Kevin Bartlett posted this shot of him chasing Ian ‘Pete’ Geoghegan in KB’s Morris Minor 1000 – ‘one I bought from the NRMA write-off yard with only superficial damage’ – on Bob Williamson’s ‘Old Motor Racing Photographs-Australia Facebook page.
Aussie international racer/historian, Peter Finlay chipped in with ‘The Geoghegans were the first in Australia to race an 850 Mini’.
Hmmm, I thought, is that so?
Noted Cooper historian, Stephen Dalton, advises as follows, ‘The 850 went on sale on 23 March if my brain is operating! So the car’s competition debut was soon after. KB’s shot is on 21 May 1961 at Warwick Farm. Ian did get period coverage, quoting him as being the first to race a Morris 850 (this one listed at 995cc already), but he wasn’t.
Peter Manton ran at Tarrawingee on 23 April, while Bruce Coventry and Sid Sakzewski ran Minis at Lakeside the weekend before Warwick Farm.
And Harry Firth made its competition debut at Rob Roy before all of them. A week before Tarra and nearly a month before the Lakeside meeting took place…’
Morris 850 Development Pace…
This piece from Tony Johns’ upcoming book on the history of Austin 7 Racing in Australia shows just how quickly local tuners hopped onto the Mini Bandwagon…
‘The Australian Motor Sports Club (AMSC) had previously organised hillclimbs at Greensborough, Hurstbridge and Hepburn Springs. When the LCCA decided, due to dwindling spectator numbers, now less than 500, that they no longer wanted to run meetings at Rob Roy. The AMSC were allowed to organise a meeting on Sunday, July 2, 1961.
A few days before the weekend, the club put up yellow posters around Melbourne stating ‘Rob Roy Hillclimb – Sunday – Next – July 20d’ It worked, a crowd of 2,500 spectators arrived.
It was Nigel Tait’s first hillclimb, and he was one of five entries in the Austin 7 Formula class. Fastest was lan Wells with a best time of 35.54 secs, still well outside Bill Rees’ class record of 31.47 in the ex-Derek Jolly Austin.
Later Mini-King Peter ‘Skinny’ Manton fitted a supercharger to his Monaro Motors entered Morris 850 (Mini) to win the Gran Turismo class -1100cc class 37.18secs.
In the Touring class, he used an overbored Mini to beat the Austin Distributors Mini driven by Harry Firth, with times of 35.19 and 37.13 seconds respectively.
Two weeks later, on July 16, Nigel was having his first outing at Templestowe hillclimb. Initially, the track was damp and greasy, but dried out after lunch. lan Wells was nearly three seconds outside Bowring’s class record, with lan Walker and John Robertson filling the minor placings.’
Jack Brabham’s screaming Matra MS650 3-litre V12 and the rumbling Henry Greder/Jean-Pierre Rouget Chev Corvette 7-litre V8 (eighth) blast past the Le Mans pits during the 1970 Le Mans 24-Hour on June 13-14.
By all accounts, the triple world champ enjoyed his races with Matra on an all care and no responsibility basis rather than his chief cook and bottle washer responsibilities at Motor Racing Developments and the Brabham Racing Organisation, with all due deference to Ron Tauranac
He shared Le Mans mount with young French thruster, Francois Cevert, who, in addition to his endurance responsibilities, took his GP debut aboard a Tyrrell March 701 Ford that year. They failed to finish at La Sarthe, as did the other MS650s raced by Jean Pierre Jabouille/Francois Cevert and Henri Pescarolo/Jean-Pierre Beltoise; a real who’s-who of French GP winning drivers of the mid-late 1970s.
Up the front, Hans Hermann and Richard Attwood took Porsche’s first outright win aboard a 4.5-litre Porsche Salzburg 917K; the best of the 3-litre cars was the Martini 908/02 raced by Rudy Lins and Helmut Marko.
Brabham and topless Cevert watch as Bruno Morin hand on wing, Philippe Chasselut engine man, in checked shirt standing, Georges Martin crouching, with Guy Prat behind him in the Elf jacket, Gerard Ducarouge also crouching at right, behind him is Dominique Codreanu, with the head leaning in front of the gendarmes Michel Polard (J-P Fabre Collection)Brabham ahead of Derek Bell’s works Ferrari 512S during the long Le Mans night (LAT)
That year, Brabham and Dan Gurney were the two GP winners on the Equipe Matra-Elf endurance program payroll. It would be fascinating to know what those two senior citizens and noted driver/engineers thought of the Matras overall and especially its two key constituent parts: the chassis and engine. Do any of you Frenchies have anything documented in relation to this? Dan only did Sebring but Jack did the season, enough to have provided input into the development direction of the cars.
Jack on the Daytona banking, just imagine the sound of that fabulous raucous V12 echoing around its vast confines! (unattributed)That’s the rather talented Gerard Ducarouge and Jack at Daytona, Jack and Francois were tenth in the race won by the Pedro Rodriguez/Leo Kinnunen Gulf-Wyer Porsche 917K
The best results for Matra’s sports car squad that year were wins for the MS630/650 in the 1000 km of Buenos Aires-Beltoise/Pescarolo, for the MS650 in the Tour de France-Beltoise/Depailler/Jean Todt and for the MS660 at the 1000 km Paris at Montlhery-Brabham/Cevert.
Brabham had been under pressure from his wife, Betty, to retire for several years. He would have too, had Jochen Rindt returned to Brabham for the 1970 season, but Chapman offered him the earth, moon and stars to stay at Lotus, so Jack tore up the Austrian’s contract and convinced Betty he had to do one last season. Further proof of Jack’s intent was that he had sold his stakes in BRO and MRD before the end of 1969.
Doug Nye advises that when Jack’s father tapped him on the shoulder and called time, that was decisive…So Jack fitted as much as he could into that final pro-season: F1 with BRO, some F2 – John Coombs Brabham BT30 – and endurance racing with Matra.
Brabham, MS650 during the Brands 1000 km, noting the wing in search of more front bite, and the car’s rear below (M Charles)(A Damfreville)
Jack opened his Matra racing account at Daytona on February 1, where he and Cevert were 10th at the start of a season of utter domination by Porsche.
Where the 12-cylinder 917Ks didn’t win, the flat-eight 908/03 did, except Sebring, where the Ferrari 512S driven by Ignazio Giunti, Nino Vaccarella and Mario Andretti prevailed. Porsche won the International Championship of Makes, 63 points to Ferrari’s 37, Alfa Romeo’s 10 (T33/3 3-litre V8) and Matra-Simca’s four.
Brabham was pretty chipper at Brands Hatch on April 12 as he had won the South African Grand Prix in early March, showing the new breed – the array of 1970 F1 newbees included Emerson Fittipaldi, Francois Cevert, Ronnie Peterson and Clay Regazzoni – there was life in the old dog yet!
He was paired with JPB in an MS650 in the Brands 1000 km, the pair finishing 12th, 34 laps adrift of Pedro Rodriguez, who blew the minds of onlookers with his handling of the JW Automotive Porsche 917K in the most atrocious weather conditions.
Brabham in the MS650 he shared with JPB at the April 25 Monza 1000 km in 1970. Aerospace company knew a thing or two about aerodynamics. This angle allows a good look at what they thought worked, the only tacked-on ‘appendage’ is the front wing, that seems to be unique to this particular chassisMS650 at Monza in 1970. The Matra 3-litre V12 in MS12 endurance spec gave about 410 bhp @ 10400 rpm
The same duo were fifth in the Monza 1000 km, then came Le Mans, and that season-ending Paris 1000 Kilometres win for Jack and Cevert at Montlhery on October 18. The Aussie-Franco duo won this non-International Championship of Makes round aboard a new MS660 monocoque by three laps from the Jose Juncadera/Jean-Pierre Jabouille Ferrari 512S and the Larrouse/Chasseuil/Ballot-Lena Porsche 908/02. More about their Montlhery victory here:https://primotipo.com/2016/09/09/jack-and-francois-matra-ms660/
It was Jack’s final pro-race win, as against mucking around in touring cars in Australia in the mid-late 1970s, he ‘retired’ after the Mexican Grand Prix on October 25, so that Montlhery win would always have been memorable as he very soon felt, strolling around his Wagga Wagga paddocks and Bankstown Ford dealership, that he had retired too early…
I’m not so sure about that. He is one of the few who retired at the top of his game; had fortune favoured him, he would have won the Monaco and British Grands Prix, if not one or two others that season. His timing was immaculate…and he was alive.
Beltoise/Pescarolo Matra M630 Ford, Montlhery, Paris 1000 km, October 1967 DNF gearbox (Matra)
Matra M630-MS650…
Matra entered racing with the F3 monocoque MS1 in 1965, the MS3 Djet was their first sports car launched the same year, whereas their first sports-racer, the MS4/620, was built in 1966. More about the MS620 here:https://primotipo.com/2015/11/15/matra-m620-brm-le-mans-1966/
The MS630 spaceframe coupe succeeded it in 1967, and was powered by a 2-litre P60 BRM V8 as a prototype (all three ’66 Le Mans entries DNF) and with a Ford 289/4.7-litre V8 as a sports car. In 1968, it raced as a 3-litre prototype fitted with Matra’s new V12 engine. While both cars again failed to finish the all-important race at Le Mans, Q4 and Q5 were indicative of race pace.
For 1969, chief engineer Bernard Boyer designed and built the MS640 coupe and MS650 spyder around the same key components inclusive of the MS630 spaceframe chassis but fitted with a comprehensive evolution of the V12 engine.
The MS12 had relocated intake ports which had been placed between the camshafts on the 1968 MS9. The MS12 ports were within the 60-degree Vee, a more conventional ‘crossflow’ position. Twin camshafts actuated four valves per cylinder and Lucas fuel injection was retained. The endurance spec engines were slightly detuned in comparison to Matra’s F1 units and produced about 410 bhp at 10,400 rpm. A robust ZF five-speed transaxle was also specified.
The Guichet/Vaccarella M630 Coupe ahead of the Courage/Beltoise MS650 at Tertre Rouge during Le Mans 1969 (unattributed)MS9 Matra V12 in the Guichet/Vaccarella MS8/M630 at Le Mans in 1969 (A Damfreville)
The MS640 Coupe was ready for the Le Mans test on March 30. The striking car featured a very curvaceous, slippery body, inclusive of a pair of tail-mounted vertical fins and partially enclosed rear wheels.
While Choulet’s body was slippery, it produced bulk lift over 300 km/h, the Matra got away from Henri Pescarolo before he had done many laps. He escaped from a massive accident with ‘only’ serious burns, but that chassis was destroyed, and the other MS640 was probably rebuilt as an MS650 spyder.
Matra MS20/640, early test with Henri Pescarolo in 1969, venue folks? (F Hurel)Piers Courage looks pretty happy with fourth place at Le Mans in 1969, MS650. Didn’t he have a sensational F1 year with Frank Williams’ Brabham BT26 Ford (Matra)
At Le Mans, Matra entered and raced a 1968 spec M630 Coupe, a pair of M630/650 hybrids and a new MS650. The updated 1968 cars and MS650 were fitted with spyder/roadster bodies that were low, wide, long-tailed and incorporated a small rear spoiler; learnings from Pesca’s accident.
Piers Courage and Jean-Pierre Beltoise raced the MS650 from grid 12, while one of the M630/650s was a bit quicker and started eleventh. The JPB/Courage MS650 was fourth, the Jean Guichet/Nino Vaccarella MS630 fifth, and the surviving Nanni Galli/Robin Widdows M630/650 was seventh.
Following Le Mans, the MS650 and an M630/650 were raced in select rounds of the World Championship, with the first real success at the Paris 1000 km at Montlhéry, where Jean-Pierre Beltoise and Henri Pescarolo drove the MS650 to victory, followed home by the MS630/650 crewed by Pedro Rodriguez and Brian Redman.
