Bruno, who sees himself as 'cool
but enthusiastic', seemed to be well set for a successful
Grand Prix career, but after he had been given some excellent
early opportunities his star waned and was eventually reduced
to a distant flicker.
Bruno
came through Formula Italia to contest the 1976 BP Formula
3 championship in a March, and he did very well to run a
close second to Rupert Keegan in his first season in the
category. Benefiting from the close attentions of Robin
Herd and the March factory, Giacomelli graduated to Formula
2 in 1977 and took three wins, but suffered through poor
reliability. Enjoying substantial backing, he made his Grand
Prix debut in a third works McLaren in selected races, but
at this point he was still focusing on Formula 2. In 1978
he blitzed the opposition, winning eight of the 12 rounds
in the works March to become the first Italian ever to win
the title.
In
1979, Bruno joined the Alfa Romeo team for what was to be
very much a learning year. The gloves were off in 1980 and
at first he floundered, prone to silly errors which undid
much good work. Then, after Depailler's death in a mid-season
testing accident, he found himself leading the team, and
rose to the challenge magnificently.
Maybe
he lacked motivation, for while there were occasions during
the next three seasons when his undoubted ability shone,
too often he seemed uninterested and at odds with his machinery.
Out of a Grand Prix drive from 1984, Giacomelli surfaced
occasionally in Indy Car and sports car racing over the
next few seasons to no great effect, so it was a considerable
surprise when he was brought into the Life team in 1990
to replace the disenchanted Gary Brabham. The exercise was
something of a joke, however, as Bruno rarely seemed to
venture beyond the pit lane.
In
1995 Giacomelli was keeping his hand in racing a Porsche
in the Monza four-hour race, and after two seasons away
from the tracks he garnered enough sponsorship in 1998 to
contest the highly competitive Porsche Supercup series,
where he performed more than respectably on occasion.
(c)
'Who is Who' by Steve Small, 2000