1970 1000 km of Nürburgring

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The 1970 1000km of Nürburgring was an endurance race held at the Nürburgring Nordschleife, Nürburg, West Germany on May 31, 1970. It was the seventh round of the 1970 World Sportscar Championship season.[1]

The Nürburgring (1967-1982)

Pre-race edit

The race weekend was marred by the fatal accident of Finnish driver Hans Laine in a Porsche 908/02. While attempting to qualify for the race at the end of Saturday's qualifying session, Laine damaged one of the front sections of his car; and while he was on the Dottinger Hohe straight going at full speed over one of the humps near the Antonius Bridge, his 908/02 flew into the air, did a full backflip and landed back on the track and rolled a number of times. Although Laine was alive and conscious after the accident, fuel was leaking and Laine could not get out of the car. Track marshals were able to get to the wrecked Porsche, but then the car burst into flames. The marshals only had small extinguishers that was not enough to put out the inferno and Laine perished in the fire. He was 25, and was survived by his wife and 5-month year old daughter; he was one of 6 racers to die at the Nürburgring that year. Laine's co-driver, Dutchman Gijs van Lennep had a similar incident at the same place on the track, although he was able to avoid causing any damage to the car. The racing team Laine drove for withdrew another one of its entries, a Porsche 917K but a Porsche 911 driven by Finnish rally driver Pauli Tovionen and entered by Laine's team won the GT's with an engine larger than 2 liters class.[2]

It was agreed upon by John Wyer and Porsche that the works teams would use the 908/03, the car used at the Targa Florio. The light and nimble 908/03 was better suited to the twisty and demanding Nürburgring than the big and powerful 917K. Two were run by John Wyer's team and two were run by Porsche Salzburg.

One of the works Ferrari 512S Spyders, entered and to be driven by Jacky Ickx and Peter Schetty crashed in practice; neither driver took part in the race. This just about proved to be fatal for Ferrari, because Ickx was considered to be the best Nürburgring driver in the world at that time, next to Formula One world champion Jackie Stewart. Even with the experienced John Surtees who knew the long circuit well and had much success at the challenging mountain circuit in the past, things did not look good for Ferrari- as most of the works Porsche drivers- including Jo Siffert, Brian Redman, Hans Herrmann and Vic Elford were all known to be Nürburgring specialists and were very fast around the circuit.

Qualifying was dominated by works Porsches. They took the first four positions on the grid with the pole position time only a second slower than the time set by Ickx for the 1969 German Grand Prix; pole position went to the Jo Siffert/Brian Redman car, followed by Pedro Rodriguez/Leo Kinnunen, Vic Elford/Kurt Ahrens Jr., and then Hans Herrmann/Richard Attwood. They were followed by a works Alfa Romeo T33/3 of Rolf Stommelen/Piers Courage, and the two works Ferrari 512S Spyders of Ignazio Giunti/Arturo Merzario and John Surtees/Nino Vaccarella.

Race edit

At the start Rodriguez went ahead and Siffert, the pole sitter, was also overtaken by Giunti's Ferrari. This allowed Rodriguez to get a good lead. At the second lap Siffert, who had a hard time getting around Giunti and even waved his fist at him, managed to overtake him and endeavoured to regain first place. He was faster at the Ring and eroded Rodriguez's lead by about 1,5 seconds per lap. At lap 8 Siffert went ahead, but Rodriguez answered back with a best lap (new prototype record). Siffert managed to gain about 8 seconds on Rodriguez, before the pit stops. When pitstops came around, Rodriguez handed off his car to Kinnunen and Siffert to Redman; but the Siffert-Redman car was delayed and went back to second place. Redman went after Kinnunen and in two laps was poised to overtake him; under pressure Kinnunen, who had been affected by his friend Hans Laine's death the day before, crashed his 908/03 after going over a jump at the 14 kilometer mark (near the Karrusell), flipping in the air and Redman went right underneath his crashing teammate. This put the Siffert/Redman car into the lead, but by the end of the 22nd lap, Redman brought his 908/03 due to faltering oil pressure. The engine then failed due to lack of oil, and the Elford/Ahrens Jr. 908/03 took the lead, ran without a hitch and went on to win the race; followed by the other 908/03 of Herrmann/Attwood and the remaining works Ferrari of Surtees/Vaccarella. The one competitive works Alfa Romeo of Rolf Stommelen/Piers Courage went out after 11 laps with a broken shock absorber.

