Race Report: Monaco, 10 May 1975

monaco_10_5_75

Race Report: Monaco, 10 May 1975

monaco_10_5_75

The annual support race for the Monaco GP was also a round of the BP championship which assured a healthy entry of UK based team in addition to a large contingent of Scandinavian and Continental runners. A total entry of 66 cars would have to battle for the 36 places in the two heats, the first nine from each heat would then qualify for a place in the final, qualifying took place on late Thursday and first thing Friday morning with all the races on Saturday.

Fastest of all the runners was Larry Perkins in the works Ralt who apart from a few minor adjustments was very happy with the car which would duly take up pole position in Heat 1. Second quickest and thus pole sitter for Heat 2 was Tony Brise who was running his F Atlantic Modus converted back to F3 specification, other than a few minor problems Brise had a smooth time during qualifying. Conny Andersson and Gunnar Nilsson were second and third on the grid for Heat 1 in their March 753s again neither man had any major problems other than traffic to report.
Second on the grid for Heat 2 was the surprise package of Italian Renzo Zorzi in his GRD 374 unusually powered by a Repetto-tuned Lancia Beta engine, many people, a little uncharitably, felt the timekeepers had made an error with his fastest time. Alex Ribeiro took third fastest in Heat 2 with the second of the works Marches.
Of the other runners Heat 1 man Mike Tyrrell had a big shunt when a clevis broke on his 733 putting him in the Armco, the non-qualifying Ken Silverstone kindly allowed his March 743 to be cannibalized to provide the parts to allow Tyrrell to race. Also in Heat 1 experienced Freddy Kottulinsky would normally expect to be at the front but problems with his new BMW engine saw him qualify well down the field.
In Heat 2 Danny Sullivan had to have his Modus rebuilt using parts from non-qualifier Reudi Gygax’s car after the American hit a tree (!) after encountering someone else’s oil. Rupert Keegan had a couple of spins without any damage to his March whilst South lost most of the second session when a burnt out coil/distributor stopped his Ray starting. Derek Cook was pleased to make the race, he was having his first F3 race in the ex-Ribeiro GRD 374 hired from Brian Henton.
Of the non-qualifiers, in addition to the aforementioned Ken Silverstone who wasn’t used to his “new” March 743 the other UK based runners out of luck were Robert Joubert in his Lola T350 who had an engine bend a valve two laps into the second session after having problems in the first period. Terry Perkins was still sorting out the second Ralt RT1 while Graham Hamilton just couldn’t get the Ecurie Ecosse March 753 within 2 seconds of making the cut.

Bob Arnott was late arriving for Heat 1 after there were problems starting his car, the organisers said Alessendro Pesenti-Rossi could take his place as first reserve, when Arnott arrived he wasn’t allowed to take his rightful grid position and Pesenti-Rossi took the start. Some behind the scenes arguing saw Arnott allowed to race in Heat 2 (after Giorgio Francia broke a driveshaft as he motored from the paddock to the track) although it would be from the back of the grid.
Larry Perkins took an immediate lead chased by Conny Andersson and Gunnar Nilsson but the unfortunate Nilsson was out almost immediately with a broken gear lever. At the end of the first lap it was Perkins and Andersson out in front with a gap back to Patrick Neve, Pierre Dieudonné and Marcello Rosei. Perkins and Andersson gradually pulled away from Neve and for a while Perkins opened out a gap to Andersson but in the closing stages the Swede closed the gap again and the two cars crossed the finishing line a third of a second apart. Neve stayed in third for the whole race initially chased by Dieudonné until the Belgian lost time with a pitstop to secure a loose coil. Rosei moved up to fourth chased hard by the Marches of Gaudenzio Mantova, Hervé Regout and Ingo Hoffman until Hoffman spun on lap 6 and then the Lancia in Rosei’s March began to fail blowing out a lot of smoke so Mantova and Regout finished fourth and fifth. Mike Tyrrell and Freddy Kottulinsky looked like qualifying but as they entered Mirabeau Kottulinsky tapped a backmarker, the German’s Modus then hit Tyrrell pushing the Antiguan off the track and out of the race. Kottulinsky lost several places and damaged his nosecone but he still managed to make the final.

Tony Brise made a slow getaway from pole in Heat 2 and it was the unfancied Zorzi that took the lead, Ribeiro moved into second ahead of Ulf Svensson’s Brabham and Brise next with the engine on his Modus misfiring. At the end of the lap Brise pitted to have a plug lead refitted, he resumed well down the field, some 34 seconds behind the ninth place he needed to qualify for the final. Zorzi, showing his practice time had not been a timekeeping error, lead the race from start to finish with Ribeiro gradually falling away in second. Svensson was still in third and during the closing laps he moved onto Ribeiro’s tail loosing out on the runner-up spot by less than half a second at the flag. Fourth was Jac Nelleman who fought of the attentions of Danny Sullivan with Rupert Keegan finishing a few seconds behind in sixth.
As for Brise he flew after his pit stop catching those ahead of him at the rate of several seconds a lap. So fast was his pace that when he caught Richard Hawkins in ninth, the final qualifying place, Hawkins assumed he was being lapped and moved over to let Brise through! Of the other UK runners neither Cook nor Parsons qualified and Arnott’s back of the grid start saw him move up to twelfth.

Larry Perkins seemed to make a good start from his pole position in the final but Conny Andersson appeared to make an even better one rocketing past Zorzi and passing Perkins at the Casino. In fact the stewards deemed Andersson’s start a little too good and he was docked a minute for anticipating the starter. At the end of the first lap the penalised Andersson led from Perkins, Ribeiro, Zorzi, Neve and Svensson with a gap back to Mantova and the rest of the field, at the back a determined Tony Brise was carving his way through the slower runners in an effort to get at the leaders. Lap 3 saw Andersson gradually pulling away from Perkins who in turn was dropping Ribeiro and Zorzi.
Brise had made great progress and was already in tenth by lap 4, 25 seconds behind Andersson at the front. Danny Sullivan was out, he had a moment on the first lap and then when Rupert Keegan dived up his inside on lap 4 at St Devote the American was taken by surprise and lost the Modus hitting the Armco hard.
By lap 8 Andersson had increased his lead to two seconds over Perkins, there was a gap back to Ribeiro who was still battling with Zorzi with Neve just behind in fifth, next up it was Svensson and Brise who seemed unable to make any impression on the gap to Andersson. On lap 11 the stewards announced Andersson’s penalty and Perkins’ pit crew passed on the information to Larry, perhaps he relaxed a little for as he entered the swimming pool his foot slipped from the brake to the accelerator and the Ralt spun slowly into the Armco damaging the rear wing.
Andersson now had a 20 second lead over Ribeiro and Zorzi whilst Brise was closing in on Neve and Svensson. On lap 17 Brise passed Svensson and a lap later he was ahead of Neve at the Gasworks. Still racing hard Brise then took care of Zorzi which just left Ribeiro who was effectively leading after Andersson’s penalty.
Entering the Mirabeau Brise pulled out from behind Ribeiro as both cars overtook a lapped backmarker Ribeiro seemed to keep to the racing line whilst Brise kept his line as he braked down the inside, there wasn’t the space for two cars and Brise hit Ribeiro who spun round, Brise’s Modus mounted the March and both cars were out on the spot.