Beltoise/Pescarolo MS630/650 winners in the Paris 1000 km Montlhery 1969 (P Vauvert)Two more Daytona shots help us with the MS650’s (M Lebold)Brabham chopped and changed his helmets in 1970 between ye-olde-faithful Bell Magnum, as here, a Bell Star, and US military-derived Gentex SPH-4 (L Galanos)
Two further MS650s were produced and campaigned at Sebring, Daytona, Brands Hatch, Monza, and Le Mans during 1970.
Given the pace of other 3-litre prototypes: Porsche 908, Alfa Romeo T33 and Ferrari 312P Matra’s the MS650 raced at Le Mans alongside its replacement MS660 (Beltoise/Pescarolo DNF gearbox). While outwardly similar, it featured an all-new aluminium monocoque chassis. It was a step forward, but it took the 5-litre to 3-litre engine regulation change for the new for 1972 Matra MS670 to deliver the goods at Le Mans from 1972-74.
Henri Pescarolo on the way to 1972 Le Mans victory aboard a Matra MS670 shared with Graham Hill. A great day for France (LAT)
Etcetera…
(A Damfreville)
Matra MS620 (MS620-01) BRM 2-litre V8 during the April 3, 1966 Le Mans test weekend.
Matra Sports Type List and Designations
MS630 and a couple of MS7 Ford FVA F2 cars. Perhaps, thanks to reader, ‘Pete, ‘it looks like the location might be Marigny airport (in the Champagne-Ardenne region of France) where they did testing ahead of Le Mans.’
(Matra)
1970 Le Mans pit panorama.
#32 is the Brabham/Cevert MS650, #31 the Beltoise/Pescarolo MS660 DNF transmission in the seventh hour. The other obscured MS650 was raced by Patrick Depailler/Jean-Pierre Jabouille/Tim Schenken, it too was out in the seventh hour with an engine problem. If my memory of a conversation with Tim serves, he did very few practice laps and didn’t get a steer in the race.
Let’s not forget that Matra – Matra MS80 Ford – were the reigning World F1 Champions in 1970, both Constructors and Drivers.
This Elf PR session at Montlhery in October 1969 shows Jackie Stewart in his 1969 World Championship winning MS80 Ford DFV from Henri Pescarolo’s MS7 Ford FVA F2 car, then Jean-Pierre Beltoise aboard an MS650, then, perhaps Johnny Servoz-Gavin, MS630/650 and finally an MS630…
Eric della Faille, Jean-Pierre Fabre Collection, Francois Hurel, Michel Charles, Marc Lebold, Revs Institute, Antoine Damfreville, Louis Galanos, Patrick Vauvert, Matra Sports Facebook group, F2Index-Fastlane, racingsportscars.com
This shot of John Surtees out front of his business in Fircroft Way, Edenbridge, Kent took my fancy.
I’ve been writing‘Australian Racing Random’ posts for a few years now, they seem to have hit the spot, so I thought I’d do the same thing with some international photographs.
John Surtees, Surtees TS7 Ford, Hockenheim 1970 (unattributed)
The photo of John Surtees was posted on Gabriel Brizuela’s Team Surtees Facebook site. Peter Connew, co-designer of the Surtees TS7 Ford communicated with Brizuela about his time at Surtees and about his own Connew GP car.
‘Hi Gabriel, I am so pleased with your interest of the history of the F1 car that I built and raced with Francois Migault.’
Peter Connew at the launch of his new F1 car at the Evening News Racing Car Show aboard the Townsend Thorensen ferry Enterprise 2, December 31, 1971 (J Wilds-Getty)
I have followed your stories and pictures of the Surtees Team history and are very impressed with your knowledge and enthusiasm about the Surtees Team history.
John Surtees seated in the new Surtees TS7 Ford with Peter Connew, Roger Flynn, Rex Stone, Bill Granger, Arthur Fowler and co-designer Shabab Ahmed. Edenbridge, July 15, 1970
They were fortunate times for me when John Surtees decided to build his own F1 car in 1970 … the TS7 … and I was lucky to be there at that time.
I have many fond memories of that time and are happy to share them. John Surtees was a very special person, and his engineering expertise and kindness is an example to us all.’
Pat Hoare on the way to victory in the Waimate 50, New Zealand, in November 1961 and below, George Begg shot it in its ‘Fugly GTO’ phase in a race paddock, date and place unknown.
Pat’s best results in the car are as follows: 1960- NZ GP Ardmore eighth, Dunedin Road race and Waimate 50 second 1961- NZ GP Ardmore seventh, Dunedin Road Race second, Teretongaa International fourth, Waimate 50 first 1962- Dunedin Road Race first, Waimate 50 second.
(G Begg)(B Cahier)
It can only be Targa, even at a glimpse…
The Chaparral 2F Chev raced by Phil Hill and Hap Sharp during the 1967 event, DNF after eight of the 10 laps. The classic was won by the more nimble works-Porsche 910/8 crewed by Paul Hawkins and Rolf Stommelen below. It was a 910 one-two-three with Cella/Biscaldi second and Elford/Neerpasch third.
(unattributed)(Getty)
If only the 2F had an ‘automatic’-transaxle with the durability and reliability to match the quality of the rest of the car. A mighta-been indeed, see here for a lengthy feature on the car: https://primotipo.com/2014/06/26/67-spa-1000km-chaparral-2f/
(unattributed)(Getty Images)
Later Chaparral pilot and rather successful entrepreneur, Roger Penske aboard Teddy Mayer’s Cooper T59 Ford FJ during the 1962 Daytona Continental 3-Hour meeting on February 11.
Penske was filling in for Tim Mayer, who had been drafted into the US Army at the end of 1961. That weekend’s Formula Junior ‘Count Lurani Cup’ was won by Pete Lovely’s Lotus 22 Ford; Penske wasn’t entered, it appears to have been a test session. Penske raced a Cooper T57 Climax in the 3-Hour but withdrew when his oil pressure plummeted.
Mind you, Tim had time enough to win the ‘62 USA-SCCA Interdivisional Championship. He prevailed in many Formula Junior races aboard big-brother Teddy Mayer’s RevEm racing Cooper T59 Ford including those at Marlboro Raceway, Maryland where Mark Donohue’s Elva was second, and Cumberland Airport, in front of teammate Peter Revson in Maryland, Bridghampton, Road America, Meadowdale Raceway, Illinois, and Thompson Raceway, Connecticut.
Tim Mayer chases Peter Revson during the 1962 Puerto Rico Grand Prix, RevEm Cooper T59 Ford FJs (Tom Burnside Collection)President’s Cup, Virginia Raceway, Danville, Virginia April 28/29 1962 (B Reynolds)
Penske raced the car once at Virginia Raceway, Danville where he was second behind Walt Hangsgen’s similar car over the April 28/29 weekend.
He’s being looked after by Teddy Mayer on the grid at Virginia above. Car #1 is the Charlie Kolb Merlyn Mk3 Ford, while the front-engined red/white Stanguellini Fiat has Pierre Mion at the tiller.
(J Culp)
Jim Culp reports from practice over the 1970 Belgian Grand Prix weekend. ‘On Saturday I arrived in the spectator parking area to discover a Team Lotus van with a brand new Lotus 72. Alex Soler-Roig arrived in slacks and polo shirt, climbed in, and after a brief orientation, pulled on his helmet and drove out for a slow lap of the circuit.’
(A Sievers)
Soler-Roig was entered by Team Lotus at home (above), Spain, Jarama (Lotus 49C Ford), where he was a DNQ, at Spa (72C Ford) DNS, and in France, DNQ (49C Ford).
He started four races in a March 711 Ford in 1971, two in a BRM P160B in 1972 and failed to finish in all of them.
Dieter Glemser/Alex Soler-Roig, Ford Capri RS2600, Le Mans 1972. Second in class, 11th outright (unattributed)
After the futility of the five or so car 1972 BRM team became clear to him he ended his career in fine fashion racing works and quasi-works Ford Capri RS2600s in the European Touring Car Championship.
A Zandvoort Trophy win with Dieter Glemser and Jochen Mass, third at Spa with Dieter Glemser, third at Paul Ricard with Mass and Gerard Larrousse and a rousing win at home – Jarama – with the same crew were great results. See here: https://www.f1forgottendrivers.com/drivers/alex-soler-roig/
Doesnt the Maserati 250F look great from every angle?
De Filippis at the September 1, 1949 Aosta–Gran San Bernardo hillclimb where she was fifth in the under 750cc class in a Meccanica Taraschi built Urania BMW 750 Sport.
Below she is pictured during the August 4 Stella Alpina together with Giuseppe Ruggiero in a Squadro Taraschi machine operating from Berardo Taraschi’s base in Teramo. They were sixth with a time of 4 min 52.41, the winning Stanguellini S1100 did a 4:43. More about the company here:https://www.cortilepittsburgh.org/taraschi.html
(unattributed)
And below nearly a decade later in a Maserati 250F during practice for the 1958 Monaco Grand Prix where she was one of 15 drivers who didn’t qualify; Maurice Trintignant won in a works-Cooper T45 Climax.
I get Derek Bell being at Le Mans for shooting The Film with Steve and all of the boys, but I don’t get the presence of his Brabham BT30 Ford FVA at La Sarthe on July 18, 1970.
Any clues folks? Show and tell perhaps? Did Steve do a few laps in the Brabham?
Derek was second in the 1970 European F2 Championship in the Wheatcroft Racing Brabham with Clay Regazzoni the victor in works-Tecno 69 and 70 Ford FVA machines.
It may well be that the car was kept in France during this period, as there were two French Euro F2 rounds back to back: on June 28 at Rouen-les-Essarts (seventh) and Paul Ricard on July 26 (DNF accident).
Aston Martin DP155 at New Zealand during the Kiwi Internationals in the summer of ’56.
Reg Parnell drove the experimental DB3S-based Grand Prix monoposto well but was blown off by the ex-works Ferrari 500/625 3-litre machines raced by Peter Whitehead and Tony Gaze. Note the rego-plate, it would have been quite an Aston-Roadie!
Start of the 1970 JAF Japanese Grand Prix at Fuji International on May 3, 1970. The three cars at the front, sorta, are Leo Geoghegan’s Lotus 59B Waggott TC-4V 2-litre, Tetsu Ikuzawa’s Mitsubishi Colt F2-D R39 1.6-litre and Jackie Stewart at the far right, Brabham BT30 BDA, capacity uncertain.
70,000 spectators watched the reigning World Champion, Stewart, win the 50 lap, 300 km race in the John Coombs Brabham BT30 Ford raced by Jackie and Jack Brabham in Euro F2 races that year.
Max Stewart’s Mildren Waggott TC-4V 2-litre was second, 50 seconds adrift of his much shorter namesake, and Kuniomi Nagamatsu was third in a Mitsubishi Colt F2-D 1.6.
Other notables who started the race included 1969 fourth placegetter Graeme Lawrence aboard the howling Ferrari Dino 246T in which Graeme and Chris Amon won back-to-back Tasman Cups in 1970-69, Leo Geoghegan’s fifth placed Lotus 59B Waggott TC-4V, and sixth placed Alastair Walker’s Brabham BT23C Ford FVA.
BRM mechanic, Willie Southcott, fettling a BRM 1-litre P80 four-cylinder twin-cam, fuel-injected Formula 2 engine circa 1965.
Power was quoted at 128 bhp @ 9750 rpm with bore/stroke of 71.555/61.595 mm in 1965, and increased to a claimed 136bhp @ 10,500 rpm when the bore-stroke changed to 74.63/56.95 mm in 1966.
The interesting bit for OCDers like me is that the inlets and exhausts of this engine are on the opposite side to most photographs of the unit; and yes, the shot isn’t being shown arse-about.
