Historique des teams F1

Modérateurs: Stew, senior, Puff92, Casimir, Zing

Historique des teams F1

Messagepar Zing » Mar Déc 14, 2021 10:55 am

source : https://www.topgear.com/car-news/formul ... every-team

Formula One: here are the family trees of every team
... with the obvious exceptions of Ferrari and McLaren. Time for a history lesson, friends

Regardless of whether Mercedes or Red Bull come out on top in this weekend’s F1 championship showdown in Abu Dhabi, Sir Jackie Stewart, a triple World Champion himself, can take some pride in his role in the heritage and success of both teams. Bear with me on this one.

Stewart won his three championships in 1969, 1971 and 1973 for the Tyrrell team which, after several changes in ownership, ultimately became the Mercedes team of today. And when Stewart set up his own Stewart Grand Prix team in 1996, he could have only dreamt that the team would go on to win four world championships and be fighting for a fifth twenty-five years later, albeit under the ownership of Red Bull.

All this got us thinking about the family trees of the teams on today’s F1 grid. Ferrari has always been Ferrari and despite some changes in ownership, McLaren has always been McLaren, but all the others have interesting back stories which link them to the history of the sport.

MERCEDES-AMG
The Tyrrell team dates back as far as 1958, when Surrey-based timber merchant Ken Tyrrell started running his own cars in Formula Three. Their golden era was 1968-1973 when they won those three F1 championships with Stewart, but what fans of a certain age remember them for most is the six-wheeled P-34 with which Jody Scheckter won the 1976 Swedish Grand Prix. Their final victory came at Detroit in 1983 but after a subsequent fallow period the team was sold to British American Tobacco ahead of the 1999 season.

British American Racing, or BAR as it was known, ran the likes of Jacques Villeneuve and Jenson Button with little success until the team was sold to Honda in late 2005. Button won the following year in Hungary, but in the wake of the 2008 world financial crisis, Honda withdrew at the end of the season. That should have been that, but against all odds Ross Brawn kept the team alive as Brawn GP, did a deal to run Mercedes engines and went on to win the 2009 championship with Button in their first and only season. Mercedes were obviously impressed because the following year they pulled Michael Schumacher out of retirement and bought out the Brawn team, going on to win seven championships with Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg.


RED BULL RACING
In late 1988 Jackie Stewart bought the assets of a small Formula 3000 (now Formula 2) team called Gary Evans Motorsport in order to establish a vehicle for his son Paul’s racing career. Paul Stewart Racing competed mainly in Formula 3 and Formula 3000 with modest success but can take some credit for kick starting the careers of both David Coulthard and three-times Indy 500 winner Dario Franchitti.

At the end of the 1996 season, with funding from Ford, the team rebranded as Stewart Grand Prix and took the step up to F1 for 1997. There was little success, but Johnny Herbert did win the rain-soaked 1999 European Grand Prix at the Nurburgring. Prior to the 2000 season, the team was sold to Ford who owned Jaguar at the time and therefore painted the cars green and rebranded again as Jaguar Racing. They competed, again with little success, for five seasons before selling out to Red Bull and the rest, as they say, is history. Red Bull went on to win four world championships in consecutive years (2010-2013) thanks to Sebastian Vettel, and there is of course the possibility of a fifth in 2021.


ALPHA TAURI
This one’s a good one. Giancarlo Minardi set up the Minardi Formula 2 team in Faenza, Italy in 1980, but their heritage goes back further than that. Minardi had been involved in racing since the late 60s and in 1976 Enzo Ferrari loaned him a then current 312-T chassis for a pair of non-championship F1 races in order to evaluate young talent.

Giancarlo Martini was the driver, but the experiment was not a success and Ferrari hasn’t had a customer team in F1 since. After doing rather better in F2, Minardi entered F1 properly in 1985 but the next 20 years yielded just 38 championship points and no podiums. There were highlights however, notably with Pierluigi Martini qualifying on the front row for the US GP in 1990. Australian businessman Paul Stoddart purchased the team in 2001, renaming it European Minardi and giving Fernando Alonso his F1 debut that year.

In 2005 the team was sold again, this time to Red Bull who branded it Scuderia Toro Rosso (‘Team Red Bull’ in Italian) from 2006. In 2008 these F1 underdogs achieved the impossible by winning the 2008 Italian Grand Prix from pole with a young Sebastian Vettel. In 2020 Red Bull changed the team’s name to Alpha Tauri in deference to its clothing brand and with Pierre Gasly at the wheel they won their second Grand Prix, again at Monza. To this day the team is based in Giancarlo Martini’s home-town of Faenza.


ALPINE
The Toleman family made its fortune in the transportation business, and in 1977, then Chairman Ted Toleman started dabbling in motorsport’s junior formulae. His team went on to huge success in Formula 2, dominating the 1980 European Championship before entering F1 the following year.

For 1984 they signed Ayrton Senna fresh out of Formula 3 and could have won in Monaco had the race not been stopped due to torrential rain. Ahead of the 1986 season the cash-strapped team was purchased by Benetton and re-named Benetton Formula. Benetton won 27 Grands Prix between 1986 and 2001 with Michael Schumacher taking the driver’s title in ’94 and ’95.

In 2002 Renault bought the team for a reputed $120M and won world championships with Fernando Alonso in 2005 and 2006. For 2011 a deal with Lotus saw the team branded Lotus Renault and then just ‘Lotus’ for 2012-15, before reverting to Renault for 2016-2020. Renault sub-brand Alpine took over the naming rights for 2021 and with the cars painted French racing blue Esteban Ocon won in Hungary.


