- 21 Dec 14, 03:41#430342
After the agony of defeat, success will be sweet!
The following three sections are all from the same article; but, I thought I'd post
them separately to facilitate discussion on the different aspects/comments.
First part, general background:
, Ben Anderson and Edd Straw wrote:">Analysis: Why Ferrari Formula 1 team's axe keeps falling
Failing to win the Formula 1 world championship is usually seen as a disaster for Ferrari, so failing to win a race in any given season must be virtually unthinkable.
But that's exactly where the Scuderia found itself in 2014 - enduring its first winless F1 campaign since 1993.
Not traditionally a team known for its patience, Ferrari has acted with a ruthless sweep of its human resources broom. Italian equivalents of the P45 form have flown all over Maranello.
News that engineering director Pat Fry and chief designer Nicolas Tombazis will leave the team is the latest development in a wide-reaching restructure that has encompassed change at the very top of the company.
During this year alone, Ferrari has changed president, team principal (twice), and reshuffled its engine department.
A disappointing season on-track led to un-resolvable tension with star driver Fernando Alonso (since departed for McLaren), and now further heads have rolled in the design office and the engineering department.
Just before taking over from Luca di Montezemolo in the autumn, Sergio Marchionne - the CEO of parent company Fiat - described the Scuderia's 2014 performance as "unacceptable", and it seems Fry and Tombazis are the latest to pay the price for that.
them separately to facilitate discussion on the different aspects/comments.
First part, general background:
, Ben Anderson and Edd Straw wrote:">Analysis: Why Ferrari Formula 1 team's axe keeps falling
Failing to win the Formula 1 world championship is usually seen as a disaster for Ferrari, so failing to win a race in any given season must be virtually unthinkable.
But that's exactly where the Scuderia found itself in 2014 - enduring its first winless F1 campaign since 1993.
Not traditionally a team known for its patience, Ferrari has acted with a ruthless sweep of its human resources broom. Italian equivalents of the P45 form have flown all over Maranello.
News that engineering director Pat Fry and chief designer Nicolas Tombazis will leave the team is the latest development in a wide-reaching restructure that has encompassed change at the very top of the company.
During this year alone, Ferrari has changed president, team principal (twice), and reshuffled its engine department.
A disappointing season on-track led to un-resolvable tension with star driver Fernando Alonso (since departed for McLaren), and now further heads have rolled in the design office and the engineering department.
Just before taking over from Luca di Montezemolo in the autumn, Sergio Marchionne - the CEO of parent company Fiat - described the Scuderia's 2014 performance as "unacceptable", and it seems Fry and Tombazis are the latest to pay the price for that.
