There are few things more nauseating in life than injustice, and while there are far more important iniquities in the world that have greater bearing on people’s lives than anything inside our motorsports bubble, there are too many times when the matrix goes awry, the picture is distorted and drivers, teams or designers are robbed of their due.
For example, take Vintage Motorsport’s cover star for our latest issue, Peter Revson. As a media outlet, it’s sad to admit that folks in our line of business were largely to blame for his talent being perennially undervalued. Search for stories or footage that includes Revson and in the opening sentence or two you’ll likely find some reference to his family’s prosperity. At best it was cliché-ridden journalism; at worst it came across as a slur from inverted snobs. Either way, it lazily suggested Revson’s background defined him. Well, it did… but not in the manner implied.
Just as actors and actresses with model looks can struggle to be taken seriously in their chosen occupation, so racing drivers with family wealth can often suffer “rich kid” tags that, intentionally or not, suggest that he or she is in the game for the glamor of it. “Revvie” was emphatically not playing at racing: yes, he came from big money, but he willingly, willfully, shunned that to make it to the top on merit. He worked hard to improve himself – and succeeded. When he perished at the age of 35, he was one of Formula 1’s aces, perhaps a potential world champion. Our story this month should convince you.
While Revson was underrated because of wealth, Frank Williams was overlooked until acquiring wealth. Nothing – certainly not Jacques Laffite’s highly fortunate runner-up finish at the German Grand Prix in 1975 – could have prompted anyone to predict that Sir Frank (as he was to become in 1999) had the potential to build an F1 powerhouse. Yet once he had adequate funding, it took just 18 months for Williams Grand Prix Engineering team to win races, and an even shorter timeline to convert that to title glory.