Car (South Africa)

Feature: arrivederc­i, Maurizio!

As Arrivabene departs, Ferrari gains Another new team principal. will mattia binotto (Above) succeed where others have Failed?

- BY: Maurice Hamilton Mauriceham­ilton

The removal of Maurizio Arrivabene (pictured opposite) from the office of team principal at Ferrari was never likely to engender much sympathy from the motorsport media. The announceme­nt earlier this year may have marked the fourth change of leadership in five years but the frequency of such fundamenta­l disorder within the world’s greatest F1 team made less of an editorial theme than Arrivabene’s hand in his own downfall.

The 61-year-old’s tenure in arguably one of the most high-pressure posts in motor racing was marked by an abrupt and, at times, aggressive attitude. Communicat­ion with the media was virtually non-existent. It has been suggested Arrivabene was merely acting on the orders of Ferrari president, the late Sergio Marchionne. If so, Arrivabene embraced it with a seasoned surliness which seemed to come naturally and had little to do with the Italian’s innate shyness.

The more telling factor was he didn’t like questions from Ferrari team members any more than from the media. Worse than that, he was not averse to criticisin­g his team in public. A prime example came in Japan last year when Ferrari was alone in choosing intermedia­te tyres at the start of qualifying. Rather than protect his team, Arrivabene condemned them.

“From the way things were done,” he said, “I do not think pole position was within our reach, but what happened today is unacceptab­le. I am very angry. It is not the rst time these mistakes have occurred. I do not feel like pointing my ngers at someone in particular but I'm very disappoint­ed. It was easy to understand what was happening on the track, as all our opponents left the pits with slicks.”

English may not be Arrivabene’s rst language but he left no doubt about his feelings. Rather than deal with the shortcomin­gs behind closed doors, his public comments encouraged the growth of a blame culture this team could have done without. It’s bad enough losing races and not winning a championsh­ip since 2007; it’s quite another to be Ferrari and have the voracious Italian media applying constant scrutiny to what amounts to F1’s only national race team. With an irritable boss like that, if you weren’t nervous before, you quickly became jumpy and likely to make mistakes by trying too hard. It became an increasing­ly vicious downward spiral, watched and reported on by an unsympathe­tic media.

The same dif culties, it could be said, applied to their number one driver. There is no question Sebastian Vettel played a major part in Ferrari failing to win the 2018 championsh­ip despite having the best car at several points during the 21-race season. The German made schoolboy errors under pressure, most notably when he slid off the damp track in his home Grand Prix, not only losing the lead, but also handing a win to the Mercedes of his rival, Lewis Hamilton. The net transfer of more than 30 points made this a pivotal moment as the crucial second half of the season got into its stride.

Vettel won four championsh­ips in succession with Red Bull between 2010 and ‘13. He may have had the best car (courtesy of the brilliance of Adrian Newey) during this run but it’s dif cult to see how a driver

of such standing could suddenly lose what it takes. From having made very few mistakes, Vettel found himself at the wrong end of misjudgeme­nts that suggested his mind was elsewhere.

You could hear radio messages grow in their frustratio­n as the 2018 season went on, Vettel clearly not trusting decisions being made at the pit wall. It was as if he had to deal with stresses that should never have been on a driver’s radar; pressures which Toto Wolff ensured rarely intruded into Hamilton’s world in the cockpit of his Mercedes. Yes, of course, Mercedes made some terrible strategic gaffes (losing the 2018 Australian Grand Prix, for example), but each time the engineers and technician­s hunkered down as a group and at least felt they were doing their best to ensure it didn’t happen again.

At no time did Wolff – and virtually every other team principal – hang anyone out to dry. One of the elementary reasons behind such an approach is the majority of team bosses understand errors can be made. They’ve come through the ranks; been there and done it. They are “racers”. Arrivabene was not.

The man from Brescia in northern Italy made his name working for Philip Morris Internatio­nal, becoming vice president of communicat­ions and then marketing for the tobacco company. As such, he worked closely with Ferrari thanks to the long-standing associatio­n with Marlboro and sat on the Formula One Commission as a representa­tive of the sport’s sponsors from 2010.

At this point, Ferrari was slowly beginning to lose its way, the glory days of Michael Schumacher – mastermind­ed by Jean Todt and Ross Brawn – long gone. The arrival of the talented Fernando Alonso promised the urgently sought comeback and, indeed, Ferrari ought to have claimed the title in 2010 but for a strategic blunder in the nal race. It would be indicative of what was to come.

Stefano Domenicali was seen as a fall guy at the start of 2014 when the long-time Ferrari employee – highly regarded by many in F1 – was replaced as team principal by Marco Mattiacci, the CEO of Ferrari North America. This disastrous appointmen­t was corrected as early as November 2014 at the start of a major overhaul which saw Sergio Marchionne replace Luca di Montezemol­o as Ferrari chairman. Marchionne brought in Arrivabene as team principal “because of his thorough understand­ing of not just Ferrari, but also of the governance mechanisms and requiremen­ts of the sport”.

It was to be one of the few misjudgeme­nts by this dynamic gurehead in the auto industry. Marchionne was reported to have seen the error of his ways and was about to relieve Arrivabene of his duties when the Ferrari chief suddenly passed away last July following complicati­ons from surgery. The deed was nally done in January by John Elkann, Marchionne’s successor.

Apart from any hints he may have had from Marchionne, Elkann would have been aware of impending trouble thanks to growing enmity between Arrivabene and Mattia Binotto, Ferrari’s F1 technical director. Rancour was to be expected as excuses were sought for another disastrous season and the one certainty is Elkann did not want to lose the highly regarded Binotto despite – it has to be said – taking the team down a blind technical entry at a crucial point in the second half of last season.

Binotto is now team principal. With stability being so important in such a deeply competitiv­e business, yet another change at the top of Ferrari is not ideal. While the Italian may be brilliant at what he does, it’s also reasonable to ask whether he is equipped for the entirely different challenges presented by the politics and the press.

Maurizio Arrivabene will be the rst to tell his former colleague being team principal can be a debilitati­ng and exposing toxin inside that poisoned chalice unique to Scuderia Ferrari. But if it works – as many imagine it will – the quiet, bespectacl­ed Binotto will be the toast of Italy.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Carmag.co.za
Carmag.co.za
 ??  ?? 2018 JAPANESE GP
2018 JAPANESE GP
 ??  ?? 2018 GERMAN GP
2018 GERMAN GP
 ??  ?? MAURIZIO ARRIVABENE
MAURIZIO ARRIVABENE
 ??  ?? STEFANO DOMENICALI
STEFANO DOMENICALI
 ??  ?? MARCO MATTIACCI
MARCO MATTIACCI
 ??  ?? SEBASTIAN VETTEL
SEBASTIAN VETTEL

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