Showing posts with label Ferrari. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ferrari. Show all posts

Monday, December 10, 2012

Driving your dreams....one man is doing it with style

I always thought about what I would do when I won the lottery....Help some good charities, take care of the bills, etc.

The main effort from there would be to create a company that would rebuild classic cars and restore them to their glory days....Spend time finding them and making them shiney & new all over again....

Here is one guy who is able to do something along those lines and I am willing to bet that we ( him & I ) have a lot of common interest in what can be done when you have the $$$$ and time to make it possible....Lucky guy.

How One Millionaire Made Himself a Pint-Sized Ferrari

Srour (pronounced “se-rure”) spots me standing in front of his parking garage and strides across the street. He offers a firm, bone-crushing handshake and immediately gestures to my red baseball hat – the one I almost never take off.

“I’m going to need that,” he says, giddily slapping my shoulder. “It’s freaking cold out.”
Other Rides To Kill For
I reluctantly hand over the cap, sheepishly adjusting my bedhead, and stand aside as Srour, 54, delicately lowers himself into his two-thirds-scale 1952 Ferrari F2 500 race car. At just over 3 feet tall and 6 feet long, the F2 holds the dubious distinction of being the only street-legal model car in Manhattan – if not the Eastern United States. It’s also the first example in Srour’s ambitious plan to transform a duo of model Ferraris into super-powered road-rockets. The second car, another two-thirds-scale 275 GTB/4 – a model made partially famous by Steve McQueen – should be road-ready early next year.

The original F2, driven by Alberto Ascari, was one of the most prolific racing Ferraris ever built. In 1952, it dominated the Formula One World Championship, winning every round except for the Indianapolis 500. It is, in fact, the second most successful car in Formula One history, only behind the incomparable McLaren MP4/4, which won more races in 1988. In a strange twist of fate, Srour’s only encounter with the real F2 was at the Cavallino Classic in 2007. “I had no idea it was going to be there,” says Srour, who was there to show off the two-thirds model for display. “Putting the two cars side by side was like seeing a father and son reunited.”

Today we’re headed to a popular car gathering in New Jersey. I’ll drive Srour’s Ferrari 458 Spider (tough life, I know) and have been instructed to stay close behind the F2 for the duration of our 45-mile journey. And for good reason. While the F2 can hit 90 mph, its small size means even inattentive Mini drivers could take it out.

As I strap into the 458, Srour pulls beside me, gooses the throttle and grins from ear to ear. A lady walking a Chihuahua stops to issue a displeased, authoritative stare. Srour is unfazed.

“Let’s roll,” he says, tearing down the street in one of the oddest sights I’ve ever seen in Manhattan.

To understand Srour’s passion for mini-cars is to enter the mind of the ultimate car fanatic. After finding success in children’s fashion (The Parigi Group, the company he started in 1980, holds exclusive licensing contracts with Puma, DKNY, Lucky Brand, Nicole Miller, and Paul Frank, among others), Srour, a native of Lebanon, began amassing an impressive array of Italian sports cars. His collection, which he calls “The Red Cave,” includes a Ferrari F50, Dino 246, Alfa Giulietta Spider and a Maserati Mexico, all dressed in gleaming Rosso Corso.

Srour purchased the F2 for $75,000 while on business in Las Vegas as a present for his 12-year-old son, who was beginning to show his own passion for exotic cars. Originally crafted by Carrozzerria Allegretti, a shop in Italy that specializes in custom cars, the F2 was tiny, underpowered, and designed for children – not adults.

“My intention was to give it to my son,” Srour said, “however, when I took it out for a spin, I totally fell in love with it. That’s when we came up with the idea to make it street-legal.”

Photo: Nathan Laliberte
Srour’s clever mechanic, Raffi Najjarian, was given the unenviable job of transforming the F2 into a road-rocket capable of withstanding the rigors of Manhattan streets while seamlessly offering a modicum of comfort and safety for the driver.

“I was surprised to get the project.” Najjarian said. “In fact, it’s still a bit of a joke to me. When he first bought the car, Marco asked if I could make it into a road car and I jokingly responded, ‘Sure, why not.’ And then he said ‘Okay, so do it.’”

The build began in 2005 and was done in three separate stages, each taking about a year to complete: drivetrain then suspension (the F2 came without rear shocks), along with extensive overhauls to the chassis and engine.

