Ferrari rather than Mercedes went home victorious from the first grand prix of 2017.
Nigel Roebuck
A genuine threat to mercedes.
Dan Gurney 1931-2018
Dan Gurney 1931-2018
How Kubica's F1 Racing Dream Was Put On Hold
How Kubica’s F1 Racing Dream Was Put On Hold
Halo It's Here
Like it or loathe it, the halo safety structure is a fixture for Formula 1 in 2018. Here’s how it’s set to affect the cars.
Rosenqvist's 10-Step Guide To Beating Buemi
The Swede turned the tables on Formula E’s top dog, beating the reigning champion and taking the lead in the title chase.
Ferrari's Finest
A selection of the Italian marque's racing machinery provided a compelling centrepiece to Autosport International 2018.
Richards' Latest Task
The Prodrive boss andnewMSA chairman assessed the challenges and opportunities facing British motorsport in 2018.
Newey F1's Aero Artist On Its New Aero Era
The Red Bull design guru can see some interesting elements in the new rulebook.