Zorzi was now in the lead but Neve was trying hard but although he closed in on the March he was unable to find a way past, so at the flag it was surprise package Zorzi in his March-Lancia that took the win with Neve less than a second behind. Svensson took third with Andersson dropping to fourth after his penalty was applied, fifth went to Gianfranco Brancatelli who just held off Mantova in sixth.
South had been ahead of Brancatelli but he went straight on at the hairpin and then rejoined the track without the marshalls permission, he was shown a black and yellow “reprimand” flag, thinking this was the same as a black flag South pitted and lost what might have been fourth. Rupert Keegan should have been sixth but he lost third gear and dropped back to finish ninth.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Monaco, 10 May 1975

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

Race Report: Monaco, 26 May 1974

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Race Report: Monaco, 26 May 1974

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A seventy strong entry was reduced via qualifying to two heats of twenty four cars each, the fastest ten from each heat would then go forward into the final. There was a late appearance by Tom Pryce after his entry in the Grand Prix driving the Token was refused and he certainly proved his point with a totally dominant performance over the F3 regulars.

Tom Pryce was uncatchable in Heat 1, he was over a second and a half quicker than the next man in qualifying and he went straight into the lead. The Ippokampos March then pulled away from the rest of the field, easing off in the closing stages to help an overheating engine, and winning by some fifteen seconds. Behind Pryce there was a brief two car battle between the Marches of Giorgio Francia and Sandro Cinotti until Francia spun on the second lap. Tony Brise moved up the third place from his fifth row start and put Cinotti under intense pressure finally getting past on lap 10, Cinotti didn’t give up and the two cars finished a couple of lengths apart after the 15 laps. Retirements included Derek Lawrence’s Ehrlich and the Modus of Rudi Gigax who were out following a start line fracas, Larry Perkins lost half a lap in his March 743 in the incident but drove really well to move up to seventh and qualify for the final.

Brian Henton took the lead from pole position in Heat 2 in the works March 743 with Renzo Zorzi slotting into second in his GRD 374, next up came Alberto Colombo (GRD 374), Ulf Svensson (Brabham BT41), Luciano Brunelli (March 743) and Gaudenzio Mantova (Brabham BT41). Half way up the hill after the start there was a big accident, Tony Rouff’s GRD made contact with an Italian car blocking the track, Barrie Maskell stopped his Dastle on the pavement with nowhere else to go and was promptly hit by a couple more runners. A couple more cars joined in the fun on lap 2 including Brunelli whilst Svensson dropped to the rear of the field following a spin.
Back at the front it was still Henton leading from Zorzi, Colombo, and Mantova, Colombo demoting Zorzi to third on lap 3. Colombo then pulled away from Zorzi but could do nothing about Henton finishing some seven seconds down at the flag. Zorzi and Mantova spent the rest of the race battling over third, it became very physical on occasions with Mantova’s nosecone bearing the scars after the race.

The first two rows for the final consisted of Tom Pryce, Brian Henton, Tony Brise and Alberto Colombo. Henton made the best start to lead Colombo and Pryce but on lap 2 Superhen spun and dropped to third. Pryce now led from Colombo having passed the Italian without difficulty next up came Henton, Brise, Francia, Cinotti and Zorzi. Pryce soon left the others behind as he pulled away from the group battling over second place by a second a lap while Henton fell to the back of the field with a second spin on lap 5. Brise was trying hard to keep in touch with Colombo whilst Cinotti and Francia were just far enough behind to give him some breathing space. Unfortunately the race now fell into a rather boring procession with no one apparently able to get past anyone else.
Colombo had an unlucky lap 13, as he approached Ste Devote he lost control of the GRD and had an enormous accident from which he was lucky to emerge unscathed. Brise was now holding second following Colombo’s demise, third was Cinotti from Francia, Zorzi and Alex Ribeiro who was hampered by understeer caused by a damaged nosecone. There were no further changes to the front of the field and Tom Pryce came home an easy winner despite clipping the chicane with his rear wheel a few laps from the finish when he lost concentration. Brian Henton had clawed his way back to tenth place but yet another spin at the swimming pool saw his March hit the barriers backwards spelling immediate retirement.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Monaco, 26 May 1974

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

Race Report: Monaco, 3 June 1973

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Race Report: Monaco, 3 June 1973

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68 cars arrived at Monaco from an original entry of 82, from these the fastest 48 would qualify for the two heats that would decide the 20 runners that would make up the final. The cars were split into two groups each of whom would have two 40 minute sessions to set a qualifying time.

At the end of all the sessions it was Michel Leclere that set the best time, the works Alpine’s featuring a new 1 inch widened track front and rear. Both Leclere and Serpaggi were delighted with the feel of their newly modified cars. Second fastest was Jacques Lafitte in his works Martin MK12, although over a second slower than Leclere Lafitte was happy as he set his time in the slower second sessions that were affected by dropped oil. Making it an all French trio at the front was the Shell France Martini of Bernard Beguin. Fourth fastest time was given to Italian runner Claudio Fransisci although even his own team hadn’t got him within two seconds of the official timekeepers. Masami Kuwashima was looking very quick and set fifth fastest time despite several spins although his second session was abruptly halted when the March hit the harbour wall very hard, the car was repairable for the heat but it would still have a kinked tub. Also showing well was the Cowangie Kid, Larry Perkins, in his ex-Alan Jones GRD 372, he had tested at Magny Cours and a repositioned rear wing and some De Carbon dampers were making the car fly.

