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In the year that the 60th anniversary of
Ferrari's first win at Le Mans was honoured
and President Luca di Montezemolo flagged
the race away there was a Ferrari win in
France as Carlos Monteverde raced to victory
in the Le Mans Legends race at the wheel of
a 250 LM. |
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In the year that the 60th anniversary of
Ferrari's first win at Le Mans was honoured and
President Luca di Montezemolo flagged the race
away there was a Ferrari win in France as Carlos
Monteverde raced to victory in the Le Mans
Legends race at the wheel of a 250 LM. This year
Le Mans cars from 1949 to 1965 provided
spectacular entertainment for the crowds, as
Ferraris and Jaguars, Porsches and Astons and
the rest of the colourful 61-strong grid fought
fiercely for race honours in the 2009 Le Mans
Legends, the historic support race which takes
place annually a few hours before the start of
the modern Le Mans 24 Hours.
Back in 1965, the Le Mans 24 Hour race was a glittering triumph for
Ferrari, with the Italian marque placed 1st, 2nd and 3rd
overall, and while it wasn’t quite an all-Ferrari podium for
the 2009 Le Mans Legend, the Prancing Horse did manage to
take 1st and 3rd places.
The battle for overall victory was initially a three-way
fight between the pole-sitting Jaguar E-type of Neil
Cunningham, the Ferrari 250LM of Carlos Monteverde and the
Lister Jaguar GT of Justin Law – but when the E-type retired
with engine trouble after just three laps, it came down to a
straight fight between Ferrari and Lister. The lead swopped
repeatedly between the small, nimble, yellow Ferrari and the
heavier, more powerful Lister, increasingly lurid slides
from both front-runners enchanting the crowds. In the final
laps, Law drove with tremendous skill as his fading brakes
grew ever weaker, while Monteverde held onto the lead with
cool determination and finally took the chequered flag by
7.8 seconds at the end of the 45-minute race.
In third place, some way behind the front two but pulling
out a substantial lead on the rest of the grid – and
scooping an emphatic class victory – was the little front-engined
Ferrari 246S Dino of Tony Dron, who took full advantage of
the car’s ‘slippery’ aerodynamic shape to make up for a
relative lack of outright power. Fourth place was taken by
Julian Bronson’s Lister Costin, with a fifth overall – and
class win – for Ewan McIntyre in his Lotus 15.
A delighted Harry Leventis took a further class win for
Ferrari, with his mid-engined 206 Dino, while Class 4 saw
Jaguar D-types sweep first, second and third in class – led
by Gavin Pickering. Other class winners were the Lotus 11 of
Andrew and Michael Hibberd, the Jaguar C-type of Nigel Webb,
and the Frazer Nash Le Mans MkII of Richard Lake and Jane
Varley. A hugely popular third in class went to Sir Stirling
Moss, sharing his beautifully restored OSCA FS 372 with
Roger Earl. The result was a remarkable achievement since a
gearbox problem in qualifying saw the pair relegated to a
disappointing 57th on the grid. But, thanks to the team’s
hard work, the gearbox was repaired in time for the race and
the little OSCA climbed 23 places to carry off a
well-deserved trophy.
Said Duncan Wiltshire of Motor Racing
Legends, “This is the ninth historic support race we’ve held
at the Le Mans 24 Hours, and it was surely one of the best.
Despite the enormous speed differential between the fastest
and slowest cars, not to mention an occasional oil spill
from overstretched engines, there were no serious incidents
during the race. Just plenty of dramatic, high-speed racing
and the competitors’ all-out determination to win.”
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