1957 World Sportscar Championship

1957 World Sportscar Championship season
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The 1957 World Sportscar Championship season was the fifth season of the FIA World Sportscar Championship. It was a series for sportscars that ran in many worldwide endurance events. It ran from 20 January 1956 to 3 November 1957, and comprised seven races.

Following the shortest season in World Sportscar Championship history, the 1957 season saw the return of the 24 Hours of Le Mans following track modifications as a direct result of the 1955 Le Mans disaster. In addition, there was a new race on the calendar, a trip to northern coast of South America for the Venezuelan Grand Prix.

Season

Ferrari won the championship with its 290MM (pictured), 315S and 335S models

The 1957 World Sports Car Championship was contested over seven races. Following the shortest season in World Sportscar Championship history, the 1957 season saw the return of the 24 Hours of Le Mans following track modifications as a direct result of the 1955 Le Mans disaster. In addition, there was a new race on the calendar, a trip to northern coast of South America for the Venezuelan Grand Prix.[1]

The Championship was remained for manufactures, and works teams such as Scuderia Ferrari, Officine Alfieri Maserati, and Aston Martin leading the way, but as the previous seasons, the majority of the fields were made up of amateur or gentlemen drivers, often up against professional racing drivers with experience in Formula One. Sometimes, even the Drivers World Champion joined in.

Maserati had the commitment and the money to success in 1957, and it armed itself with the World’s finest driver, Juan Manuel Fangio, and the potent Maserati 450S. To add to their unfair advantage, they employed a young Englishman, Stirling Moss. Despite leaving their Formula One team, he remained with the Modena team for the World Sportscar Championship.[2]

The season opened in Argentina, where Fangio and Moss led imperiously in the 1000 km Buenos Aires, until they retired with transmission failure. As for Ferrari, it was left to the privateer entry of Temple Buell to take the victory, and give Maranello the initial points lead in the championship. Next up was the Sebring 12 Hours. There Maserati dominated with Fangio and Jean Behra leading throughout, with Moss and Harry Schell backing them up. As for Ferrari, they sent the first two 315 S to Florida, but both were slowed with brake and tyre problems.[2][3][4][5]

Maserati placed second with its 450S (pictured) and 300S models

For the Mille Miglia, Maserati’s challenge was over before it had really begun, with Behra smashing his car prior to the event in a road accident, and Moss retiring with brake failure just 12 km from the start. With Maserati out of contention, Ferrari had no more real opposition and Piero Taruffi won the last Mille Miglia, ahead of Wolfgang von Trips, both in 315 S. The initial pace was set by Peter Collins in a Ferrari 335 S. He imposed a remarkable pace on the marathon and on course to smash the course record, when a broken transmission put an end to his race. The second 335 S, driven by Alfonso de Portago and Edmont Nelson, was always up among the leaders, but about 10 km from the finish, a tyre blowout caused the car to charge off the road and into a group of spectators, killing nine onlookers and the crew.[2][5]

The race at the Nürburgring showed that the British were a force to be reckoned with. The race victory did not go to either of the major Italian marques, as they were beaten by the Aston Martin DBR1/300 of Tony Brooks and Noël Cunningham-Reid, gaining the manufacturer their first points of the season. The British success continued in the next round at Le Mans, when Grand Prix of Endurance returned to the championship. Never before in the history of the French event, did a single nation sweep the broad so completely as Britain did in 1957. The brilliant success of the Jaguars in taking first four and sixth places became all the more significant when it is considered that every one of these cars was privately entered, and matched against the works teams of most of the greatest sport car manufacturers, with victory going to the Scottish entrant, Ecurie Ecosse.[6][7]

Normal service resumed in Sweden, when Ferrari and Maserati returned to the front of the field. As the Swedish race regulations allowed limitless driver changes, Maserati planned to use only its three best drivers – Schell/Moss/Behra, with the later pair winning the race, while the former pair retired whilst in second place when it transmission seized.[2]

The outcome of the championship depended on the result of the finale, the Venezuelan Grand Prix in Caracas. The works Maseratis were supported by the American entrant Temple Buell. The race became an infamous disaster for Maserati, when on lap two Masten Gregory flipped Buell’s 450S. Moss led until he collided with a slow back marker who strolled across his racing line, demolishing his 450S. Its sister 450S ignited during a pit stop, injuring Behra, but Moss and Schell continued to race the car, until Schell was hit by team-mate Joakim Bonnier and his 300S, following a loss of a wheel. So four front-line Maseratis started the deciding Championship race, and all four had crashed - leaving the world title to Ferrari. For the record, Ferrari still took a 1-2 finish.[2][8]

Just this one catastrophic race for Maserati, when four of their big, expensive cars were destroyed, had been enough to push their finances over the edge and the company into virtual oblivion, at least as a racing team. At the very moment when Fangio was giving Officine Alfieri Maserati its first world championship in Formula One, the firm was going into survival mode. It was fared never to recover its position in the world of racing, and would spend decades trying to establish itself as a manufacturer of road cars.[9]

Season results

Results

Date Round Event Circuit or Location Winning driver Winning team Winning car Results
20/01 Rd. 1 Argentina 1000km of Buenos Aires Circuito de la Costanera Norte United States Masten Gregory
Italy Eugenio Castellotti
Italy Luigi Musso
United States Scuderia Temple Buell Italy Ferrari 290 MM Spider Scaglietti Results
23/03 Rd. 2 United States 12-Hour Florida International Grand Prix of Endurance for The Amoco Trophy Sebring International Raceway Argentina Juan Manuel Fangio
France Jean Behra
Italy Maserati Factory Italy Maserati 450S Results
12/05 Rd. 3 Italy Mille Miglia Brescia-Rome Italy Piero Taruffi Italy Scuderia Ferrari Italy Ferrari 315 S Results
26/05 Rd.4 West Germany Internationales ADAC 1000 Kilometre Rennen auf dem Nürburgring Nürburgring United Kingdom Tony Brooks
United Kingdom Noël Cunningham-Reid
United Kingdom David Brown United Kingdom Aston Martin DBR1/300 Results
22-23/06 Rd.5 France Les 24 Heures du Mans Circuit de la Sarthe United Kingdom Ron Flockhart
United Kingdom Ivor Bueb
United Kingdom Ecurie Ecosse United Kingdom Jaguar D-Type Results
11/8 Rd.6 Sweden Sveriges Grand Prix Rabelövsbanan France Jean Behra
United Kingdom Stirling Moss
Italy Officine Alfieri Maserati Italy Maserati 450S Results
3/11 Rd.7 Venezuela Gran Premio de Venezuela Caracas United Kingdom Peter Collins
United States Phil Hill
Italy Scuderia Ferrari Italy Ferrari 335 S Results

Championship

Jaguar placed third with the D-Type
Aston Martin placed fourth with the DBR1
Porsche placed fifth with its 550 RS (pictured) and 718 RSK models
O.S.C.A. placed sixth with the MT4

Note:

Pos. Manufacturer Rd 1 Rd 2 Rd 3 Rd 4 Rd 5 Rd 6 Rd 7 Total
1 Italy Ferrari 8 (3) 8 6 (2) (6) 8 30 (41)
2 Italy Maserati 6 8 3 (2) 8 (1) 25 (28)
3 United Kingdom Jaguar 3 4 8 2 17
4 United Kingdom Aston Martin 8 8
5 West Germany Porsche 2 3 2 7
6 Italy O.S.C.A. 1 1

The cars

The following models contributed to the net championship point scores of their respective manufacturers.

References

External links

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