Show Me the Money!

A short time after we went to press last month, it was announced that a new American Formula One team was soon going to be announced. Yawn. Sorry, itโ€™s not that Iโ€™m notโ€”yawnโ€”excited by the prospect, itโ€™s just how many times have we heard this over the pastโ€ฆoh, I donโ€™t know, 30 years? You have to admit that the United States, on the whole, has always had a somewhat star-crossed history in Formula One. Donโ€™t believe me? In the modern postwar era, weโ€™ve enjoyed but 2 World Driving Championships (Phil Hill, 1961, and Mario Andretti, 1978). Britain, by contrast, has had 13 to date, while Brazil has had 8 and Germany 7 (though, granted, all 7 came from Herr Schumacher).

Sadly, when one looks at the record of American car constructors, the statistics get even grimmer. Lance Reventlowโ€™s Scarab effort kicked off Americaโ€™s first postwar foray into Formula One at the close of the โ€™50s, but sadly the team missed the mark by a year or two, when they had the bad fortune of fielding a fast front-engine car, during the dawn of the rear-engine revolution. Next up, but often overlooked, was the short-lived Scirocco effort of the early โ€™60s, but lack of funding and development saw the team miss a great opportunity to capitalize on the even playing field brought about by the new 1.5-liter engine rules of the day.

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