The eagle-eyed may have picked up ‘A&M’ on the head casting ‘facing us’. A&M was/is Automotive & Marine Foundry Ltd, based in Grantham, Lincolnshire, England. This company was a key supplier of precision sand castings for BRM during the 1950s and 1960s.
The P80-engined Matra MS5 of Hubert Hahne during the 1966 German GP meeting in August 1966. He was ninth outright and first in the F2 class ahead of Hans Hermann, Brabham BT18 Ford and Jo Schlesser’s works-Matra MS5 Ford.
Credits…
Peter Connew, George Begg, Bernard Cahier, Eric Stevens, Jim Culp, Bill Reynolds, GP Library, Alex Sievers, Dariel-Paris, Repco, Russ Cunningham
Tailpiece…
(Darien-Paris)
Did he catch it?…
This shot popped up in my BRM P80 research adventures. It’s Graham Hill doing his best to cut the Rouen-Les-Essarts grass during the 1965 meeting aboard John Coombs’ Brabham BT16 BRM P80 1-litre; Graham was a works-BRM pilot then.
Understandably so, as Hill is trying to catch Jim Clark’s victorious Lotus 35 Cosworth SCA, unsuccessfully as it transpired. Graham was second and Jack Brabham third in a BT19 Cosworth SCA; Brabham knocked the Honda S800 F2 engine into shape that season, then went and pulverised F2 with it the following year. Jack used the SCA for a while mid-season after dispatching the Japanese to go home and try again…they did a mighty fine job! See here:https://primotipo.com/2015/07/30/xxxii-grand-prix-de-reims-f2-july-1966-1-litre-brabham-hondas/
(R Cunningham)
There is an Australian aspect to this story. At the end of the ’66 season Frank Gardner bought the car on behalf of Alec Mildren in Sydney. The chassis was fitted with a Coventry Climax 2.5 FPF four and raced by Gardner successfully in the 1967 Tasman Cup, here at the Levin International on January. The car is still here, see this piece: https://primotipo.com/2020/03/13/brabham-bt16-climax/
AJ Foyt beats fellow American Mel Kenyon to the chequered flag of the 1975 Australian Speedcar Grand Prix at Liverpool City Raceway, Sydney on January 12, 1975.
The Canberra Times reported the weekend this way, ‘A. J. Foyt, the 39-year-old Texan car racing great, exploded one myth and cemented a reputation during his brief 22-hour Australian visit at the weekend.
Foyt, in Sydney for a one-night speedcar show at Liverpool Raceway last night, fully lived up to his awesome reputation created on the race tracks in America.
After a predictably slow start – it was only his sixth outing in a midget speedway car in 18 years – Foyt demonstrated just why he is said to be the best driver in the history of motor sport.
He qualified fourth fastest in the time trials behind Australian stars Ron MacKay and Jack Porritt, and countryman Mel Kenyon, of Indiana.
However, in the four-lap trophy dash. Foyt drove to a strong win over MacKay and Kenyon. Kenyon reversed this decision in the international scratch race over 10 laps. taking the lead just after the start. Foyt was second.
Foyt then teamed with Californian professional Gary Patterson to defeat Porritt and another Sydney driver Kevin Gormley in a US versus Australia match-race series.
Foyt ‘in the Gilmore sponsored Kenyon built car’ during the ’75 speedcar GP at Liverpool (Full Throttle)Liverpool course commentator Steve Raymond is welcoming Foyt to a packed Liverpool and a media scrum (Full Throttle)
Foyt scored three brilliant wins and a close second to Porritt to score top points in the series. His rare appearances in the midget division did not seem to be any real handicap because he won the Australian Grand Prix race for the class by a considerable margin. He went on to win the Grand Prix itself, over 40 laps.
Foyt, Kenyon and the 1973 USAC champion Barry Rice started at the rear of the 20-car field, and with 15 laps remaining, the nose of Foyt’s car sat only inches away from Kenyon’s tailpipe. A tiny lapse by Kenyon allowed Foyt to pass underneath and into the lead.
Foyt said before the meeting that it was the first time since 1956 that he had raced on a quarter-mile paved oval.’
The Americans dominated the GP; the first four placings were Foyt, Kenyon, Larry Rice and Garry Patterson.
The photographs in this article are from Tony Loxley’s Full Throttle Publishing. Full Throttle are the most prolific Australian Speedway racing, Rugby League, and occasionally, road racing, book publisher! Loxley’s ‘Tasman Cup 1964-1975’ and ‘F5000 Thunder’ are brilliant books that live upstairs close to hand rather than in my library down below, constant references as they are. See here: https://www.fullthrottlepublishing.com.au/?srsltid=AfmBOop0cODJjQ-6LK6sYTWn_oWngNnoT90dwsh6OWZQuZfaSpXiuDAo
Howard Revell’s ex-Cuneen Offy leads Foyt and Kenyon during the ’75 GP (B Meyer)
Loxley observed of Foyt’s trip, ‘AJ Foyt ventured to our shores in 1975 and 1976, a Mike Raymond and Frank Oliveri coup if ever there was one.’
Foyt’s Gilmore VW was built and maintained by Mel Kenyon and his mechanic, Billy Gene Thomas during the meeting. Foyt’s entourage comprised his wife and his Indy sponsor/friends, Jim and Di Gilmore.
AJ raced at Western Springs in New Zealand before his 22-hour Australian whistle-stop. Customs came to the party with priority clearance for the Americans’ cars organised via Liverpool Manager/Commentator Mike Raymond and track owner Frank Oliveri.
Foyt returned for more 12 months later to defend and retain his GP title.
Foyt, Liverpool 1976 GP weekend (D Cumming)
Further context about Speedcard in the 1970s and this event is provided by speedway historian Bill Lawler.
‘The Sydney Showground was continually under fire from local residents and the new Liverpool City Raceway by this time was up and running and after negotiations with Frank Oliveri in the mid 70’s made Liverpool their home.
Between 1970 and 1980, track surfaces went from the traditional dolomite dirt mixture to ashphalt and finally, to a clay compound. Racing on the ashphalt was super fast, the Volkswagen engine was dominating over the long established Holdens and Offenhausers, and racing brought out the best in four drivers, Barry Pinchbeck, Ronald Mackay, Howard Revell, and George Tatnell.
Johnny Rutherford ready for the push at Tralee Speedway, then a paved quarter-mile, in the Australian Capital Territory in 1977. Car owner and teammate Howard Revell watches from #98 (JAnderson)
The influx of US midget stars continued (from prior decades) headed by Indianapolis drivers A. J. Foyt, Johnny Rutherford, and Mel Kenyon. They were followed by Pancho Carter, Larry Rice, Sleepy Tripp, and the great Rich Vogler.
There was some incredible racing on the asphalt at Liverpool, but the most outstanding race of that decade had to be the 21st running of the Australian Speedcar Grand Prix. In a masterly display of skillful driving, A. J. Foyt tore through the field, lapping every local car on the way to winning the 1975 Grand Prix from fellow countrymen Mel Kenyon, Larry Rice, and Garry Patterson.
The race went flag to flag and Foyt smashed the existing 40 lap record by 20.24 seconds, averaging 14.371 seconds per lap through traffic.’
Etcetera…
(Full Throttle)
The eagle has landed, Foyt and his Gilmore VW at Sydney’s Mascot Airport on January 11, 1975. The detailed specifications of this circa-2.3-litre VW-powered machine would be gratefully received.
(M King)
Tony Loxley wrote, ‘The shot above shows the Higgins #30 returning to the pits after engine starts at Liverpool with Mel Kenyon and AJ Foyt looking on.
Foyt, Mel Kenyon, Gary Patterson and Larry Rice were on hand to represent the best of the USA against a host of talented Aussies, all of whom were still – at this period of time – getting used to high-speed pavement racing (Liverpool had only been paved six months earlier) and the intricate nature of that form of racing.
In the end, Foyt won in front of a capacity audience from Kenyon, Rice and Patterson – a USA washout – but the Aussies, none of whom had the latest, updated VW-powered machinery at the time, were learning fast.
Foyt would follow up his AGP win the following year, but it was a lot tougher second time around after the locals had begun to up-date their cars to the latest specs available. Great days in speedcar (midget) racing in Australia.’
(A Loxley)
‘Practice for the 1975 event with Gary Patterson and Gene Welch – US-based short-track racers in sprints, midgets and sedans – chatting to themselves with Indy royalty close by.’
And below, Foyt during practice.
(B Meyer)(D Cumming)
AJ Foyt waits for a push-car at Liverpool above prior to defending his 1975 Australian Speedcar GP win in 1976.
Tony Loxley, ‘Foyt won this time-honoured race again, but this time (1976) the Aussies, now suited up in VWs, made a better race of it. AJ loved Liverpool and stated to anyone who wanted to listen that he thought it was the nicest 1/4-mile track he had ever raced on.’
(G Hogarth)
Foyt at the Brisbane Exhibition, ‘the Ekka’ during a practice run before his big show, he won.
Brian Farley, ‘That was very special during that TV and promotional session, particularly special was watching the professionalism of AJ and his crew. They had that VW Midget “sorted” handling and gear set-wise in about three separate runs. Jaws dropped when they got in the last couple of runs. He was the best I’ve ever seen bar none.’
(G Hogarth)(G Hogarth)
History of Midgets in Australia – 75 Years and Counting…
This piece was contributed to the Speedway Gazette by the late Bill Lawler in 2010 to celebrate the 75th anniversary of Midgets in Australia, the first race having been run at Olympic Park, Melbourne on December 15,1934.
I tripped over this fantastic article on Facebook – the quality of information on social media is amazing sometimes – while researching the Foyt piece. It’s great document of record stuff, I’ve adopted it in full other than the anniversary elements.
‘The sport of dirt track and asphalt automobile and motorcycle racing in Australia on small, enclosed, circular tracks can be traced, in embryonic form at least, to the 1900’s however it was during the 1920’s that it really became popular with world famous tracks opening such as the Sydney Showground and West Maitland in NSW, Wayville Showground in SA, Claremont Showground in WA, Kardinia Park and Melbourne Exhibition in Vic and the Brisbane Exhibition in Qld.
(internationalspeedway.co.uk)
The first official Speedcar or ‘Midget car’ event held in Australia was staged at Melbourne’s Olympic Park on December 15, 1934 under rules and regulations of the Midget Car Drivers Association whose name was later changed to the Victorian Speedcar Drivers’ Association.
The Victorian Speedcar Championship was inaugurated in April 1935 and still stands as the second oldest Speedcar race in the world behind the American Thanksgiving Grand Prix held in November 1934.
The Victorian club also organised the first Australian championship, however, as Speedcar racing spread interstate the official national title is difficult to trace as each rival track and sanctioning body held their own title in each state, this continued even after a national body was formed.
When the sport took off in America like a California fire storm, Bill Allen, a resident Australian visiting the United States, decided that here was a golden opportunity to bring this new form of dirt track racing to Australia, and with an American built midget he headed off back to the land ‘Down Under’. He arrived in early 1934, and the sport may well have had its roots here in Sydney had the entrepreneurs the same faith as many of the road racers to which Allen had spoken, but they declined to take the risk. So Allen headed off to Melbourne where he met with Raymond Lean, a promoter with Sporting Carnivals, and after months of negotiations, put together a program of events incorporating midgets to be held on the newly laid dirt surface at Olympic Park.
In the meantime, cars were being constructed for the event in both Melbourne and Sydney. On that very first night in December, ten drivers from Victoria along with seven from NSW including Bill Allen with his American midget car took to the track for the history making event. For the next four months, midget car racing dragged thousands of new fans through the Olympic Park turnstiles and before that first year was out, this new form of motor racing on dirt became an instant hit with the Victorian public.