Of the other runners Tony Brise was not happy with the handling of his GRD and Alan Jones lost a lot of time with a broken wheel rim when he was forced off-line by a slow Tecno. Jean Max had a large accident at Portier which removed one side of his car rendering him a non-starter and Hakan Dahlqvist was disqualified for ignoring a black flag when his Merlyn was dropping oil. Ian Taylor was hampered by a broken differential that lost him time in his second session and one-off F3 returnee Bob Evans was not happy with the handling of his STP-March 723. Jacques Coulon was also returning to F3 from F2 and was having a run in the spare DART GRD, he took a corner off the car in qualifying and seemed to be uninterested in the whole proceedings.
Of the non-qualifiers Mo Harness was disappointed not to be allowed to take Max’s place, the organisers not believing in reserves, Harness had an off at Piscine which interrupted his qualifying. Danny Sullivan, whose Ehrlich was running on Dellorto carburettors, was never going to make it after loosing third gear and Val Musetti had a shunt on Thursday, an all nighter to rebuild the Royale proving fruitless when a ball joint failed on the second lap of Friday’s practice.

After all the practice sessions the qualifying times were put into chronological order and first, third, fifth etc. went into one heat with second, fourth, sixth etc. into the second. The final would be made up from the first ten in each heat.

Bernard Beguin was in trouble before the flag fell with the engine in his Martini sounding very rough during his warm up lap. It was Michele Leclere who made the best start to lead from Masami Kuwashima, Christian Ethuin, Jean-Pierre Paoli who had made a great getaway from the fourth row, then a gap back to Bruno Pescia, Alain Serpaggi, Tony Brise, the ailing Beguin, Leonel Friedrich, Carlo Giorgio, Ian Taylor and Damien Magee. However Paoli only made it as far as St Devote on lap 2 where he hit the Armco removing three wheels from his Martini, this accident giving Leclere a good lead over Kuwashima who was fighting off the attentions of Ethuin. Brise had moved up to fourth on lap 3 and Pescia who had been well placed spun his March down to the back of the field on lap 5. Pescia’s problems held up several of the drivers allowing Brise to pull away from his pursuers led by Serpaggi from Giorgio, Friedrich, Taylor, Magee and Wilds.
Lap 6 saw Ethuin pass Kuwashima at the chicane but almost immediately there were problems at Tabac. Down at the lower end of the field there had been an intense battle between Salminen, Sassi, Svensson and Lewis, suddenly there were cars flying off the track in all directions almost blocking the track. Lewis was the only one of the group to be able to continue, his Brabham now less its nosecone, in the confusion a Tabac marshall began waving a red flag and many drivers expected the race to be stopped. Both Leclere and Ethuin picked their way through the wreckage but Kuwashima slowed down on seeing the red flag and lost quite a lot of time, the rest of the field also made their way past the carnage and the man with the red flag gave up and put it away. Next to leave the fray was Ian Taylor was out on lap 7, his March clipped the kerb at Station Hairpin, flew across the track and hit the opposite kerb doing substantial damage in the process.
Tony Brise had managed to pull up onto the tail of Kuwashima in the confusion but he clipped the kerb at Casino bending a top link and then on the ninth lap he did more damage to the GRD at the chicane causing him to retire a lap later with one of his wheels pointing at a very odd angle. Meanwhile back at the front Ethuin began to close the gap to Leclere but the Alpine had enough in hand to win by some 4 seconds despite a big sideways moment at Casino on the last lap. Kuwashima also came under heavy pressure from Serpaggi in the last 5 laps but at the line he took third by a tenth of a second. Giorgio managed to keep Friedrich at bay for fifth despite the Brazilians best efforts over the second half of the race with Magee taking seventh despite a broken gear lever.

Heat 2 was all Jacques Lafitte, he took an immediate lead at the start whilst the rest of the field found themselves boxed in behind Giorgio Francia. Conny Andersson’s March took third at the start ahead of Larry Perkins, Gunnar Nordström, Alan Jones, Alberto Colombo and Russell Wood. As Lafitte increased his lead Andersson and Perkins were involved in a tense battle that caused Perkins to give the chicane a heavy clout that launched his GRD in the air which cost him some time but no places. Also battling hard were Nordström and Jones until they made contact at Piscine on lap 2, Jones struck the Armco and retired immediately. Andersson and Perkins finally found a way past Francia on lap 6 but for Perkins it was to no avail as on the following lap he hit the chicane and bent a top link and had to retire after falling down the field with his wheel now misaligned.
This left Lafitte with a comfortable lead over Andersson who in turn was well ahead of Francia who had Nordström close behind although with an eye to the final the GRD did not attempt to pass the Brabham. Gaudenzio Mantova’s Lotus 69 was next and pulling away from a battle between Russell Wood and Jurg Dubler, the Lotus pulling up to within a second of Nordström at the finish. Dubler got ahead of Wood on lap 9, the engine of the Chequered Flag March not running cleanly due to fuel pressure problems. Alberto Colombo’s Brabham BT41 had been in seventh but the Italian dropped out on lap 10 with a damaged front wheel. Lucien Guitteny’s Alpine passed Johnny Gerber’s Brabham for eighth on lap 8 and the Mexican was further demoted by Lella Lombardi at the chicane on lap 13. The Brabham BT41 of the Italian lady made contact with Gerber’s works version bending a front wing and delaying Gerber by quite a large amount.
Gerber now found himself dicing for tenth (and the final qualifying spot) with Jac Nelleman and Alessandro Pessenti-Rossi and on the last lap in an amazing manoeuvre Nelleman passed both Brabhams as they entered Casino Square and as they reached the chicane Gerber dropped another place to Pessenti-Rossi. The Italian then tried to pass Nelleman at La Rascasse which nearly ended in tears with both cars making heavy contact although Pessenti-Rossi recovered first to take the final qualifying position. Retirements from the race included Coulon who capped a lacklustre weekend with a collision with Pessenti-Rossi on lap 1 from which he immediately retired and Roelof Wunderink who badly damaged his car at St Devote on lap 10. Brian Henton had a miserable race, from his lowly grid position he ran towards the rear of the field, he lost his nosecone on the Pit Straight and was black flagged, he then spun after hitting a car at La Rascasse and he finally finished last in the heat.

