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'Fittipaldi Automotive', sometimes called 'Copersucar' after its first major sponsor, was the only
Formula One motor racing team and constructor ever to be based in
Brazil. It was formed during 1974 by racing driver
Wilson Fittipaldi and his younger brother, double world champion
Emerson, with money from the Brazilian sugar and alcohol cooperative
Copersucar. In 1976 Emerson surprised the motor racing world by leaving the title-winning
McLaren team to drive for the unsuccessful family outfit. Future world champion
Keke Rosberg took his first podium finish in Formula One with the team.
The team was based in
São Paulo, almost 6,000 miles (10,000 km) away from the centre of the world motor racing industry in the UK, before moving to
Reading,
UK during 1974. It participated in 119 grands prix between 1975 and 1982, entering a total of 156 cars. It achieved 3 podiums and scored 44 championship points.
Origins

'Copersucar-Fittipaldi FD01:' The team's radical first car was restored in 2004 after being destroyed on its debut in 1975.
Wilson Fittipaldi was a midfield 'pay driver' with
Brabham in
Formula One in 1972 and 1973. Unsatisfied with his treatment by the team, he talked to his younger brother and double world champion,
Emerson towards the end of 1973 and they decided to set up their own Formula One team in Brazil. The Fittipaldi brothers had already set up businesses building customer
karts and
Formula Vee cars in Brazil in the 1960s, as well as a successful custom car accessory business
[1] It was through these ventures that Emerson had achieved his successful move to the European racing scene in 1969. During the 1970s it was not unusual for a driver to design or buy a chassis, attach the readily available
Cosworth DFV engine and
Hewland gearbox and enter World Championship races. ''(See
Hill and
Surtees)''. By the early 1980s the DFV was no longer competitive and supplies of the new
turbocharged engines were far more limited.
The 1974 season was spent setting up the new team, which was to have a strong Brazilian flavour. Wilson was able to persuade Brazilian sugar and alcohol cooperative Copersucar to sponsor the team.
McLaren driver Emerson acted as a consultant to the team. The Copersucar-branded car was designed by Brazilian
Richard Divila, who had worked for Fittipaldi Empreendimentos designing Formula Vee cars, and later for the European
Formula Two Team Bardahl Fittipaldi, modifying their
Lotus and Brabham chassis.
[2][3] National aerospace company
Embraer was also involved, supplying materials to the fledgling team and providing wind-tunnel time. Mexican
Jo Ramirez was hired as team manager.
[4] The team was initially based in Brazil, almost 6,000 miles (10,000 km) away from the United Kingdom, a bold move given the overwhelmingly British nature of Formula One technology from the 1960s onwards. The long and low Copersucar FD01, with bulbous bodywork enclosing the engine and unusual rear-mounted radiators, painted in silver with rainbow markings on the flanks, was unveiled in October 1974 at the
Federal Senate in
Brasilia in the presence of President
Ernesto Geisel. Like Brabham's BT series of cars, the car's FD designation reflected the initials of the driver and the designer.
Racing history
Copersucar-Fittipaldi (1975 - 1977)

'Copersucar-Fittipaldi FD04:' Emerson qualified 5th on his debut for the family team in 1976. This was the last Fittipaldi to be built in Brazil.
''See
1975 season,
1976 season, and
1977 season for season summaries''
The team, initially known as Copersucar-Fittipaldi, did not have great success in its first racing season in 1975. Wilson crashed in chassis FD01 on lap 12 of their first race, the
Argentine Grand Prix, which his brother went on to win in his McLaren. Chassis numbers FD02 and FD03, used for the rest of the year, were the same design as the original car but were fitted with a succession of more conventional aerodynamic treatments.
[5] Wilson was the sole driver and managed only five finishes, the highest of which was a 10th and last place at the
US Grand Prix at
Watkins Glen, and failed to qualify on three occasions. Italian
Arturo Merzario did no better when he took over the chassis for his home Grand Prix after Wilson broke two bones in his hand in a practice crash at the
Austrian Grand Prix.
