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1959 United States Grand Prix - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1959 United States Grand Prix

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

United States   1959 United States Grand Prix
Race details
Race 9 of 9 in the 1959 Formula One season.
Date December 12, 1959
Location Sebring International Raceway
Sebring, Florida
Course Former Military Airbase
5.2 mi / 8.36 km
Distance 42 laps, 218 mi / 351 km
Weather Hot, sunny
Pole
Driver United Kingdom Stirling Moss Cooper-Climax
Time 3:00.0
Fastest Lap
Driver France Maurice Trintignant Cooper-Climax
Time 3:05.0 (on lap 39 of 42)
Podium
First New Zealand Bruce McLaren Cooper-Climax
Second France Maurice Trintignant Cooper-Climax
Third United Kingdom Tony Brooks Ferrari

The 1959 United States Grand Prix was a Formula One race held on December 12, 1959 at Sebring International Raceway.


Contents

[edit] Summary

Russian-born Alec Ulmann's dream of an American Grand Prix was realized in December, 1959 when 19 entries, including six American drivers, arrived in Florida for the final World Championship event of the season. Originally scheduled as the year's opening round, the now season-concluding Sebring race saw the Championship down to Cooper versus Ferrari. Australian Jack Brabham led for Cooper with 31 points to 25.5 for Stirling Moss, also in a Cooper, and 23 for Ferrari driver Tony Brooks.

The field featured works Coopers for Brabham and 22-year-old Bruce McLaren of New Zealand; blue Rob Walker-entered Coopers for Moss and Frenchman Maurice Trintignant; four Ferraris--three in Italian red for Englishmen Brooks and Cliff Allison, and German Wolfgang von Trips; one in American white and blue for Phil Hill; front-engined Lotuses for Innes Ireland and Alan Stacey; and, incomprehensibly for the European road-racing elite, the number 1 Kurtis-Offy Midget of USAC National Champion Rodger Ward, the only American-built and American-driven entry.

Ward's car had an underpowered engine (1.7 liters to 2.5 for the F1 cars), separate gear-change levers for the two-speed gearbox and two-speed rear end, and an outboard handbrake! Ward explained how his participation in the race came about by saying, "Ullman called me up and invited me to race in the Grand Prix. He offered me some money, and I was in the habit of accepting money, so I told him I'd bring the midget."

The night before practice began, Cooper Team Manager John Cooper, and his drivers Jack Brabham and Bruce McLaren, came across Ward at the hotel in Sebring. Ward, who had won the Indy 500 that year and would win it again in 1962, told the Cooper team members he was in Sebring to drive a dirt track car.

"In the Grand Prix?," Brabham asked, astonished.

"Sure. And have you guys got a surprise waiting for you! Why, on every turn I'll blow you right off the road!" Ward gushed.

The Cooper team soon realized they could not explain things to Ward. He insisted, "I know what a Midget can do and I know it can take a corner faster than any of those sports cars you have in Europe. You might be faster on the straights, but when it comes to turns you just won't have a chance. Sebring's a lot of turns, isn't it?"

Well, to the Europeans' amazement, Ward's car made it through the technical scrutineering, perhaps a tribute to his Indianapolis reputation, but during the first practice lap, Bruce McLaren and Jack Brabham arrived at the first turn in their Coopers about the same time as Ward. The rear-engined cars sped through the turn, while Ward seemed to almost come to a stop. Afterward, Ward shook his head and said, "I've got to hand it to you. Those European buggies sure take corners fast!"

-- The Grand Prix Carpetbaggers, John Cooper, 1977.

Qualifying ended with Moss, Brabham and Brooks on the front row, but, overnight, American Harry Schell was given third position, next to Moss and Brabham. The 3:05.2 lap that got Schell on the front row apparently had come at the tail end of the session, and had gone unnoticed by almost everyone; his best time previously had been 3:11.2, good enough for 11th.

Protests ensued from nearly every other team, most vociferously Ferrari, whose man, Brooks, was displaced on the front row. The shouting match raged even as "The Star-Spangled Banner" was being sung, but when it was through, Schell started from third place.

What had really happened with Schell did not come out until after the race. At Sebring, just beyond the MG bridge and before the esses was a sharp right turn that apparently led nowhere. Schell found, however, that it connected with the end of the Warehouse Straight, bypassing the entire straight and the Warehouse Hairpin. He had secretly cut across and come back on the course during a lull in the traffic--and cut six seconds off his time! Alas, it didn't help him in the race; he was eighth after the first lap and retired after only six.

