1954 12 Hours of Sebring

The 1954 12 Hours of Sebring (officially the Florida International 12-Hour Grand Prix of Endurance [1]) was a motor race for sports cars, staged on 7 March 1954 at the Sebring International Raceway, Florida, United States. It was the second race of the 1954 World Sportscar Championship and was the fourth 12 Hours of Sebring. The race was won by Bill Lloyd and Stirling Moss driving an Osca MT4 1450.

Sebring International Raceway in 1952-1966

Report edit

Entry edit

A grand total 89 sports cars were entered for this event, of which only 63 arrived for practice. The race was supported by the work of teams of Scuderia Lancia, running four cars, the Aston Martin running three cars and the Austin-Healey team consisting of four cars, only one of which was a factory entry, under the name of Donald Healey Ltd., the others entered by private individuals. The three work's Lancia D24's in particular were entered for – Juan Manuel Fangio and Eugenio Castellotti, Piero Taruffi and Robert Manzon and Alberto Ascari and Luigi Villoresi, were in a class of their own.[2][3]

The factory Ferrari entries did not materialize, in order to defend their championship lead, but the private entries of Bill Spear and Briggs Cunningham were on hand. Likewise, there was no Jaguar factory team, but eight Jaguars were listed on the entry.[2]

Some of the race participants who also were noted in other fields of endeavor included ex-US congressman Jim Simpson, "international playboy" Porfirio Rubirosa, and, fresh from finishing second in the Buenos Aires 1000km, Marquis de Portago – well known equestrian at the time and also a high ranking Spanish nobility.[4]

Practice edit

It became obvious during Friday practice sessions that the race would be between the Ferraris and Lancias. The Lancia D24s lapped the 5.2 mile circuit in three minutes 38 seconds and on the Saturday, Cunningham's Ferrari 375 MM made it in 3m 31sec. Another of Cunningham cars, an Osca MT4 1450 piloted by young English driver, Stirling Moss with his partnered Bill Lloyd, turned in lap on Friday of, 3m 56 secs, although this small engined car, no one considered this car a real threat the Lancias.[2]

Race edit

The race was held over 12 hours on the 5.2 miles Sebring International Raceway. The early morning rain cleared to leave a cold, windy but dry day. However, throughout the race, the strong wind blowing directly out of the north created a nasty crosswind on the fast back stretch.[2]

With the race starting promptly at 10am, 59 cars scrambled for positions. Cunningham in his own Cunningham C-4R was the first across the line, but was soon headed by Erwin Goldschmidt in his Allard-Cadillac J2R. However, before the end of lap one, the three Lancias, of Fangio, Ascari and Taruffi had sorted themselves out and headed the field, running one, two and three with Spear's Ferrari close behind. The Cunningham Ferrari of Phil Walters, stopped for a replacement spark plug and lost several minutes. Moss was keeping the bigger cars on their toes holding down 4th.[2][4]

Around mid-distance, trouble hits Spear's Ferrari, crippled by a broken oil seal. Last year's winner's, John Fitch and Walters, in their Ferrari had been marking up time, and with Spear's retirement, the only threat to the flying Lancias. Fitch and Walters had been pushing the car hard, and this too would not finish, going out late afternoon with a bad connecting rod bearing.[2][4]

As darkness fell on the former Hendricks Army Airfield, the Lancias of Ascari and Villoresi, and Fangio and Castellotti had retired due to brakes and gearbox issues respectively, leaving the burden on the shoulders of Taruffi and Manzon. This D24, was still lapping swiftly on the now night-blackened circuit, at an average speed of 82 mph – more than seven mph faster than the 1953 record-breaking Cunningham C-4R – albeit with only one headlight. As Taruffi and Manzon streaked out of sight, chief race steward, Alec Ulmann announced that the Lancia would be black-flagged if it continued to race with just one light. The team's race director, Attilio Pasquarelli put out a red flag, and leaned far out onto the course to block the car's path. When the car finally pitted, Manzon protested: "The car wouldn't go any faster – oil pressure was off." He thought the red flag was a pit signal that their lead was in danger.[2]