Upon completion of the first phase, Najjarian installed headlights, turn signals, 14-inch wire rims and a miniature license plate bracket. To keep the noise down, he tacked on a modified Harley-Davidson muffler to the chrome exhaust tips which instantly transformed the F2 from a blaring hot-rod to a highly tuned gentleman’s racer.

Srour, who is 5 foot 6, required six additional inches of legroom to properly operate the three floor pedals, so the chassis and bodywork were extended accordingly. “We also upgraded the brakes to a dual-circuit system, operating in the front and the back, independently,” says Najjarian. “The car is light enough [roughly 600 lbs] that I was able to use drum brakes as opposed to disk brakes.”

To give the engine – an original 1952 Topolino – a little more pep, Najjarian designed a custom transmission and installed several high-end racing components, including a handmade camshaft.

“The original setup had a 500cc engine that was pretty anemic,” Najjarian told me. “It only made 27 horsepower with a top speed of 40 mph and it was mated to a 4-speed transmission with 4 synchros.” To provide proper motivation, Najjarian pulled the transmission, built a custom housing and fitted a dogleg transmission from a Nissan. “First gear is in line with reverse,” Najjarian says proudly, “just like a modern-day Ferrari 5-speed.”

Surprisingly, Srour and Najjarian agreed to keep the engine, but modified it with Abarth racing parts to increase the displacement to 600cc, boosting output to around 45 hp and delivering a top speed of 90 mph at 7,000 rpm.

“Much to my surprise, it turned out to be a really down-to-earth car,” says Najjarian. “I thought it would it always be a toy, but now I think of it as a real car. It’s completely, 100 percent drivable.”

Photo: Gila Srour
Next up for Najjarian is Srour’s two-thirds-scale 275 GTB/4 NART Spyder, whose body shell was made by Carrozzeria Allegretti. “This car will have two doors, a passenger seat, and seatbelts – much more advanced than the F2,” Najjarian says. The top speed will be in the neighborhood of 110 to 120 mph, but the main challenge will be mating the new engine to the reworked transaxle. “I plan on making them a stressed member of the frame,” Najjarian explains, “which will make everything more rigid.”

Back in New Jersey, Srour pulls next to me on the highway. One guy in a Chevy Malibu was so befuddled by the presence of the F2 he almost plowed head-first into a construction median. After his near-miss, he caught up, gave an enthusiastic (if not foolhardy) thumbs up, and continued snapping photos on his smartphone.

The guys at the car show were equally mystified. A large crowd gathered as Srour elegantly removed the engine cover, exposing the F2′s complex innards. One slightly husky 12-year-old boy jumped into the driver’s seat. While most collectors cringe at the thought of kids poking around in their cars, Srour isn’t that guy.

“Hey, this thing’s a toy,” said the boy, fumbling with the rear-view mirror.
“Not quite, kid,” said Srour. “Not quite.”

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Got some disposable $$$ ?? Some seriously older Ferraris are up for sale

Wow.....that is all I have......wow.

The guy who owned these was from BOSTON.....awesome.

Got $20 million? 4 'very important' Ferrari cars to go on block

By Jerry Hirsch - LA TIMES
July 19, 2012,


A rare collection of four Ferrari cars is expected to sell for a combined $20 million or more at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance next month.

Santa Monica auction house Gooding & Co. landed the Ferrari collection, which was the property of Sherman Wolf, a Boston paging service and amphitheater entrepreneur who died earlier this year.

“It is a very important collection of cars,” said David Kinney, publisher of the Hagerty Price Guide for collector cars.  “This is causing heartburn for some of the other auction companies that Gooding has grabbed this very important collection.”

The rarest vehicle in the collection is a 1960 Ferrari 250 GT LWB Alloy California Spider Competizione. Gooding & Co. said it is one of only nine alloy-bodied LWB – long wheel base - California Spiders ever built and is expected to sell for $7 million to $9 million.

The other cars include a 1953 Ferrari 340 MM Competition Spider, a 1957 Ferrari 500 TRC and a 1985 Ferrari 288 GTO.

“The Gooding sales have always been high-end and they seem to bring the right buyers to the room. The estate of Mr. Wolf will do very well,” Kinney said.

Although the GTO is fairly new by collector car standards, Kinney said its stature has grown, in part because not many were made.  It could sell for close to $1 million. The other vehicles are expected to go for $3.75 million to $6.5 million each.

Ferraris are among the hottest part of what has become a strong collector-car market over the last year.

An index of rare Ferrari values calculated by the Hagerty Insurance Agency has risen 16% to $3.5 million as of April from the same month a year earlier.

