The 1979 Formula One season began with an air of clarity.
Across the opening two races in Argentina and Brazil, Jacques Laffite and Ligier looked composed, coherent, and firmly in control.
At Interlagos, Laffite delivered a commanding performance to secure his second consecutive victory, completing a rare grand slam and reinforcing the sense that a new order might already be forming. But Formula One rarely allows first impressions to endure. What appeared to be authority would soon be tested, refined, and ultimately overtaken as rivals responded.
Alongside the Brazilian Grand Prix, this episode reflects on the career of Giorgio Pantano — a driver whose talent was undeniable, but whose Formula One opportunity proved fragile in a modern sport defined by timing and circumstance. We also remember Richard Seaman, one of Britain’s greatest pre-war drivers, whose success and death illustrate the extraordinary risks once accepted in Grand Prix racing.
Different eras. Different costs.
One recurring truth: in Formula One, early promise is no guarantee of lasting control.
Cover Image: By Martin Lee - Jacques Laffite - Ligier JS11 leads Jan Lammers - Shadow DN 9B into Rascasse during practice for the 1979 Monaco GP, CC BY-SA 2.0, Link
Music by #Mubert Music Rendering