Slay the Spire
F1 Season 1974 Portable -
At the start, Lauda lunged into the lead. Fittipaldi slotted into second. For 15 laps, the title was decided in real time: Lauda pulling away, Fittipaldi hanging on.
In the annals of Formula 1, certain seasons are remembered for dynasties (the 1960s Jim Clark show), others for tragedy (1970, 1973). But 1974? 1974 was the season F1 grew up. It was the year the sport collectively decided that the era of romantic, long-haired adventurers dying behind the wheel of underfunded machinery was over. In its place came professionalism, political intrigue, and a world championship decided not by raw speed alone, but by nerve, consistency, and a little bit of Swiss engineering. f1 season 1974
Then, Niki Lauda’s Ferrari exploded. Not literally, but mechanically. He retired with a snapped throttle cable. Fittipaldi, driving a flawless race in the M23, won. But the real story was the silence. For the first time all year, the Ferrari pit was quiet. Lauda’s machine had shown its one weakness: reliability. Ferrari had speed; McLaren had dependability. At the start, Lauda lunged into the lead