[6] Despite the lack of success, the tiny team achieved a coup for the following year: Emerson Fittipaldi joined the team from
McLaren, with whom he had taken his second Driver's Championship in 1974. His brother stepped down from driving to look after the management of the team.
Emerson commented: "I am aware that I will virtually have no chance of winning the world title next season....It will be a very difficult beginning, but I am very enthusiastic and I am certain that with everybody's effort we will have the first positive results in the second half of next year. I think that in the medium term of one or two years Brazil will have one of the best Formula One teams in the world."
[7]
Emerson was the team's main driver in 1976 although Brazilian
Ingo Hoffmann joined him for four races. Fittipaldi qualified the new FD04 fifth for his debut, at
Interlagos. In the race he could only finish 13th – a result which was more representative of the rest of the season during which he scored only three points. The qualifying result remained the best the team would ever achieve. The experiment of basing the team in Brazil did not last - it was too far from their engine and gearbox suppliers and did not have the large community of expert component manufacturers available in the UK. Although the first FD04 was built there, future cars would be built at the team's established base in
Reading,
UK, in what would become known as 'motorsport valley'.
[8][9]
The team continued with the same setup for 1977. Fittipaldi was able to score several 4th and 5th places during the year. Hoffman only appeared twice at the beginning of the year, finishing 7th at the Brazilian Grand Prix. The new F5, liveried in yellow rather than silver, (Divila having left the role of technical director, the 'D' was dropped from the designation) was introduced mid-season.
Fittipaldi Automotive (1978 - 1979)
''See
1978 season and
1979 season for season summaries''
While it was not a great success in 1977, in 1978 the F5A, modified to implement the principles of ground effect demonstrated to excellent effect by
Lotus, allowed the former World Champion to score several good results. The best of these was a competitive second place, after fighting with
Mario Andretti and
Gilles Villeneuve,
[10] at the team's perennial happy hunting ground in Brazil. Fittipaldi finished the year with 17 points and the team, now known as Fittipaldi Automotive,
[11] came 7th in the Constructor's table – one place ahead of Emerson's old team McLaren.
The 1979 season saw the promise of the previous year fade away. Implementing ground effect successfully was becoming crucial to success on the track but understanding of the phenomenon was in its infancy and Ralph Bellamy's F6 was a failure on the track.
[12] Fittipaldi was again the team's only driver, although
Alex Ribeiro was run in the non-championship race which inaugurated the
Imola circuit that year,
[13] before attempting and failing to qualify a car for the end of season North American championship races.
Skol Fittipaldi Team (1980)
''See
1980 season for season summary''
At the end of 1979 Copersucar decided to end their sponsorship.
[14] The team bought the remains of close neighbour
Wolf Racing, becoming a two car operation for the first time. The team was renamed Skol Team Fittipaldi for the 1980 season to reflect new sponsorship from Skol Brasil (now an
AmBev brand). Emerson and Wolf Racing driver
Keke Rosberg raced the first part of the season with reworked Wolf chassis from the previous year. The cars, designated F7s, brought a third place for each of the drivers before being replaced by the less successful F8. The design team that year was headed by
Harvey Postlethwaite, another asset gained from Wolf, and also included a very young
Adrian Newey[15] - both were later designers of championship winning cars for other teams.
Fittipaldi Automotive (1981 - 1982)
''See
1981 season and
1982 season for season summaries''
Emerson Fittipaldi decided to retire from racing at the end of 1980. He has since said that his last two years in Formula One were very unhappy: "I was too involved in the problems of trying to make the team work, and I neglected my marriage and my personal life", although at the time he cited colleagues' deaths as his reason.