Wolf was well-known in classic car collector circles, both for his collection and for his mechanical ability.

Jon Shirley, the former president of Microsoft and a collector, remembers meeting Wolf at Ferrari rally in Colorado in 1995.

Shirley was having trouble getting his 1951 Ferrari to run properly at the high altitude.
“He went over to his Ferrari 340MM Spyder and pulled out more tools and small parts in carefully marked plastic cases than I thought possible to store in a Ferrari,” Shirley said.

Wolf tinkered with Shirley’s Ferrari, tuning it “by ear until the car sounded quite good” he recalled.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Bending up the Carbon Fiber Super Cars, Japan style.




When you think about it, it looks like some Japanese drivers tried to replicate NASCAR with disasterous results....They bent up their expensive cars like they were out on the back stretch of Daytona.

Domo arigato ! or not.....

The £2.5million motorway smash involving 8 Ferraris, 3 Mercedes, a Lamborghini, a Skyline and a humble Toyota Prius (which was in the wrong place at the wrong time)
By Daily Mail Reporter
5th December 2011

Thirteen high-end sports car owners - and one driver of a Toyota Prius - were probably close to tears last night after a £2.5million motorway pile-up.

A single miscalculation from a Ferrari driver leading a convoy of sports car connoisseurs left a trail of twisted Italian and German metal trailing across this motorway in Japan.


Ten people were rushed to hospital after the smash on the Chugoku Expressway in Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi Prefecture, yesterday afternoon, but none of their injuries were said to be serious.

But the damage to their wallets may be far more grievous. Among the wrecked vehicles were eight Ferraris, three Mercedes, a Lamborghini, and a Skyline, as well as a Prius hybrid that was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Police said the accident occurred on an uphill curve when the 60-year-old driver of the Ferrari leading the pack lost control while trying to overtake another vehicle.

The trailing cars then proceeded to crash one by one, with the ensuing carnage closing down the express way for six hours while emergency services cleared up the mess.

The cars involved in the epic smash included at least two Ferrari F430s, two Ferrari 360 Modenas, two Ferrari F355s and a Lamborghini Diablo.

There was also a Nissan Skyline GT-R - the only current Japanese supercar - and two Mercedes Benz, while the cheapest involved in the crash was the Toyota Prius hybrid.

Sports Nippon estimates the value of the vehicles to be 300million yen (£2.5million).


Thursday, July 21, 2011

$18 Million Dollar Ferrari.....or you can have what is behind Door #2 ?


If you had $18 Million Dollars, would you be able to part with it for this piece of Automotive history ? It is a rare and exotic girl, one that would take your breath away each and every time you drove it but is that worth $18 Million ?

For $18 Million Dollars, I could buy a $2 Million Dollar home in Maui for the winters, another $2 Million dollar home on Cape Cod for the summers, spend a few million outfitting both homes along with filling the garages with some nice wheels (classic ones of course) and still have plenty of $$$ left over to enjoy...

She is a beautiful and rare car but I am not sure I would part with $18 Million for her even if I had it.....just sayin'


Records to fall?
The 1957 Ferrari Testa Rossa prototype heads the lots at Gooding's Monterey sale – will it create another record?
21st July 2011
www.classicandperformancecar.com

Gooding & Company is offering the 1957 Ferrari 250 Testa Rossa Prototype and the 1963 Shelby Cobra 289 Factory Team Car at the world-renowned Pebble Beach Auctions on 20-21 August. It's the 1957 Ferrari 250 Testa Rossa Prototype that really interests – joins an elite list of extraordinary competition Ferraris that have crossed the block at Gooding & Company's auctions, including the record-breaking 1959 Ferrari 250 GT LWB California Spider that sold for $ 7.26m and the 1961 Ferrari 250GT SWB Berlinetta SEFAC Hot Rod that sold for $ 6.1m in 2010. And if it sells, the expectation is that it will be for a record amount.