Moss led the race from the drop of the flag, but his day, and his Championship hopes, ended after only five laps with a broken gearbox. Already out of the running for the title was Brooks, who had been bumped off the front row by Schell's qualifying ruse. Brooks made contact with teammate von Trips in the first turn, and pitted to examine the damage. The stop cost him two minutes, and proved to be unnecessary. Though he rejoined to drive a sensational race and finish third, he never had a realistic shot at Brabham.

Brabham took the lead from Moss and led McLaren for most of the race. When he slowed to allow his teammate to close up to him, Trintignant's Rob Walker Cooper took huge bites off the gap, as his pit crew kept him informed of his position.

On the last lap, as his team waited for him to appear and take the checkered flag, Brabham rolled to a halt in sight of the line on the uphill front straight. He had refused to follow Team Manager Cooper's exhortations to start the race on full tanks, hoping instead to find more speed from a lighter car. McLaren, surprised to see Brabham slowing, lifted his foot and slowed as well. Brabham waved him on frantically, and McLaren resumed speed just soon enough to cross the line less than a second ahead of Trintignant, who had set the race's fastest lap only three laps from the end. He was the last man to receive one Championship point for recording the race's fastest lap, as the next year the rule was changed.

Brabham was also passed by Brooks for third place, but pushed his car over a quarter mile up the hill to finish fourth and clinch his first World Championship. It was also the first for Cooper, the first for a rear-engined car, and the first for an Australian driver. Brooks' third gave Ferrari second place in the Championship; Innes Ireland came fifth, three laps down in his Lotus, and Wolfgang von Trips ended up sixth after his Ferrari's engine gave way with four laps to go. With his victory, McLaren became the youngest ever Grand Prix winner at age 22 years 104 days. In addition to his prize money, he also won several acres of land adjoining Sebring Lake!

Despite the exciting finish of the race and the Championship, however, the United States Grand Prix at Sebring was a financial disaster. The crowd was half the size of that year's 12 Hours of Sebring sports car race, and after distributing the $15,000 purse, including a huge $6,000 winner's share, Alec Ulmann just about broke even. The next year, he would try again, on the opposite coast, in Riverside, California.

[edit] Classification

Pos No Driver Team Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 9 New Zealand Bruce McLaren Cooper-Climax 42 2'12:35.7 10 8
2 6 France Maurice Trintignant Cooper-Climax 42 0.6 5 6
3 2 United Kingdom Tony Brooks Ferrari 42 + 3:00.9 4 4
4 8 Australia Jack Brabham Cooper-Climax 42 + 1:57.3 2 3
5 10 United Kingdom Innes Ireland Lotus-Climax 39 + 3 Laps 9 2
6 4 Germany Wolfgang von Trips Ferrari 38 Engine 6  
7 17 US flag 49 stars.svg Harry Blanchard Porsche 38 + 4 Laps 16  
Ret 3 United Kingdom Cliff Allison Ferrari 23 Transmission 11  
Ret 12 United Kingdom Roy Salvadori Cooper-Maserati 23 Transmission 11  
Ret 1 US flag 49 stars.svg Rodger Ward Kurtis Kraft-Offenhauser 20 Clutch 19  
Ret 14 Argentina Alessandro de Tomaso Cooper-Osca 13 Brakes 14  
Ret 5 US flag 49 stars.svg Phil Hill Ferrari 8 Clutch 8  
Ret 15 Brazil Fritz d'Orey Tec-Mec-Maserati 6 Oil Leak 17  
Ret 7 United Kingdom Stirling Moss Cooper-Climax 5 Transmission 1  
Ret 19 US flag 49 stars.svg Harry Schell Cooper-Climax 5 Clutch 3  
Ret 16 US flag 49 stars.svg George Constantine Cooper-Borgward 5 Overheating 15  
Ret 11 United Kingdom Alan Stacey Lotus-Climax 2 Clutch 12  
Ret 18 US flag 49 stars.svg Bob Said Connaught 0 Accident 13  
DNS 22 United Kingdom Phil Cade Maserati        
Previous race:
1959 Italian Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World
Championship, 1959 season
Next race:
1960 Argentine Grand Prix

Previous race:
None
United States Grand Prix Next race:
1960 United States Grand Prix

[edit] Notes

[edit] References

  • John Cooper (1977). The Grand Prix Carpetbaggers: The Autobiography of John Cooper. Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-03081-9
  • Doug Nye (1978). The United States Grand Prix and grand prize races, 1908-1977. B. T. Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-1263-1
  • Jack Brady (March, 1960). "Sebring: Grand Prix of the U.S.". Road & Track, 24-28.
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