Ten months later it was Sydney’s turn, and with the help of W. B. Thompson (thrice winner of the Australian Grand Prix), managing director of National Speedways Ltd. Midget car racing began for the first time on the Wentworth Park cinders track in Glebe. At least a dozen drivers and cars took part in Sydney’s historic event and after practice at the track earlier in the week, one Sydney newspaper wrote; ‘Les Burrows, well-known competition driver, drove from Bowral direct to the track in his midget and drove it home after the practice.’ Then on Saturday night October 5 when Arch Tuckett led home Bruce Leckie and Bill Thompson in that very first 5 lap midget race on the program, little could they know that 75 years on NSW would celebrate that occasion.
Arthur Wylie – he of Australian Motor Sports fame – Arch Tuckett and Sam Aggett at Wentworth Park, Glebe in 1935-36 (B Darby)Bill Balgarnie, Lane Special Indian Altoona at Wentworth Park, the ‘V-Twin engine on loan from Bob Chamberlain’ from whence it was originally fitted to the Chamberlain Special (Edgerton Collection)
Many of these drivers became household names during the late 30’s. Names like Ted Poole (who would end his racing career after a bad midget crash in England before finally moving to and living out the rest of his life in America), Bill Balgarnie, Bill Thompson, Bruce Leckie, and Sam Aggett. I interviewed Aggett some twenty years ago and he told me of the time he lost control of his midget, crashed clean through the wooden picket fence at Wentworth Park, climbed three rows into the grandstand, and ran down spectator Carlisle Rochester, a local who lived in Burwood. The luckless Rochester was stretchered to an ambulance, taken to hospital for observation, and when Sam visited Rochester in hospital, all he could talk about was where he could purchase one of these midgets so he too could race! Amazingly, Rochester did race midgets and went on to a reasonable career himself at the Sydney Sports Ground up until 1941 when war broke out.
Sam Aggett also told a story of the Newcastle speedway on Union St. “We flat towed our midgets down to the wharf in Sydney, loaded them on board the boat on Friday night, and sailed out from Sydney up to Newcastle. We had breakfast on board the boat on Saturday morning before unloading all the midgets and flat towed them through town over to the track. We raced them Saturday night before re-loading them back on the boat for the trip back to Sydney to be unloaded on Sunday morning.”
Frank Arthur, managing director of Empire Speedways at the Showground where he conducted solo racing, could also see the potential of this new form of dirt track racing and hoped that they would be as spectacularly popular as they were in the United States and down in Victoria, and while scouting around in Great Britain for potential solo riders for his showground season, he also looked into the midget scene in the U.K. Returning home on the liner R.M.S Orsova, he had with him three English solo riders, Cliff Parkinson, Herbert ‘Dusty’ Haigh, and Les Gregory. Also accompanying Arthur were three U.K. midget drivers and their ‘gnat’ midgets to compete at his opening season at the Showground Speedway. They were Bud Stanley, Ralph Secretan, and Jean Reville. A shrewd businessman, Arthur wasted no time in presenting his new speedway stars to the public. The English midget team and officials were escorted through Sydney in a fleet of cars to radio station 2UW where they were interviewed on air across Sydney before being dined at the Royal Automobile Club. Although the Englishmen were somewhat plagued with engine problems, the tour was a success for Arthur and midget racing. Secretan and Stanley returned to England after their tour, but Jean Reville stayed on in Australia, living out the rest of his life in Queensland.
Being a past international solo rider himself, Arthur stayed committed to the bikes and only ran eight meetings with midgets during the years prior to WW11, opting to leave midget racing in the hands of the promoters next door at the Sports Ground, but obviously keeping a keen eye on the development of the new and fast-growing section. Arthur ran seven meetings with the midgets in the 1935/36 season and, like Wentworth Park, the racing was confined to heat races and triangular match races of three cars. On the last meeting with the midgets pre-war on February 8, 1936, Arthur tried something different. He tried a six lap all-in race that would eventually be known as the feature race. That night, Sydney driver Tom Quinn, led home Englishman Jean Reville and Charlie Spurgeon, winning the very first feature race run in Australia.
South Australia was the next state to run midget/speedcars when a group of drivers assembled with their cars at the Camden Motordrome on December 28, 1935 with further meetings held through to April 4, 1936. They were thin in numbers, and during that time, drivers came from Victoria, NSW, and the visiting Englishmen. Some of the drivers who competed that first season were Aub Ramsay, Bert Woodman, Ted Poole from NSW, and Ralph Secretan and Bud Stanley from England. One of the pioneering South Australian drivers that season was the late and great Alex Rowe. Two years later, a new sanctioning body, South Australian Speedways Limited was formed to control racing and continued at the Camden track until the outbreak of World War 11, the gates were closed to speedway in 1940 and when the war ended, speedway never returned to the Camden track.
Bob Wente takes the chequered flag from a young Glen Dix at Rowley Park, Adelaide in the 1960s (N O’Connor Collection)
Midget car racing commenced again at the old Rowley Park speedway for its very first season in December 1949 where Harry Neale won the 8 lap feature race and who would go on to win a further 51 A-mains at the track affectionately known as ‘The Brick Pit’. Neale became the winningest driver on the Park from Joe Braendler and Bill Wigzell. Many great stars rose out of the brickpits of Rowley. Champions like Neale, Rick Harvey, Arne Sunstrom, Roy Sands, Kym Bonython, Bill Wigzell, Bruce Rickard, Dean Hogarth, Joe Braendler and Phil Herreen to name a few. Racing continued at Rowley Park for another 28 years before finally closing its doors to speedway when George Tatnell took out the very last feature race, a 15 lapper, and fittingly, it was for the Harry Neale Memorial race who tragically lost his life racing at Claremont speedway on February 6, 1959.
Barely two months later it was Queensland’s turn when another group of New South Wales drivers and two of the English imports, Bud Stanley and Jean Reville arrived at the Brisbane Exhibition grounds, and on Saturday night, February 26, 1936, Queenslanders witnessed midget car racing for the first time. Only four meetings for midgets were run that first season, in fact they were the only meetings run before the outbreak of the war, possibly it may have been the unavailability of Queensland midget cars and local drivers at that time. Some of the NSW drivers who appeared in those four meetings were Bruce Leckie Bill Jeffers, Ralph King, Charlie Spurgeon, Tom Quinn, Norm French, Marco Cox, and two Newcastle residents Lance Wilson and Bill Sticpewitch.
Brisbane Exhibition Speedway (unattributed)
At the end of the war years, the Brisbane Exhibition grounds were re-opened for speedway and on the second meeting of the 1945/46 season the very first feature race was performed for the first time in Queensland over a ten lap distance. The field consisted of Ray Revell, George Bonser, Johnny Read, Bob Playfair, Jim Cross, Fred Barker, Belfred Jones, and Ken Wylie. The race was won by Ray Revell, and one of the first Queenslanders to take up the sport that year was Alan Belcher. That first year saw a test team of midget drivers and cars from New Zealand compete in five test matches. The New Zealand team consisted of Max Hughes, Jack Malcolm, Ken Wylie, and Lew Murphy. The last two were really from Victoria and NSW. Australia won the first test 17 to 9, NZ won the second 24 to 20, and Aust. won the final two 32 to 16 and 31 to 21. The fifth test was abandoned. That first season on the Ekka saw Ray Revell win the first Queensland title, Jack Malcolm win the ¼ mile Australian Championship, and Max Hughes the ‘World Title’. Near the end of that season, Arthur Chick made the long haul over from Western Australia to compete and he took out the 10 lap feature race to become the first West Aussie to do so. Amazingly, only one other WA driver has accomplished a win on the Exhibition, Johnny Fenton. The list of Queensland greats is incredible. Howman, Sendy, Belcher, Jefferson, Goode, Watt, Shepherd, Kelly McClure, Wanless, Morgan, Valentinna, Davidson, Sacre, Mitchell. Queensland was endowed with great stars.
Meanwhile after two seasons at Wentworth Park, midget racing moved to the Sports Ground in 1937 and for the next four years ran as many as 70 or 80 meetings a year, running Wednesday, Friday or Saturday nights and on occasions Sunday afternoons to raise money for Boys Town situated out in the Sutherland shire. On May 22, 1938 Jack Wilson won the 10 lap feature race at the Sports Ground from Bob Preston and Arthur Hyde, but on that same night Les Dillon crashed and rolled his midget. He was thrown out of his car and suffered fatal head injuries. Sadly, the 27 year old Dillon was to become the very first recorded death in midget racing in Australia. Eleven months later, 26 year old Victorian driver Claude Miller, while competing in time trials at the Sports Ground, lost control and rolled over, pinning him underneath his car. He was rushed to hospital, but died from severe head injuries the next day. The promoters and officials tried desperately to keep the news from the papers for fear of public outcries over two deaths in less than a year. Luckily, only one reporter ran a small article about the crash in the Sydney Morning Herald. Fortunately, there were no repercussions towards midget racing over the two deaths.
Work boots for racing shoes, coveralls neatly tucked into socks, no seat belts fitted to most of the cars, and in some instances, not even a helmet for protection. Such were the safety needs of those pioneering gladiators in a life-threatening sport. Sitting upright, knees inches from the front engine plate, his back probably the same distance from a crudely constructed fuel tank holding anything up to 20 gallons of petrol, they man-handled their machines around the tiny ¼ mile Sports Ground and the 1/3rd mile Showground Speedways every week throughout our long hot summers.
American Paul Swedberg and his Offy powered Midget in Melbourne’s backstreets in 1939. His was the first Offy Speedcar in Oz, Swedberg a driver of great skill. I must write about him ( S Magro)He may have been a fish out of water but Paul Swedberg was very fast in his Offy at Mount Panorama over the Easter 1940 weekend in the 150 Mile Road Race. The car had handbrake levers either side connected to a common linkage fence for the rear brakes (B Darby)
During the 1938 season, and after the success of Arthur’s English imports, the promoters imported two American drivers and their cars who were contracted to race in New Zealand, and after their commitments in New Zealand, they arrived in Sydney for a one-off flying visit for the World Championship at the Sports Ground. Both drivers came with their own American imported midgets. Beale Simmons brought with him the ex-Lou Fageol Hercules #27, and Paul Swedberg had the former Frankie Lyons Elto outboard marine #18. (A midget racer himself, Lyons was a stand-in driver while filming the movie ’10 Laps to Go’ at Gilmore Stadium when he hit an open pit gate. The impact into the gate broke his neck and he died instantly. Not long after, Lyons widow sold the midget to Swedberg.) There were 8 heats for the World Championship, and only the winners of each heat went into the final. Both Americans won their heats easily, and lined up at the rear of the 8 car 10 lap feature race. Swedberg shot to the lead and was never headed, his travelling partner Simmonds finished 4th behind Cec Garland and Bob Hoare.
The duo returned the following year, this time, Swedberg brought with him the ex-Don Lee Offenhauser midget which he had purchased from Lee, the first ever Offy to be imported into the country. They stayed for four months campaigning on the Sports Ground. The Sydney drivers and their home-built cars were no match for the Americans in their purpose-built creations, and they tore the opposition to pieces. They competed in a total of thirteen feature races, setting new times for the 10, 12, and 20 lap records. Between them, they won 9 feature races, Swedberg with four, and Simmons with five including the 20 lap Australian Championship won by Simmons in record breaking time. Swedberg made one more visit in 1940 winning a further four feature races including the 30 lap World Derby. He (Swedberg) was invited to race his Offy at the Bathurst races and to the horror of the motor racing fraternity, the Offy was more than capable of mixing it with the established road racers, and only for oil fouling up plugs, Swedberg may quite easily have inflicted more embarrassment on the cloth cap and cravat set.
The Americans were an instant hit with the public and it was the beginning of a trend over the next 75 years that has seen an influx of Americans flying halfway around the world to compete in Australia. Sadly, Beale Simmons died during the war on active duty in the Pacific while Swedberg was fatally injured racing at Hughes Stadium, Sacramento, California on May 27, 1946. Before leaving for home, Swedberg sold his Offy to Sydney businessman Wally Reed for Sydney driver Jimmy McMahon to drive, but difficulties maintaining and running the Offy with readily obtainable parts, forced Reed to sell the Offy to Victorian midget driver George Beavis, and he returned with the car to the United States where, after some racing himself, he became a well respected car owner.
