Luciano Sighinolfi: Difference between revisions
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|bgcolor="#ffbbbb" align="center"| MON<br><small>DNQ</small> | |bgcolor="#ffbbbb" align="center"| MON<br><small>DNQ</small> | ||
|bgcolor="#ffbbbb" align="center"| MEX<br><small>DNPQ</small> | |bgcolor="#ffbbbb" align="center"| MEX<br><small>DNPQ</small> | ||
|bgcolor="# | |bgcolor="#ffbbbb" align="center"| SMR<br><small>DNPQ</small> | ||
|bgcolor="# | |bgcolor="#cfcfff" align="center"| FRA<br><small>19</small> | ||
|bgcolor="# | |bgcolor="#ffbbbb" align="center"| GBR<br><small>DNPQ</small> | ||
|bgcolor="# | |bgcolor="#ffbbbb" align="center"| GER<br><small>DNPQ</small> | ||
|bgcolor="# | |bgcolor="#ffbbbb" align="center"| AUT<br><small>DNPQ</small> | ||
|bgcolor="# | |bgcolor="#ffbbbb" align="center"| ITA<br><small>DNPQ</small> | ||
|bgcolor="# | |bgcolor="#ffbbbb" align="center"| CAN<br><small>DNQ</small> | ||
|bgcolor="# | |bgcolor="#ffbbbb" align="center"| CPA<br><small>DNQ</small> | ||
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|align="center"| INT<br> | |bgcolor="#efcfff" align="center"| INT<br><small>Ret</small> | ||
|align="center"| ROC<br> | |bgcolor="#ffdf9f" align="center"| ROC<br><small>3</small> | ||
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Revision as of 03:49, 23 May 2022
![]() Luciano Sighinolfi pictured in 1978 | |
Details | |
---|---|
Name | Luciano Sighinolfi |
Born | 10th Dec 1951 |
Nationality | ![]() |
Achievements | |
1976 Trofeo Cinquetti winner | |
Drove in the Dywa Grand Prix Series | |
Drove in the Formula One World Championship |
Luciano Sighinolfi (born 10th December, 1951 in Ragusa, Sicily) is an Italian former racing driver best known for his ties career in Formula One with the B&S Fabrications and Osella teams, as well as briefly competing - and then withdrawing - as an owner-driver in the Dywa Grand Prix Series.
Early life
Luciano Sighinolfi never met his father, who was never in a relationship with his mother but was rumoured to be a racing driver who met his mother the night after winning a motor race of some kind, although there was never any way to confirm this rumour for certain. Regardless, Sighinolfi was inspired by his own purported origin story and from an early age he dreamed of becoming a racing driver. He took little interest in anything else, and never worked a full-time job. This paid off in 1974, when he had a significant Lotto win.
Early career
![]() | |
---|---|
Entries | 59 |
Starts | 54 |
Wins | 1 Varano, '76 |
Podiums | 8 |
Points | 62 |
Best Season | 4th 1976, 25 pts |
After an inauspicious start to his Italian Formula Three career (with a couple of DNFs and a DNQ in 1970), Sighinolfi took several years to progress gradually towards the front of the grid. The real breakthrough came when he started his own racing team, Scuderia Sighinolfi, using his winnings from the Lotteria di Monza in July 1974; this allowed him to compete in every race and to generally be far more competitive. Throughout his Formula Three career, he drove an incredible twelve different makes of chassis, powered by three different engine manufacturers. Most of his success came with Toyota power, driving Tecno, Modus and Ralt chassis between 1975 and 1977. His only Formula Three race win came at the 1976 Trofeo Cinquetti, held at Varano: he won the 30-lap race in 25 minutes and five seconds, narrowly ahead of Gianfranco Brancatelli (Scuderia Everest) and Piercarlo Ghinzani (Scuderia Angeleri), both of whom were driving March-Toyotas. 1977 proved less fruitful, but he still managed a trio of podiums at Varano, Enna and his most successful circuit, Vallelunga on the outskirts of Rome. Sighinolfi had purchased a new Argo chassis for the 1978 season, but when a new opportunity presented itself he sold that and the Toyota engines on to Enzo Coloni.