Lafitte’s heat winning time was a couple of seconds quicker than that of Leclere’s so the Martini took up the pole position with the runners from his heat lined up behind, Leclere and his fellow Heat 1 runners took the opposite side. Andersson’s March was unable to take part in the warm up lap when it refused to fire up in the pits but it was started in time to join the grid. When the flag fell it was Andersson who accelerated into an immediate lead from the second row, in fact many people felt he had jumped the start. At the chicane it was still Andersson from Lafitte and Leclere, then it was Francia, Kuwashima, Serpaggi, Ethuin, Giorgio, and Nordström. Andersson was quickly demoted on lap 2 by both Lafitte and Leclere and they both began to pull away from the rest of the runners. Leclere was trying to pass the Martini all round the track and on lap 4 the Alpine punted the Martini up the gearbox exiting the left hander behind the swimming pool, the Martini snapped sideways but Lafitte held the moment. Leclere found that he had damaged the steering on the Alpine and cracked a wheel and he immediately began to drop down the order. Andersson moved up to second although some way behind Lafitte and the Swede found himself under heavy pressure from Kuwashima and Serpaggi, the Alpine driver demoting Kuwashima to fourth on lap 7. The March of Kuwashima was out three laps later when a stud on a wishbone failed and the car ground to a halt on the hill up to Casino. Ethuin moved up onto Serpaggi’s tail and both Frenchmen were trying to get past the wide March of Andersson, however Ethuin only lasted in fourth briefly as he went off at Tabac damaging the suspension on the Martini.

On lap 18 Andersson and Serpaggi arrived at the chicane side by side, Andersson ran wide on the exit and made contact with the Armco and at Tabac the March spun bending a radius rod and damaging the bodywork, the Swede motored round to the pits and retirement. Serpaggi now had a clear run on Lafitte and with six laps remaining he set off after the leader but Lafitte had enough of a lead and despite Serpaggi flinging the Alpine all round the track the Martini came home the victor by 1.5 seconds.
Nordström had moved up to third by passing Giorgio and Francia but he was disqualified in post-race scrutineering due to a leaking airbox. Francia had been in fourth holding up a bunch consisting of Magee, Friedrich, Giorgio and Mantova, Magee got ahead of Francia on lap 18 but was unable to pull away but Francia was unable to retake the Irishman and the remaining positions remained static to the finish allowing Magee to claim an excellent third spot after Nordström’s disqualification. Jurg Dubler had been running with this group until Mantova passed Dubler at the chicane launching the Swiss Brabham into the air, Dubler later went up the escape road at the chicane on lap 19 and then pitted with locking brakes. Russell Wood had been making good progress up the field and had been with Mantova when his fuel pressure problems struck again and he had too retire at La Portier. Mike Wilds had been chasing Wood but when he encountered the slowing Leclere he tried to pass him at the chicane on lap 8, the two cars touched and Wilds flew up into the air and landed heavily, the resulting puncture causing him to leave the track at Tabac badly damaging the Ensign. Leclere was also a disappointed retirement as a result of all his various problems, the accident being the final straw.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Monaco, 3 June 1973

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

Race Report: Monaco, 13 May 1972

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Race Report: Monaco, 13 May 1972

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As was to be expected for this, the jewel in the F3 crown, 69 of the accepted 70 entries arrived at Monaco for practice, of these 69 cars 40 would race in two heats of 20 in each. Practice took place on Thursday afternoon and Friday morning at 05:30 (!) with each heat having 40 minutes per session.

Patrick Depailler was flying in heat one qualifying and he set a time 0.8 seconds quicker than any of the other runners to take pole position, the Alpine looking particularly impressive through the tight corners. Second fastest was Andy Sutcliffe who was suffering from brake problems as were all the GRD runners, next up was the second Alpine of Michel Leclere from the Brabham of Torsten Palm. Mike Walker had problems in the first session when his black box failed after a lap but it was sorted for the second session although Walker felt the Ensign wasn’t particularly suited to the track. Going very well was Steve Thompson who was having an outing in Bubbles Horsley’s Dastle as Horsley couldn’t get an entry, also suffering engine problems Thompson still managed to get the Dastle on the fourth row.