Ron Edgerton Collection, date and place unknownSydney Sports Ground possible 1949, Jack Brabham leads Alec Hunter #16 on the outside, and Sel Payne. Brabham was the Australian Speedcar Champion in 1948-49 (F Le Breton)Jack Hedley’s car during the April 26, 1948, ‘midget car race and meet’ at Brenock Park, Ferntree Gully, in the Dandenong Ranges foothills, to Melbourne’s outer east (B Watkins-SLV)
Finally, midget car racing reached the West coast of Australia when, on New Year’s Eve, December 31st 1946, a team of east coast pioneers brought their cars to the Claremont Showground’s and stayed for the remainder of the 1946/47 season. The team consisted of Jim Cross, Ken Wylie, Lew Murphy, Fred Allen, Johnny Maxwell, and Doug Muir. Jim Cross won that inaugural feature race that night and later that season, Ken Wylie would win the very first West Australian title from Lew Murphy and Fred Allen over 10 laps. Major race car building took place in the off-season, and the 1946/47 saw many new names shine in WA midget ranks, Jack Howe, Rod Denney, Bill Smallwood, Harry Lewis, Bill Stitt, Andy Hall, and Ray Arthurell. They would be the forerunners of many great stars to come out of the west. Names like Laurie Stevens, Ron Hall, Ray Clarke, Bill Jost, Geoff Stanton, Noel McDonald, Charlie West, Keith Mann, Johnny Fenton, (who would become the winningest driver at Claremont) Geoff Pilgrim, Graham Jones, Neville Lance, Tommy Watson, and the great Michael Figliomeni.
It would be 28 years before a West Australian driver would win the Australian championship, and a further five years before the west would play host to the coveted title, and in February 1979, Ron Wanless from Queensland would be honoured with Australia 1, leading home Howard Revell and Bill Sutherland. Claremont speedway continued through until its forced closure in 2000, and a new era commenced at the new Kwinana Motorplex
It was to become a tragic year for midget racing in New South Wales during 1947 when the then top Sydney midget drivers Dinny Patterson and Jimmy McMahon both left Australia to compete in America. But before a year had passed, both were killed on American circuits. Both Patterson and McMahon had won the Australian Championship with McMahon the reigning champion winning the title at the Sports Ground before leaving for the United States.
Midget racing continued at the Sports Ground until its closure to speedway racing in 1955, pressured by the promotional impact and expertise of Frank Arthur, John Sherwood and Bert Prior next door at the Showground, a track they dubbed ‘The Speedway Royale’. The Sydney Showground then became the headquarters of speedcar racing in Sydney every Saturday night under the control of the NSW Speedcar Association, while the Sports Ground promotion concentrated their drawing power with local and International overseas solo riders.
Laurie Mason at the Brisbane Exhibition during 1947 (SLQ)American, Cal Niday won the 1947-48 Australian Speedcar Championship in this Edelbrock Ford V8-60 Midget at Sydney Showgrounds. Here he is practising at the Brisbane Exhibition in 1947 (SLQ)Niday some years later in his Offy, not sure where this shot was taken (Ron Edgerton Collection)
But they weren’t all good years. Members of the controlling speedcar association were feuding over prize money paid by the promoters of the Showground, and it was obvious that the majority of the members were not prepared to continue with negotiations, and by the beginning of the 1951/52 racing season, many of its members walked away from Empire Speedways at the Showground and raced in opposition at Cumberland Oval at Parramatta under the control of the Speedcar Association of New South Wales. Meanwhile, what was left of the city drivers, barely a hand-full, formed the National Speedcar Club, and remained loyal to Sherwood and Arthur.
Over the next four years, bitter rivalry existed between the two clubs, disputes that eventually found their way into the equity court rooms. The National club could barely manage ten cars for a feature race, and on one occasion in 1954, only four cars fronted for the 9 lap feature race, Ray Revell, Lew Murphy, Bill Reynolds, and Johnny Peers, while out at Cumberland Oval, fields of 20 cars were running, consisting of Len Brock, Bill Shevill Eric Morton, Norm Jackson, Bob Playfair, the Olling brothers Jim and Lindsay, Jack Ferguson and more. With depleted fields week after week, midget racing at the showground was slowly dying.
Ray Revell, Australian Speedcar Champion in 1945-46, 1949-50, 1950-51, 1952-53 and 1956-57, at Sydney’s Westmead Speedway, early 1960s. ‘Revell also raced with distinction in the USA, where he purchased this stunning Offy,’ Tony Loxley
A meeting was finally convened by both warring parties on neutral ground in Victoria. Delegates from both parties met with Sel Payne and Bob Playfair representing the NSW Speedcar Association while the National club was represented by Ray Revell and Bill Reynolds. Also attending the meeting were delegates from South Australia, (Arn Sunstrom and Jack Self) and Victoria (Alf Beasley and Ken Young). Finally, after many hours of discussions, most of the Association drivers finally agreed to race back at the Sydney Showground under the control of the National Speedcar Club. The amalgamation of the warring parties would be midget racing’s salvation that would turn out to be the beginning of a bright new era for the Sydney speedcars.
By the end of the 1950’s, air-cooled motorcycle engines were being replaced by the 6 cyl. Holden. Metal panels were being replaced by fibreglass, and a whole new breed of young drivers was emerging onto the Showground stage. Peter Johnson, Johnny Harvey, Rob Greentree, Jeff Freeman, and a young western suburbs lad called Johnny Stewart. These drivers would leave an indelible mark on the sport through a potent mixture of natural talent and raw determination.
Mike McGreevy USA #1 from Bob Tattersall at the Brisbane Exhibition in the 1960s (G Hogarth)
And as they began to write themselves into the speedway history books, along came a tough as teak American WW11 war hero by the name of Robert George Tattersall from Streator, Illinois. He brought with him a fully imported state of the art Offenhauser midget for his Sydney campaign in the summer of 1960. Over the next few years, Tattersall and these young champions would change the art of midget racing forever. Some of the best racing seen anywhere in the world was about to take place on the narrow confines of the speedway Royale and continue throughout the sixties and pack those old Sydney Showground grandstands to the rafters every Saturday night from September to May. Tattersall returned every year for thirteen straight years and earned the respect of all who raced against him and he brought that “I’m here to win” meanness gained while shovelling clods of dirt on the carnival arenas right across the back blocks of the United States.
His main Sydney rivals during the sixties were close friend Jeff Freeman and Johnny Stewart. Johnny was brave beyond belief. He wrung the necks of everything he drove. He had some of the most monumental crashes ever seen in the 75 year history of the sport and walked away time after time only to come back hungry as ever for victory. God he was good on dirt. His fence-scraping rides, millimeters from the safety fence was heart in the mouth stuff. Freeman had a special brand of aggression in his driving. Not one to sit back and wait, he made his own openings and showed Sydney fans the art of wheel-banging, sometimes earning respect from fellow competitors, anger from others. But he had natural raw ability always keeping on top of his rivals and never gave them an even break. Tattersall admired that in a driver and probably why they became good friends. Sadly, Jeff’s career was snuffed out all too short at Westmead on Mother’s Day 1965 when he crashed cockpit first into the safety fence. It was a terrible blow to Sydney speedway. Freeman was by far, the country’s greatest driver at that time. And spare a thought for Don Mackay who owned the two American Offenhausers driven by Freeman and Nick Collier, losing both his drivers in fatal crashes in just three months. 1965 brought more internal unrest in the National Speedcar Club that saw the top Sydney A grade drivers resigning en masse. Unable to hold power within, they re-formed under the banner of the Eastern States Racing Association (ESRA) with Len Steele at the helm as their president.
The 1960s could never have been more scripted. It had everything. The infamous 9-car pile-up on the pit bend. Bob Holt and Peter Cunneen both cheating the Grim Reaper as they rode out separate horrifying crashes that saw both their cars flip high into the track lights level with the front row spectators seated above the pits. Bryan Cunneen’s firey crash on the Bull Pen’s corner the car and driver enveloped in flames. The Barry Butterworth riot during the running of the 1966 Internationale feature race where hundreds of fans swept across the infield in protest at his disqualification, Howard Revell, the only car still running in the 1967 100 lapper as all other drivers were out at the ¾ mark, and the very first and only all-speedcar meeting mid-week in 1968. The yearly imports of top shelf American midget drivers combined with our local stars produced some of the best midget racing seen anywhere in the world attracting excellent coverage in Sydney newspapers week after week and television exposure across all TV stations throughout New South Wales. Sadly, it was also a period fraught with danger every Saturday night in every lap in every feature race. The injury and death toll was alarmingly high during that decade. So concerned by the deaths and injuries in the sport, the controlling Sydney club was forced to make roll-cages mandatory on all speedcars by the end of the 1971 season. Unfortunately it came all too late for Peter Johnson and Jack Bissaker (1961) Barry Robinson (1963) Nick Collier, Jeff Freeman and Tony Burke (1965) and Ted Fluett in 1968. But it was an incredible decade of talent, an absolute plethora of great drivers like Marshall, Middlemass, Bowland, Oram, Park, McClenahan, Myers, Noble, McKittrick, Manion, Clark, Hunt, Collier, Archibald, Morton, Holt, Peers, the Cunneen brothers and more. Any one of these drivers could snare a feature win, and most did. And a Tempe Service Station proprietor was beginning to make his mark. George Tatnell.
By the end of the decade, the stars of the fifties and sixties were making way for the new. Names like Ronald Mackay, Barry Graham, Stan Lawrence, and a stocky, slightly short wheel-twisting dynamo named Pinchbeck. It was the dawning of yet another era full of many changes. The Sydney Showground was continually under fire from local residents and the new Liverpool City Raceway by this time was up and running and after negotiations with Frank Oliveri in the mid 1970’s made Liverpool their home. Between 1970 and 1980, track surfaces went from the traditional dolomite dirt mixture to ashphalt and finally, to a clay compound. Racing on the ashphalt was super fast, the Volkswagen engine was dominating over the long established Holdens and Offenhausers, and racing brought out the best in four drivers, Barry Pinchbeck, Ronald Mackay, Howard Revell, and George Tatnell. Between these four, they had accumulated over 120 feature race victories on their home track at Liverpool. In the 1975/76 season, they accounted for 24 of the 39 feature races. The influx of US midget stars continued with some of the most famous names in American motor racing history headed by Indianapolis drivers A. J. Foyt, Johnny Rutherford, and Mel Kenyon. They were followed by Pancho Carter, Larry Rice, Sleepy Tripp, and the great Rich Vogler. There was some incredible racing on the ashphalt at Liverpool, but the most outstanding race of that decade had to be the 21st. running of the Australian Speedcar Grand Prix. In a masterly display of skillful driving, A.J. Foyt tore through the field, lapping every local car on the way to winning the 1975 Grand Prix from fellow countrymen Mel Kenyon, Larry Rice, and Garry Patterson. The race went flag to flag and Foyt smashed the existing 40 lap record by 20.24 seconds, averaging 14.371 seconds per lap through traffic. But the 1970’s belonged to the diminutive Barry Pinchbeck with over 40 career feature races at Liverpool including five state championships, one World Cup, one World Derby, the Ray Revell Memorial, the Australian Grand Prix, and the Australian Speedcar Championship along with two track records.