Dywa GP
In 1978, Sighinolfi's chance to drive a Formula One car finally came when the Dywa Grand Prix Series was founded by Dydo Monguzzi with the backing of Renzo Engineering. He used what was left of his Lotto money to move Scuderia Sighinolfi into the new series, with himself as owner-driver and with the second seat sold to Irish Formula Atlantic washout Kelby Rogerson for an undisclosed sum. On the first race weekend at Enna, Sighinolfi's teammate suffered a terrifying crash that would ultimately end his open-wheel racing career. Despite a podium finish at Imola, a second enormous crash involving a Scuderia Sighinolfi car was enough to convince Luciano that he was not prepared to continue risking his and his teammates' welfare racing in the series. The other driver involved in the second incident, Lena Trosschi recovered from her injuries to compete for Dywa in 1979, and Sighinolfi's entry was resold by Monguzzi to a new team.
Formula One career
Formula One Career | |
---|---|
Entries | 11 |
Starts | 4 |
Wins | 0 |
Podiums | 0 |
Points | 0 |
Best Season | 1980, NC |
Quite unexpectedly, Luciano Sighinolfi was given the opportunity to buy a drive at B&S Fabrications for the 1978 Italian Grand Prix at Monza for the affordable sum of £6,000 - money that was still left over from Kelby Rogerson's condom sales. Under no illusions as to the prospects of the aged B&S machinery to actually get on the grid, Sighinolfi explained his decision as "the perfect opportunity to get some track time in comparable equipment" ahead of the Dywa Grand Prix season finale, which was also to be hosted at Monza the following weekend. As everyone will have expected, Sighinolfi did not pre-qualify in his borrowed B&S March, but he did say afterwards that he was "proud to now be a Formula One driver".
Sighinolfi continued with the team in the 1979 season, this time driving the team's Spartec G71A at selected Championship and non-Championship events throughout the season. These events included both the 1979 San Marino Grand Prix and 1979 Italian Grand Prix, as well as promised drives in the International Trophy and Race of Champions. In his first non-Championship event, Sighinolfi achieved his first ever Formula One race finish in 14th place. The race was also notable for the reunion of Sighinolfi and Trosschi on the racetrack, and for the latter's refusal to accept Sighinolfi's offer of an apology and reconciliatory meal at a London restaurant of her choosing - instead, she suggested he be sent "to the gulag".
On the back of his 1979 performances, and with the help of significant sponsorship from Denim, Sighinolfi managed to secure a full-time Formula One drive for the first time in the 1980 season. He would drive the Osella #34 alongside Arsenio Matarazzo, and began the season with a strong ninth-placed finish at Kyalami for the South African Grand Prix. Unfortunately, FISA-FOCA disputes led to this being a non-championship event. The Osella's patchy reliability record meant that this would be Sighinolfi's only finish in the opening half of the season.
