9 Days Until the 2008 Australian GP
In its 21-year history Ligier scored nine wins. The first of these came in Ligier’s second season. In the 1977 Swedish Grand Prix, Jacques Laffite kept his head cool after a mediocre start that saw him drop from eight to eleventh. As others before him developed problems, Laffite got further and further to the front. By half distance, the Ligier driver was up to fifth place, helped by problems for both Gunnar Nilsson and Ronnie Peterson as well as a collision between John Watson and Jody Scheckter. While Laffite made his way past Mass, Depailler and Hunt, second place seemed the maximum reachable until Mario Andretti suddenly lost speed three laps from the end. This gave Laffite and Ligier their first victory.
1978 was without wins for Ligier, but in 1979 the team got off to a rocket start with wins in the first two races for Laffite. The small team shocked the grid and woke up the competition. However, before Ferrari overtook the French team, Patrick Depailler gave Ligier its third victory of the season in the Spanish Grand Prix. The next year gave Ligier another two victories. Didier Pironi won in Belgium and Laffite scored his fourth victory for Ligier in Germany. Laffite was again successful for the team in 1981 when he won in Austria and Canada. However, that was the last success for a long time. Only in the 1996 Monaco Grand Prix came another win for Ligier. Olivier Panis was one of the very few who kept his car on the track in a rain soaked Monte Carlo. In a race that saw only four cars take the chequered flag, the Frenchman scored his first and Ligier’s last victory.