Ferrari was at rock-bottom by the end of the 1973 season. Its answer was to sign a driver who had just two F1 points to his name. The gamble paid off. After only five GPs with the Scuderia, Niki Lauda was winning races; after just two seasons, the world title was his. As would Michael Schumacher 20 years later, Lauda brought speed and steel to Enzo's team
Watkins Glen paddock, Sunday October 5, 1975. Niki Lauda is next to me in a queue for a helicopter. A queue, mind. No special treatment here. An hour or so earlier he had hopped out of his Ferrari 312T at the end of the United States Grand Prix after nailing his fifth win (sixth if you include Silverstone's non-championship International Trophy) of the season — a season in which he had secured Ferrari's first F1 world title for 11 years. Putting them into the context of their time, Lauda's achievements had saved Ferrari's reputation in much the same way Michael Schumacher's have done over the last decade...
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