David Purley set fourth fastest time in the first session but an engine failure early in the second meant the Ensign driver lined up only fourteenth, also in difficulties was McCully who had gearbox problems in the first session and couldn’t get a clear lap in the second, to further add to his woes his team timed him a lot faster then the official watches did. Maskell was another driver who would have expected to be higher up the grid but in the first session his Lotus was badly undergeared and in the second a shock absorber broke at Tabac and the suspension was ripped off on one side. Vermilio was very disappointed not to qualify his Lotus 73 but a rocker cover gasket failed in the first session and was then incorrectly replaced causing oil to spray over the rear brakes of the 73 during the second session. Other surprise non-qualifiers were Peter Hull as both handling and engine problems stopped him setting anything like a competitive time and Vittorio Brambilla who was also in handling problems with his rather tatty Alpine-like Birel.
It was Roger Williamson who took pole position for the second heat, despite suffering the universal GRD brake problem he was only 0.1 seconds slower the Depailler. Jacques Coulon was also going very quickly in the latest Martini and lined up next to the GRD, the second row consisted of Claudio Francisci in his Lotus 69 and the second Martini of José Dolhem. Tony Trimmer got his Lotus 73 on the fourth row despite engine problems and handling difficulties which were alleviated by fitting an odd shaped nose. Equalling Trimmer’s time was an interesting new car, the French Narval, being driven by former Tecno driver Christian Ethuin.
An unfortunate incident befell Peter Lamplough and Tom Pryce and it was only pure luck that there weren’t tragic consequences, Pryce’s Royale stopped just before Casino and the Welshman was looking at the engine for a possible faulty wire when Lamplough lost the Merlyn which cannoned into the Royale knocking Pryce over. Both drivers suffered broken legs and were expected to be out of racing for several months. Jochen Mass was disappointed to be on row fifteen, he was overdriving the March and bouncing off the kerbs far too much, he suggested things would be better if the kerbs were made of rubber!
James Hunt’s run of bad luck continued when he found his car wasn’t ready at the start of practice despite the factory having had two weeks since his Silverstone accident. The car was eventually ready 20 minutes late but as he went out on the track the throttle cable broke at the Gasworks hairpin, Hunt ran back to the pits and returned a few minutes later with Brendan McInerney’s mechanic to find that in the interim Tecno driver Pesce had hit the March removing a rear wheel, Hunt had several words with the Italian who wasn’t seen again at the meeting. Despite an all nighter by the March team the car wasn’t ready for the morning session on Friday so Hunt spoke to former team manager Chris Marshal about using the spare La Vie Clare March 713M which was a bitsa made out of spares. The normal driver Jean-Claude Alzerat had lost his license after a disagreement with the French Police, Hunt took over his entry in the first heat and qualified sensibly despite his lack of familiarity with the car.
Barrie Maskell’s Lotus was deemed beyond immediate safe repair so team-mate Roger Keele very sportingly stood down to allow Maskell to use his car. This meant with only 19 starters in heat one, Jorge Pinhol as first reserve should have been allowed to start but for some incomprehensible reason the organisers refused to let the GRD onto the grid.
Patrick Depailler’s Alpine made the best start and at the end of lap 1 he led from Andy Sutcliffe, following closely behind were Palm, Walker, Albera, Leclere, von Opel, Svensson, Serpaggi, Thompson, Guitteny, Purley, Vandervell, Wood, Hunt, Bond , Maskell, McCully and Bianchi. Hunt’s bad luck continued at the chicane on lap 2 when Wood was far too late on the brakes and spun pushing Hunt off into the barriers. Depailler, Sutcliffe and Palm were starting to pull out a small lead on the rest of the pack as Walker began to drop away with a flat engine. Bev Bond had to pit with a sticking throttle, not the best thing to have at Monaco and Maskell joined Hunt and Wood at the chicane when the engine in his Lotus blew its water out onto the rear wheels of the car. Lap 5 and it was still Depailler with Sutcliife in close attendance, Palm was dropping away a little whilst there was a big battle for fourth between Albera, von Opel and Leclere. There were seven cars squabbling over seventh consisting of Serpaggi from Vandervell (missing first gear), Svensson, Thompson (no second gear), Purley, Guitteny and McCully, and they were beginning to pull back up again to the three cars ahead. By half distance Depailler had eked out a one second lead over Sutcliffe with Palm a similar distance back in third but there was trouble further back when von Opel passed Albera but as the two cars turned onto the waterfront the Martini gave the Ensign a chop, the two cars collided and were both out, Albera suffering a broken arm. Depailler passed through the carnage on the next lap with no flags being evident but when Sutcliffe arrived yellow and oil flags were waved causing the GRD man to slow and loose ground to the Alpine. Sutcliffe then put the hammer down for the next few laps and began to reel the Alpine in again but mysteriously on the last three laps yellow flags were furiously waved at Sutcliffe and Palm despite the lack of any apparent reason whilst the flag marshalls seemed to miss Depailler every time he went past them. So it was that Depailler took the flag 7 seconds ahead of Sutcliffe who in turn had three seconds in hand over Palm. Purley should have been fourth after really flying over the last few laps and setting the fastest lap but his engine blew on the last lap dropping him to tenth which at least meant he qualified for the final, he was able to borrow a spare engine from Williamson for the race. Leclere moved up to fourth ahead of Guitteny after Serpaggi made a late pit stop and McCully took Vandervell for sixth on the last corner of the last lap.
It was another 19 car field for heat two after Stan Matthews was unlucky enough to suffer a CV joint failure on the warm up lap. Coulon took the lead at the start and was in front at the end of the first lap from Williamson but the GRD driver took the lead at St Devote on lap 2 and immediately began to leave the rest behind. Coulon held second under pressure from Dolhem and Francisci, next up were Pica, Brise, Ethuin, Rousselot, Jones, Trimmer, Evans, McInerney, Möhr, Giorgio, Mass, Rabbione, Lombardi and Compain who had a bad misfire, pit stopping was Pessenti Rossi with a broken throttle cable. There were problems for Brise on lap 3 at the Station hairpin when the top of his header tank blew off covering his rear tyres with coolant, the Brabham spun and whilst Brise was backing up Alan Jones had to stop to avoid contact, stalling his engine and needed a push start after everyone else had gone.
Williamson had pulled out a three second lead over Coulon by lap 3 who in turn led Francisci and Pica, Dolhem had been next but he spun and hit the barrier at St Devote allowing the impressive Ethuin to move up to fifth. Trimmer was in seventh but unhappy as his tyres had rolled on their rims causing all sorts of handling problems. Williamson further extended his lead until it stood at six seconds on lap 10, Tom Wheatcroft held out a “Slow” sign to him and the Englishman eased off a little until Francisci who had passed Coulon on lap 11 closed within two seconds, Williamson immediately eased away again and took the chequered flag some four seconds ahead of the Italian. Coulon took third only about a second down on Francisci, Ethuin should have taken fourth but he missed the chicane on lap 13 and fell to seventh. Pica was next ahead of Rousselot who had been dicing with Trimmer but as the tyre problems on the 73 got worse the Brabham was able to pull away and take fifth.
The first ten in each heat made it through to the final although one or two might not have been too pleased when the heavens opened in the afternoon and the track was soon soaking. The drivers were given two warm up laps and were told that under no circumstances would any last minute adjustments be allowed on the grid under penalty of disqualification, these rules were rigidly enforced on all drivers whose names weren’t Depailler or Coulon!
It was Depailler who scrabbled away in the lead as everyone was suffering from wheelspin, Sutcliffe slotted into second with Palm third and Williamson fourth until the Station hairpin when Williamson tried to take the inside line, it was wetter than he expected, his brakes locked and he went wide, Roger gathered it together, found reverse and rejoined the track but he was down to ninth. At the end of the lap it was Depailler from Sutcliffe, Coulon, Leclere, Pica, Rousselot, Francisci, Williamson, Ethuin, Mass (good progress from the back), Guitteny, Vandervell, Purley, McCully, Evans, Thompson, Bianchi and Möhr.
Back at the front Depailler still led but he wasn’t dropping Sutcliffe and Williamson was really moving (both up and down), lap 2 saw him fifth, lap 3 back to eighth after missing the chicane, fourth on lap 4 and third on lap 6. Although Depailler had by now pulled out a gap to Sutcliffe the arrival of Williamson on his tail spurred Andy on and the two GRDs began to catch the Alpine at a second a lap. Palm was in fourth leading a battling group consisting of Rousselot, Coulon, Vandervell, Trimmer, Francisci and Mass. Retirements at this point were Ethuin who hit the rail at St Devote and a few laps later he was joined by Pica.
Williamson’s challenge lasted until lap 12 when he was descending the hill towards Mirabeau, his brakes locked on and the car hit the barrier and he had to retire accompanied by loud applause from the stands. Sutcliffe continued to close in on the Alpine until the gap was down to a second and then, just as in his heat, the marshalls began to wave yellow and oil flags at him despite there being no apparent reason, it worked and by lap 16 the Alpine was well clear again.
The rain had now stopped and the track had begun to dry and Tony Trimmer and Colin Vandervell who were wearing a new low profile Firestone front found the tyres working really well. Vandervell who had been fourteenth on the first lap and Trimmer who had been tenth were now carving their way through the field, by lap 16 Vandervell was on Sutcliffe’s tail having set fastest lap on the way. Trimmer was with them two laps later after having had a stroke of good luck, earlier he had locked up at Mirabeau and ended up interlocked with an Alpine facing the barrier. Using the red light in the rain had flattened his battery so Trimmer couldn’t restart, suddenly another car spun hitting Trimmer up the rear, he banged the Lotus into gear and bumped started it.
The positions were now Depailler, Sutcliffe, Vandervell, Trimmer, Francisci, Palm, McCully, Leclere, Mass and Coulon. David Purley had been next but like Williamson he went off at Mirabeau. By lap 18 Trimmer and Vandervell were attacking the GRD for second, Sutcliffe tried to hold on but the Firestones were working too well and the Lotus and the Ensign were ahead. They then began to catch the Alpine at a tremendous rate but there just wasn’t enough time left and Depailler took the win by 1.9 seconds from Trimmer with Vandervell very close behind. Sutcliffe was a disappointed fourth with McCully fifth (another Firestone user), Francisci had been sixth but he retired on lap 20 with waterlogged electrics so Leclere took the place.