George Tatnell #25 going under Geoff Spence #62, Ron Mackay #76 and Barry Graham. Liverpool undated (D Cumming)
As the curtain came down on the ’70’s ex-sprintcar driver Sid Hopping had constructed a new speedway inside the Granville trotting track specifically for sprintcars running Friday night meetings while Liverpool continued to run on the Saturday nights. Liverpool ran big fields of early model sedans with a new section called Grand National sedans, along with Compact Speedcars (originally junior speedcars) and these sections began to rise in big numbers and strong fields. Between that and sprintcars at Parramatta, the midgets were finding it difficult to get meetings, and it was only when the two tracks found time in their season schedules that the midgets were allocated meetings. Times were certainly tough on the midget scene. In fact, speedcar racing dropped so low in NSW that for five years (1983 to 1988) no one seemed bothered to run the prestigious state title! And if all that wasn’t enough, the final bombshell that fell on the midget ranks Australia wide was the introduction of wings that divided state clubs across the country and all but destroyed the old and historic South Australian club. Fortunately, common sense and safety prevailed, but not before deep scars were left behind throughout the sport. Scars so deep that even to-day, South Australia is still attempting to rebuild their numbers. But still, the 1980’s brought new faces to the NSW speedcar ranks. Names like Ian Saville, Ron Mankey, Gavin Leer, Michael Meyer, Aaron Benny, brothers Edward and John Dark, Norm Jackson Jr, and Glenn Cox, and some of the old guard of Howard Revell, Barry Pinchbeck, Garry Rush and Kevin Gormly. These four drivers were into their third decade of racing and were still showing the new breed the way to the chequered flag. The Volkswagen engine was still the motor of preference while some were experimenting with factory engines like Nissan, Mitsubishi, Subaru, and the Mazda Rotary with some success. The 1980’s saw the visit by Americans Ron Shuman, Mark Passerelli, P. J. Jones, Kevin Olson, and Johnny Pearson. When Olson arrived, he had with him an engine that would soon change racing in Sydney and would dominate feature race win results for the next 20 years. He brought with him the all-conquering Fontana. Today, the Fontana holds the record for the most feature race victories at Parramatta City Raceway, and the Fontana engine is still winning races in 2010. Ian Saville and Steven Gall dominated racing at Parramatta during the 1980’s with 14 victories between them.
The era of the 1990’s dawned with an amazing group of young talented drivers to join the established stars. Names like Jason Gates, Peter Burke, the Jenkins brothers Troy and Darren, Steven Graham, Adam Clarke and Mark Brown a young Victorian driver who would re-plant his roots in Sydney. The 90’s saw more horsepower with Pontiac, V4-Scat, Cosworth, the ever reliable Chevy 11, and as stated, American engine builder Joe Fontana’s new creation. These motors were gradually taking over from the Volkswagen engine.
Speeds were becoming faster with 14 track records broken in the first three years of the 90’s. Suddenly after a hiatus of nearly 24 years when Ted Fluett passed away in a racing accident at Westmead Speedway in the winter of 1968, the Grim Reaper cast its shadow over Parramatta Speedway during the 1992/93 season when young Rodney Day lost his battle for life after a serious crash on the main straight. Within less than a year, the Sydney speedway fraternity was rocked by the death of two more Parramatta midget drivers in Joe Farrugia and Steven Thode. Once more, it was a wake-up call and a stark reminder that auto racing is a dangerous and hazardous profession. Sadly, injuries and fatalities are a part of the vocation that sometimes brings superstition and strange habits that only those within the Inner Sanctum of speedway can explain. Many more safety regulations were implemented in the years following those deaths with more advanced roll cages constructed, mandatory new high-back and wrap-around seats and the Hans device keeping head and neck movement to a minimum in a rollover. These were just some of the measures put in place for safety.
Up and coming star, and soon to be Australian Speedcar Champion in 2004-05, Steven Graham poses in one of four engines of a Qantas Boeing 747 in for maintenance at Kingsford Smith Airport, Mascot, Sydney circa-1994. Graham was a Qantas aircraft mechanic at the time (T Loxley)
We have now travelled back in time, passing back through and into a new millennium and are now coming to the end of yet another exciting decade. This last ten years have seen new young-guns take to the stage in NSW. Nathan Smee, Tim Evans, Matt Young, Rod Bright, Matthew Smith, Richard and Trevor Malouf, Anthony Brien, a third generation racer Matthew Jackson to take on the resident hot-shoe, Mr Excitement, Mark Brown in his 27th year of racing. Over the last ten years, speedway fans have witnessed some of the best midget racing ever seen over the past 75 years thanks to the continual injection of new and exciting talent. In 2008, fans witnessed one of the most exciting 50 lap feature races ever at the Tyrepower Sydney Speedway. Steven Graham emerged as the highest ever feature race winner at Parramatta before a crash put paid to his racing career. Mark Brown, after moving from Victoria to settle in Sydney in 1991, matured to the point that he now holds claim as the fourth highest New South Wales feature race winner in the 75 year history with 56 victories behind Ray Revell (115), Ronald Mackay (73), and Barry Pinchbeck (59).
With the calibre of drivers we have today, midget racing in New South Wales could quite easily continue to go forward and only time will tell what the future will bring. Queensland has risen as the dominating state as far as car numbers are concerned, while Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia are attempting to build their numbers back. In the greater scheme of things 75 years is but a tiny blip on the radar screen of history, but those 75 years have brought us a mosaic of memories indelibly printed into our minds, some good, some tragic. We shed tears of joy for great victories, and cried tears of sorrow and mourn those lost to us far too soon from our sport.
Credits…
Full Throttle Publishing, The Canberra Times January 14, 1975, John Anderson, Martin King, David Cumming, Bill Meyer, Gordon Hogarth, Noel O’Connor Collection, Brian Darby Archive, Steve Magro Archive, Frank Le Breton, State Library of Queensland, Gordon Hogarth, Betty Watkins-State Library of Victoria, Ron Edgerton Collection
Dan Gurney’s winged Lotus 19B Ford V8 during the 1964 Times Grand Prix aka Riverside 200 on 20 October…
Ok, it’s only a little one but Dan is still testing a front wing on the nose of his Lotus 19B. Remember the year folks, 1964, the year the Chaparral lads were getting serious about spoilers but not a wing like this, even if it’s of poverty pack dimensions.
I wonder that he thought of it? He raced it so it can’t have been all bad? I am intrigued to know what contemporary reports made of the experiment.
This one of a kind Lotus 19 variant, the very last made, chassis number 966, was designed by Len Terry for Dan to accept the ubiquitous Ford 289cid pushrod V8 via the relationship created between the two men through the Lotus/Ford Indy program. It culminated in a win for Lotus, Ford, Colin Chapman, Len Terry and not least Jim Clark. Len joined Dan’s All American Racers after the historic 1965 victory.
Colin Chapman and Dan Gurney at Indy in 1963966, Riverside paddock in 1964Dan, and Roger Penske’s Chaparral @A Chev at Nassau in 1963
966 was delivered from Cheshunt to Dan’s new Costa Mesa, California workshop as a rolling chassis and built up by his team before its first race at Nassau in late 1963 (above).
966 is still extant, racing at elite level as late as 1969 in two Can-Am events at Riverside and Texas as the ‘BVC Mk1’- the poor little spaceframe must have been groaning under the strain of a 5.7-litre ‘hevvy Chevvy’.
Dan’s car was hardly the first of the Anglo-American V8 lightweights but it was a mighty quick car in its day, a better car than Chapman’s backbone chassis Lotus 30 and ‘ten more mistakes’ Lotus 40 successor.
Fast but unreliable is a fair description of it. In December 1963, it was 16th in the Nassau Classic and DNF in the blue riband Nassau Trophy, which AJ Foyt won in a Scarab Mk4 Chev.
The Weber fed 4.7-litre Cobra engine produced circa 360bhp @ 6500rpm in period, the gearbox was a ZF. It evolved continuously of course, below in its original guise.
Laguna Seca, Ed La Mantia’s Genie Mk 5 Corvair, DNQ, about to be passed by Gurney during practice. Look at the practice crowd, FFS!Penske, Chaparral 2A Chev and Gurney, Lotus 19 Ford, Laguna Seca 200 Miles October 1964
Parnelli Jones won the 1964 LA Times GP in a more developed and robust Cooper King Cobra from Roger Penske in Jim Hall’s Chaparral 2A Chev and Jim Clark’s works Lotus 30 Ford. The following weekend Dan was second to Penske in the 200 mile Monterey GP at Laguna Seca.
Gurney shared the All American Racers entered car at Daytona and Sebring in 1965. He led at Daytona for 211 laps before retiring at two-thirds distance with engine problems. At a very soggy Sebring he again ran up the front for a bit until the oil pump ended a valiant run. The car, by then entered as a Lotus 19J Ford, raced in Shelby American colours as below.
966 Lotus 19J Ford at Sebring in 1965 (L Galanos)
Louis Galanos wrote of Sebring (this group of photographs), ‘Gurney had an arrangement with Carroll Shelby to be ‘the rabbit’ and get the Chaparrals and Ferraris to chase him and hopefully retire early. This would leave the door open for either Shelby’s Cobra Daytona Coupes to win or one of the GT40s taking home the trophy for the overall win. Unfortunately it was Gurney who retired early with a broken oil pump chain drive. Gurney’s co-driver Jerry Grant never got the chance to drive. Jim Hall’s Chaparral won the race.’
Gurney negotiates Sebring’s Webster Turns – be interesting to know who built the body, Shelbys I guess? – whoever it was didn’t rate the little front wing…
Etcetera…
In the beginning…
The delicate little flower as it arrived from Cheshunt, here (above) at Daytona in February 1964 still fitted with skinny Lotus wobbly-web magnesium alloy wheels. Dan took the view that 360 odd bee-aitch-pee needed more rubber on the road so a call to Halibrand was made.
The car was quick, on pole for the SCCA American Challenge Cup, he led the 15 February 400km race for 12 laps before stalling during a pitstop and was then disqualified for a push-start from his crew, a breach of the rules. Clearly Gurney had concerns about the cars endurance as he chose to contest this shorter race rather than the Daytona 2000km, as it then was, the following day.
Laguna Seca 1964. Gurney’s Lotus with Bruce McLaren, McLaren Mk1 Elva Olds at left, #8 is Jerry Grant’s Lotus 19 Chev and the white helmeted driver is probably Parnelli Jones’ Cooper King Cobra.
Penske won from Gurney and Bob Bondurant then Ronnie Bucknum- here dicing with Gurney in the photograph below the week before at Riverside.
Ronnie Bucknum, Shelby prepped Cooper King Cobra Ford, DNF, from Gurney’s Lotus 19 – 19G – in some texts, Riverside 1964
Dan and Mickey Thompson take shelter from the Laguna Seca, California, heat under Gurney’s beach umbrella. I wonder what plan they are hatching?
That roll bar is braced (removed in this shot) but is still a bit limp. Note the Lotus chassis and Weber fed 289 Ford V8, these little, light Windsors were and are gems of things, at 302cid they were the last ‘real production’ engines to win Le Mans outright in 1968 and 1969 in the back of JW Ford GT40s??
Between session changes at Laguna Seca. Note the Lotus 18 parts bin front suspension, and vestigial roll-over bar. Car #81 is Allen Grant’s Cheetah Chev, 14th.
Riverside again, at a glance the pretty car looks like a beefy Lotus 23. Team plagued with multiple mechanical issues over the weekend so did not finish.
Driver Bruce Campbell with his Ecurie Vickie Racing Team BVC Mk1 Chev 5.7 at Riverside in October 1969.
The car was given this name as a ruse to try and ensure race organisers didn’t know the derivation and age of the car. He qualified twentieth of 35 starters 14 seconds off the pace of Denny Hulme’s McLaren M8B Chev pole time and finished fifteenth 14 laps down. After his impressive qualifying time, race winner Denny spoke to Bruce and suggested a more modern car for the coming season!
At Texas International, Houston, the following weekend Bruce was 20 seconds off Denny’s pole and DNF. Hulme won aboard his M8B with Bruce winning the ’68 Can-Am Drivers championship and McLaren the Constructors of course.