[16] He was only 33, but had been racing in Formula One for a decade. He had failed to finish seven of the last ten races that year and had several times been outpaced by his Finnish team-mate. He moved into the management of the team
[17] and young Brazilian
Chico Serra replaced him for 1981. The team, which reverted to the name of Fittipaldi Automotive as Skol sponsorship was lost again, entered a sharp decline from 1981 onwards. Postlethwaite left for
Ferrari early in the year and the team once again raced updated variants of the previous season's chassis, using tyres from
Michelin,
Avon and
Pirelli - including one race in which the two cars were on different brands.
[18] Rosberg did manage to finish a lapped 4th at the non-championship FOCA
South African Grand Prix at the start of the year
[19] (''see
FISA-FOCA War''), but after that the drivers recorded a succession of DNQs and retirements. When they did finish they were normally at the back of the field and scored no points that year.
The Finn moved to
Williams for 1982, where he would win the Drivers Championship - the only man ever to do so having scored no points the previous year. The team continued with a single F8 for Serra - often using a chassis that had raced through most of the 1981 season
[20] - and scored a final point from a sixth place finish at the
Belgian Grand Prix at
Zolder, although only after Niki Lauda had been disqualified. A final new car - the outwardly identical F9,
[21] penned by the returning Divila and introduced at the
French Grand Prix that year
[22] - failed to improve matters. The team went into receivership at the end of the 1982 season and closed its doors.
[23]
Aurora Formula One
A Fittipaldi F5A chassis run by
RAM Racing (in the guise of '
Mopar Ultramar Racing Team'} took the make's only race win in the Aurora Formula One UK championship at the
Race of Champions at
Brands Hatch on 15 April 1979 in the hands of
Guy Edwards, albeit actually 7th on the road behind six cars from the world championship which were not entered in the Aurora series. Edwards and team-mate
Bernard de Dryver scored other good results in the series, including a string of podium finishes.
[24]
Valentino Musetti, an Italian stuntman, raced an updated F5B variant in the 1980 Aurora Formula One UK championship, but with less success than the previous year.
[25]
Notable Drivers
Main articles: Emerson Fittipaldi
For much of its history Fittipaldi Automotive was entirely focussed around Emerson Fittipaldi. Emerson was a double world champion renowned for a smooth and quick style when he joined the family team. Although his older brother drove in the team's first season, the suggestion that Emerson might drive for the team was always in the air and only a year later he cancelled contract discussions with his then team McLaren at a very late stage and signed with Fittipaldi. Although he remained capable of front-running performances, during his time with Fittipaldi Automotive he became an inconsistent performer. On several occasions team manager Jo Ramirez berated his driver after a sudden burst of speed indicated that he had not been driving to his full potential. By 1980 Fittipaldi's team mate Keke Rosberg thought him long past his best, and found him demotivated. Emerson retired at the end of that year after six full seasons with the family team. Like fellow world champion
Jacques Villeneuve’s five year stint with the
BAR team set up for him with BAT money in 1998, the partnership ended the front running Formula One career of a young and highly competitive driver, although he would later build a very successful career in top level American single seater racing in the
CART series.
Main articles: Keke Rosberg
The young Finn Keke Rosberg was struggling to get into a competitive seat when he joined Fittipaldi for the 1980 season. He had previously driven two disjointed seasons for the
Theodore Racing,
ATS and
Walter Wolf Racing teams but although he had won a non-championship race with Theodore, he had scored no world championship points. Fittipaldi bought the remains of Wolf at the end of 1979. Rosberg reports that Emerson, who had not previously had a full time team-mate while at Fittipaldi Automotive, wanted another Brazilian driver but was persuaded by ex-Wolf employees Peter Warr and Harvey Postlethwaite to offer the number two drive to the Finn. Rosberg himself saw a full season in Formula One with Fittipaldi as a step "towards victory". He was competitive alongside Emerson during his first season, scoring a podium in his first race with the team, the
1980 Argentine Grand Prix. Rosberg passed Emerson on the track in his second race for the team, and claims that from then on there was friction between Fittipaldi and himself. During his disastrous second season with the team, during which not a single point was scored, Rosberg engineered his release from his contract. He went to Williams, where he would win the drivers world championship the next season.