The 1957 Ferrari 250 Testa Rossa Prototype, Chassis 0666 TR started it all as the prototype and test-bed for the Testa Rossa line, which is arguably the most successful series of sports racing cars in history. Based on the 290MM, the prototype TR was assembled in 1957 featuring the classic V12 engine, de Dion rear axle and right-hand drive. The car debuted at the Nurburgring 1000kms where Masten Gregory and Olindo Morolli finished in 10th place. As a factory team car, 0666 TR practiced in Sweden and ran the GP of Sweden. After receiving pontoon-fender coachwork by Scaglietti, Ferrari campaigned the car in the Venezuelan Grand Prixand the 1000kms of Buenos Aires, where it placed an impressive 3rd and 2nd, respectively. It has been raced at all of the major events worldwide including Sebring, Nurburgring and Le Mans, as well as SCCA events. Restored to superb condition with its original, matching-numbers engine and 1958 NART livery, the wildly impressive historic racer has won two Best in Class trophies from Pebble Beach, a Platinum Award and the TR Cup at Cavallino, and it is one of only two factory Classiche-certified TRs in existence. With just two owners in 40 years, this car's presentation at auction this August is a once in a lifetime opportunity. If this Testa Rossa sells next month, it will be the most valuable car ever sold at auction in the world.

Also on offer is the 1963 Shelby Cobra 289 Factory Team Car, CSX2129. Completed in May 1963, CSX2129 was built by Shelby to full 'Sebring' specification as a Factory Team Car. In what would become an unprecedented year for Shelby, CSX2129 competed through the 1963 USSRC season at the hand of Bob Bondurant and, predominantly, Ken Miles. Numerous class victories and pole positions marked CSX2129's successful 1963 season playing a major role in Shelby America's win of the USRRC Manufacturer's Championship, USRRC Driver's Championship and an SCCA Championship. Successfully raced by Graham Shaw in 1964, the 289 team car returned to Shelby and was displayed at the 1964 New York World's Fair. Now fashionable in its authentic 1963 team livery, this American motorsport legend has an estimate of $ 2.4m - $ 2.8m and will be an exciting highlight of Gooding & Company's Pebble Beach Auctions.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

A Ferrari that you can take to the Grocery Store??? A seriously expensive way to haul the groceries with style...



The only difference between boys and men is the price of the toys....yeah, whatever.

I have always been a Porsche Guy when it came to foreign wheels and saw Ferraris as way outta my league.....Looks like they want to tempt a few more people to their side of things.....Damn, they got some seriously good looking horses over there in Italia.


Sex on Wheels’? Now Ferrari Has ‘Room for Groceries,’ Too
NY TIMES - 05/15/11 by Liz Alderman

THE yellow Ferrari Italia twists out of a steep curve and rockets down the ribbon of blacktop.

The tires smoke. The V-8 howls. Somewhere on the long straightaway, the needle on the speedometer touches 150 miles an hour. The test driver downshifts and hurtles into a hairpin turn.

So this is what Ferraristi mean by “sex on wheels.”

Here, outside the north central Italian town of Maranello, yellow, blue and blood-red Ferraris race through 14 curves on the company’s 1.9-mile-long track known as the Fiorano circuit. This is the heart of Ferrari-land, a seductive, mysterious place that at times seems to defy logic, or at least the economics of the conventional automotive industry.

It is a place of sonorous engines and sinuous curves, where engineers don’t just tune up engines — they tune them, like pianos, to produce that libidinous vroom. It is a place where the price of admission is at least 180,000 euros ($250,000) and can zoom toward a million with custom colors, hand-stitched calfskin seats and dashboards upholstered with manta ray hide.

And where Ferrari executives are now looking to get a bit practical — or at least what passes for practical here in this rarefied world.

So, brace yourself: Ferrari is making a hatchback. Mind you, this is no ordinary hatchback. With a cobra-like front end and a 660-horsepower engine, it starts at 260,000 euros ($370,000).

Luca Cordero di Montezemolo, the company’s chairman, says the car, an all-wheel drive known as the FF, is intended for the man who craves a Ferrari but finds himself hauling a baby seat and sports equipment on the weekends.

“Ferrari used to be the car that you kept in your garage, took out to polish and show, and put back into the garage,” Mr. Montezemolo, 63, said as he gave a tour of Ferrari’s headquarters recently. “Today,” he said, “people want to do more with a car.”

Going hatchback — Ferrari style — is part of Mr. Montezemolo’s survival strategy for a company whose name has been synonymous with power, braggadocio and Italy itself for more than 60 years. It comes as Sergio Marchionne, the chief executive of Fiat, which owns 85 percent of Ferrari, has been asking Ferrari and its sister brand, Maserati, to aim for higher profit and sales by offering a wider range of cars.

As Mr. Marchionne moves to raise Fiat’s stake in Chrysler to 51 percent, he has also suggested an eventual initial public offering of Ferrari, which could compel it to start dialing up profitability.

