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MasterCard Lola

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Defunct racing team

Lola
Full nameMasterCard Lola
Formula One Racing Team
BaseHuntingdon,United Kingdom
Founder(s)Eric Broadley
Noted driversItalyVincenzo Sospiri
BrazilRicardo Rosset
Formula One World Championship career
First entry1997 Australian Grand Prix
Races entered1 (0 starts)
EnginesFord
Constructors'
Championships
0
Drivers'
Championships
0
Race victories0
Pole positions0
Fastest laps0
Final entry1997 Australian Grand Prix (Did not Qualify)
Vincenzo Sospiri (pictured) andRicardo Rosset both failed to qualify for the1997 Australian Grand Prix.

TheMasterCard Lola Formula One Racing Team, often known asMasterCard Lola or simplyLola, was a BritishFormula One team that contested only one race in the1997 Formula One World Championship. It quickly withdrew from the sport after failing to qualify on its debut at the1997 Australian Grand Prix, where the cars were more than 11 seconds off the pace in qualifying.[1]

Competition history

[edit]

Team beginnings and aspirations

[edit]

After years of providing chassis to other teams such asLarrousse and Scuderia Italia, team principalEric Broadley planned a team that would compete solely underLola ownership. A prototype chassis was first tested in late 1994 and early 1995 withAllan McNish and in late 1996 Broadley announced the team's participation in the near future. The team had originally intended to enter F1 in 1998 when the regulations on car designs were set to be overhauled, but entered a year early in 1997, In a 2008 interview withMotor Sport, Broadley said that this was due to commercial pressures from the team's sponsors, primarily from title sponsor,MasterCard.[2] This was due to MasterCard's ardour to launch its "F1 Club" for card holders to provide funding to Lola.[3] Lola founder and designer Eric Broadley stated in late January/early February 1997 that the target of Huntington-based team for the 1997 season was for Lola to be ahead of the other new Formula One team entrant for 1997-Stewart Grand Prix, with Broadley also citingArrows, who had signed then-reigning championDamon Hill for 1997 as a benchmark for Lola in their first season.[4][5]

Technology of the T97/30 and car launch

[edit]

The Lola chassis, dubbed theT97/30, was based on most of theirCART technology yet never saw the inside of a wind tunnel and barely had on-track tests. This was mainly because the design of the engine fell behind schedule.[3] The T97/30 designed by Broadley and Chris Saunders was launched at theHilton Hotel inLondon on 20 February 1997. At the car launch Broadley stated the team aimed to win the World Championship within a four year period.[6]

Unrealised Lola V10 engine and Ford-Cosworth V8

[edit]

The engine, the responsibility ofAl Melling, was originally planned to be an in-house Lola V10, designed specifically to take into account the rear streamlining of the car and the underneath of the car in the area of the diffuser. However, the engine was not developed in time and Lola were compelled to use the underpowered and outdated Ford-Cosworth ECA Zetec-RV8 engine, the same specification V8 as used by the defunctForti team in the1996 season andSauber in1995.[7]

Drivers and failure to qualify in Melbourne

[edit]

Vincenzo Sospiri, anInternational Formula 3000 champion and Formula One test driver withBenetton, andRicardo Rosset were signed to drive.[3][8] By the time the car made it to the1997 Australian Grand Prix, the team's failings were laid bare, with the cars bottom of the qualifying timesheets by a considerable margin. Under 1997 rules, drivers would only be allowed to start a race if they set a qualifying time within 107% of thepole position time or if under exceptional circumstances, they fail to qualify, their time in practice would be considered. At 11 and 13 seconds respectively, with the ageing Ford unit, Sospiri and Rosset were nowhere near achieving this. The cars were tested at Silverstone shortly after the Australian Grand Prix but both were again slowest with times in excess of 9 seconds off the front runners.[9]

Withdrawal

[edit]

On 26 March 1997, the Wednesday before theBrazilian Grand Prix, Lola announced it was withdrawing from the Brazil race due to "financial and technical problems". Lola's staff, who had already travelled to Interlagos, returned to the team's base in Huntingdon, England. Shortly afterwards, Lola withdrew from the World Championship outright.[10]

In its short existence as a Formula One constructor, Lola had incurred £6 million in debt; the company went into receivership several weeks later.[11] Irish entrepreneurMartin Birrane purchased the company and oversaw a revival in the company's fortunes; however, Lola has not been involved in Formula One in any capacity since.[12] Rosset would go on to race forTyrrell in1998, but the promising Sospiri would never compete in Formula One again.

2010 comeback attempt

[edit]

On 22 April 2009, Lola announced its intention to launch a full scale works effort for the 2010 FIA Formula One World Championship.[13] The team said that they had to re-examine their position after the plans to introduce a budget cap of £30million were raised to £40m but insisted it was "an opportunity not to be missed".[14] However, on 17 June, Lola announced it had abandoned the plan after failing to secure a place on the initial 2010 entry list.[15]

Legacy and retrospective

[edit]

In a 2021 interview with motorsport websiteThe Race, the former Mastercard Lola driverVincenzo Sospiri said the following when talking about his brief experience of Formula One with the team, including about how he was not informed in advance of the team's withdrawal from second round of the 1997 F1 season at theBrazilian Grand Prix and later the rest of the 1997 season:

