Another race track, another Formula 1 grand prix. But a real moment is occurring.
There’s a commotion in the Silverstone paddock, as a figure emerges through a doorway behind a waiting car. Hundreds of camera shutters click. Journalists jostle for view as a new member of the racing fraternity slides on a star-design helmet.
A woman is competing in a Formula 1 car – a moment she has dreamed of her whole life.
But it all grinds to a halt. An oil pressure problem shuts down the engine, the car comes to a stop. Bar one more outing in Germany, that would be it in terms of a woman driving at a Formula 1 race weekend.
No, it’s not 2025. It’s 2014. A decade on, the clock is still ticking.
The driver was Susie Wolff, behind the wheel of a Williams car taking part in first practice at the 2014 British Grand Prix. She was never assigned to race.
“Most probably now looking back with perspective, I had to work harder for their respect because there was just that underlying doubt that I was good enough,” says Wolff.
“Of course there are difficult moments because when you are the only one, suddenly there’s lots of attention on my gender instead of my performances on track.
“But I tried to not let those distract me because I knew performance is power, and as long as I did a good enough job on track… But there was this natural scepticism – I was a young girl in a very male-dominated environment.”