Françoise Conconi
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Françoise Conconi is widely regarded as the most talented and successful female co-driver of all time — a navigator whose precision and nerve helped redefine what women could achieve in international rally competition, and who somehow managed to build parallel careers in journalism, banking, press relations, and authorship on the side.
EARLY YEARS
Specific details about her birthdate and birthplace are not documented in the available public record — a gap that will surprise no one familiar with how thoroughly motorsport media of the 1970s failed to chronicle the backgrounds of female competitors. What is clear is that she came up through French rallying during a period when women navigating the co-driver’s seat at high-level events was still a genuine rarity, and that her earliest documented competitive partnership was with driver Marie-Odile Desvignes, who relied primarily on Conconi as her co-driver before the latter went on to form her historic alliance with Michèle Mouton. [15]
OTHER INTERESTS
The range here is genuinely striking. It would be easy enough to fill a career with just the rallying — over 150 competitive events tends to occupy a person — but Françoise Conconi also worked as a journalist, a press officer, a bank manager, and an author. [9] That’s not a résumé that gets assembled accidentally. She is one of 65 women featured in the Carob Tree Publishing release 100 Years of Women: Motorsport & Monaco, a project that itself reflects an ongoing commitment to documenting and advocating for women’s place in the sport. [9]
EARLY SUCCESS
By the mid-1970s, Conconi was already making her presence felt on the European rally scene. In 1975, she and Michèle Mouton entered the Bianchi Rally together, finishing 10th overall and taking the Prix des Dames — the ladies’ trophy — a result that announced the partnership as one worth watching. [23] The Monte Carlo Rally came next in their shared story: in 1977, the crew contested the 45th Rallye Automobile de Monte-Carlo in an Autobianchi A112 Abarth, finishing 24th overall and 5th in Group 2. [20]
Also in 1977, behind the wheel of a Porsche Carrera RS, the pair won the RACE Rallye de España — a Category 4 event in the European Championship — and finished second in the Tour de France Automobile, entering the Jarama circuit in Madrid as rally winners. [3] The following year, 1978, brought further confirmation of their caliber: Mouton and Conconi won the Tour de France Automobile outright, [26] and also competed in the Tour de Corse in a Fiat France-backed Fiat 131 Abarth, finishing 8th overall. [31] These were not token results in a separate women’s classification. They were finishing against the full field.
NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENTS
- 1975: With Michèle Mouton, finished 10th overall and won the Prix des Dames (ladies’ trophy) at the Bianchi Rally. [23]
- 1977: Won the RACE Rallye de España (Category 4, European Rally Championship) with Michèle Mouton in a Porsche Carrera RS. [3]
- 1977: Finished second in the Tour de France Automobile with Michèle Mouton. [3]
- 1977: Contested the 45th Rallye Automobile de Monte-Carlo, finishing 24th overall and 5th in Group 2 in an Autobianchi A112 Abarth with Michèle Mouton. [20]
- 1978: Won the Tour de France Automobile with Michèle Mouton. [26]
- 1978: Finished 8th overall in the Tour de Corse with Michèle Mouton in a Fiat France-backed Fiat 131 Abarth. [31]
- Career total: Competed in more than 150 rallies and won four French championship titles. [2]
INSPIRATIONS
The historical record doesn’t offer documented statements from Conconi about who or what drew her to motorsport. What is evident from the record is that her earliest competitive work was done alongside Marie-Odile Desvignes, another pioneering woman in French rallying — suggesting that whatever pulled her into the sport, she found her footing within a network of women who were collectively refusing to accept their supposed absence from the competitive order. [15] The partnership with Mouton that followed was one of equals: two women, both technically accomplished, both unintimidated by a field that was almost entirely male.
REPUTATION
The description that has followed Françoise Conconi through the historical record is direct and unqualified: the most talented and successful female co-driver of all time. [1] That’s a strong claim, but her results across 150-plus rallies and four French titles give it something to stand on. What may be more telling is the secondary characterization — that it is “difficult to imagine [her] being intimidated by anything.” [2] That quality, whether innate or hard-won, would have been non-negotiable for someone navigating not just mountain passes at speed but also the institutional resistance that greeted women in professional motorsport throughout the 1970s.
The Mouton-Conconi partnership is now recognized as one of the genuinely landmark pairings in rally history — not as a curiosity or a footnote in a ladies’ category, but as a competitive force that contested major European events on equal terms and won. [10] Conconi’s contribution to that partnership was fundamental. Mouton was the driver; Conconi was the one translating the road ahead into information Mouton could use, under conditions that left no margin for error. The fact that this partnership succeeded at the level it did is as much a testament to the co-driver as to anyone else in the car.
FUTURE GOALS/PLANS
In 2025, Conconi was featured as one of 65 women profiled in 100 Years of Women: Motorsport & Monaco, published by Carob Tree Publishing — a project that places her legacy in direct conversation with the current generation of women in motorsport. [9] Separately, she has been announced as a participant in the Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique 2026, a development that visibly moved her. [20] For a woman who logged more than 150 competitive rallies across her career, the prospect of returning to Monte Carlo — the event that defined so much of the sport’s golden era — clearly still means something.
References:
Instagram Post — Françoise Conconi Tribute
Good News Monaco — Françoise Conconi Tag Page
Facebook — Rally Group Post on Conconi
Facebook — Rally Legends Group Post
Facebook — Motorsport Memories Group Post
Facebook — Rally Legends Group: Mouton and Conconi
Wikipedia — Michèle Mouton
Iedei Blog — Françoise Conconi Tag
Good News Monaco — Françoise Conconi: 100 Years Women Motorsport Monaco
Hagerty UK — Michèle Mouton Took on the World and Won
Instagram Post — Mouton and Conconi
Getty Images — Françoise Conconi Photos
Instagram Reel — Conconi Rally Footage
Facebook — Rally Legends Group Post
Motorsport Memorial — Marie-Odile Desvignes Profile
Facebook — Françoise Conconi Personal Page
Facebook — Rally Legends Group: Mouton Quattro
Instagram Reel — Conconi and Mouton Highlights
Facebook — Stay Middle: Fabrizia Pons Post
Facebook — Automobile Club de Monaco: Conconi at Monte-Carlo Historique 2026
History Racing Pedia — Mouton Fiat Abarth 1978
Facebook — Motorsport Memories: Monte Carlo 1977
Facebook — Rally History Group Post
Facebook — Stay Middle: Michèle Mouton Pikes Peak 1985
eWRC Results — Françoise Conconi Co-Driver Profile
Facebook — Motorsport Memories Group Post
Goodreads — Francesco Conconi Author Page
Instagram Post — Conconi Rally Content
Instagram Reel — Conconi Feature
Instagram Post — Rally History Content
X (Twitter) — WRC Past: Mouton and Conconi
Facebook — Motorsport Memories Group Post
Instagram Reel — Conconi and Mouton Archive
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