We are accustomed to the tribal loyalties that mar modern day F1 and other areas of motor-sport (albeit to a lesser degree thankfully) but for how long has this been the case?
Such loyalties have long been part of other sports going back many decades. Football (in all its various forms) has long been tribal, mainly of course due to teams having strong local identities which remains the case even in these more global and on-line days. Most teams still draw most of their support from their home-town.
Other areas of sport may have nationalist support as we see in international tournaments. Where they are one-person sports, there have been strong connections to individual sportspeople, such Bjorn Borg or Tiger Woods (other stars are available).
Such personal followings are also found in motor-sport with Mansell-mania and Sennadolatry as examples from the past and the recent Orange Army phenomenon shows this is still a thing, as does the strong support for Hamilton whilst nationalistic fervour was perhaps strong for Ferrari in particular, but not so much elsewhere. I do not recall ever coming across any powerful level of home-town support for teams, marques or drivers.
So if we roll back the years, when did this sort of fan-dom first arise in our sport? Certainly I can recall Italian fans (largely tifosi) invade the track at Monza after GPs but how far back did that go? We might perhaps draw a veil over 1930s fervour as highlighted by Elon Musk style salutes, but was there any of this sort of fan-dom in the early days? Of course there was great enthusiasm right from the start leading to the spectator fatalities of very early years but was it just general euphoria over speed and spectacle or was it focussed on individual drivers, marques or nationalities?
Discuss!