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    samedi 22 juin 2013

    Triumph vs Tragedy: The 5 greatest Le Mans victories



    The 90-year history of the Le Mans 24 Hours is rich in heroic wins that inspired the world, sitting alongside heartbreak and loss of life – often in the same race. As we wait for the Saturday start of the world’s greatest endurance race, we recall five of the greatest Le Mans victories in history…


    1924 – Playboys and Heroes

    Back in the 1920s, what could be more thrilling than to drive from Britain to France in an open-topped Bentley, enter the same car in a 24-hour road race… and win it outright, beating all the local French heroes? It was a real-life comic-book story, featuring super-wealthy playboys and outrageous derring-do. 

    The second-ever Le Mans race took place in 1924, and saw Captain John Duff and Frank Clement sweep past the chequered flag in their Bentley 3 Litre Sport – the first of five pre-War victories for the British marque and the legendary ‘Bentley Boys’. 


    1963 – The Ox That Pushed the Cart

    Enzo Ferrari was famously sniffy about mid-engined cars. “The ox pulls the cart” was his mantra, and he remained stubbornly insistent in the face of the engineers’ arguments – right up to the point when a mid-engined Ferrari, the 250P of Bandini and Scarfiotti, won Le Mans in 1963. 

    It was the first mid-engined car ever to win Le Mans and no front-engined car has won there since. With a result like this, even Enzo was forced to accept the arrival of the mid-engined revolution. 


    1969 – From Last to First

    At the start of the 1969 race, as the drivers sprinted across the track and leapt into their cars for the traditional ‘Le Mans start’, Jacky Ickx refused to run. Instead, he walked slowly across, climbed into his Ford GT40 and deliberately did up the belts, relegating himself to last place on the grid. It was a dramatic way to rebel against the dangers of not belting the driver in properly. 

    Despite his slow start, Ickx – and co-driver Jackie Oliver – came through to win the race… by a few nail-biting seconds only, the closest genuine finish in the history of Le Mans. (Only ‘staged’ finishes have been closer.) It was the last Le Mans to feature the traditional start: in a tragic endorsement of Ickx’s stand on safety, John Woolfe was killed in a first-lap accident. 


    1970 – Porsche's First of Many

    Over the entire history of Le Mans (so far), one marque has stood out as – far and away – the most successful. Porsche has, to date, won the 24 Hours a staggering 16 times… but it wasn’t until 1970 that the German marque scored its first outright win. Up until the late 1960s, Porsche had enjoyed immense success in the smaller-engined classes but steered well clear of the big boys. 

    Then came the Porsche 917: phenomenally fast and – at first – notoriously unstable. Rushed through in double-quick time for the 1969 Le Mans race, the lack of development time made it hair-raising to drive. (It was in a 917 that John Woolfe died in 1969.) But for 1970, the aerodynamic problems were – at least partially – sorted. The 917K of Richard Attwood and Hans Herrmann crossed the line five laps in the lead. 


    2006 – Burning Oil

    In one of the biggest technical turnarounds in the history of Le Mans, the 2006 race was famously won by a diesel car – the Audi R10 TDI. Spectators were amazed as the oil-burning Audi sped between the stands that surround the start-finish line, emitting not the high-pitched wail of a petrol-engined endurance racer, but a softer, smoother whoosh. Not everyone was delighted by the change. 

    Nevertheless, after 24 hours of racing, when the Audi took the flag four laps ahead of the second-placed Pescarolo, it justified the German marque’s vast investment in the new breed of Le Mans car. The era of the diesel-engined racer had arrived. What would Enzo have said? 


    Text: Charis Whitcombe (Classic Driver)
    Photos: Rainer Schlegelmilch / Getty Images

    Dirt Track Heroes Exhibit at the National Motorcycle Museum

    Whether you call it flat track or dirt track racing, it's a thrilling form of motorcycle competition unique to America. Now Allstate Motorcycle Dirt Track Heroes presented by J&P Cycles brings together nearly 30 race bikes, over 20 sets of leathers and countless photos, paintings and prints. It's been assembled to build a great exhibition in tribute to the #1 Plate Grand National Champions, tuners and other dirt track greats and many of the motorcycles they raced.

