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Giovanni Soldini will work with Ferrari as the luxury sports car maker enters the world of ocean racing. Photo: Handout

Ferrari taking F1 technology to the waves with Soldini for new ocean racing sailing team

  • Luxury sports car maker to team up with Italian ocean racing yachtsman Giovanni Soldini
  • Red Bull’s top designer Adrian Newey teamed up a decade ago with British Olympian Ben Ainslie on an America’s Cup challenge

Luxury sports car maker Ferrari said is taking its technological know-how to the waves, teaming up with Italian ocean racing yachtsman Giovanni Soldini to enter the world of sailing.

An icon of motor racing with its uninterrupted presence in Formula One since the start of that world championship in 1950, Ferrari last year also returned to the Hypercar top flight of endurance racing and Le Mans.

Ferrari chairman John Elkann said the new project would expand Ferrari’s “racing soul”.

“In addition to competing on tracks all over the world, Ferrari is now embarking on this new venture to enhance its technological know how,” the company said in a statement.

Ferrari won its last F1 drivers’ championship in 2007 and constructors’ title in 2008.

Land Rover BAR skipper by Ben Ainslie prepares for the race with Emirates Team New Zealand in the 35th America’s Cup Challenger play-offs on Bermuda’s Great Sound. Photo: AFP

Formula One teams have had close ties with yachting over the years with Red Bull’s top designer Adrian Newey teaming up a decade ago with British Olympian Ben Ainslie on his America’s Cup challenge with the Land Rover BAR team.

Mercedes technical director James Allison has also worked with co-team owners INEOS on an America’s Cup project while Martin Whitmarsh, CEO of Aston Martin Performance Technologies, also worked with Ainslie previously.

Ferrari said it would rely on “cutting-edge technologies throughout the entire cycle, from conception and engineering to realisation” of the boat.

“The search for maximum performance at sea will generate innovations and concrete solutions for sustainability that, in line with Ferrari’s tradition, will be an important stimulus in the evolution of its sports cars,” it said in the statement.

Earlier this week Soldini, 57, and Italian carmaker Maserati, part of Stellantis, announced the end of their 11-year long partnership in ocean navigation.

Soldini is a veteran of more than 30 years of solo and crewed ocean competition, including two solo round-the-world races.

“I am thrilled to start this new adventure with Ferrari. We are working on an important and cutting-edge project with an amazing technological potential,” Soldini said in the statement.

Elkann, who is also Stellantis chairman, said the new challenge would push the company “beyond current boundaries”.

No further details of the project were provided and no information given on the level of investment by Ferrari.

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