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Up the ladder - the 1977 Formula 2 season
After Patrick Tambay had left Formula 2 in the search for a Formula 1
drive, the place alongside René Arnoux, who the year
before had lost the title of European Champion to Jean-Pierre
Jabouille by only one point, was to be given to another young and
promising driver.
The decision was not a difficult one for Tico
Martini as Didier Pironi just came from impressively clinching
the Formula Renault Europe title so that the "enemy
brothers" of earlier Formula Renault times got re-united in
the Elf/Martini-Renault team directed by Hughes de Chaunac.
Once again Didier took the number two seat next to René
Arnoux.
It was quite obvious that it would not be a season
to be easily dominated because there were a number of competitors
to be taken serious such as Patrick Nève in one of the
strong March’s,
the Italian armada with Patrese, Giacomelli
or Colombo and not to forget young American Eddie Cheever.
Even
last year's Martini cars that the German Willi Kauhsen had taken
over from the deleted Elf/Switzerland team with the help from
Renault and Elf-Germany to have them run by Leclère and
Ludwig, were still considered competitive. It's an interesting
note that Klaus Ludwig who later on became highly successful in sports
and touring cars, left the team at Mugello and was replaced by
several drivers throughout the season, among them Alain Prost and
Didier Pironi's cousin/half brother José-Louis Dolhem.
The 1977 season started at Silverstone, but for
the Martini team it started differently than Hughes de Chaunac
and Tico Martini had expected. The rear wing mountings turned out
to be too weak and had to be reinforced, the starter on Pironi’s
car gave up and as a result of all the problems both drivers
didn't get a comfortable set-up together. They even tried to swap
the cars between them but without a result.
In the end Arnoux
qualified seventh with Didier disappearing into the depths of the
grid. The mechanics were up checking the fuel-supply system
during the night before the race; the team began to improve as in
the last free practice the Martinis were suddenly three seconds
faster than the day before. The race started with Patrick Nève
taking the lead from Leclère. Arnoux is fourth and Didier
had already gained three positions at the end of lap one. Arnoux
overtook Mallock for second place and took up the chase for Nève.
Meanwhile Didier is caught in a hard battle with Mallock, Cheever
and Colombo. He found out very fast that this new F2 world was
completely different from what he was used to from Formula
Renault. At the front Nève suddenly lost a rear wheel,
sliding though a curve sideways but managing to keep the car on
the track but managed to get back to the pits, rejoining the race
in fourth position. So after a problematic send-off, René
Arnoux led and finally won the race. Didier unfortunately left
the track due to a flat tyre with only six laps to go. A harsh
introduction into the fiercely competitive world of Formula 2.
The second round of the 1977 Formula 2
European Championship at Thruxton is one that Tico Martini does
not have happy memories about.
Although Didier was rather
satisfied with his Martini Mk22's road holding and the resulting
5th place in the first qualifying session, he had some doubts
about the Renault engine's reliability. Both qualifying sessions
were dominated by the March drivers, this plus tyre problems
meant Didier wasn't able to accomplish more than a 7th place on
the grid, meanwhile Arnoux who struggled with a 'phlegmatic'
engine ended up even 17th. The result in the race was even worse:
While Brian Henton drove to the inaugurate victory for Brian
Lewis' Boxer - Hart ahead of Eddie Cheever, Didier had to end his
race on lap 25 with an engine failure. His team-mate didn't even
get that far - he collided with Norman Dickson's spinning
March-BMW on the first lap.
Only a week later they met again at Hockenheim
for the Jim Clark Memorial race so there were only four days to
overhaul Didier Pironi's car completely and to rebuild Arnoux'
Mk22 as it was severely damaged in his Thruxton accident. The
team soon found out that the latter was impossible given the lack
of time and so decided to use the 1976 Mk19 again to ensure they
could compete at Hockenheim with two cars. Despite the
reconditioning of his vehicle Didier was not able to do a single
lap at full speed, the Renault V6 simply refused to do more than
10000 revs, the Renault technicians had no idea what the problem
was, checked the fuel system but didn't find the reason for the
missing fuel pressure.
In the end they worked through the night,
changing the engines of both cars. Although this measure didn't
change anything Didier and René made up an all Elf/Martini
row 3 in the end. After all that struggling Tico Martini and
Hughes de Chaunac probably had a smile of relief on their faces
when their “Martini Boys” came past the pits in 3rd
and 5th places after the first lap of two 20 lap heats.
Unfortunately fate treated Didier unkindly once again - another
engine failure forced him out of the race on lap four. René
Arnoux came home second behind Jochen Mass who also won the
second heat, this time ahead of Patrese and Arnoux. Didier wasn't
that lucky. Although he had to start from the last row for the
second heat due to the breakdown of his car, it wasn't all lost
as the team had managed to change the engine once again. But the
new Renault V6 had the same fuel pressure problems so that Didier
gave up the race in the pits already on lap 4.