    Screen shot 2013 06 21 at 9.31.41 PM Dirt Track Heroes Exhibit at the National Motorcycle Museum

    Screen shot 2013 06 21 at 9.33.05 PM Dirt Track Heroes Exhibit at the National Motorcycle Museum

    Lasting the Longest: Five decades, five Le Mans challengers



    Although the last 90 years have seen the Le Mans 24 Hours develop into a cutting-edge spectacle of high technology, it remains – above all – about just one thing: endurance. We've selected five cars on sale today that were up to the ultimate challenge...


    Out after 16 hours: Bentley 3 Litre Le Mans

    No listing of Le Mans cars would be complete without a pre-War Bentley. And this car, this very car, note, actually competed at Le Mans in 1926. Its owner, the generously named Tommy ‘Scrap’ Thistlethwayte, was paired with professional ‘Bentley Boy’, experienced racing driver, war hero and preparation expert Capt. Clive Gallop. 

    Sadly, after over 16 hours of hard running, mechanical maladies forced it to retire at 08:30 on Sunday morning. 

    To see this Bentley 3 Litre Le Mans in the Classic Driver Marketplace >>


    Failure with victory in sight: Lotus 17

    There’s no denying the genius of North Londoner Colin Chapman. With the Lotus 17, his final front-engined car, he pulled out all the stops to ‘add lightness’ with glassfibre bodywork (a first, for customer cars) and other extensive weight-saving measures that saw the small racer tip the scales at a dry weight of just 340kg.

    Two factory entries, fitted with tiny 750cc Coventry Climax engines, and driven by Stacey/Green and Taylor/Sieff, ran strongly at Le Mans in 1959, sadly retiring before a likely class victory. 

    To see this Lotus 17 in the Classic Driver Marketplace >>


    Flying Frenchman: CD Panhard Le Mans LM64

    ‘CD’? That’s not for ‘Classic Driver’, is it? No, the letters stand for the man behind these small, superlight and very aerodynamic cars, the Frenchman, Charles Deutsch. Vive la France!, we say, as for many years the small Panhards and Deutsch-Bonnets (DBs) carried the hopes of the host nation at the annual day-long race. 

    After success in the 1930s with Bugatti, and just a single win in the 1950s (Rosier and Rosier in a Talbot-Lago T26 GS), it wasn’t until 1972 that a French car crossed the finishing line first. Up till then, the home crowd had to support these puttering CDs and DBs, winning the small-capacity classes year after year. 

    To see this CD Panhard Le Mans LM64 in the Classic Driver Marketplace >>


    Best of the 1997 privateers: Porsche GT1-96

    “No listing of Le Mans cars would be complete without a...” Whoa! Haven’t we been there before? It’s fact, though, that Porsche’s name in the 70s, 80s and 90s was as synonymous with the French 24-hour race as Bentley in the inter-war years. 

    Was the 993-based GT1 of the late-90s any more related to a road car than the outrageous 935 K3 that won in 1979, Porsche’s very first 911-based winner? The jury is out. This 600bhp car, chassis 102, is the ex-Team Schübel entry that finished fifth overall at Le Mans in 1997. 

    To see this Porsche GT1 in the Classic Driver Marketplace >>


    Dutch courage: Spyker C8 Laviolette GT2-R

    The plucky Dutch manufacturer was up for anything: super-expensive sports cars of extravagantly different design, a bit of Formula 1, even a tilt at the Le Mans 24 Hours. This car (an orange-free zone, carrying sponsorship not from an aid to a better night’s sleep, but from the now-bankrupt Lithuanian bank Snoras) raced at Le Mans in 2008. 

    To see this Spyker C8 Laviolette GT2-R in the Classic Driver Marketplace >>


    Text: Classic Driver
    Photos: Classic Driver Dealers

    The Rise

    Devinci Global Racing entered the 2013 gravity arena with its stacked lineup of Steve Smith, Nick Beer, Mark Wallace and Gianluca Vernassa. With less than a week before the first UCI World Cup of the season we wanted to share some of the preseason preparation and testing the team did while in Canada.
    The Rise from Cycles Devinci on Vimeo.