The 1967 24 Hours of Daytona was an endurance sports car race that took place on 4 and 5 February 1967 at the 3.8-mile (6.1 km) Daytona International Speedway road course in Daytona Beach, Florida. It was the sixth running of the Daytona Continental endurance race, and the second time the event was held as a 24-hour race. It was also the opening round of the 1967 World Sportscar Championship.
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Chris Amon and Lorenzo Bandini won the race for Ferrari with its new 330 P4 model, leading a 1–2–3 finish for the marque.
Race
editIn the 1960s, Ford and Ferrari were involved in an endurance racing rivalry, which arose after the Italian manufacturer refused to be bought by the Americans. Thus, Ford decided to enter endurance racing in 1964, which eventually paid off in 1966 with victories at the 24 Hours of Daytona, the 12 Hours of Sebring and the 24 Hours of Le Mans, as well as the overall victory in the World Sportscar Championship. For the 24 Hours of Daytona in 1967, Ford entered as many cars as possible to maximize its chances of another victory. There were six factory cars at the start, three each from Shelby American and Holman & Moody, supplemented by a number of private entries. The factory teams used Mk.II Ford GT40s, while the private teams participated with Mk.I models. However, Ferrari had not stood still in the winter of 1966 either. Technical director Mauro Forghieri was given complete freedom by team boss Enzo Ferrari to design new cars and engines. As a result, the team introduced the new Ferrari 330 P4, of which two examples were entered into the race: an open-top "Spyder" numbered 23 and a closed-top "Berlinetta" numbered 24. The former was an ex-P3 chassis converted to P4 specifications (sometimes referred to as a P3/4), while the latter was a brand new P4. In addition to the two works entries, privateer teams entered two 412 P models, which was a less sophisticated version of the P4 intended for customers. Despite the high costs, Ferrari traveled to Daytona for a test session in December 1966.
In qualifying, the Ford of Dan Gurney and A. J. Foyt took pole position, just two tenths ahead of the Chaparral 2F of Phil Hill and Mike Spence. Ferrari's first factory car, the No. 23 of Chris Amon and Lorenzo Bandini, started fourth, behind the private entry of Pedro Rodríguez and Jean Guichet. Immediately after the start, Hill took the lead, and after half an hour he had a twenty second lead over Gurney. Ford and Ferrari, meanwhile, focused on their own lap times and decided not to push hard for the lead unless the it increased to more than five laps.
After three hours the Chaparral spun and had to retire, allowing the No. 24 Ferrari of Mike Parkes and Ludovico Scarfiotti to take the lead. The other Chaparral of Bob Johnson and Bruce Jennings also had to abandon the race. Ford's cars suffered from many mechanical problems, such as defective seals and transaxles, and had to be brought in one by one for long pit stops or retirements. Ford's mechanics made more and more repairs, but eventually almost all of the manufacturer's cars had to retire. Gurney and Foyt had to have a transmission replaced and were still fifth, but six hours before the finish they also had to give up. The only Ford factory car that could still threaten Ferrari, the No. 1 of Bruce McLaren and Lucien Bianchi, had to significantly reduce its speed due to overheating. This entry eventually finished the race in seventh place, 73 laps behind the winner.
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Ferraris cross the finish line three abreast |