There was a certain amount of discord after the race when the winning Alpine appeared to have a very cursory and private eligibility check whilst the Lotus and the Ensign were given a very thorough public check with repeated vacuum tests but despite the scrutineers best efforts both cars were found fully legal. Mo Nunn then asked that the Alpine be vacuum tested in front of everyone, but unfortunately the scrutineers managed to break the tester. Vegantune offered their tester but then the French police were called and told to stop anyone touching the Alpine unless a £90 fee was paid, the AIRO team agreed to pay. The race officials then insisted that the car be checked in front of the Alpine team only so nobody was sure that the engine was legal, coupled with the flag marshalling problems it cast a shadow over Depailler’s victory.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Monaco, 13 May 1972

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

Race Report: Monaco, 22 May 1971

monaco_22_5_71

Race Report: Monaco, 22 May 1971

monaco_22_5_71

An excellent field of 45 runners arrived for this race, the F3 jewel in the crown, with just about every top car/driver combination in attendance, the only notable British non-runners being Bev Bond, James Hunt and Colin Vandervell. As was to be expected there were a significant number of French entries with Martini MW7s being a popular choice, drivers were José Dolhem (BRM), Lucien Guitteny (BRM), François Migault (Novamotor) and Patrice Compain (Novamotor), Renault powered MW7s were driven by Jacques Coulon and François Lacarrau . Renault units were also in the works Alpine A360s of Patrick Depailler and Jean-Pierre Jabouille and the Tecno of Christian Ethuin. Interestingly all the Renault power plants were still using Webers although they were expecting to switch to Lucas fuel injection shortly. Also from France were the Brabham-Holbay BT35s for Jean-Louis Lafosse, Pierre-François Rousselot and Bernard Lagier.

Nine cars came from Italy, a 1969 Tecno-Novamotor for Giancarlo Naddeo, an elderly Brabham (listed as a F2 type BT23) for Marcello Gallo also with a Novamotor. Giuseppe Bianchi and Fabrizio Noe had their Lotus-Novamotor 69s while older Novamotor powered cars were the Tecno of Giorgio Carlo and the Chevron B17 of Carlo Scarambone. Also in a Chevron B17 but with Alfa Romeo power was Sandro Cinotto. Luigi Fontanesi also arrived with his Tecno but it sat on its trailer all weekend.
A large contingent of British based runners made the trip south headed by the works Lotus-Novamotor 69 of Dave Walker. Similarly mounted was Andy Sutcliffe in his newly painted “American Express Team Lotus” Holbay car. The sole Ensign to arrive, in the absence of Bev Bond, was Steve Thompson (Holbay) whilst Roger Williamson, Tim Goss and John Bisignano had their usual March-Holbay 713s. American Cliff Haworth had his older 703 with Alfa Romeo power that he raced in European rounds, the car was entered by Team Pschitt (apparently a brand of soft drink). Barrie Maskell had the Sports Motors Chevron-Holbay B18 with Chris Skeaping in his older B17 Rowland. Two of the rarer cars were Bob Evans with the Puma BRM and newcomer Cyd Williams with the Ehrlich EMC. Brabham-Holbay BT35s arrived for usual pilote Brendan McInerney and American debutante Randy Lewis. In Holbay powered BT28s were David Purley, Ronald Rossi and Sandy Shepard.
Liechtenstein was represented by Rikki von Opel’s Lotus Holbay 69, whilst for Switzerland there were the Martini-Novamotor MW7s of François Rabbione and Phillip Albera. Sweden had the two Brabham BT35s of Ulf Svensson (Holbay) and Jonas Qvarnstrom (Swedish Sportscars). Surprisingly Germany only had two representatives, both Novamotor powered, the Lotus 69 of Manfred Möhr and the March 713M of Dietmar Floer who was having his first outing in the car. Last but not least was the Lotus-Holbay 69 of Belgium’s Claude Bourgoignie.

Friday’s practice session was cancelled due to heavy rain meaning that all qualifying would have to be done on Saturday morning’s extended session. The cars were split into two groups and the first bunch of 20 cars had to contend with a drying track and overcast conditions. José Dolhem in his Martini proved best suited to the changing conditions and set the fastest time ahead of Jabouille, Lafosse, Rousselot, Svensson and Guitteny. Lafosse managed to spin and damage his car in the tunnel but it was repaired in time for the race. Next up were a group of the British runners with Goss showing good form to lead Purley, Maskell, Shepard, Williamson and Rossi. Maskell was suffering from a bad cold and Rossi had severe engine problems necessitating a new unit be installed for the race. Surprise non-qualifier was François Migault whose engine failed after a lap time of 7:42.2, some six minutes off pole! Less surprising was the non-qualification of Chris Haworth whose Alfa engine broke an oil pipe, destroying itself and liberally soaking the circuit with lubricant.
By the time the second group of drivers joined the circuit conditions were much improved and so lap times were 2 or 3 seconds faster. Dave Walker proceeded to destroy the rest of the opposition with a 1:37.8 lap, a full 1.2 seconds quicker than next man Jacques Coulon. Close behind Coulon were Bourgoignie and Thompson with Naddeo surprising many with his sixth fastest time, next up was Depailler suffering engine problems, Lacarrau and Ethuin. Two of the British drivers in trouble were Skeaping whose throttle jammed open on his first lap at Mirabeau and he hit the sea wall wrecking his Chevron and Sutcliffe who had broken engine and gearbox mounts giving him very odd handling. Floer, who had been ready and waiting for the wet Friday session, did not appear in the dry Saturday practice for some unknown reason.
Rather unfairly the grids for the two heats were made up by putting the times from both sessions together and then selecting alternating times for each heat, this meant that the drivers from the slower first session were put at an immediate disadvantage, fastest driver from session one, Dolhem, found himself on row 2 of the first heat.