 
Moss and Lloyd's race winning Osca MT4

Despite, as Moss said, the Lancias were "wiping the floor with the rest of us", Lloyd and Moss soon took advantage of the Osca's beautiful handling, by throwing the car sideways, into the corners to scrub off as much speed as they started to countering the high brake wear.[3]

The three Aston Martins had retired quite early [5] and the leading Lancia D24 being driven by Manzon, stopped on the circuit with engine trouble an hour from the end of the race.[6] Manzon returned to the pits on foot, but co-driver Taruffi acted to push the car for the mile and a half back to the pits.[6] The Lancia was finally pushed across the finish line but was disqualified and the Osca, driven by Moss and Lloyd, won the race.[6] The Osca survived a slightly suspect clutch and a tremendous rain storm to take a totally unexpected win. They covered 168 laps (873.6 miles), averaging a speed of 72.800 mph. Second place went to the Lancia D24 of Porfirio Rubirosa and Gino Valenzano, albeit five laps adrift. Third place was awarded to the Austin-Healey 100 entered by Donald Healey and driven by Lance Macklin and George Huntoon.[2][3][4][7]

Although there were no fatalities during the race, James Brundage, died in Fort Lauderdale, Florida on his way home when the Allard he was driving hit a tree.[4]

Official Classification edit

Class Winners are in Bold text.