With half an hour remaining until the finish, three Ferraris occupied the first three positions. They reduced their speed so that they could cross the finish line side by side. This was in response to Ford's photo finish at the 1966 24 Hours of Le Mans. Unlike in that race, where the two leading cars had completed the same distance and it was not initially clear who had won, the leading No. 23 Ferrari was three laps ahead of the second-placed No. 24 entry, while the NART-entered 412 P finished a further 26 laps behind in third. The photo taken of this finish was kept in Enzo Ferrari's office for a long time. The first Ford, the private J. W. Automotive entry of Dick Thompson and Jacky Ickx, finished sixth, behind two Porsches. The race is referred to as "Enzo's revenge" by various media outlets. Ferrari led for more than twenty hours during the entire race.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]
Official results
editFinishers
editPos | Class | No | Team | Drivers | Chassis | Laps |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | P + 2.0 | 23 | Ferrari s.p.a. | Lorenzo Bandini Chris Amon |
Ferrari 330 P4 | 666 |
2 | P + 2.0 | 24 | Ferrari s.p.a. | Mike Parkes Ludovico Scarfiotti |
Ferrari 330 P4 | 663 |
3 | P + 2.0 | 26 | North American Racing Team | Pedro Rodríguez Jean Guichet |
Ferrari 412P | 637 |
4 | P 2.0 | 52 | Porsche of Stuttgart | Hans Herrmann Joseph Siffert |
Porsche 910 | 618 |
5 | P 2.0 | 55 | Squadra Tartaruga Switzerland | Dieter Spoerry Rico Steinemann |
Porsche 906LH | 608 |
6 | S + 2.0 | 11 | J. W. Automotive | Dick Thompson Jacky Ickx |
Ford GT40 | 601 |
7 | P + 2.0 | 1 | Shelby American | Bruce McLaren Lucien Bianchi |
Ford GT40 | 593 |
8 | S + 2.0 | 20 | William Wonder Inc. | William Wonder Raymond Caldwell |
Ford GT40 | 573 |
9 | GT 2.0 | 54 | RBM Motors | Jack Ryan Bill Bencker |
Porsche 911S | 555 |
10 | T 2.0 | 61 | George Drolsom | George Drolsom Harold Williamson |
Porsche 911S | 542 |
11 | T + 2.0 | 72 | Ring Free Oil Racing Team | Paul Richards Ray Cuomo John Norwood |
Ford Mustang | 526 |
12 | T + 2.0 | 19 | Howmet Corp. | Ray Heppenstall Bill Seeley |
Ford Falcon | 518 |
13 | GT 2.0 | 73 | Peter Marinelli | John Tremblay Larry B. Perkins |
Volvo P1800 | 500 |
14 | GT + 2.0 | 43 | Cannons Auto Service | Dana Kelder Ara Dube |
Triumph TR4A | 499 |
15 | T + 2.0 | 21 | Brock Yates | Brock Yates Charles Krueger |
Dodge Dart | 498 |
16 | T + 2.0 | 66 | Tom Yeager | Tom Yeager Walt Hane Peter Feistman |
Ford Mustang | 498 |
17 | GT 2.0 | 86 | Kenneth G. Chambliss | Bill Eve Ernie Croucher Pete Glenn |
MGB | 493 |
18 | GT + 2.0 | 42 | Cannons Auto Service | Steven Sommer Guido Levetto |
Triumph TR4A | 491 |
19 | T 2.0 | 75 | Ike Maxwell | Ike Maxwell William Martin |
Volvo 122S | 485 |
20 | T + 2.0 | 71 | Ring Free Oil Racing Team | Anita Taylor Smokey Drolet Janet Guthrie |
Ford Mustang | 484 |
21 | S + 2.0 | 32 | Peter Clarke | Peter Clarke Edward Nelson |
Ferrari 250LM | 484 |
22 | T 2.0 | 89 | Ross Bremer | Ross Bremer Don Kearney Billy Turner |
Ford Cortina Lotus | 477 |
NC | T 2.0 | 77 | Precision Auto Inc. | John Bentley Brian Beddow |
Alfa Romeo GTA | 465 |
NC | P 2.0 | 96 | Jim Baker | Donna Mae Mims Suzy Dietrich |
ASA 411 | 459 |
NC | P 2.0 | 84 | Jim Baker | Dick Ganger Al Weaver Ken Goodman |
MGB GT | 406 |
NC | T 2.0 | 74 | Arthur Mollin Racing Ent. | Arthur Mollin Art Riley |
Volvo 122S | 400 |
NC | T 2.0 | 90 | Del Russo Taylor | Del Russo Taylor Bob Pratt Charles Lyon |
Alfa Romeo GTA | 360 |
NC | GT + 2.0 | 46 | Richard Robson | Richard Robson Rajah Rodgers Bill Buchman |
Jaguar XKE | 320 |
NC | GT + 2.0 | 48 | Atlas Van Lines | Tim Burr Buell Owen Clint Cavin |
Triumph TR4 | 264 |
Did not finish
editClass | No | Team | Drivers | Chassis | Laps |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
P + 2.0 | 3 | Shelby American | A. J. Foyt Dan Gurney |
Mercury GT40[13] | 464 |
T + 2.0 | 36 | Roger Penske | George Wintersteen Joe Welch Bob Brown |
Chevrolet Camaro | 456 |
P + 2.0 | 33 | Ecurie Francorchamps | Willy Mairesse Jean Blaton |
Ferrari 412P | 401 |
GT + 2.0 | 18 | Roger West | Roger West Bobby Allison |
Shelby GT350 | 343 |
P 2.0 | 34 | Harrah Modern Classic Motors | Charlie Kolb John Fulp |
Ferrari Dino 206S | 341 |
P + 2.0 | 28 | North American Racing Team | Jo Schlesser Masten Gregory Peter Gregg |
Ferrari 365P2 | 338 |
P + 2.0 | 14 | Chaparral Cars Inc. | Bob Johnson Bruce Jennings |
