Mike Doodson – “Money greased the wheels, but talent turned them”, MotorSport, giugno 2011

Il testo in inglese, riportato con accuratezza dall’originale, è seguito da una traduzione in lingua italiana resa dal presente sito, in fondo. Valgano alcune note di contestualizzazione dell’articolo. Quanto alle parole di Elio sull’esperienza ferrarista, Mike Doodson accenna a delle confidenze da lui registrate agli albori degli anni ottanta: si tratta dell’intervista “Face to face. Elio de Angelis”, apparsa su una diversa pubblicazione di quegli anni, “Grand Prix international”, della quale Doodson era, all’epoca, un corrispondente. Il presente sito l’ha già presentata nel testo originario e relativa traduzione in italiano. Il riferimento fatto dal giornalista non è neanche troppo velato, in quanto un intero paragrafo di questo articolo del 2011 è una riproposizione, con lievi modifiche, dell’altro, pubblicato nel 1981. Una nota sulla metodologia utilizzata nella sottostante traduzione: quando è affrontato l’argomento dell’accordo stipulato fra Elio de Angelis e Ken Tyrrell si è preferito richiamare la “responsabilità contrattuale”: il testo in inglese allude a un’offerta di contratto definitivo non ancora perfezionato, o a un contratto preliminare, e questi sono i campi di applicazione preferenziali dell’istituto. Altrove, interrogato in merito all’episodio, Elio ha sempre adoperato parole alludenti a un accordo preliminare. Per questo motivo, sembra doversi escludere che l’azione civile fosse stata intentata per ottenere i tipici rimedi da dolo determinante o da dolo incidente, categorie dottrinali nostrane che, comunque, dovrebbero avere una qualche corrispondenza nel common law. A essere intervistato, nel corso dell’articolo, è Nigel Stepney, meccanico di varie scuderie titolate. Il celeberrimo protagonista del caso di spionaggio del 2007, che vide coinvolte la McLaren e la Ferrari, è scomparso in circostanze tragiche nel 2014,.

Elio de Angelis was more than just a ‘rich kid’ – he was a naturally talented driver who, on his day, could outperform Senna

Elio de Angelis, whose death from race-track injuries 25 years ago will be commemorated on May 15, is remembered with endearing fondness by almost everyone who knew him during his seven-year Formula 1 career. The eldest son of a wealthy Roman family involved in the construction business, he was dismissed by critics as a dilettante in the junior formulae, then joined the Shadow team as a pay-driver for his debut season in 1979 in exchange for a rumoured $25,000 per race.

Although de Angelis confounded those early critics, his record of three pole positions and two wins from 108 Grand Prix starts hardly marks him down as a ‘great’. But he had a charm and modesty that belied his wealth, together with an incipient talent that deserved respect, however inconsistently it may have blossomed. As this tribute will show, the path to the top of his profession was not exactly strewn with rose petals.

The circumstances of Elio’s violent death caused bitter distress within the Brabham team, which had never lost a driver to a mechanical failure before, and caused Gordon Murray, its senior engineer, to consider his future in the sport. The cause of the crash was the loss of the Brabham-BMW’s rear wing, which sent it crashing and overturning into a fast corner. The wreck caught fire and the marshals, most of them wearing shorts, were disgracefully slow to assist. It was half an hour before a helicopter arrived and de Angelis — whose external injuries were minor — died in a Marseilles hospital the following day of smoke inhalation. He was 28 years old.

Thirty years ago, when there were only a couple of dozen reporters at a Grand Prix, F1 drivers were comparatively approachable, Elio more than most. With his Brando-esque features, fluffy hair and pastel-coloured sweaters, he could have been mistaken for a professional tennis player, although the odd cigarette hinted otherwise. His gifts included an uncannily good command of the English language, so it was a surprise to discover that he made no attempt to speak German with his long-term girlfriend, the fashion model Ute Kittelberger. This was perhaps a pointer to his reluctance to put an effort into anything that didn’t come naturally to him.

From the beginning, he and I had an easy and open friendship. In a conversation recorded on the eve of his first-ever GP, in Buenos Aires in 1979, he said, “You can buy your way into F1. But once your arse is in the metal monocoque, the only person who can help you is yourself.”

Elio was the oldest of four children born to Giulio and Giuseppina de Angelis: after him came Roberto, Andrea and Fabiana. Giulio had raced powerboats with some success and owned a Ferrari. He enjoyed taking his sons to watch car races, which gave them a lifelong love of motorsport. Although the boys were allowed to race (all three would win the national karting title), Giulio ruled that only one of them — Elio — would be given an opportunity to take his ambitions further. That way, the business dynasty would have a chance of continuing if the worst should befall the first-born.

Continua a leggere Mike Doodson – “Money greased the wheels, but talent turned them”, MotorSport, giugno 2011