But Ferrari is about more than cars and profit: its selling point is prestige, status and sex appeal, carefully calibrated through the economics of high-end luxury.

DRIVING in from the Bologna airport, you can tell immediately when you reach the realm of Ferrari. One minute, small, squat cars — mostly Fiats — are puttering along on the narrow roads that wind through the countryside. Then, suddenly, a roar of engines rips into the pastoral quiet, and a parade of sports cars zooms around a curve in a blaze of color.

The machines have just rolled out of a plant after a four-month birthing process that begins with a custom order at one of 200 Ferrari dealerships around the world. After the car bodies are glossed with a triple coat of paint, workers install custom dashboards, hand-sewn seats and transmissions that allow drivers to shift gears, Formula One-style, with the touch of a lever.

The secret to any Ferrari is the sound of its engine, whose power is depicted by a prancing horse, a symbol that was emblazoned on a lightning-fast World War I plane flown by an Italian pilot. To fire up the engine’s magic, Mr. Montezemolo gathers with top officials in a secret facility three years before a model hits showrooms to vote on a playlist of engine tones that are composed with the help of a musician. A prototype Ferrari is built around the most thrilling pitch, and the men gather again in a soundproofed, padded room to judge the real thing. If the engine hits the right primal note, the car is approved for production.

I got a taste of the engine’s power when a test driver took me for a spin in that canary yellow Italia on the Fiorano Circuit. As we hit what is known as Straightaway 1, I was pinned to my seat by the g-forces. The driver turned to make sure I was smiling.

“You feel the excitement in your skin!” he said, gunning the engine. The sound was glorious, the vibrations electric.

The Italia’s more pragmatic cousin, the hatchback FF, will start being delivered to customers this month. Though it makes up less than 10 percent of total production, to some Ferrari loyalists the car and its hunched backside are a step toward compromise — and a sign that Ferrari is toying with its image.

Mr. Montezemolo prefers to cultivate Ferrari’s exclusivity by limiting production and enforcing yearlong waiting lists, much the way a luxury fashion house like Hermès creates desire for a handbag. To do so, Ferrari sells only four models, including the FF, and makes around 6,500 cars a year, controlling the number sold in each country. Analysts say Ferrari could easily catapult its sales if it simply made more.

Ferrari’s production “is nothing in a market of 60 million cars,” said Ferdinand Dudenhöffer, the director of Center Automotive Research in Germany. To meet Mr. Marchionne’s goals, he said, the automaker could sell 20,000 vehicles a year while remaining exclusive, if it designed the right models.

Mr. Montezemolo concedes that Ferrari could consider raising production to about 10,000 cars annually in the next 10 to 15 years, but only by putting limited numbers of cars in new markets. “I will always produce less than demand,” he told me. “If I do more, I would destroy the brand.”

“This is fashion,” he added, leaning into his handmade red leather desk as the high-pitched whir of new Ferraris pierced the air outside his office. “We don’t sell cars; we sell dreams.”

When he wants to feel the breeze and throw things in the back, he tools around in a Ferrari California convertible, painted in blues and grays instead of Ferrari red. He and his wife, Ludovica Andreoni, now have an 8-month-old son (his sixth child), so there is more to tote around these days.

To him, practicality and sex appeal are not mutually exclusive. The FF might be a hatchback, he argues, but with a 660-horsepower engine that can whisk a family and its luggage up to a ski lodge in short order, “it’s a racing car, not a station wagon.”

So far, his instincts have paid off: All 800 FFs scheduled for production this year sold out within weeks, despite the 260,000 euro base price and the minimum one-year waiting period.

MR. MONTEZEMOLO, a larger-than-life industrialist with a flowing mane and a studied elegance, pours boundless energy into every detail of Ferrari. He pops up on the factory floor, jumps in and out of prototype cars and buzzes through the employee cafeteria. He is also deeply involved in the operation of the company’s Formula One racing team.

One day in April, he showed off some of the more than 1,000 kinds of Ferrari paraphernalia at an onsite boutique, including a 6,000-euro cellphone and a new line of baby products. After bounding to a rack of leather jackets, he began rearranging the display and asked a staff member why no race flags were visible. “Put up 5 — no, 10 — flags, and bring out the life-size cutouts of the Formula One drivers,” he commanded.

A member of an old aristocratic family from the Piedmont region of Italy, Mr. Montezemolo stumbled onto the path to his dream job after phoning a radio station in 1973 and starting a fierce debate with another listener over car racing. Enzo Ferrari, the company’s founder, happened to be listening and rang the station to track down the mysterious caller.

