Will Porsche commit to Formula 1 middecade, when the new engine regulations are finalised? Its Volkswagen Group parent stands on the precipice and has been openly engaged in talks, but it has yet to confirm that one of its brands – most likely Porsche – will take the plunge into grand prix racing. But there’s a sense that ‘yes’ is more likely than ‘no’ right now.
There are other questions: if Wolfsburg chooses to push the big button, would it enter as a powertrain partner with Red Bull Racing? That would make more sense than starting from scratch, at least from a competitive point of view – although what’s the true value if the car isn’t painted in Porsche colours? Then again, should Porsche bother with F1 at all? No other form of racing comes anywhere close in terms of global appeal – certainly not Formula E or the World Endurance Championship. But in the face of real-world challenges, should a highprofile F1 campaign really be a priority, even with synthetic e-fuels and sensible budget caps?
Sure, Dan Gurney won the 1962 French Grand Prix in a little silver Porsche, and Niki Lauda and Alain Prost scored a hat-trick of F1 titles in the mid-1980s driving McLarens with Weissach’s turbo V6 engines (albeit bearing TAG badges). But is Porsche really an F1 company? It fits at Le Mans – of course it does. But it has never really been at home in F1. Perhaps it’s time for that to change.
So many questions, so many possibilities. It’s a good time, then, to speak to Porsche Motorsport’s new boss, Thomas Laudenbach.
F1 CALL MUST BE MADE SOON
This story is from the November 17, 2021 edition of Autocar UK.
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This story is from the November 17, 2021 edition of Autocar UK.
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