What happens when your big F1 break spirals into a farce
On paper, it sounded reasonable enough: Lola T97/30 chassis, Ford Zetec-R V8 engines and, most importantly, major corporate backing from Mastercard.
But F1 teams donât race on paper, and the reality was a total disaster.
The driver of the project was Mastercardâs eagerness to launch the âF1 Clubâ for card holders that was supposed to fund the team. It meant that the project was horribly rushed â basically one year earlier than initially planned. Banking rival HSBC was joining F1 with the new Stewart Grand Prix team, which had a full year of preparation under its belt and a long-term works support deal with Ford.
The car was desperately undercooked, and gave drivers Vincenzo Sospiri and Ricardo Rosset little chance of making the starting grid for many reasonsâŠ
Vincenzo Sospiri, Lola T97/30 Ford
Photo by: Sutton Images
The IndyCar-based chassis hadnât been designed for the Ford V8 engine, as Al Melling was supposed to be developing a V10 Lola-badged engine in-house â but that never got to see the light of day.
The Ford customer supply came from the Forti team, which had folded in â96, and the team had struggled with reliability â even suffering a failure straight-line running at the Santa Pod dragstrip. Plus, thereâd been no time for windtunnel testing either!
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Vincenzo Sospiri, Lola T97/30 Ford
Photo by: Sutton Images
Ricardo Rosset and Vincenzo Sospiri, Lola
Photo by: Sutton Images
Former FIA Formula 3000 champion Sospiri gave it his best shot in qualifying, but fell way short of the 107 per cent cut-off required to make the race.Â
Rather fatefully, Lola founder Eric Broadley had said at the carâs launch in London: âThe 107% rule is actually quite a large margin. If we canât do that, then we shouldnât be in it.â
Eric Broadley, Lola Team Principal, a guest, Ricardo Rosset, Lola and Vincenzo Sospiri, Lola
Photo by: Sutton Images
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Oddly, Sospiri blames Jacques Villeneuve for the fact heâs never started a grand prixâŠ
âIf he hadnât done that fantastic pole lap, I would have qualified,â he claims of JVâs pole time, which was some 1.75secs clear of the opposition. Closer analysis reveals that Sospiriâs time was almost 12secs slower than Villeneuve, and that Arrowsâ Pedro Diniz was in fact the unfortunate soul who only just missed the 107%.
But, after some arguing from Tom Walkinshaw, Diniz was allowed to race anyway due to his speed in free practice, unlike the tardy Lolas, which were way off the pace.
Ricardo Rosset, Mastercard Lola T97/30
Photo by: Sutton Images
âRicardo was 1.5secs slower than me anyway,â shrugs Sospiri, who at least could take solace in that. âThe car was not the best to drive.Â
âWe had done 12 laps [of testing] at Silverstone, thatâs all. It was very difficult to handle in the corners, and lacked aerodynamic grip. Even in a straight line it was going left and right! No-one seemed to know why.â
Rosset summed up his experience thus in Autosport: âIt has been hard, as I knew it would be. Weâve had a lot of problems. Weâve got a lack of downforce and too much drag. The biggest problem is that we donât have a basic setup for the car, so we guessed at the settings and when they were wrong we panicked a little.â
Ricardo Rosset, Mastercard Lola with his team mate Vincenzo Sospiri, Mastercard Lola
Photo by: Sutton Images
Vincenzo Sospiri, Lola T97/30 Ford
Photo by: Motorsport Images
Ricardo Rosset, Lola T97/30 Ford
Photo by: Motorsport Images
Ricardo Rosset, Lola
Photo by: Sutton Images
Matters came to a head before the next race, the Brazilian GP at Interlagos. All set to try to qualify again, Sospiriâs F1 dream fell apart in comical circumstances. Not only was there no pace in the car, there was no money in the bank either!
In fact, the project was ÂŁ6million in debt and sent the entire company into receivership a few weeks later.
âI actually found out the team was over from a Brazilian newspaper on the Thursday morning before the grand prix,â he says. âThe paper said âLola is outâ so I thought, âWhatâs going on?â and phoned Ricardo [above right], and he said it was true. He was in the truck, and said it was about to be locked up, so I asked him to get my stuff and my helmet too!Â
âI went to the track, and everything was sealed. It was all over.â
The Lola Mastercard Team withdrew their cars from the race
Photo by: Sutton Images
Despite having previously tested for Benetton, Ligier and Simtek, Sospiriâs F1 career was over after just one failed attempt at qualifying.
He reflects: âIt sounded such a good deal, I left my test role with Benetton and signed up for four years. They had plans to make their own engines the next year, but the budget was never there.
âEverything theyâd told me wasnât true. In F1, when that happens, it doesnât take long to find out.â
Instead, he turned to America, where he raced IndyCars (starting on the front row of that yearâs Indy 500 behind only Arie Luyendyk and Tony Stewart) and sportscars â where he had great success driving the Ferrari 333SP â before hanging up his helmet and moving into team and driver management, most notably with Luca Filippi.