Mr. Montezemolo soon became Mr. Ferrari’s assistant and, at 27, was put in charge of Ferrari’s Scuderia Formula One racing team. He continued to rise through the Fiat empire when Gianni Agnelli, the patriarch of Italy’s most powerful family, which owned Fiat, tapped him to be chairman of Ferrari in 1991. In 2004, after Mr. Agnelli’s death, he became Fiat’s chairman.

Mr. Montezemolo set about engineering a turnaround in Ferrari’s road car business, which had been flagging after Mr. Ferrari died in 1988. He turned a mountain of debt into profit, in part by transferring Formula One technology to road cars. In 1993, Ferrari sold about 2,000 cars at its dealerships in 30 countries; today, it is in 50 markets.

For the Formula One team, he brought in crucial players like Jean Todt, catapulting Ferrari back into a dominant position in racing. The racing team is a huge investment that feeds the myth of Ferrari for branded merchandise and licensing, including Ferrari World, an over-the-top theme park in Abu Dhabi. About 20 percent of Ferrari’s operating profit comes from items emblazoned with the prancing horse symbol.

Last year, operating profit jumped 23 percent, to 302 million euros, and sales rose 8 percent, to 1.9 billion euros. In the first quarter of this year, sales were 491 million euros, up 18 percent from the period a year earlier.

But Mr. Montezemolo refuses to divulge the costs of operating the Formula One unit, citing competitive reasons — a sore point among analysts who complain that the company’s financial picture isn’t as transparent as it should be. That could spell trouble for any Ferrari stock offering, said Eric Hauser, an analyst at Credit Suisse who has pored through Ferrari’s balance sheets.

Another concern is whether Ferrari could independently meet American or European emissions regulations, which are calculated as part of Fiat’s overall carbon footprint, Mr. Hauser said. “There are so many loose ends that would need to be addressed in an I.P.O.,” he said. He estimates Ferrari’s overall worth at around three billion euros.

Such talk inflames Mr. Montezemolo, who argues that Ferrari is worth at least six billion to seven billion euros. “When I hear people say that the value of Ferrari is only three billion, I think, ‘Someone must be out of their mind,’ ” he said.

Yet critics question whether Ferrari could ever be worth as much as Mr. Montezemolo believes as long as he is in the driver’s seat. While he succeeded in digging Ferrari out of debt early on, some analysts say he may not have the business acumen needed to drive Ferrari toward greater profitability.

Some point to his record at Fiat. As chairman, he had a hard time turning the company around when it was skidding toward bankruptcy in 2005. Fiat brought in a new chief executive, Mr. Marchionne, to help steer it clear of disaster. “Mr. Montezemolo could not have pulled that off,” Mr. Dudenhöffer said.

Last year, Mr. Montezemolo was replaced as Fiat chairman by John Elkann, Mr. Agnelli’s grandson, in a planned succession. Mr. Montezemolo remained Ferrari’s chairman.

NONETHELESS, Mr. Montezemolo’s management of Ferrari as the ultimate “made in Italy” icon makes him nothing short of a hero in his country, not to mention a fixture in Italian magazines. He often tops polls of people Italians would like to see run against Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

Over lunch in his private dining room overlooking the Ferrari campus, Mr. Montezemolo showed me a two-page, single-spaced political speech that he had stayed up typing the night before to gather his thoughts on Italy’s problems. “Italy today is like a boxer in the corner,” he said. “We have to get back into the center of the ring.”

He blames political infighting for throwing the country and the economy into gridlock. Mr. Berlusconi might have taken power with the fire of an entrepreneur. But 16 years later, he has distracted Italy and made the country less competitive and more protectionist, says Mr. Montezemolo, who has started a research group, Italia Futura, to monitor problems in government and identify new political candidates.

“Today, the largest industry in Italy is politics; the state is present everywhere,” says Mr. Montezemolo, who lamented similar problems when he led Confindustria, Italy’s biggest business federation, in 2004. “This means less of a free market, more corruption and less meritocracy.”

His discourse is laced with the catch phrases of a politician. But will he run for public office? Pressed, he said he wouldn’t rule it out, but then added: “I don’t believe in a one-man show. I’m more of a team-spirit guy.”

This month, he was re-elected to another three-year term as chairman of Ferrari. And while he may be spending more of his time fighting Italy’s ills, at the end of the day, he said, “I’m married to Ferrari.”