With this victory at their home event, Porsche claimed the World Sportscar Championship over Ferrari.

This would be the last ever major international race on the original Nürburgring with no safety features on it. For the next year's race, the Nordschleife was rebuilt, which included making the surface smoother and lining the circuit with Armco and adding run-off areas wherever possible. The German Grand Prix that year was originally supposed to be at the Nurburgring that year, but with Laine's accident being the third racing fatality at the Ring in 1970 and the deaths of 2 other Formula One drivers, the Formula One circus moved temporarily to Hockenheim, which prompted the Ring to be rebuilt. 3 more drivers and a motorcyclist were to die at the Ring that year- bring the total death tally for the circuit in 1970 up to a very dubious seven in one year.

Official results edit

 
The Nürburgring in 1970
 
Vic Elford in a Porsche 908/03, winner of the race together with Kurt Ahrens
 
Hans Herrmann in a works Porsche 908/03, this car finished 2nd
 
Nino Vaccarella in a works Ferrari 512S Spyder, this car finished 3rd and 1st in class
 
Helmut Kelleners in a private Porsche 917K, this car qualified ninth but then retired due to wheel bearing problems
 
Gerard Larrousse in a Martini Porsche 908/02. This car finished 5th overall and 3rd in class.
 
Mike Parkes in a privately entered standard Ferrari 512S. This car finished 4th overall and 2nd in class.
 
Dieter Fröhlich in a Racing Team AAW Porsche 911S. This car won the GT +2.0 class and finished 14th overall. The team that fielded this car was the same that Hans Laine drove for.
 