Credits…
Getty Images, The Enthusiast Network, Louis Galanos, Bob D’Olivo, Pat Brollier, Vickie Callouette, Bill Stowe. Sorry about most of the photo credits, folks, I drafted this years ago and have long since lost those notes
Tailpiece: 1964 LA Times GP, Riverside…
Sadly for Dan it’s just the end of qualifying not the end of the 200 mile race the following day! Lotus 19B Ford.
I’m not sure of the date of Dan’s last drive in the car, but it seems Joe Leonard crashed it whilst tyre testing. It then passed through the hands of Steve Dulio, Dick Callouette, Wayne Linden, Gordon and Nancy Gimbel, then back to Steve Dulio, who is the last name I can see online. The car is still historic raced in the US, which is wonderful.
Mike Hailwood had a fantastic season with Matchbox Team Surtees in 1972, winning the European F2 Championship in a pair of Surtees TS10 Ford BDAs.
The lovely lady above is shown with an almost visually identical – but quite different under the skin – 1973 TS15 during the International Racing Car Show held at London Olympia on January 1, 1973.
Hailwood commenced the year in Australasia in the Tasman Series, then returned to Europe for F1 and F2 campaigns in early March.
In the European F2 Championship he bagged maximum points in five of the 14 rounds – Rouen-les-Essarts, the Österreichring, Mantorp Park, the Salzburgring and the Hockenheim finale – to win the title with 55 points from Jean-Pierre Jaussaud, Brabham BT38 Ford 37, and Patrick Depailler, March 722 Ford on 27. The impact of Graded Drivers on the results will be shown below.
(Y Hirano)
Mike Hailwood arrived in New Zealand for the Tasman in sparkling form. He did two late-season ’71 Grands Prix for Surtees at Monza and Watkins Glen, and then a full South African series of sportscar races before arriving in Auckland to race the Surtees TS8/9 Chev #TS8-002 that John Surtees raced in the November 21, 1971 Australian Grand Prix at Warwick Farm, DNF.
He started the Tasman with a bang: second behind Frank Gardner’s works-Lola T300 Chev in the NZ GP at Pukekohe, second again in the Lady Wigram Trophy, then third at Levin. Then the momentum he had was lost when the car was badly damaged at Teretonga, the final NZ round.
A TS11 monocoque #TS11-03 was shipped to Australia. The team had the car ready for the fifth round at Surfers Paradise, but the win that had seemed likely didn’t happen; his best in the four Australian rounds was second in the final round at Adelaide International.
Hailwood in the Sandown dummy grid over the AGP weekend. TS11-03 is fitted with the TS8/9 nose of the damaged car rather than the sportscar type usual TS11 nose Warwick Farm 100, February 13, 1972. Hailwood, Surtees TS11 Chev from David Hobbs’ McLaren M22 Chev, Teddy Pilette’s McLaren M10B Chev, Tony Stewart, Mildren Waggott 2-litre TC-4V and Warwick Brown, McLaren M10B Chev (R MacKenzie)
I attended my first car race at Sandown for the Australian Grand Prix, Hailwood was on my list of four to watch all weekend: Hailwood, Gardner, Matich and Bartlett. Mike had an aura to 15 year old me for sure and seemed a good bloke. You know, the way you can tell when you watch the way someone interacts with those around them, the familiar and the fans?
So I followed his fortunes in F1 and F2 that year, rejoicing in his successes in both categories that cemented his place in Grand Prix racing.
When Mike flew out of Adelaide on February 27, it was to South Africa where the Grand Prix at Kyalami was held the following weekend. His year of F1 intent started with Q4 and challenging Jackie Stewart’s Tyrrell 003 Ford for the lead before a rear suspension breakage on the TS9B Ford after 28 laps.
Hailwood, Surtees TS9B Ford, Italian Grand Prix, Monza 1972. A great second behind Emerson Fittipaldi’s Lotus 72D Ford (unattributed)
Surtees TS10 Design and Construction…
John Surtees seized a commercial opportunity in 1972, that season F2 changed from 1.6 to 2-litres, potentially throwing the paradigm up into the air. Surtees had reasonable success with both his F1 works designs and F5000 cars.
In addition to those programs, the team designed and built a neat, conventional aluminium monocoque racer with a Tyrrell/sportscar type nose section powered by Brian Hart prepared, fuel-injected Ford Cosworth BDA engines quoted as 1850/1860cc. An F1 spec Hewland FG400 five-speed gearbox was used, stronger but heavier than the FT200 used by many.
Surtees poses for the cameras in his Edenbridge factory in early 1972, Surtees TS10 (Popperfoto)Carlos Ruesch’s TS10-05 in the Hochenheim paddock over the October 1 weekend. Brian Hart built 1790cc BDA, DNF engine which gave circa 265bhp. Simple slab sided aluminium monocoque chassis, the engine was mounted to the rear bulkhead and supported by an A-frame which is visible. Suspension single top link, inverted lower wishbones, two radius rods, mag-alloy uprights and Koni/coil springs. Inboard brakes, Hewland FG400 5-speed transaxle (unattributed)Upper and lower wishbones, coils/Konis, mag-alloy uprights, adjustable roll bar and outboard brakes. Hailwood’s car behind Ruesch’s (unattributed)
The engine de jour in ’72 was the BDA in various capacities, generally those who ran engines of 1860cc did better than those of over 1.9-litres as the good-old cast iron Ford 711M block simply couldn’t be bored out that far within the pistons coming awfully close to one another and water passages.
Cosworth’s BDE was 1790cc and gave a quoted 245bhp @ 9000rpm with a bore of 85.6mm. Their 1972 1927cc BDF used an 88.9mm bore that was achieved by brazing liners into the standard block, which gave 270bhp @ 9250rpm.
Hart’s alloy 1975cc 275bhp @ 9250rpm BDG solved all those problems when it was homologated later in the year, then in 1973, March Engineering did their exclusive deal with BMW Motorsport for the supply of the BMW M12/7 2-litre F2 engine and the poor old BDG then never got the works-team attention it really deserved.
Surtees and Hailwood aboard TS10-01 at Mallory Park over the March 12, 1972 weekend; first round of the Euro F2 Championship, fifth (unattributed)Variety is the spice in chassis at least!…Carlos Reutemann, Brabham BT38, Ronnie Peterson, March 722, Jody Scheckter, McLaren M21 – then race winner David Morgan, Brabham BT35, and ? Mallory Park, Euro F2 Champ round 1 March 12, 1972 (P Amoudru)
1972 European F2 Championship…
The array of talent that contested the series in whole or part that year was typically deep. Graded Drivers – drivers who participated but were not be awarded championship points, see definition at the end of this piece – included Jean-Pierre Beltoise, Francois Cevert, Emerson Fittipaldi, Graham Hill, Ronnie Peterson, Tim Schenken, John Surtees and Reine Wisell.
Future World Champions in the ’72 mix comprised James Hunt, Niki Lauda, Jody Scheckter, while the GP winner roll call included Vittorio Brambilla, Peter Gethin, Patrick Depailler, Jean-Pierre Jabouille, Jochen Mass, Carlos Pace, Carlos Reutemann and John Watson, not to forget Le Mans victors Derek Bell, Jean-Pierre Jaussaud, Henri Pescarolo, Vern Schuppan and Bob Wollek.
It’s an interesting pub fact – perhaps – that no winner of the old European F2 Championship 1967-84, or modern FIA Formula 2 Championship 2017-present, has ever won the F1 World Championship. Oscar Piastri, the 2021 victor, has a chance, therefore, of making history this year, depending on how things go over the next couple of months!
By the time Hailwood got his bum into TS10-01 Surtees had the car nicely sorted, with Mike taking fifth place overall from the two heats of the opening round of the European F2 Championship at Mallory Park on March 12.
Privateer, Dave Morgan sensationally won the round in a year-old spacframe Brabham BT35 BDA 1860cc from Niki Lauda’s works-March 722 BDA 1825cc, Carlos Reutemann, Brabham BT38 BDF 1927cc, Jody Scheckter’s one-off McLaren M21 BDF 1927cc, then Hailwood using a BDA prepared by RES (Race Engine Services) of 1825cc.
That variety of cars set the pattern of lots of different car-driver winning combinations for the season. The subtext, for F2 anoraks, were the BDA battles between the various engine builders/preparers.
Ronnie Peterson’s works-March 722 BDF-1927cc won at Thruxton, then Jean-Pierre Jaussaud’s Brabham BT38 BDA-1850cc at Hockenheim in mid-April, before Hailwood collected fifth place points in the Pau GP on May 5-6 using one of Brian Hart’s 1850cc BDAs; Peter Gethin’s Chevron B20 BDA took the champers that weekend.
John Surtees raced TS10-02 at Oulton Park and Thruxton then took that chassis to Japan to contest the Japan Auto Federation Grand Prix of Japan at daunting Fuji Speedway on May 3. He splendidly won the race using new a Hart-prepped 1930cc alloy block BDG. Japanese drivers Hiromu Tanaka and Hiroshi Fushida were second and third aboard a March 722 and Brabham BT38, both powered by 2-litre Mitsubishi Colt R39B engines.
John Surtees on the way to winning the 1972 JAF Japanese GP at Fuji in TS10-02 from Hiromu Tanaka, March 722 Mitsubishi R39B 2-litre (Y Komura)Hailwood from Jody Scheckter, McLaren M21 Ford BDF, Crystal Palace 1972
Back home in London, Hailwood and Scheckter thrilled the crowds at Crystal Palace on May 29. Reutemann’s Rondel Racing – Ron Dennis and Neil Trundle – Brabham BT38 won the first heat, Hailwood the second and then Scheckter, works-McLaren M21 Ford BDF 1927cc the final in a thriller-diller dice with Carlos third. Mike’s best lap of 48.4 seconds set in the second heat of the Greater London International Trophy is the all-time lap record of a venue then in its final season.
By mid-season, there was no lack of Surtees TS15s in circulation, but they were all works-run cars; no customers stumped up to buy one. Argentinian Carlos Ruesch raced TS10-03, Andrea De Adamich, TS10-04 and later in the season Carlos Pace, TS10-07.
Andrea De Adamich, Surtees TS10-04 Ford BDE-Novamotor 1790cc Imola 1972, fourth (Autosprint)Emerson Fittipaldi, works-Lotus 69 Ford BDF, Hockenheim October 1972. DNF engine – BDF – after eight laps (P Amoudru)
Emerson Fittipaldi, in amongst winning his first F1 World Championship for Lotus (72? Ford DFV) made a number of successful F2 raids in a modified Lotus 69 fitted with 1927cc Cosworth BDFs. He won at Hochenheim on June 11 and Rouen Les Essarts on June 25. Hailwood got the points for the latter win as Emerson was a Graded Driver.
The same pair did the one-two at the Osterreichring on July 9, this time Mike was 36 seconds adrift of Emmo on the road, but again got the nine championship points. Carlos Ruesch was seventh in a good weekend for Matchbox Team Surtees.
Vic Elford, works-Chevron B20 BDA and Richard Scott, Brabham BT38 BDE on the inside at Crystal Palace 0n May 29; fourth and DNF valves. David Purley in the March 722 behind? (unattributed) A shit shot, but it’s the only one I can find of John Surtees TS10-07, taking his last in-period race win, the Imola Euro F2 round on July 23, 1972 (unattributed)
At Imola the boss showed his fellow motor-cycling ace how to do it! Surtees was fourth in the first 28 lap heat, was third in the second and won on aggregate with Bob Wollek, Brabham BT38 BDA and Niki Lauda, March 722 Ford BDA third. Wollek won a heat, and Peter Gethin, Chevron B20 the other…there was no shortage of race winners that year as I wrote earlier! Mike was second in the first heat but failed to finish the second after his fuel pump failed.