So now it was on into the “Green Hell”,
the Nürburgring, the track that had been rejected by Formula
1 for safety reasons that became obvious in Lauda's horrendous
accident the year before. A very fast circuit, a very dangerous
circuit, but none the less one that many drivers love. A week
earlier the Martini team had a quick test session there but it
was less informative than they had hoped and too short to improve
the situation for the team with regard to the German Grand Prix.
Nonetheless Didier Pironi reached an impressive 7m 17.7s. but
Arnoux was one of the drivers who did not feel at all comfortable
on the infamous circuit. Both Martini scored some important
points in the race with Didier in fourth place ahead of his
team-mate.
For the fifth round of the season, the Gran
Premio di Roma at Vallelunga, the Martinis came up with slightly
modified cars which were, of course, no help for the main problem
of the region, the heat. The engines suffered from high
temperatures so much that they resigned with valve defects
several times. Nonetheless the Martini drivers tried everything
to stand up to the fast March cars but Didier especially found it
impossible to get a good lap together and ends up on the 6th row.
The race then saw Giacomelli take the lead ahead of Arnoux while
Didier even lost places though in 14th place after lap one. But
after Arnoux had to give up the race in the pits with an oil-leak
all French eyes were on Didier who rewarded them with a brilliant
drive to a second place behind Giacomelli. It was at this time
that Didier decided that he could do with a little boost to help
his career and decided to gamble on a Formula 3 race at Monaco.
The race was in fact a support race to the F1 Grand Prix and
Didier felt sure that he could win here and that it would do his
C.V. no harm at all when he came to look for bigger and better
drives. Plus there would me many team managers looking on. Where
better to put on a good show that in front of them all at Monaco?
It was decisions like this that gave people the impression that
Didier was rather aloof and arrogant. What on earth made him
think that with his less than impressive introduction to F2, that
he could just walk into a F3 race at Monaco? Was it arrogance or
was he just highly motivated and confident of his abilities? True
to form Didier won the Formula 3 race, with a convincing
start-finish-victory, almost 12 seconds ahead of Elio de Angelis
in the Chevron and the Ralt of Olofsson. Mission accomplished a
jubilant Pironi returned to the Formula 2 team.
Anything else than a Martini victory in the
streets of Pau would have been a surprise as Laffite (1975) and
Arnoux (1976) managed to come home first in the two preceding
years. Laffite as well as Didier's predecessor at the Martini
team, Patrick Tambay, decided to compete in this race at the
wheel of Chevron-Harts. Didier Pironi, still enthusiastic about
his F3 victory at Monaco the weekend before, pushed a bit too
hard in the first qualifying session thus leaving the track twice
and damaging the front of his car. Tambay dominated all
qualifying sessions and Arnoux reached the second place on the
grid, Didier Pironi had to fight a lot with the balance of his
car, most probably as a result of his accidents the day before.
At the end his time was only good enough for a ninth place.
Fortunately Didier managed to achieve a comfortable set-up for
the race during the Sunday morning warm-up session. Under a dark
and menacing sky the field was decimated already at the start
when Tambay had stalled his engine and his got rammed by Xavier
Lapeyre. As a result Arnoux was able to take the lead, followed
by Giacomelli and Laffite who soon collided which promoted
Patrese and his "shadow", Didier Pironi up to second
and third place. When Patrese got slightly off the line in the
hairpin Didier slipped through to take second place. Suddenly
amidst all this heavy rains set in. Arnoux was a bit surprised
and slid sideways across the track, Didier, having seen Arnoux go
off pays heed and slows to avoid something similar. So now the
two Martinis were directly behind each other, Arnoux leading
Pironi when the race was stopped. René, keeping an eye on
the race director, took his foot off the throttle but Didier,
blinded by the spray produced by his team-mate's car, was
completely surprised, spun and finally ended up in the bales of
straw. When trying to restart, he stalled the engine, then
fortunately managed to leave the car fast enough to escape
Patrese's car that came sideways to ram into the stranded
Martini. While Laffite, the next to come along, managed to get
around the two wrecks by forcing his car into a spin, Colombo and
Zunino did not and added to a very expensive scrap yard. It was
reminiscent of a demolition derby with cars scattered all over
the place.
Mugello near Florence, Italy, was not a good
place for non-Italians that extremely hot weekend in 1977,
especially for the two works-Martini drivers it was no laughing
matter as they had to go back to Magny-Cours without a single
point for the first time since Thruxton. The training sessions
with six Italians among the first eight already made it quite
obvious that this time the French nationality was not the one to
win races with. Neither Didier (10th) nor René (14th) were
able to get a convincing set-up together. Anyway Didier once more
managed to start sensationally and catapult himself from the 5th
row into third position. Although he had to let Patrese pass, his
race still looking promising until he dropped out of the race
with a broken gearbox on lap 19. René stopped out on the
track with an empty fuel tank shortly before the end of the race.
