Chequered Past

11th May 1947: The Failure That Started a Legend

Martin Elliot Season 1 Episode 345

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0:00 | 27:26

What does it mean to build something that lasts? Not a car, not a season, not a dynasty — but an institution. Something that absorbs failure, survives its founders, outlasts its rivals, and keeps coming back.

This episode of Chequered Past takes a single date — the 11th of May — and follows it across six decades of Ferrari history. Four races. Four completely different eras. One unbroken thread.

It starts in a paddock in Piacenza in 1947, where a brand-new manufacturer is about to enter its first competitive race — and one of the greatest drivers in Italy has just walked out in a dispute over which car he'd been given. From there it moves to the streets of Monaco in 1975, where Niki Lauda is managing a failing car in the closing laps of the race that would start a championship campaign. Then back to Monaco in 1997, where Michael Schumacher makes a tyre call in the rain that exposes the gap between Ferrari's rebuilt organisation and everyone else's. And finally to Istanbul in 2008, where Felipe Massa wins his third consecutive Turkish Grand Prix — the last great morning of Ferrari's last sustained title era.

The through-line isn't victory. Ferrari lost its first race on a May 11th. What connects all four stories is something harder to define and more interesting to trace: the institutional character of a team that has entered works cars at every level of motorsport, continuously, for 79 years — longer than any other manufacturer in history.

No other team has done that. Not Lotus. Not McLaren. Not Williams. Ferrari never stopped.

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Music by #Mubert Music Rendering