A video of Ferrari F1 at Torino 2006 doing what Ferrari does best!
Don't answer immediately. Take some time to think before responding.
How many things can you identify that are at the same time not only
precious objects, but also status symbols, social phenomena, and subjects
of graduation thesis in such varied areas as sociology, sports, industry
and law?
Fine: Now weed out all those objects that do not have a history
of at least fifty years, marked by alternating defeats and victories,
deaths and resurrections, risks of failure and bankruptcy, super-profitable
earnings, and famous personalities in the waiting rooms.
I don't know
about the United States, but in Europe, only Ferrari remains.
The little horse of Maranello -the second most important entity among
those born in a stable- is the all and nothing of automobile-ism, incarnating
for more than half a century a dream on four wheels, the ultimate manifestation
of the ever-existing human weakness that drives us, inevitably, towards
that which is beautiful in itself, even though-and especially if-identified
with the superfluous.
A Ferrari does not take the
kids
to school or the dog to the vet; it is not to be seen in the parking
lot of the supermarket, nor is it taken to work. But it is great for
travelingto Montecarlo, even if you don't gamble, or for tooling around
the center even if you live in the very heart of Paris.
But Enzo Ferrari was a man who had exceptional intuitive capacities,
and this explains in great part - but this is my very personal opinion
- the great success that he was able to confer to his creatures-marvelously
unnecessary and absolutely essential at the same time.
He identified, first of all, the "other" factors that are basic for
commercial success for so-called "niche items", a nd these are now carefully
described in any text dealing with market
dynamics: Exclusivity and potential - in this case deriving from sports
performance - and the exceptionally strong personal characterization,
almost patriarchal, of the company.
In the ninety years of the long life with which he was blessed, the
man of Modena made the most of his personal potential, building with
the precision of an engineer (which in effect he was, but only honoris
causa) that which he had planned in his youth.
It was the Alfa Romeo, that for good reason believed in his organizational
skills more than in his talent as a driver, that offered him his first
opportunities for business success, but the beginning of his legend
had a precise place and date: Piacenza, 11 May 1947.
The launching of the first automobile that carried his name took place
once the agreement of non-competition with Alfa Romeo ended. On the
basis of that agreement, he had been forbidden to produce cars with
the name Ferrari.
Not
that this clause could dampen the dynamic Enzo, who already in 1940
had made some appearances with the "Auto Avio Costruzioni" 815 with
a Touring chassis, but the power of the name Ferrari Team and of the
Little Horse, figured on the bonnets of the Alfa Romeo in all the most
important victories of the thirties, could not escape the only person
that had the right, even though time bound, to use them.
So Enzo Ferrari waited: Certainly not patiently, but he waited nevertheless.
And on 11 May 1947 his wait ended. The Ferrari 125 S made its entrance
into the automotive world at Piacenza, in the hands of Franco Cortese:
A good race that ended with the withdrawal when the debutante was comfortably
ahead in the race. But this was not a problem, because in the successive
race,
the Circuit of Caracalla of 25 May, victory was restored during the
course of the "Primavera Romana del Motore" (the Roman Spring of Motors).
The first page of history was written on the 137.60 kilometers of the
40 lap race.
This was indeed an unusual coincidence. It was always said, in fact,
that the Commendatore (Ferrari) did not have a good relationship with
the capital, understood as the center of political power - certainly
not of Rome itself. And yet it is not at all to be excluded that his
so-called allergy for the establishment was actually in some way exaggerated
by the Commendatore himself, a reflection of his love for melodrama,
and of his knowledge of the attraction exerted by the self-made man
who achieves success without help of the powerful, indeed even in contrast
with them.
Was it not Catullo who dedicated one of his famous writings to the absolute
indifference that he felt with regard to Cesaer? Nevertheless it is
not credible that this businessman, not just the man, was able to move
through the ruins (not only in material terms, but also in financial
terms) of the post war period in Italy without the help of allies, if
not powerful friends.
Certainly, he was a man of exceptional courage: if you observe one of
the few photos of the period you will note that the participants of
the first races in the post-war period would use anything as long as
they could race: the cars of the 30s and even of the 20s were brought
to light emerging from underground hiding places where they had been
hidden to protect them from the quest for metal of a nation at war.
Even
the remains of war machines were cannibalized to obtain motors and suspensions,
while the tires were often the same as those that had been used in races
ten or more years earlier.
In such a situation the 12 cylinders of the Ferrari 125S were nothing
less than technological heresy, in addition to being a great risk
from an economic point of view.
But so it was.
The future Engineer Ferrari (alias the "Grand old gentleman" alias the
"Commendatore" (commander), alias "Capo" (boss), abandoned his profitable
activity of producing "oleodinamic" machines to plunge into the battle
with an automobile having a very expensive and complicated motor, and
above all no commercial prospects in the financial desert of the post-war
period.
Who, after all, would be able to permit themselves the luxury of such
valuable objects?
By Luca Ciai
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