 

As the cars came out for the heat the the track was wet but beginning to dry, making the tyre choice difficult especially with the surprising omission any warm up lap to allow the drivers to check out the track conditions. Walker took an immediate lead from pole position with Bourgoignie and Depailler close behind but second row starter Dolhem had an immediate off at Tobacconists and retired immediately, Rousselot and Fossati came past minus their nose cones and Ethuin, showing signs of accident damage, pulled into the pits to retire . Rousselot’s damage must have been more than just the missing nosecone as he retired just before the Gasometer on lap four. Walker was pulling away at the front of the field whilst Bourgoignie tried desperately to hold Depailler at bay but on the fifth lap the Alpine was through although Bourgoignie wasn’t beaten and for the next six laps there was a tremendous battle between the two until Bourgoignie clipped the kerb at Gasometer breaking a rod end on the Lotus causing the Belgian to pull off to retire.
Depailler was now in an untroubled second place ahead of Sutcliffe who had been behind the similar Lotus of von Opel until the unfortunate Liechtenstein driver lost a wheel on his way up Ste Devote. There was a huge fight going on for what was now fourth place with Shepard, Rossi, Compain, Lewis and Qvarnstrom all determined to be on top, they were swopping positions all round the track and judging by some of the hairy manoeuvres it was only a matter of time before someone came to grief. With one lap to go it was Shepard leading the bunch only to swipe the Armco at Ste Devote and remove a wheel, thus fourth place fell to Compain followed by Rossi, Lewis and Qvarnstrom. Fossati’s noseless Brabham was next followed by Lagier and final qualifier Goss who was hampered first by his gear lever snapping and then by the March getting stuck in 4th gear. Scarambone helped the carnage at Ste Devote by spinning his Chevron and being collected by the similar car of Cinotti. Walker took the chequered flag a relatively comfortable 3.3 seconds ahead of Depailler, the two drivers had been swopping fastest laps during most of the race, Walker finally setting a 1:37.0 to settle the argument.

Once again conditions were tricky for this heat, like the first heat the track began wet and dried throughout the course of the race.
The second heat turned into a battle between Jabouille and the unfancied Naddeo in his Tecno, the Italian leading the opening four laps until the Alpine got past. Naddeo then sat on Jabouille’s tail until the run to the flag on the last lap when he pulled out of the slipstream, dived inside the Frenchman and took the heat victory. Steve Thompson’s Ensign kept a close eye on the battle ahead never being more than a second away in third place. Quickest man on the track was Manfred Möhr who got faster and faster as the track dried, setting a best lap of 1:35.6 as he caught up with Thompson but the Briton made the Ensign a little too wide to pass, the first four finishers were separated by 2.2 seconds at the flag. Lacarrau fell back to a distant fifth after being passed by Möhr and was chased home by Guitteny, Svensson, Williamson and Coulon who had a spin at the chicane. Final qualifier was Gallo who led home a sickly Maskell (whose cold was worse). Evans abandoned the Puma in the pits on lap 11 deciding it was uncompetitive, Lafosse was in trouble with an overheating engine, Albera had to pit a couple of times with clutch problems and Giorgio hit the barrier at Casino and retired.

 

Yet again the drivers were faced with a wet but drying track and there was a last minute panic for Dave Walker who was suffering from oil on his rear brakes from a cracked oil cooler, the car was jacked up and run with the brakes on to burn the oil away. Paul Frère dropped the flag and the two Alpines made a demon getaway from the second row with Depailler leading Jabouille at the end of the lap. Behind these two a long train followed consisting of Walker, Naddeo, Sutcliffe, Möhr, Compain, Rossi, Thompson, Lacarrau, Svensson, Guitteny, Lagier, Lewis, Qvarnstrom, Fossati, Coulon, Williamson, Goss and Gallo. Gallo had been as high as eighth but spun at the Gasometer delaying himself and several other runners, he then hit the wall at Beau Rivage ending his race for good. Also in trouble was Bernard Lagier who had to pit with a sticking throttle. Back at the front Walker wasn’t to be denied, he passed Jabouille on lap 2 and Depailler on lap 3 taking Naddeo with him. Depailler fought back and retook Naddeo for a lap until the Tecno driver got ahead again and this time made it stick. Jabouille fell further back when both Sutcliife and Möhr caught and passed him and he now found himself fighting off the attentions of Steve Thompson. Möhr fell to the back of the field when he had to make a pit stop with a flat front tyre and Compain retired his Martini with a broken rear wishbone as did team mate Coulon only his damage was to the front suspension.
Thompson now made his move and passed Jabouille and Sutcliffe whose motor was beginning to sound rough. Sutcliffe still held sixth but Roger Williamson was storming up through the field, eighteenth at the end of lap 1 he was now seventh on lap 19 and closing on Sutcliffe fast. Svensson when passed by Williamson had sat on his tail and was now up to seventh ahead of Rossi.
At the finish it was Walker who took a comfortable victory from surprise man of the meeting Giancarlo Naddeo with Depailler in third. Thompson took fourth from Jabouille, Sutcliffe who held off the charging Williamson and Svensson whilst Guitteny made it ahead of Rossi on the last lap.