Racing Career Results
Italian Formula Three Championship
Season | Team | Car | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | Pts | Pos |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1970 | ![]() |
Tecno-Ford | MNZ |
MNZ Ret |
MNZ |
MNZ |
IMO Ret |
MNZ |
MNZ |
IMO |
0 | - | ||||||
![]() |
Branca-Ford | VAR DNQ |
||||||||||||||||
1971 | ![]() |
Tecno-Ford | MNZ |
MNZ |
MNZ |
IMO Ret |
MON |
MNZ 7 |
IMO |
0 | - | |||||||
Template:GBR Wheatcroft Racing | March-Ford | IMO DNQ |
ENN C |
|||||||||||||||
![]() |
Brabham-Ford | MNZ DNQ |
||||||||||||||||
1972 | ![]() |
Chevron-Alfa Romeo | MNZ |
IMO Ret |
MNZ C |
3 | 11th | |||||||||||
![]() |
Quasar-Ford | MNZ Ret |
MNZ DNS |
MNZ Ret |
VAL 9 |
MNZ | ||||||||||||
![]() |
GRD-Ford | VAR 6 |
||||||||||||||||
![]() |
Lotus-Alfa Romeo | IMO Ret |
MIS 5 |
ENN C |
MIS |
VAR Ret |
||||||||||||
1973 | ![]() |
Brabham-Ford | CAS Ret |
MIS |
CAS |
IMO 10 |
VAL |
CAS |
MNZ Ret |
CAS |
MIS 6 |
MNZ |
VAR 4 |
4 | 14th | |||
Ensign-Ford | MON DNQ |
|||||||||||||||||
1974 | ![]() |
GTS-Alfa Romeo | CAS |
IMO |
VAL Ret |
CAS |
MNZ |
CAS |
2 | 15th | ||||||||
![]() |
Tecno-Toyota | MAG 7 |
MNZ Ret |
MUG 5 |
||||||||||||||
1975 | ![]() |
Tecno-Toyota | CAS 5 |
VAR Ret |
VAL 3 |
MUG 6 |
MAG 7 |
MNZ Ret |
MNZ 4 |
CAS |
IMO 5 |
12 | 6th | |||||
1976 | ![]() |
Modus-Toyota | MUG 5 |
VAR 1 |
IMO Ret |
MAG Ret |
ENN 3 |
CAS Ret |
MNZ 6 |
CAS Ret |
IMO 11 |
MNZ Ret |
VAL 2 |
MUG 3 |
25 | 4th | ||
1977 | ![]() |
Ralt-Toyota | VAR 3 |
MUG 6 |
VAL 5 |
MNZ 8 |
IMO Ret |
ENN 3 |
MNZ Ret |
IMO 9 |
MAG 6 |
VAR Ret |
MNZ 10 |
VAL 3 |
MAG Ret |
16 | 8th |
Dywa Grand Prix series
Season | Team | Car | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | Pts | Pos |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1978 | ![]() |
Dywa-Renzo | ENN Ret |
IMO 3 |
ROU 5 |
NOR WD |
SYR |
MUG |
PAU |
CAS |
CLE |
MNZ |
6 | 19th |
Formula One World Championship
Season | Team | Car | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | Pts | Pos |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1978 | Template:GBR B&S Fabrications | March-Renzo | ARG |
RSA |
USW |
ESP |
BEL |
MON |
SUI |
MUG |
GBR |
FRA |
NED |
GER |
AUT |
ITA DNPQ |
CAN |
USA |
0 | - | |
1979 | Template:GBR B&S Fabrications | Spartec-Ford | ARG |
BRA |
RSA |
USW |
ESP |
BEL |
MON |
EUR |
SMR DNPQ |
FRA |
GER |
AUT |
NED |
ITA DNPQ |
CAN |
USA |
0 | - | |
Template:GBR Graham Eden Racing | Chevron-Ford | GBR DNPQ |
|||||||||||||||||||
1980 | ![]() |
Osella-Ford | C |
ARG Ret |
BRA DNPQ |
USW Ret |
ESP Ret |
BEL Ret |
MON DNQ |
MEX DNPQ |
SMR DNPQ |
FRA 19 |
GBR DNPQ |
GER DNPQ |
AUT DNPQ |
ITA DNPQ |
CAN DNQ |
CPA DNQ |
DUB DNPQ |
0 | - |
Non-Championship Formula One
Season | Team | Car | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1979 | Template:GBR B&S Fabrications | Spartec-Ford | INT 14 |
GBR 12 |
||
Template:GBR Graham Eden Racing | Chevron-Ford | TBT 4 |
GNT | |||
1980 | ![]() |
Osella-Ford | RSA 9 |
INT Ret |
ROC 3 |