[26]
Complete Formula One results
(Note: grands prix in 'bold' denote 'Pole Positions'.)
World Championship Results
()
Non Championship results
Notes
1. ''Hall of Fame - Emerson Fittipaldi'' www.formula1.com Retrieved 28 February 2006
2. ''Richard Divila'' www.grandprix.com Retrieved 28 February 2006
3. ''Ricardo Divila'' www.teamdan.com Retrieved 7 March 2006
4. Jo Ramirez (2005): Memoirs of a Racing Man. Haynes Group.
5. ''Copersucar-Fittipaldi models'' www.statsf1.com Retrieved 8 March 2006
6. Barrie Gill ''John Player Motorsport Yearbook 1976 - The World Championship 1975'' page 78. Queen Anne Press Ltd ISBN 0-362-00254-1
7. ''Fittipaldi eager to put Brazil on world map'' (November 27 1975) ''The Times'' p. 10
8. ''Motorsport Industry Association - About the Industry'' www.the-mia.co.uk Retrieved 19 March 2006
9. ''Motorsport Valley'' www.motorsport.cranfield.ac.uk Retrieved 19 March 2006
10. Reutemann turns on heat that is too much for other's comfort (January 30 1978) ''The Times'' page 8
11. ''Fittipaldi team name history'' www.formula1results.com Retrieved 1 March 2006
12. ''Fittipaldi Automotive'' www.grandprix.com Retrieved 28 February 2006
13. ''Jesus Saves Racing'' 8w.forix.com Retrieved 28 February 2006
14. ''Copersucar'' www.grandprix.com Retrieved 28 February 2006
15. ''Debrett's People of Today'' (May 2006) Accessed 5 May 2006
16. Fittipaldi to Retire (December 12 1980) ''The Times'' page 20
17. ''Emerson Fittipaldi'' 8w.forix.com Retrieved 28 February 2006
18. ''Fittipaldi 8C'' ChicaneF1.dyndns.org Retrieved 7 March 2006
19. ''The one that didn't count'' 8w.forix.com Retrieved 20 March 2006
20. ''Fittipaldi F8C/3'' www.oldracingcars.com Retrieved 8 March 2006
21. ''Fittipaldi Models'' StatsF1.com Retrieved 8 March 2006
22. ''Better luck in stock'' 8w.forix.com Retrieved 28 February 2006
23. ''O sonho que virou pó'' autoesporto.globo.com Retrieved 12 April 2006 (In Portuguese)
24. Autocourse Formula One 1979-1980 Aurora Formula One
25. ''Val Musetti'' forums.atlasf1.com Retrieved 10 April 2006
26. Rosberg, Keke & Botsford, Keith (1985) Keke An Autobiography Stanley Paul pp. 112 - 118 ISBN 0-09-156180-9
References
★ Lyons, Pete (24 October 1974) 'The new F1 Fittipaldi' ''
Autosport p.10 (Haymarket Publications)''
★ Karl Ludvigsen (2002)
'Emerson Fittipaldi' Haynes Group. ISBN 1-85960-837-X
All Formula One race and championship results are taken from:
★ ''Official Formula 1 Website. Archive: Results for 1972 – 1982 seasons''
www.formula1.com Retrieved 28 February 2006
★ ''The Formula One Archives - Non-Championship & Aurora''
www.silhouet.com/motorsport Retrieved 23 March 2006
Further reading
★
dana.locaweb.com.br Details 2004 restoration of the Copersucar-Fittipaldi FD01 and FD04 by
Dana Corporation's Brazilian arm. With pictures and video, including some original footage. Retrieved 23 March 2006. (In Portuguese)
★ '' A história da equipe Fittipaldi (também conhecida como Copersucar)'' http://www.bestlap.com.br/copersucar/ Accessed 7 March 2006 (In Portuguese)
★
www.tgpf1.com A Fittipaldi Automotive F5A competes in the European
Thoroughbred Grand Prix Championship. Brief details and pictures. Retrieved 1 July 2006.