The race at Rouen would have been a black day
for the French if Didier had not saved the day for France by
accomplishing a third place. With three Frenchmen among the first
four on the grid the expected result was a different one but
pole-setter Tambay and fourth-placed Arnoux collided right after
the start and found themselves in the role of spectators earlier
than they wanted. So it was the turn of the second-fastest
qualifier American Eddie Cheever who dominated and achieved his
first ever F2 victory with Patrese second ahead of Didier.
The trip to Enna - Pergusa in central Sicily
also didn't start well as Didier qualified only ninth with his
team-mate in 4th. At the start to the first heat Patrese
catapulted himself in front of Cheever and pole-setter Rosberg
but soon after that spun off falling victim to the fine Sicilian
sands permanently blown onto the circuit by the wind. After a
short pit-stop he rejoined the race to finish fourth. While
Didier drove his own race, being handicapped by a defective
cooler and ending up 8th, Arnoux fell back to 14th place after
having left the track and having to pit to have the front-cowling
repaired, he then fought his way up to seventh again with the bit
firmly between his teeth. With Arnoux's' victory in heat two
resulting in a second place overall behind an impressive Keke
Rosberg and Didier finishing fourth after a 5th place in the
second run the team was rather satisfied. Arnoux was now leading
the Championship by 14 points and the result was also much better
than what was expected after all the Martini problems during
qualifying combined with the menace from the BMW- and
Hart-engined cars. On the other hand Didier was now practically
no longer among the title candidates as he (as well as Bruno
Giacomelli) were already 23 points behind Arnoux with only three
more races to go.
The first of these three remaining weekends
was spent at Misano - Adriatico on August, 7th. Another “double header”
event of 30 laps each. Arnoux managed to drive the third fastest
lap, but poor Didier was only 11th suffering from a defective
shock-absorber causing irregularly strong wear of the tyres and
thus disastrous road-holding. However, Arnoux was out of the race
after one lap due to a collision with Alberto Colombo. So it was
up to Didier’s again to uphold the Martini colours while
Elio de Angelis lead the field. Didier decided that the best game
plan was to try to avoid dangerous duels and hope the others made
mistakes. And they did. At the end of the first race of the day
Didier was sixth while the race was won by Eddie Cheever leading
the surprising Italian Lamberto Leoni in the Ferrari-powered
Chevron. It was quite obvious who would be the leading actors in
race two. Leoni took his chance and the lead at the start and
stayed there until the end of the race thus accomplishing a
sensational win for the Ferrari-Dino engine that was often
laughed at. Didier drove a discreet race ending up 9th and fifth
overall so gathering another two points. With Cheever's second
place behind Leoni though and Arnoux going home with empty hands
the gap between the two championship contenders had decreased to
only nine points, so it was not over yet.
In opposition to the preceding race at Misano
the Grande Premio do Estoril on October, 2nd was to become a complete triumph for
the Elf / Martini team.
They had already tested at Estoril the
Tuesday before the race giving them a slight advantage over their
competitors. Didier took pole-position four tenths ahead of
Giacomelli with his team-mate and title candidate Arnoux in third
place on the grid. Eddie Cheever, Arnoux’ rival for the
championship, was in fifth place, directly behind Arnoux. Didier
had a perfect start and pulled away with only Giacomelli being
able to follow. On lap eight Giacomelli made a little mistake,
slightly left the track, spun and then damaged a fixture of the
front cowling when he hit the Armco. The enforced pit stop left
Bruno without a chance for points. Meanwhile Didier had increased
his lead upon his team-mate permanently and crossed the finish
line 17 seconds ahead of Arnoux who drove a tactically clever
race and always held Cheever in check until the end. So Didier
got his first and only F2 victory while René captured the
title of the 1977 Formula Two European Championship. A perfect
weekend for the Martini team.
The last round of the F2 European
Championship at Donington Park was completely dominated by Italian Bruno
Giacomelli. He, who had been so unlucky at Estoril, drove the all
new March 782-BMW and achieved a start-finish win from
pole-position as well as the fastest lap of the race. Didier
Pironi who once more started sensationally from 8th place on the
grid to fourth after lap one had an eight lap battle with
Riccardo Patrese and finally managed to overtake him in the
chicane after a minor collision. Patrese who had already suffered
from severe clutch and gearbox problems gave up the race in the
pits shortly after that. Arnoux who had started only 10th
decreased the gap to Didier in the further course of the race and
finally tried to out brake him. He failed and damaged a front
tyre instead. The resulting vibrations let him drop back to sixth
while Didier stayed third behind Giacomelli and Rosberg. These
final four points eventually lifted him up to third place in the
championship, pushing the unfortunate Patrese back at the last
minute.
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Mail : info@didierpironi.net
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www.didierpironi.net |
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