
thumb
During its history, 'Alfa Romeo' has competed successfully in many different categories of 'motorsport', including
Formula One,
sportscar racing,
touring car racing and
rallies. They have competed both as a constructor and an engine supplier, via works entries (usually under the name
Alfa Corse or
Autodelta) and private entries. The first racing car was made in
1913, three years after the foundation of A.L.F.A., the
40-60HP had 6 liter straight-4 engine.
Alfa Romeo quickly gained a good name in motorsport and gave a sporty image to the whole marque.
Pre-War
Early History
Alfa Romeo started motor racing almost immediately after it was founded. A.L.F.A. ventured into motor racing in 1911, drivers Franchini and Ronzoni competing in the Targa Florio with two
24 HP models.
[1] First success came in 1913 when Nino Franchini finished second in Parma-Poggio Berceto race with
40-60HP.
Giuseppe Merosi built very advanced racing car in 1914, named as
Grand Prix.
[2] In 1920
Giuseppe Campari won race at
Mugello with
40-60HP,
Enzo Ferrari was second in
Targa Florio in same year. Year later Giuseppe Campari
won Mugello again.
Ugo Sivocci won 1923
Targa Florio with
RL and
Antonio Ascari took second place, Sivocci's car had green cloverleaf symbol on white background symbol that was become Alfa racing car's good luck token.
Grand Prix racing
In 1923
Vittorio Jano was lured to Alfa from Fiat, designing the motors that gave Alfa racing success into the late 1930s. (When Alfa began to lose in the late 1930s Jano was promptly sacked.)
In
1925 Alfa Romeo won the first
World Grand Prix Championship. Over 4 rounds the
Alfa Romeo P2 won the
European Grand Prix at
Spa and the
Italian Grand Prix at
Monza, and hence incorporated the laurel wreath in their logo.
For 1932 Jano produced the sensational
P3 which won its first race driven by
Tazio Nuvolari at the
Italian Grand Prix, 5 more Grands Prix that year were shared by Nuvolari and
Rudolf Caracciola.
Alfa Corse closed for 1933 and locked the cars in the factory, but they eventually transferred them to
Enzo Ferrari's now privatised 'factory' team
Scuderia Ferrari. P3s then won six of the final 11 events of the season including the final 2 major Grands Prix in Italy and Spain.
In 1934
Louis Chiron won the
French Grand Prix in the
P3 whilst the German
Silver Arrows dominated the other 4 championship events. However the P3s won 18 of the 35 Grands Prix held throughout Europe. 1935 was even tougher, the P3 was simply outclassed by the remorseless Silver Arrows, but
Tazio Nuvolari gave the
P3 one of the most legendary victories of all time by winning the
German Grand Prix at the
Nürburgring. The P3 managed 16 victories in 1935.
Sportscar racing
In the
1930s Tazio Nuvolari won the
Mille Miglia in a 6C 1750, crossing the finishing line after having incredibly overtaken
Achille Varzi without lights (at nighttime). Targa Florio was won six times in row in 1930s. Mille Miglia was won in every year between 1928 and 1938 except year 1931.
The 8C 2300 won the
Le Mans 24 Hours from
1931 to
1934, with Alfa Romeo withdrawing from racing in 1933 when the Italian government took over, and the racing of Alfas was then taken up by Scuderia Ferrari as Alfa's outsourced team. (Enzo Ferrari drove for Alfa before he went on to manage the team, and after that went on to manufacture his own cars.)
In
1935 Alfa Romeo won the German Grand Prix with Nuvolari.
In 1938 Biondetti won the Mille Miglia in an 8C 2900B Corto Spyder, thereafter referred to as the "Mille Miglia" model.
Formula One
:''Main Article:
Alfa Romeo in Formula One''
Alfa Romeo participated in
Formula One, both as a constructor and engine supplier, from to .
The works Alfa Romeo team dominated the first two years of the Formula One World Championship, using the pre-war
Alfetta, but withdrew from Formula One at the end of .
During the 1960s, several minor F1 teams used Alfa Romeo
straight-4 engines and a V8 Alfa Romeo appeared in
McLaren and
March cars in the early 1970s.
The
Brabham team used Alfa Romeo engines from to , foreshadowing a return by Alfa Romeo as a constructor from to .
