Gulf News

Ferrari strive to fill gap left by Marchionne

Italian team in mourning during Hungarian Grand Prix

- BY OLIVER BROWN

Here at the Hungarorin­g, the untimely passing of Ferrari kingpin Sergio Marchionne is acutely felt.

The prancing horse flags are at half-mast on the Scuderia motorhome, staff are all wearing black armbands, while the cars of Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen have both had black stripes added to the paintwork.

With even Maurizio Arrivabene, the inscrutabl­e principal, removed from scheduled press duties on Friday, the impression was of a team stricken by a sense of numbness.

Marchionne, who died last week age 66, after complicati­ons from shoulder surgery, was as feared as he was revered.

In the wake of several Ferrari gaffes late last year, from Vettel’s first-corner crash in Singapore to the malfunctio­n he suffered at Suzuka of a £52 spark plug, the chief executive described the period as “embarrassi­ng”.

When he arrived here in Hungary last year, Ferrari were wary of repeating their habit of underperfo­rming in his presence.

As it turned out, they achieved only their second one-two finish since 2010. The loss of such a strong-armed leader, who repeatedly threatened to remove Ferrari from Formula One if they were not -guaranteed favourable treatment, leaves the sport’s most decorated team strangely rudderless.

Toto Wolff, who as Mercedes team principal dealt with Marchionne at many F1 strategy meetings, expressed the size of the void left behind. “I don’t want just to go back to business as usual, because we are Mercedes, Ferrari are our great friends, and we are badly shocked by events,” he said. “He was a friend, ally, rival and competitor, and he will be dearly missed.

As a businessma­n, Marchionne pulled off some giddying feats. He turned Fiat, once a middling -European carmaker, into a global behemoth. In a stunning coup, Fiat took ownership of Chrysler in the throes of the global financial crisis in 2009, with Marchionne committing no cash, but pledging to -reopen factories that had shut down during the US company’s bankruptcy.

In his trademark dark sweater, he cut an unassuming figure in the flesh, but he could be an uncompromi­sing ruler, famously savaging Raikkonen as a “laggard” after the Finn’s string of indifferen­t results.

Marchionne was also distinguis­hed by the fact that he lacked the noble lineage of his Ferrari forebears. Luca di Montezemol­o, his immaculate­ly-groomed predecesso­r, hailed from Piedmontes­e aristocrac­y, but Marchionne was proud of his own background as the son of an Italian emigre to Canada.

In the F1 realm, the task of replacing him is a complex one but the one certainty is that Ferrari are determined, even at a time of tragedy, to advance Marchionne’s vision.

As a businessma­n, Marchionne pulled off some giddying feats. He turned Fiat, once a middling -European carmaker, into a global behemoth.

 ?? Rex Features ?? ■ Sergio Marchionne died last week age 66, after complicati­ons from shoulder surgery.
Rex Features ■ Sergio Marchionne died last week age 66, after complicati­ons from shoulder surgery.

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