Hailwood bounced back at Mantorp Park, Sweden, a fortnight later, he was second in the first heat behind Gethin, won the second from Jean Pierre-Jabouille (March 722 Ford BDA) and the round overall. It was a timely win at the business end of the season, capped by Ruesch’s sixth place.
Hailwood had his tail up at Enna on August 20, winning the first heat from Henri Pescarolo but bombing out of the second with transmission failure. Patrick Depailler won that one, Alpine A367 Ford BDA, but veteran-Pesca was again second and won the round on aggregate. Carlos Ruesch got his best result for the year in TS10-05, third place, having placed third in both heats.
Mike Hailwood and Peter Gethin in the Brands Hatch Race of Champions paddock on March 19, 1972. Hailwood was second in his Surtees TS9B Ford DFV, and Gethin fourth in a BRM P160B. The race was won by Emerson Fittipaldi’s Lotus 72D Ford. Straight from Carnaby Street by the look of itCarlos Pace, GP del Mediterraneo Enna-Pergusa 1972, TS10-07 NC (A De Brito)
On the fast Salzburgring, Hailwood again showed his class, winning on aggregate after beating Carlos Pace in the second heat and placing second behind David Morgan’s Brabham BT38 BDA in the first. Pace was second overall aboard TS10-07, and Ruesch TS10-05 tenth, giving Matchbox Team Surtees its best result for the year, and perhaps securing Pace’s place in Team Surtees F1 for 1973.
Jean-Pierre Jaussaud won the penultimate round, the Albi Grand Prix in his Brabham BT38 BDA from Depailler’s March 722 and Bob Wollek’s BT38 in a French one-three. Reusch was sixth and Hailwood 14th; disappointing as Mike won the second heat but isn’t listed in my results of the first. What was the problem, folks?
Tim Schenken won the final round of the European F2 Championship at Hockenheim on October 1 from his Surtees F1 teammate Hailwood: Rondel Brabham BT38 BDF and Surtees TS10 BDA. Ronnie Peterson, March 722 BDA, was third.
Ronnie Peterson in his works-March 722 Ford BDF at Thruxton in April 1972. Winner of the Jochen Rindt Memorial Trophy (LAT)Hailwood TS10-01, or TS10-07, third in the final October round of the Euro F2 Championship at Hockenheim (R Schlegelmilch)
Mike won the championship with 55 points from Jean-Pierre Jaussaud – the Le Mans winner, sometimes a forgotten Frenchie? – Brabham BT38 on 37 points, and Patrick Depailler March 722 third on 27 points.
With adequate funding, John Surtees ran a strong program: chassis, engines and driver, Matchbox Team Surtees delivered the goods.
As to the best-chassis of 1972? The Brabham BT38 won four European F2 Championship rounds – Jean-Pierre Jaussaud won at Hochenheim-Jim Clark Memorial Trophy and Albi, Tim Schenken Hochenheim-Preis von Baden-Wurttemberg, Henri Pescarolo, Enna – not to forget David Morgan’s BT35 victory at Mallory. The Surtees TS10 won three rounds – Hailwood at Mantorp Park and Salzburgring, and Surtees at Imola. Emerson Fittipaldi took three in his works-Lotus 69 at Hochenheim-Rhein-Pokalrennen, Rouen and the Osterreichring with single round wins to the March 722, Peterson at Thruxton, the Chevron B20, Gethin at Pau and finally Jody Scheckter won at Crystal Palace in his McLaren M21.
Jody Scheckter on the way to winning the London Trophy at Crystal Palace in May 1972, McLaren M21 Ford BDF 1927cc (T Legate)Carlos Reutemann, Brabham BT38 Ford BDF, Mallory Park, March 1972, third (D Btiot)
So, drum-roll, the Champion F2 Constructor for 1972 – was there such a title – would have been Brabham, who, after years of ‘F2 Dominance’, got their come-uppance the year before with March. I’ve always thought the ultimate test of a customer racing car is the number of different drivers to have been victorious behind its steering wheel.
While Ron Tauranac was rightly famous for his spaceframe Brabhams, there was nothing wrong with the BT38, Brabham’s first production monocoque design, the work of Geoff Ferris. New owner Ecclestone would soon get rid of all this production racing car rubbish, of course…
Etcetera…
(T Legate)
Mike Hailwood enroute to setting the all-time lap record at Crystal Palace on May 29, 1972, aboard TS10-01, such an attractive car, doesn’t it look the goods!
(LAT)
John Surtees aboard TS10-07 at Oulton Park over the September 16, 1972 weekend, DNF with electrical problems without completing a lap of the final round of the British F2 Championship. The race was won by Ronnie Peterson from Niki Lauda and James Hunt; works March 722 by two, and Hesketh Racing March 712M BDA.
The British championship was won by Lauda – a flicker of light in a pretty grim March year for him – from Peterson and David Morgan.
The Matchbox Team Surtees transporter in the Oulton Park paddock on that same weekend below.
(R Kalatayud)
Imola 1972 is a kaleidoscope of Formula 2 colour and variety that would over-stimulate the poor punters of today who are swamped in dull, shit-boring one make drossful classes.
Foreground car folks? Mike is facing us, shielding his eyes from the sun, with Surtees #3 behind. #14 Hiroshi Kazato March 722, #11 is Carlos Reuttemann, Brabham BT38, #27 Adrian Wilkins March 722, #25, Jose Dolhem March 722, #6 Peter Getin, Chevron B20. All BDAs of one sort or another…
Mike Hailwood, John Surtees and Helmut Marko in the Monza paddock during the 1972 Italian Grand Prix weekend on September 5.
(H Fohr)
Carlos Ruesch, Surtees TS10 BDA, NC, and Claudio Francisci, Brabham BT38 Cosworth BDE, ninth, at Hockenheim during the Jim Clark Memorial meeting in April.
(Getty)
Niki Lauda, March 722 BDA-RES 1927cc, Rouen, June 25, 1972, DNF with a popped engine. Fittipaldi’s Lotus 69 won and Mike bagged the nine points, placing second behind the Graded Driver.
Niki was fifth in the Euro F2 points standings.
(J Regami)
Hailwood’s TS10 in the paddock during the Pau Grand Prix weekend. You can see the top wishbone, front suspension was conventional upper and lower wishbones, coil spring/Koni dampers, adjustable roll bar and mag-alloy uprights. Perhaps Mike wiped a nosecone off in practice?
(F Kraling)
Graham Hill’s Brabham BT38 Ford BDA-RES 1927cc has aero modifications neatly exercised by KayDon Racing. David Kaylor and John Donnelly, being ex-MRD employees who ran the car for owner Graham Hill with Jäegermeister sponsorship. This shot is at Hockenheim on October 1, fifth.
Hill won the non-championship Gran Premio della Lotteria at Monza with BT38-1 in June.
(J Regami)
At Pau Emerson Fittipaldi’s Lotus 69 Ford BDF – apart from its Moonraker Yachts livery – didn’t look much different to the 69s of 1970-71 but the adoption of a sportscar type nose brought the old, very fast jigger up to snuff aerodynamically. Lotus 69 bias declared herein!
World Champion drivers of the previous five years.
Drivers who, in one and the same year, have been classified at least twice among the first six in a race of the World Championship for Drivers, while taking into account the Championship of the two previous years.
The winner of the Indianapolis 500 Miles of the previous year.
The winner of the Can-Am Series of the previous year.
The winner of the European Championship for Formula 2 drivers of the previous year on condition, however, that he has won at least three first places in the Class B drivers’ classification (ie non-graded) of an event qualifying for the said Championship.
Drivers who, in the same year, won at the same time one classification among the first six in an event counting for the World Championship of Drivers, and one classification among the first three in the general results of an event counting for the Makes’ Championship. Only the Championships of the two previous years shall be taken into consideration.
2. Long Distance Graded drivers
Drivers who, in one and the same year, havew been classified at least twice among the first three in an event of the Makes’ World Championship, while taking into account the two previous years. However, only those teams of not more than two drivers, and that for the whole duration of the event, will be retained for inclusion on the list of graded drivers.
The text for 1975 is identical, except that it omits the winner of the Can-Am title.
Credits…
Team Surtees and Formula 2 Facebook pages, Yoshiaki Hirano, Popperfoto, Michael Lee, Yoshinori Komura, Alejandro De Brito, Patrick Amoudru, Walter Harbers, Rafael Kalatayud, Denis Btiot, LAT, Rainer Schlegelmilch, Joe Regami, Caz Caswell, Hans Fohr, Trevor Legate, F2 Index-Fastlane, oldracingcars.com, Joe Regami, Ferdi Kraling
The Referee Sydney, June 16, 1938(L Sims Collection)
Peter Whitehead sans helmet on the way to an Australian Hillclimb Championship win aboard his ERA B-Type #R10B, then 1.5-litres supercharged, on Monday, June 13, 1938, at Rob Roy, 40 km east of Melbourne.
He came, saw, and conquered Australia in 1938, winning the Australian Grand Prix and Hillclimb Championship and attended to the needs of the family wool processing and spinning business too.
What follows are Whitehead’s observations about Rob Roy and related adventures, as told to his Australian friend, Kenneth Maxwell, and published in The Car, the official organ of the Light Car Club of Australia, the organiser and promoter of Rob Roy.
(T Johns Collection)(L Sims Collection)
She’ll be comin’ down the (Rob Roy) mountain as she comes…
Etcetera…
Surfs-Up albeit not that much! Whitehead and entourage keep a close eye on the 90 Mile Beach’s rising tide during a spot of land speed record breaking in Victoria
Greg Smith wrote that ‘A young bloke from Orbost rode his pushbike to 90 Mile Beach to watch this car on the sand in the speed trials and it was his inspiration to get involved in motorsport. That bloke was (Oz driving and engineering legend) Harry Firth.’
Peter didn’t run the ERA in Rob Roy’s November 20, 1938 meeting but LCCA stalwart, Jim Leech gave him a run in his Frazer Nash, he did an amazing 34.77-sec run. Car now owned by the Davey-Milne brothers.
(Cummins Collection)
Peter returned to Australia a number of times, the visit I tend to forget is when he entered his Jaguar C-Type in the Mount Druitt 24-Hour in January 31-February 1, 1954.
Paul Cummins tells the story, ‘Whitehead’s Jaguar ‘C’ Type XKCO39 was co-driven by Tony Gaze and Alf Barrett. The race started at 2 pm on January 31st, with a Le Mans Start. Organised by Belfred Jones and his company Speed Promotions and run under the ARDC for unmodified production cars, it was the first 24-hour race in Australia and attracted 22 cars.’
It all looks good other than the dates! (B Williamson Collection)The Mount Druitt 24-Hour winning Jag XK120 FHC crewed by Geordie Anderson, Bill Pitt and Charlie Swinburne (B Caldersmith-AMHF)
‘There was no crowd control and the road surface gradually disintegrated making it a rough going and forcing the ‘C’, which was leading, to pull out with rear suspension problems. Peter Whitehead started the race and by the third lap had already started overtaking slower cars. By the end of the first hour he overtook the Geordie Anderson XK120 FHC that was in second.
By the eight hour mark the ‘C’ had completed 217 laps and was 23 laps ahead of the second placed Holden of Shaw. Hitting a pothole at midnight put an end to the ‘C’ Type’s race. All 22 cars finished as the ‘retirements’ rejoined at the end. The car race wasn’t repeated but amazingly in October the world’s first 24 hour bike race was run there.’
Peter is shown above manoeuvring his Ferrari 555 Super Squalo 3.4-litre in the paddock. He was third in the race, behind Moss and Behra, in his final competition appearance in Australia. I wonder if he continued to travel to Melbourne on business in the period between then and his untimely death during the September 1958 Tour de France.
Credits…
The Referee Sydney June 16, 1938, Leon Sims Collection, Bob King Collection, Ian & Paul Cummins Collection, Ken Wheeler via David Zeunert Collection, Bob Williamson Collection, AMHF Archive