Chaparral 2D | 334 |
GT + 2.0 | 67 | Dos Caballos Racing Inc. | Fred van Beuren Paul Jett Don Pike |
Shelby GT350 | 313 |
T + 2.0 | 76 | John McComb | John McComb Dave Dooley |
Ford Mustang | 312 |
P + 2.0 | 31 | David Piper | David Piper Richard Attwood |
Ferrari 365P2/3 | 311 |
P + 2.0 | 6 | Holman & Moody | Lloyd Ruby Denis Hulme |
Ford GT40 | 299 |
P + 2.0 | 5 | Holman & Moody | Mario Andretti Richie Ginther |
Ford GT40 | 298 |
P + 2.0 | 2 | Shelby American | Ronnie Bucknum Frank Gardner |
Ford GT40 | 274 |
T + 2.0 | 40 | Craig Fisher | Craig Fisher George Eaton |
Chevrolet Camaro | 258 |
P + 2.0 | 4 | Holman & Moody | Mark Donohue Peter Revson |
Mercury GT40 | 236 |
P 2.0 | 51 | Porsche of Stuttgart | Gerhard Mitter Jochen Rindt |
Porsche 906E | 194 |
T + 2.0 | 16 | Joie Chitwood | Joie Chitwood junior Jack McClure |
Chevrolet Camaro | 186 |
GT + 2.0 | 45 | Joe Hines | C. C. Canada Joe Hines T. J. Kelly |
Triumph TR4 | 186 |
P 2.0 | 53 | Porsche of Stuttgart | Udo Schütz Rolf Stommelen Gijs van Lennep |
Porsche 906 | 170 |
S 2.0 | 56 | Charles Vögele | Charles Vögele Walter Habegger |
Porsche 906LH | 146 |
GT + 2.0 | 29 | Pedro Rodríguez | Carlos Salas Guterrez Hector Rebaque senior |
Ferrari 275 GTB/C | 136 |
P 2.0 | 47 | Fred Opert Racing | Peter Gethin Fred Opert Roy Pike |
Chevron B4 | 106 |
S + 2.0 | 9 | Brescia Racing Corse | Umberto Maglioli Mario Casoni |
Ford GT40 | 93 |
P + 2.0 | 15 | Chaparral Cars | Phil Hill Mike Spence |
Chaparral 2F | 93 |
P + 2.0 | 8 | Jim White Chevrolet Inc. | Tony Denman Bob Brown |
Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport | 72 |
T 2.0 | 82 | Harry Theodoracopulos | Harry Theodoracopulos Sam Posey Jim Haynes |
Alfa Romeo GTA | 69 |
S + 2.0 | 7 | Herb Byrne | Herb Byrne Dick Thetford Russell Beazell |
Shelby Cobra | 56 |
GT + 2.0 | 44 | Ray Stoutenburg | Ray Stoutenburg James Taylor Roger McCluskey |
Triumph TR4A | 22 |
T 2.0 | 87 | Chet Freeman | Chet Freeman Al Weaver John Marshall |
Ford Cortina Lotus | 18 |
GT 2.0 | 63 | Dockery Ford Inc. | Bob Grossman Martin Krinner |
Shelby GT350 | 1 |
Did not start
editClass | No | Team | Drivers | Chassis |
---|---|---|---|---|
T + 2.0 | 22 | JoKar Racing Associates | Frank Karmatz Raymond Caldwell |
Plymouth Barracuda |
S 2.0 | 58 | Rod Savyer | Tony Dean Trevor Taylor |
Porsche 906 |
T 2.0 | 85 | Jim Baker | Ken Goodman Jim Baker |
Alfa Romeo GTA |
References
edit- ^ "1967 Daytona: The Story Behind This Iconic Ferrari Picture". ROSSOautomobili. 2024-01-23. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ^ "Enzo's Revenge: The 1967 24 Hours of Daytona". apex.custodian.club. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ^ "LEGENDARY FINISH: Ferrari History". www.ferrari.com. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ^ "1-2-3 at Daytona". www.ferrari.com. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ^ "Sweet revenge of Ferrari's 1967 Daytona 24 Hours win". Motor Sport Magazine. 2022-08-24. Retrieved 2024-02-05.
- ^ Selby, Ben (2022-02-08). "Enzo's Vengeance: Ferrari and the 1967 Daytona 24 Hours". Waimak Classic Cars. Retrieved 2024-02-06.
- ^ Galanos, Louis (2012-01-20). "1967 24 Hours of Daytona - Race Profile, History, Photos". Sports Car Digest. Retrieved 2024-02-06.
- ^ "1967 Daytona 24 Hours | Motorsport Database". Motorsport Database - Motor Sport Magazine. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ^ "Daytona 24 Hours 1967 - Photo Gallery - Racing Sports Cars". www.racingsportscars.com. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ^ "Daytona 24 Hours 1967 - Race Results - Racing Sports Cars". www.racingsportscars.com. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ^ "Results of the 1967 24 Hour Daytona Continental, February 4-5, 1967" (PDF).
- ^ "Entries for 1967 Daytona 24-Hour Continental".
- ^ Peek, Jeff. "Costume change: Ford's little-known Mercury GT40s". Hagerty Media. Hagerty. Retrieved 24 June 2024.
External links
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