Pos No Class Driver Entrant Chassis Laps Reason Out
1st 56 S1.5   Bill Lloyd   Stirling Moss B. S. Cunningham Osca MT4 1450 12hr 00:00.0, 168
2nd 39 S5.0   Porfirio Rubirosa   Gino Valenzano Scuderia Lancia Co. Lancia D24 163
3rd 29 S3.0   Lance Macklin   George Huntoon Donald Healey Ltd. Austin-Healey 100 163
4th 91 S1.5   James Simpson   George Colby James Simpson Osca MT4 1450 163
5th 61 S1.5   Otto Linton   Harry Beck Speedcraft Enterprises Osca MT4 1350 161
DISQ 38 S5.0   Piero Taruffi   Robert Manzon Scuderia Lancia Co. Lancia D24 161 Pushed
6th 97 S2.0   Bill Carpenter   John van Driel W. K. Carpenter Kieft-Bristol Sport 158
7th 41 S2.0   Richard Cicurel   Jim Pauley Richard Cicurel Siata 208s 155
8th 65 S1.1   Rees Makins   Frank Bott Rees Makins Osca MT4 1100 152
9th 15 S5.0   Jake Kaplan   Russ Boss Jacob Kaplan Jaguar XK120 151
10th 49 S1.5   Fernando Segura   Daimo Bojanich Fernando Segura Porsche 550 144
11th 54 S1.5   Fred Allen   Gus Ehrman Fred Allen Kieft-MG Sport 144
12th 62 S1.5   Richard Toland   Charles Devaney Richard Toland Denzel-VW 1300 Super 142
13th 9 S5.0   Austin Young   Jack Morton A. F. Young Jr. Jaguar XK120 142
14th 18 S5.0   Fred Dagavar   Henry Fanelli Fred Dagavar Jaguar XK120 141
15th 50 S1.5   Hubert L. Brundage   William Simpson H. L. Brunsdage Porsche 356 America Roadster 141
16th 62 S8.0   Walt Gray   Chuck Hall Walter S. Gray Allard-Oldsmobile J2 141
17th 32 S3.0   Jim Feld   Robert Gary Brooks Stevens Excalibur-Willys J 141
18th 46 S1.5   Howard Hanna   Evans Hunt Howard Hanna Porsche 550 136
DNF 19 S5.0   Al Garz   Len Lesko Fred Dagavar Jaguar XK120 134 Brakes
19th 74 S750   Ken Heavlin   C. J. Davis C. J. Davis DB HBR Panhard 127
20th 67 S1.1   John Bentley   Guy Atkins John Bentley Siata-Fiat 300BC 127
21st 66 S1.1   Austin Conley   Horman Christianson Austin Conley Siata-Fiat 300BC 126
22nd 64 S5.0   D. Carleton Wilson   Bob Kennedy D. Carleton Wilson Jaguar XK120 124
DISQ 10 S5.0   John Gordon Bennett   Traver McKenna Frank Miller Jaguar C-type 113 Disqualified
NC 12 S5.0   Charles Schott   David Michaels Chas. Schott Jaguar XK120 111 Accident
DNF 5 S5.0   Phil Walters   John Fitch B. S. Cunningham Ferrari 375 MM 104 Engine
DNF 1 S8.0   Briggs Cunningham   Sherwood Johnston B. S. Cunningham Company Cunningham C-4R 104 Engine
NC 35 S2.0   Alan Patterson   Ernesto Tornquist Alan Patterson Triumph TR2 103
NC 57 S1.5   George Moffett   Bob Sand George Moffett Osca MT4 1450 102
DNF 99 S1.5   Victor Herzog   Steve Lansing A.E. Goldschmidt Kieft-MG Sport 88
DNF 37 S5.0   Alberto Ascari   Luigi Villoresi Scuderia Lancia Co. Lancia D24 87 Brakes
DNF 17 S3.0   John Schmidt   John German John Ellwood Jaguar XK120 82 Off course
DNF 25 S3.0   Charles Wallace   Carroll Shelby Aston Martin Ltd. Aston Martin DB3S 77 Rear end
DNF 42 S2.0   Don McKnought   William Eager Don McKnought Maserati A6GCS 67 Accident
DNF 100 S1.5   Gleb Derujinsky   Don Underwood Gleb Derujinsky Kieft-MG Sport 65
DNF 14 S5.0   Conrad Janis   James Daly Conrad Janis Jaguar XK120 65
DNF 7 S5.0   William Spear   Phil Hill Bill Spear Ferrari 375 MM 60 Rear end
DNF 48 S1.5   James Graham   J. Stimpson James Graham Porsche 550 57 Fuel system
DNF 36 S5.0   Juan Manuel Fangio   Eugenio Castellotti Scuderia Lancia Co. Lancia D24 51 Real axle
DNF 44 S2.0   Larry Kulok   Harry Grey Geo. B. McClellan Fraser Nash Le Mans Replica 50 Engine
DNF 58 S1.5   William Brewster   Henry Rudkin Wm. Brewster Osca MT4 1450 47 Transmission
DNF 40 S2.0   Luigi Musso   Ferdinando Gatta Maserati Co. Maserati A6GCS 47 Brakes
DNF 30 S3.0   James L. Brundage   James Orr H. L. Brundage Austin-Healey 100 36 Engine
DNF 11 S5.0   Watt Hansgen   Paul Timmins Walt Hansgen Jaguar C-Type 28 Engine
DNF 59 S1.5   William Franklin   Ned Curtis Howard Hanna MG Magnette 27
DNF 22 S3.0   Harry Schell   Alfonso de Portago Harry Schell Ferrari 250 MM Vignale 26 Axle
DNF 24 S3.0   Peter Collins   Pat Griffiths Aston Martin Ltd. Aston Martin DB3S 25 Brakes
DNF 8 S5.0   Peter Sparacino   Raymond Osborne A. F. Young, Jr, Jaguar XK120 25
DNF 23 S3.0   Reg Parnell   Roy Salvadori Aston Martin Ltd. Aston Martin DB3S 24 Engine
DNF 70 S750   Bret Hannaway   Miles Collier Miles Collier Bandini S 750 21 Engine
DNF 26 S3.0   William Wellenberg, Jr.   William Wonder Wm. Wellenberg Austin-Healey 100 20 Engine
DNF 33 S3.0   Mike Rothschild   George Hunt Michel Rothschild Healey-Riley Silverstone 17
DNF 69 S750   Roger Wing   Karl Brocken Isabelle Haskell Siata-Crosley 300BC 17
DNF 72 S750   Phil Stiles   George Schrafft Geo. Schrafft Palm Beach-Crosley Special 16 Rear end
DNF 31 S3.0   Hal Ullrich   Ham Reidy Brooks Stevens Excalibur-Willys J 10 Fuel leak
DNF 98 S8.0   Erwin Goldschmidt   Johnny Rocco A. E. Goldschmidt Allard-Cadillac JR 9 Engine
DNF 27 S3.0   Joe Giubardo   Phil Smyth Joseph Giubardo Austin-Healey 100 3
DNF 28 S3.0   Dick Irish   Ralph Knudson Brooks Stevens Excalibur-Willys J 1 Engine
DNS 20 S3.0   F. Randolph Pearsall   George Tilp George Tilp Aston Martin-Offenhuaser DB2 Transmission
DNS 51 S1.5   John Schmidt   John German John Ellwood Porsche 550 raced car #17
DNS 63 S1.5   Dickson Yates   Duncan Black Dickson Yates Excalibur-Willys J Oil pressure
DNS 75 S350   Bill Wood   John Moncur Wm. W. Wood Rex Mercury Marine Failed scrutineering