 

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Monaco, 22 May 1971

List Formatted as -

Rank- Driver

Car | Time | Lap

Qualifying

1 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69| 1:37.8 | 2

2 Jacques Coulon

Martini-Renault MW7 | 1:39.0| 2

3 Claude Bourgoignie

Lotus-Holbay 69 | 1:39.1 |2

4 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Holbay LN1| 1:39.6| 2

5 José Dolhem

Martini-BRM MW7| 1:40.3| 1

6 Giancarlo Naddeo

Tecno-Novamotor 69 |1:40.4| 2

7 Patrick Depailler

Alpine-Renault A360| 1:40.5 | 2

8 François Lacarrau

Martini-Renault MW7 |1:40.5 | 2

9 Jean-Pierre Jabouille

Alpine-Renault A360| 1:40.8 | 1

10 Christian Ethuin

Tecno-Renault TF71/3| 1:40.8 | 2

11 Patrice Compain

Martini-Novamotor MW7 |1:40.9| 2

12 Jean-Louis Lafosse

Brabham-Holbay BT35 |1:41.0| 1

13 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Novamotor 69| 1:41.0 | 2

14 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Novamotor 69 |1:41.0 |2

15 Pierre-François

Rousselot Brabham-Holbay BT35 |1:41.4| 1

16 Ulf Svensson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 |1:41.5 | 1

17 Rikki von Opel

Lotus-Holbay 69 |1:41.6 | 2

18 Lucien Guitteny

Martini-BRM MW7 |1:41.8 | 1

19 Tim Goss

March-Holbay 713M |1:41.9| 1

20 David Purley

Brabham-Holbay BT28| 1:42.1| 1

21 Randy Lewis

Brabham-Holbay BT35 |1:42.1 | 2

22 Barrie Maskell

Chevron-Holbay B18|1:42.6| 1

23 Sandy Shepard

Brabham-Holbay BT28| 1:42.8| 1

24 Brendan McInerney

Brabham-Holbay BT35| 1:42.8| 2

25 Andy Sutcliffe

Lotus-Holbay 69| 1:42.9 | 2

26 Marcello Gallo

Brabham-Novamotor BT23| 1:43.2| 2

27 Giuseppe Bianchi

Lotus-Novamotor 69| 1:43.3| 2

28 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M| 1:43.4 | 1

29 Ronald Rossi

Brabham-Holbay BT28 |1:43.5| 1

30 François Rabbione

Martini-Novamotor MW7| 1:43.6 | 1

31 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham-Novamotor BT28 |1:43.7 | 1

32 Phillip Albera

Martini-Novamotor MW7| 1:43.8 | 1

33 Jonas Qvarnstrom

Brabham-Sportscars BT35| 1:44.4| 1

34 John Bisignano

March-Holbay 713M|1:44.6 | 2

35 Bernard Lagier

Brabham-Holbay BT35 |1:45.0| 1

36 Cyd Williams

Ehrlich-EMC| 1:45.9 | 2

37 Sandro Cinotti

Chevron-Alfa Romeo B17 |1:46.0 | 2

38 Bob Evans

Puma-BRM |1:48.2 |2

39 Carlo Giorgio

Tecno-Novamotor |1:50.9 | 1

40 Carlo Scarambone

Chevron-Novamotor B17 |1:51.1 | 2

41 François Migault

Martini-Novamotor M Martini-Novamotor |MW7 7:42.2 | 1

42 Chris Skeaping

Chevron-Rowland B17| NT | 2

43 Cliff Haworth

March-Alfa Romeo 703 |1:51.1 (DNS) | 1

44 Dietmar Floer

March-Novamotor 713M| DNP 2

45 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Novamotor |DNP | 1W7 |1:43.8 |1

Fastest Lap

Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69| 1:36.1 | 73.59

Race heat 1

1 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69 26:33.1| 16 | 70.65

2 Patrick Depailler

Alpine-Renault A360 26:36.4 | 16

3 Andy Sutcliffe

Lotus-Holbay 69 27:22.9 | 16

4 Patrice Compain

Martini-Novamotor MW7 27:33.4 | 16

5 Ronald Rossi

Brabham-Holbay BT28 27:34.1 | 16

6 Randy Lewis

Brabham-Holbay BT35 27:34.8 |16

7 Jonas Qvarnstrom

Brabham-Sportscars BT35 27:51.2 | 16

8 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham-Novamotor BT28 28:04.0 | 16

10 Tim Goss

March-Holbay 713M 28:08.1 |16

11 Sandy Shepard

Brabham-Holbay BT28| 15

12 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Novamotor 69 | 15

13 Giuseppe Bianchi

Lotus-Novamotor 69 | 14

Race heat 2

1 Giancarlo Naddeo

Tecno-Novamotor 69 |26:04.9 |16 |71.97

2 Jean-Pierre Jabouille

Alpine-Renault A360 |26:05.1| 16

3 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Holbay LN1| 26:06.4 | 16

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Novamotor 69| 26:07.1 | 16

5 François Lacarrau

Martini-Renault MW7 |26:26.2 |16

6 Lucien Guitteny

Martini-BRM MW7 |26:28.5 | 16

7 Ulf Svensson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 |26:36.6 | 16

8 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M| 26:38.4 | 16

9 Jacques Coulon

Martini-Renault MW7 |26:38.8 | 16

10 Marcello Gallo

Brabham-Novamotor BT23 |26:39.0 | 16

11 Barrie Maskell

Chevron-Holbay B18 |26:41.9| 16

12 David Purley

Brabham-Holbay BT28 |26:44.3| 16

13 Brendan McInerney

Brabham-Holbay BT35 |26:55.2 | 16

14 François Rabbione

Martini-Novamotor MW7 |27:09.4| 16

15 John Bisignano

March-Holbay 713M | 15

16 Cyd Williams

Ehrlich-EMC | 15

Race Final

1 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69 39:16.4 24 71.65

2 Giancarlo Naddeo

Tecno-Novamotor 69 39:26.9 24

3 Patrick Depailler

Alpine-Renault A360 39:28.2 | 24 |

4 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Holbay LN1 |40:01.3 | 24

5 Jean-Pierre Jabouille

Alpine-Renault A360| 40:05.7 |24

6 Andy Sutcliffe

Lotus-Holbay 69 |40:08.1 |24

7 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M |40:10.2 |24

8 Ulf Svensson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 |40:10.5 | 24

9 Lucien Guitteny

Martini-BRM MW7 |40:20.2 | 24

10 Ronald Rossi

Brabham-Holbay BT28 |40:21.5| 24

11 François Lacarrau

Martini-Renault MW7| 40:42.3 |24

12 Randy Lewis

Brabham-Holbay BT35 | 23

13 Jonas Qvarnstrom

Brabham-Sportscars BT35| 23

14 Tim Goss

March-Holbay 713M | 23

15 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Novamotor 69 | 23

16 Bernard Lagier

Brabham-Holbay BT35| 21

17 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham-Novamotor BT28 | 17

18 Jacques Coulon

Martini-Renault MW7 | 12

19 Patrice Compain

Martini-Novamotor MW7 | 4

20 Marcello Gallo

Brabham-Novamotor |BT23 | 1