Women
can hack it against the men in F1, says Wilson
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[May 04, 2019]
By Alan Baldwin
HOCKENHEIM, Germany (Reuters) - Desiré
Wilson sees no physical or mental reason why a woman cannot compete
in Formula One, whatever the men might say, and she should know.
The only woman to win a Formula One race, a non-championship round
of a long-defunct British series at Brands Hatch in 1980, the
65-year-old South African says those who raise such obstacles are
talking rubbish.
"I used to drive for three hours in world endurance championship
races, in monstrous Porsche 956s, and I was capable of doing it,"
she told Reuters at the first race of the all-female W Series.
Wilson's first IndyCar race in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1983, was 500km
on a street course with eight pitstops for fuel and no paddle
shifts.
"The cars were brutal. I finished 10th in that race and I think
seven drivers pulled in and collapsed (because of the heat)," she
said.
"Drivers were just passing out and there I was, a 120 pound driver
but it was all in the mental strength.
"My opinion is that women are actually stronger mentally than men
are. I think we can push ourselves much further than men can," added
Wilson.
"It’s the individual person, what you are made up of, what you want
in life, how hard do you want to fight for it and how serious and
focused you are."
W Series, with 18 women racing identical Formula Three cars in a
six-round championship, aims to raise the profile of female racers
and help them take on the men further up the single-seater ladder.
One of the ultimate aims is to see a woman compete in Formula One
again for the first time since Italian Lella Lombardi in 1976, and
Wilson is highly supportive of the concept.
"I think it’s a superb idea. Because ultimately you’re giving these
women an opportunity to take part. A lot of them wouldn’t be racing
if it wasn’t for this series," she said.
"For men who say 'why should it be an all-woman series?', they
haven’t had to really go through what women really have had to go
through in motorsports. So they have no idea.
"I think this series will showcase women more than it ever has
before and hopefully that will be a combination of finding some more
sponsorship. I’d love to see somebody there (in Formula One) in the
next few years."
FIVE WOMEN
You can count on the fingers of one hand how many women have entered
a world championship Formula One race, and Wilson is one of those
five.
While the South African failed to qualify her Williams for the 1980
British Grand Prix at Brands Hatch, as did future world champion
Keke Rosberg, she says the timing sheets told only part of the
story.
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Germany's Naomi Schiff during qualifying REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
She recalled the words of French driver Jacques Laffite,
unapologetic after forcing her off the track on the way to a
front-row slot for Ligier, who said: "No (expletive) woman should be
in grands prix."
When Wilson won the Evening News Trophy at Brands Hatch, a circuit
that now has a stand named after her, she beat four F1 drivers
including Chile's Eliseo Salazar and Italian motorcycling great
Giacomo Agostini.
Wilson also drove a Tyrrell in the 1981 South African Grand Prix at
Kyalami, a race scheduled originally as the first round of the
season but then deemed non-championship due to F1 politics. That
designation still rankles.
"There’s no doubt that chauvinism and sexism was difficult in my era
but we were seen a little bit more as novelty drivers," she said.
"Every few years a woman was at least able to attempt to get into
Formula One. But you still had to qualify and get the super license
to be able to race."
Gender was always an issue.
"I had a couple of sponsors who turned around and said ‘You’re in my
car because I want you to go and beat those boys’," she said. "A lot
of the guys were pressured by their girlfriends and wives not to be
beaten by a woman.
"Everybody was your friend while you weren’t competitive," she
added.
"But the minute you started winning it was amazing how fewer male
friends you had. They just disappeared."
In 1980, Wilson's team in the British-based F1 championship ran out
of sponsorship and told her they could afford to run only one car
and it was going to be that of team mate Kevin Kogan, despite her
being third in the championship.
"They said...Kevin is a man and is going to go to Formula One.
You’re not’," she explained.
"They said he’s going to make it to Formula One. But he never did."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Ed Osmond)
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