Ferrari endured a tough Italian GP weekend against a background of continued speculation about the future of Luca di Montezemolo, which only intensified after critical commented emerged from Fiat boss Sergio Marchionne.
Marchionne is tipped to take over the presidency of Ferrari himself, possibly as an interim measure, although there are also suggestions that the 62-year-old’s end game is to eventually quit his Fiat and Chrysler jobs to run Ferrari as a ‘project’ as he eases towards eventual retirement.
Meanwhile Marco Mattiacci made it clear that the pieces are being put in place for a return to form in the future.
“We have a very clear picture about where is the deficit, and about the assets,” he said. “I can say definitely the assets are that we have a lot of talented people, but it’s evident in which areas we are lagging behind, and we are already working for a few months in order to address those issues. I’m definitely not going to make public giving my competitors an advantage about where my weaknesses are. We know and we are already working to address those issues. As I said and I keep saying this a medium/long term project, because we are talking about engineering investments, so it takes a while.
“The strong points are the drivers, the brand, the company, the heritage, the culture, the people who work every day from 7am to midnight. There are many, many assets to start from. And there is the tradition of winning, we know how to win, and we are obsessed to go back to the top. There is a huge motivation and hunger to go back to the top because we belong there. My role is to shorten as much as we can as much as we can that kind of curve.”
Mattiacci said that the Italian GP was a valuable experience for him.
“First of all I think for me it was important to experience the impressive love and passion that there is around Ferrari, and to understand the relevance that Ferrari is much more than just a racing company, it is an institution, and we have an obligation to fans. And this gives me again a lot of motivation towards the team, to make sure that this frustration is going to end. I still believe that we had a good pace, the car confirmed an improvement, but definitely we had a deficit in qualifying.
“If you start lower on the grid, it’s going to be difficult, if you don’t have a strong power unit. But I think we had the same pace as Red Bull, and some of the others, and we could have done better. Unfortunately we started too far behind to have a normal race.”
Mattiacci said that Alonso’s rare retirement at Monza was inevitable, given the long streak of good reliability the red cars have demonstrated.
“So far we have been good in terms of reliability, but statistically we had to face something. We had an issue with the ERS. We never had this issue before, but it happened. Everybody was having reliability issues this year, but Ferrari, so we joined the group.”
Regarding the performance of the power unit he said: “As you know there is this great regulation which does not allow you today which to improve what could be absolutely improveable, but it’s as it is. I keep saying we have been doing small but consistent improvements on the car.”
It seems incredible to me that Mattiacci needed to attend the Italian Grand Prix to “experience the impressive love and passion that there is around Ferrari, and to understand the relevance that Ferrari is much more than just a racing company, it is an institution, and we have an obligation to fans.”
How did he ever get to be CEO of Ferrari North America without already understanding that?
Yet, experiencing something adds a dimension beyond knowing or thinking we understand that thing.
I’m sure the owners of Ferrari are happy to hear that or not. Steve H I agree.