For the 1987 season, Alfa Romeo made a deal to supply engines to
Ligier, but the deal was cancelled when Fiat took control of Alfa Romeo.
Alfa Romeo also supplied engines to the tiny and unsuccessful Italian
Osella team from 1983 to 1988.
Formula Three
Alfa Romeo has also supplied engines to
Formula Three cars.
Piercarlo Ghinzani driving Euroracing March 793 with 2 litre Alfa engine won straight away its
first season in Italian F3 serie in 1979.
[3]
Michele Alboreto won the European title in 1980 with
March Alfa Romeo.
[4]
Alltogether Alfa Romeo engined cars took 5 consecutive wins between 1980-1984. Alfa Romeo's new Twin Spark Formula Three engine arrived in 1987 and it continued the success
and took five European titles, five European cups and about twenty national championships in Italy, France, Germany, Switzerland and Scandinavia.
[5]
Indycars
From 1989 to 1991, Alfa Romeo supplied engines to the
IndyCar World Series. The 2648 cc, turbocharged V8 engine produced 720 bhp
[6], and was partly developed from the unraced
Ferrari 637 Indy car. The engine was mated to a chassis specially built by
March and prepared by Alex Morales Motorsports in 1989, with
Roberto Guerrero at the wheel. Guerrero only managed a best of 8th place at Detroit, before both driver and engine moved onto
Patrick Racing for 1990. That season proved to be an improvement, as Guerrero finished 16th place in the points standings, with a best finish of 5th place. The next year would be Alfa's last, as
Danny Sullivan took over the drive and finished 11th in the points, with a best finish of 4th. In the end, Alfa Romeo would finish its Champ Car project without scoring a single podium, pole position or race win.
Rally
Alfa Romeo cars has been used in rallying also, mostly with private teams. In 1958
Alfa Romeo Giulietta won the
Rally Finland.
Racing versions of the Alfetta GT and GTV were built by Autodelta in 1970s, initially with the normally aspirated engine from the earlier
GTAm racer, for homologation under FIA Group 2. In this form they were rallied with moderate success in 1975, winning the Elba and Costa Brava rallies overall, as well as winning the Group 2 category in the World Rally Championship's Corsican event. In 1980 the Alfetta GTV Turbodelta was already homologated in FIA Group 4, since the required number
of production cars had been built. A racing version was campaigned in rallies, but once more the effort
was abandoned after a single season, despite scoring a win at the Danube Rally. In 1986
Alfa Romeo GTV6 was one of the fastest Group A rally cars.
[7] However
FIA put it to Group B in the
end of 1986, this made if from winner car to a car which was drawn away from rallying. The GTV6 placed 3rd in 1986
Tour de Corse.
Sportscars
On
March 6 1963, Alfa Romeo's racing department, Autodelta, was established, to run Alfa Romeo's sportscar programme, directed by Ex-Ferrari engineer,
Carlo Chiti. Competing with the
Alfa Romeo TZ, the team began to collect class wins, but faced strong competition from the
Porsche 904 and realised they would need a new design if they were to achieve outright victories. Carlo Chiti and the Audodelta team, designed a new 90 degree
V8 engine for their
Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 sportscar and ultimately a
flat-12 engine for the
Alfa Romeo 33 TT 12. These cars were raced in the
World Sportscar Championship from
1967 to
1977, with the 3-litre TT 12, winning titles in
1975 and
1977.
Touring cars
Alfa Romeo won many touring car series during the 1960s and 70s. The
Alfa Romeo GTA won
European Touring Car Championship (ETCC) in 1966, 1967 and 1968 and the later GTAm won titles in 1970 and 1971. Among other victories, the GTA won the inaugural
Sports Car Club of America's
Trans-Am championship in 1966. The
Alfetta GTV6 won four
European Championship titles between 1982-1985. In 1993, the
DTM series was won by
Nicola Larini with
Alfa Romeo 155. The successor to the 155, the
156 has won the European Touring Car Championship, four times in row from 2000 to 2003.
Notes
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
References
★ ''Great Marques Alfa Romeo'', David Owen, Octopus Books, ISBN 0-7064-22198
External links
★
Le vittorie Alfa Romeo