I recently watched Lucky!, the documentary about Bernie Ecclestone. There were so many conflicting stories in it about the history of F1, I actually wanted to start a thread about it. But that was exactly the problem: I could not find 'a theme' around which the contradictions centered, so why would I bother.
But here is at least one that confused my mind and memory. In the documentary, Bernie taks about the 'watertanks'-scandal of 1982 season. He talks about it scathingly. He points at his coffee-cup and says: 'That is about how much water there was in those famous watertanks.'
Now, this almost drives me crazy. I really, really, think I remember seeing pictures in Grand Prix International of F1 cars with rubber watertanks of at least GALLONS of water placed in the side-pods of the car. The magazine wrote in detail about the tanks, about how they led to the boycot of Imola of 1982 by all the 'non-factory'-teams. I have no doubt that other magazines in the UK or else all over Europa wrote about it as well.
So my questions are two-fold.
1. Is Bernie deluded in his memory?
2. If he is lying, why the hell would he forty years after the fact?