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The Ferrari no one wanted to win the F1 title

Ferrari's 312B was a return to form that fell just short of greatness - and, writes STUART CODLING, in the tragic circumstances of the 1970 Formula 1 season there were many who were glad it didn't convey Jacky Ickx to the drivers' championship...

Throughout the 1960s, Ferrari's focus on Formula 1 slipped as money grew tighter and engineering resources were increasingly directed towards sportscar racing and Le Mans. This was, after all, a fertile ground for selling cars to customers and a rare European playground for American interests. Enzo had famously come close to selling out to Ford before ultimately reaching terms with the Fiat empire to sell a 40% share of his business.

The upshot was that Ferrari's first car for the three-litre era, the 312, was overweight and underpowered, having inherited its engine from a sportscar. Frustrated by both this and the annual failure to get any meaningful F1 development work done until after Le Mans, John Surtees left after a bust-up with the team in 1966. Successive iterations of the 312 failed to deliver the goods on track as the powerful, flexible Ford-bankrolled Cosworth V8 became ubiquitous.

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