1971: Formula One Season Portable

1971: Formula One Season Portable

Forget the championship for a moment. Monza 1971 is the most insane race you’ve never seen on a highlight reel. Five drivers——crossed the finish line within 0.61 seconds after 55 laps. Peter Gethin, a journeyman in a BRM, won his only race, averaging over 150 mph on a track with no chicanes, just flat-out trees and banking.

If you ask most F1 fans about the early 1970s, they’ll point to 1970 (Rindt’s tragic, posthumous title) or 1973 (Peterson vs. Stewart, the season of shadows). But 1971? 1971 is the forgotten monster. It’s the season that shouldn’t have worked—a chaotic, thunderous, and brutally dangerous bridge between two eras. 1971 formula one season

Tracks like the Nürburgring Nordschleife (still in its 14-mile, 172-corner glory) and the old Spa (8.7 miles of public roads) were already terrifying. Put 500 horsepower in a 550kg tube of aluminum, on wet cobblestones and grass, and you have a recipe for gods or ghosts. Forget the championship for a moment

1971 is also the season of the "shadow champion." François Cevert, Stewart’s young, beautiful, brilliant teammate, finished third in the championship. He was faster than Stewart on his day. He was the future. The photos from 1971 show him laughing, leaning on the Tyrrell, hair in his eyes. Two years later, at the 1973 US GP, he would be cut in half by the Armco barriers at Watkins Glen. Stewart retired immediately, never to race again. Peter Gethin, a journeyman in a BRM, won

The top five: Gethin, Peterson, Cevert, Ganley, Hailwood. Three of those names would be dead within two years. But on that September afternoon, they were immortals, slipstreaming so close you could read their tire wear.