Vincenzo Sospiri: "Like many drivers, my dream was to become a Formula 1 driver. We did everything we could with the budget we had, and we never had enough money to be fair. That was always the target and finally seeing the dream being realised was an incredible feeling, even though that the reality was not what was promised on paper. I had the opportunity to stay withBenetton for 1997 as a test driver but I wanted a race seat, and I had this offer from [Lola backer]MasterCard to sign for four seasons. I was optimistic about 1997 and what Lola was delivering, because back then Lola was an historic name, the number one brand in motorsport and they decided to go into F1 as a team. So I thought it was very promising. They showed me on a piece of paper, they had this sponsor and this sponsor, a lot of backing. They told me that the first year would be hard because we went in with a very old engine, it was a Ford V8 engine and they didn’t want to invest so much money before the rules change in1998. So, everything on paper was brilliant. We did a test atSilverstone where my car caught fire as I came out of the pits, it just caught fire. So, I couldn’t do the rest of the day. And then the day after, I only manage about nine laps, just out laps and in laps. [Team-mate]Ricardo [Rosset] did about 20 or 30 laps the first day and then another 20 or 30 laps on the second day, so we really didn’t know the car well at all. But it was OK, we knew the situation, we knew that it would be hard the first year, that the car hadn’t been built with any windtunnel. We all knew the car wasn’t brilliant, but it was no problem because we had to learn all these things as a racing driver. I was planning to be better for the second year. We knew we weren’t competitive, but we didn’t know it would be that bad. The car’s pace was probably the same or a little bit worse than a Formula 3000 car, but I didn’t care, I accepted it as part of the learning process. I didn’t expect the dream to be over by the second round. There was a lot of pressure from the sponsors, so they decided to bring everything forward. That’s what they told me anyway. They didn’t have time to do it correctly, and by doing everything one year early, that’s probably what caused the project to fail. The deals with the sponsors were also not closed properly and then everything went bust. I didn’t even know the team was closing down until I read about it in the newspapers. We had the car out in front of the garage on Wednesday morning, I thought, for a big conference to present the car for the future and so on. It was a horrible way to find out, I didn’t even get a phone call".

Excerpts from Vincenzo Sospiri's 2021 Interview withThe Race on his 1997 season.[16]

Also in January 2021 Mastercard Lola was ranked third byMotorsport Week in their list of 'Formula 1's top 10 worst teams', behind onlyLife Racing Engines andAndrea Moda respectively.[17]

Complete Formula One results

[edit]

(key)

YearChassisEngineTyresDrivers1234567891011121314151617PointsWCC
1997T97/30Ford ECA Zetec-R 3.0V8BAUSBRAARGSMRMONESPCANFRAGBRGERHUNBELITAAUTLUXJPNEUR0NC
ItalyVincenzo SospiriDNQWD
BrazilRicardo RossetDNQWD
Source:[18]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Bring Back V10s Podcast: Lola's disastrous 1997 F1 team".The Race. The Race Media. 11 February 2021. Retrieved11 February 2021.
  2. ^"Lunch with... Lola". 7 July 2014.
  3. ^abcBradley, Charles (26 March 2020)."What happens when your big F1 break spirals into a farce". motorsport.com. Retrieved27 March 2020.
  4. ^"Lola: We can beat Stewart".www.atlasf1.com. Atlas F1. Retrieved8 September 2023.
  5. ^Saward, Joe."The Lola T97/30".www.grandprix.com. GrandPrix.com. Retrieved1 February 2007.
  6. ^"Lola's last-minute launch".www.grandprix.com. GrandPrix.com. Retrieved8 September 2023.
  7. ^"Features – Technical – The Lola T97/30". Grandprix.com. 1 February 1997. Archived fromthe original on 30 January 2013. Retrieved26 December 2010.
  8. ^"Lola confirms Rosset and Sospiri".
  9. ^"... while Ralf is fastest".www.grandprix.com. 24 March 1997. Retrieved22 February 2020.
  10. ^"Lola out of Brazilian GP and out of season?..." - Autosport.com, 26 March 1997. Retrieved 25 October 2007.
  11. ^"Lola Cars in administration" - Grandprix.com, 26 May 1997. Retrieved 25 October 2007.
  12. ^"Q & A with Lola's Martin Birrane".
  13. ^Lola ponder return to Formula One -BBC Sport, 22 April 2009. Retrieved 22 April 2009.
  14. ^"Lola to submit 2010 Formula One entry".formula1.com. 2009. Retrieved26 December 2010.
  15. ^Lola abandons planned F1 comebackBBC Sport, 17 June 2009
  16. ^"From Lola F1 humilation the to Indy 500 front row".The Race. The Race Media. 14 February 2021. Retrieved14 February 2021.
  17. ^Camp, Steve (January 2021)."Feature: Formula 1's top 10 worst teams, Part Two".www.motorsportweek.com. Motorsport Week. Retrieved1 January 2021.
  18. ^"All championship race entries from Mastercard Lola F1 Team". ChicaneF1. Retrieved6 December 2021.
United KingdomLola Formula One cars
Test cars
T95/30
2025 season
Former
Proposed
Although World Championship races held in 1952 and 1953 were run to Formula Two regulations, constructors who only participated during this period are included herein to maintain Championship continuity.
Constructors whose only participation in the World Championship was in theIndianapolis 500 races between 1950 and 1960 are not listed.
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