ASTON MARTIN
Former Top Gear presenter Eddie Jordan had been a moderately successful driver in Formula 3 before turning his hand to team management. Following F3 and F3000 success the Jordan team took the giant leap into F1 for the 1991 season with sponsorship from 7-Up. The car was both beautiful and fast, but was probably best known for giving Michael Schumacher his stunning F1 debut at Spa that year. The team scored four Grand Prix victories in total including a 1-2 for Damon Hill and Ralf Schumacher at Spa in 1998.

Heinz Harald Frentzen - yes, that bloke who made a guest appearance in Top Gear series 29 last year - scored two wins in 1999, taking third spot in that year’s drivers’ championship. The team was sold in 2005, becoming Midland F1 in 2006, Spyker in 2007 and then Force India from 2008. In 2018 Lance’s dad Lawrence Stroll bought the team, initially renaming it Racing Point before settling on Aston Martin for 2021. The team’s most recent victory came courtesy of Sergio Perez at Sakhir in 2020.


ALFA ROMEO
Alfa Romeo will forever hold the honour of winning the first ever Grand Prix which was held at Silverstone in 1950 with Giuseppe Farina at the wheel. They withdrew from the sport in 1952 before returning for a spell from 1979-1985 which yielded no victories. But the current team’s lineage is all about Peter Sauber’s racing business which was established in 1970 in Switzerland.

In the late 80s Sauber became the Mercedes works team in the World Sportscar Championship and won Le Mans in ’89. Mercedes used this programme to develop young driving talent including Michael Schumacher prior to his F1 debut. Sauber entered F1 in 1993, becoming the BMW factory team in 2006 and winning the Canadian Grand Prix with Robert Kubica in 2008.

In 2019 the team announced that it would compete as Alfa Romeo Racing although the ownership and management structure in Switzerland would remain unchanged. This weekend marks Kimi Raikkonen’s final F1 race before retirement and it is fitting that he’ll end his career driving for the same team he started out with, having made his debut for Sauber as a twenty-one year old back in 2001.


HAAS
Let’s not make the mistake of confusing Gene Haas who owns the Haas F1 team with Carl Haas whose Beatrice Haas team ran former champion Alan Jones in a Lola chassis for the ‘85 and ’86 F1 seasons. Both men may be American F1 team bosses named Haas, but that’s where the relationship ends.

The current Haas team was established from scratch for the 2016 season, but it did acquire the factory and assets of the defunct Marussia F1 team, whose heritage can be traced back to winning the Formula Renault UK championship in 2000 and 2003 with Kimi Raikkonen and Lewis Hamilton respectively as Manor Motorsport.

But Haas’s true history lies in NASCAR where they have competed since 2002. In 2009 the team partnered with driver Tony Stewart to become Stewart-Haas Racing and they have since won 65 NASCAR races and 2 drivers' championships, with Kevin Harvick finishing fifth overall in 2021.


WILLIAMS
Like Ferrari and McLaren, the heritage of the Williams team is pretty pure. They’ve never competed under another name and officially Williams Grand Prix Engineering was established in 1977. But there is a bit more of a back story than that. Frank Williams first entered Formula 1 in 1969 with Piers Courage as his driver. After showing great promise, Courage was killed in 1970 and the team then had a lacklustre time in the early 70s before selling up to Walter Wolf Racing in 1976.

The team went on to win on its debut as a constructor with Jody Scheckter at the wheel in 1977 but by that point Frank Williams had left to set up a new team of his own, Williams Grand Prix Engineering. Williams went on to became one of the most successful constructors of all time with 114 race wins and seven drivers' championships to its name. In late 2020 the business was sold and although Sir Frank stepped down from the management of the team, the legendary Williams name was retained. Sir Frank Williams passed away last month.



So, there we have it. It’s impossible to say whether Lewis’s ‘Tyrrell’ or Max’s ‘Stewart’ will win the 2021 championship, but we’ve already seen Esteban Ocon score a popular victory for ‘Benetton/Toleman’ in Hungary and having won last year’s Italian Grand Prix, Pierre Gasly has performed well all season in his ‘Minardi’.

Let’s finish with a quiz question. Who is the only driver to have raced in Grands Prix for all four of these teams?
Yup, it's none other than Max’s old man Jos Verstappen, who competed in F1 between 1994 and 2003.
Parfois on regarde les choses, telles qu'elles sont, en se demandant pourquoi.
Parfois on les regarde, telles qu'elles pourraient être, en se disant pourquoi pas.
Avatar de l’utilisateur
Zing
 
Messages: 49229
Inscription: Ven Fév 10, 2006 8:17 pm
Localisation: +BE-Namur

Re: Historique des teams F1

Messagepar Casimir » Mar Déc 14, 2021 11:49 am

Avec les images c'est mieux :D voir la source ;)

Pour AMG par exemple

Image

Image

Image

Image

Faut voir les autres pour tous ces changements...
"l'Empire d'Essence" de J. Klaxon aux Editions Catbert
Avatar de l’utilisateur
Casimir
Mangeur d'enfants
 
Messages: 34874
Inscription: Dim Juin 13, 2010 10:02 pm
Localisation: +L'Isle aux Zenfants


Retourner vers Sport et competition automobile

Qui est en ligne

Utilisateurs parcourant ce forum: Aucun utilisateur enregistré et 3 invités