[7][8][9]

Class Winners edit

Class Winners
Sports 8000 2 Allard-Oldsmobile J2 Gray / Hall
Sports 5000 39 Lancia D24 Rubirosa / Valenzano
Sports 3000 29 Austin-Healey 100 Macklin / Huntoon
Sports 2000 97 Kieft-Bristol Sport Carpenter / van Driel
Sports 1500 56 Osca MT4 1450 Lloyd / Moss
Sports 1100 65 Osca MT4 1100 Makins / Bott
Sports 750 74 DB HBR Panhard Heavlin / Davis

[10]

Standings after the race edit

Pos Championship Points
1=   Ferrari 8
  Osca 8
3   Lancia 6
4=   Aston Martin 4
  Austin-Healey 4
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included in this set of standings.
Championship points were awarded for the first six places in each race in the order of 8-6-4-3-2-1. Manufacturers were only awarded points for their highest finishing car with no points awarded for positions filled by additional cars. Only the best 4 results out of the 6 races could be retained by each manufacturer.

References edit

  1. ^ "Official Program, Florida International 12-Hour Grand Prix of Endurance, March 7th 1954 at Sebring Florida, USA, front cover, www.racingsportscars.com". Retrieved on 5 April 2015
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Reference at www.ferrariexperts.com".[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ a b c "Archived copy". Archived from the original on April 9, 2015. Retrieved September 28, 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ a b c d e Alec Ulmann, “The Sebring Story" (Chilton Book Company, ASIN B0006CUAP2, 1969)
  5. ^ János L. Wimpffen, Sebring 12 Hours - David over Goliath, Time and Two Seats, 1999, pages 147 to 150
  6. ^ a b c Anthony Prichard, The Blue and White of Turin, The Racing Sports Car, 1970, pages 129 to 130
  7. ^ a b c "Reference at www.teamdan.com". Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved September 28, 2014.
  8. ^ a b "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October 21, 2014. Retrieved September 28, 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^ "Sebring 12 Hours 1954 - Race Results - Racing Sports Cars".
  10. ^ "Sebring 12 Hours 1954 - Racing Sports Cars".

Further reading edit

  • Alec Ulmann. The Sebring Story. Chilton Book Company. ASIN B0006CUAP2.


World Sportscar Championship
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1000 km Buenos Aires
1954 season Next race:
Mille Miglia