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The 1975 Argentine Grand Prix opened the Formula One season in chaotic fashion. A pole-sitter who never made the start, early promise undone by spins and retirements, and a race shaped less by domination than by survival. Amid the disorder, Emerson Fittipaldi avoided the mistakes that caught out his rivals and began his title defence with a victory built on control rather than speed.

From Buenos Aires, this episode broadens its focus to explore how Formula One is often defined by what happens away from the stopwatch. We examine the career of Emanuele Pirro, whose brief time in Formula One belied a distinguished career elsewhere in international motor racing. We reflect on the legacy of Alan Rees, a driver turned organiser whose influence was measured in opportunity and access rather than trophies, through the founding of March and Arrows. And we close with Toto Wolff, whose leadership of Mercedes illustrates how structure, stability and management now sit at the heart of modern Formula One success.

A story about champions, choices, and the value of avoiding errors when others cannot — from racing’s rich and chequered past.

Cover image: By Martin Lee - Emerson_Fittipaldi_1975_Race_of_Champions, CC BY-SA 2.0, Link

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Music by #Mubert Music Rendering