Jo Siffert in a works/John Wyer Porsche 908/03, this car retired with engine failure after leading 11 laps
Pos Class No Team Drivers Chassis Engine Laps
1 P
3.0
22   Porsche Salzburg   Vic Elford
  Kurt Ahrens Jr.
Porsche 908/03 Porsche 3.0L Flat-8 44
2 P
3.0
15   Porsche Salzburg   Hans Herrmann
  Richard Attwood
Porsche 908/03 Porsche 3.0L Flat-8 44
3 S
5.0
55   SpA Ferrari SEFAC   John Surtees
  Nino Vaccarella
Ferrari 512S Spyder Ferrari 5.0L V12 43
4 S
5.0
4   Scuderia Filipinetti   Mike Parkes
  Herbert Müller
Ferrari 512S Ferrari 5.0L V12 42
5 P
3.0
1   Martini International Racing   Gérard Larrousse
  Helmut Marko
Porsche 908/02 Porsche 3.0L Flat-8 42
6 P
3.0
2   Martini International Racing   Rudi Lins
  Willy Kauhsen
Porsche 908/02 Porsche 3.0L Flat-8 42
7 P
3.0
11   German BG Racing Team   Karl von Wendt
  Gerhard Koch
Porsche 908/02 Porsche 3.0L Flat-8 41
8 P
3.0
4   Asahi Pentax Racing Team   Sepp Greger
  Helmut Leuze
Porsche 908/02 Porsche 3.0L Flat-8 40
9 P
2.0
29   Andre Wicky Racing Team   Andre Wicky
  Mário Cabral
Porsche 907 Porsche 1.9L Flat-6 39
10 P
2.0
14   Levi's International Racing   Yves Deprez
  Julien Vernaeve
Chevron B16 Mazda 1.0L 2-Rotor 39
11 P
3.0
17   Asahi Pentax Racing Team   Dieter Basche
  Helmut Kelleners
  Jürgen Neuhaus
Porsche 908/02 Porsche 3.0L Flat-8 38
12 P
3.0
31   Scuderia Auto-Neuser   Anton Fischhaber
  Dieter Schmid
Porsche 906 Porsche 1.9L Flat-6 38
13 P
2.0
31   Mark Konig   Mark Konig
  Tony Lanfranchi
Nomad Mk.2 BRM 2.0L V8 37
14 GT
+2.0
79   Racing Team AAW   Dieter Fröhlich
  Pauli Toivonen
Porsche 911S Porsche 2.2L Flat-6 37
15 GT
+2.0
84   Auto Kremer   Erwin Kremer
  Günther Huber
Porsche 911S Porsche 2.2L Flat-6 37
16 GT
+2.0
85   Peter Kersten   Clemens Schickentanz
  Hans-Joachim Stuck
Porsche 911S Porsche 2.2L Flat-6 37
17 S
2.0
67   Roger Heavens   Roger Heavens
  Mike Garton
Chevron B8 BMW 1.9L I4 37
18 GT
2.0
53   Porsche Salzburg   Georg Loos
  Franz Pesch
Porsche 911L Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 36
19 GT
2.0
88   Scuderia Lufthansa   Robert F. Huhn
  Günther Schwarz
Porsche 914/6 GT Porsche 1.9L Flat-6 36
20 GT
2.0
93   Hahn Motors   Peter Kaiser
  Günter Steckkönig
Porsche 914/6 GT Porsche 1.9L Flat-6 36
21 GT
2.0
101   Hülpert & Co.   Alexander Nolte
  Werner Christmann
Porsche 914/6 GT Porsche 1.9L Flat-6 36
22 S
5.0
60   Ecurie Evergreen   Piers Forrester
  Alain de Cadenet
Ford GT40 Mk.I Ford 4.9L V8 35
23 GT
2.0
96   Autohaus Max Moritz   Gerd F. Quist
  Dietrich Krumm
Porsche 914/6 GT Porsche 1.9L Flat-6 35
24 GT
2.0
55   Jean-Marie Jacquemin   Jean-Marie Jacquemin
  William Scheeren
  Bernard Palayer
Alpine A110 Renault 1.3L I4 35
25 GT
+2.0
83   Claude Haldi   Claude Haldi
  Eric Chapuis
Porsche 911S Porsche 2.2L Flat-6 34
26 GT
2.0
91   Bernd Becker   Bernd Becker
  Elmar Clever
Porsche 911S Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 34
27 P
1.6
42   Dieter Weizinger   Dieter Weizinger
  Wilhelm Bisterfeld
Alfa Romeo GTA Junior Alfa Romeo 1.6L I4 34
28 GT
2.0
94   Jörg Klasen   Peter Otto
  Jörg Klasen
Alfa Romeo GTA Alfa Romeo 2.0L I4 34
29 GT
+2.0
97   Ecurie Evergreen   David Weir
  Mike Ogier
Porsche 911T Porsche 1.9L Flat-6 32
30 S
2.0
69   Worcestershire Racing Association   James Tangye
  Paul Vestey
Chevron B8 BMW 1.9L I4 32
31 S
2.0
69   Edward Negus   Edward Negus
  Brian Joscelyne
Chevron B8 BMW 1.9L I4 30
32 P
1.6
43   Stanley Robinson   Stanley Robinson
  John Blanckley
Unipower GT BMC 2.0L I4 29
33 P
2.0
93   AM Graphics Racing   Andrew Mylius
  Gerry Birrell
Gropa CMC Ford 1.6L I4 28
34 S
2.0
38   Red Rose Racing   John Bridges
  Peter Lawson
Chevron B16 Ford 1.6L I4 28

Did Not Finish edit

Class No Team Drivers Chassis Engine Laps
S
2.0
66   Nikolaus Killenberg   Nikolaus Killenberg
  Georg Bialas
Chevron B8 BMW 1.9L I4 24
P
3.0
20   John Wyer Automotive Engineering   Jo Siffert
  Brian Redman
Porsche 908/03 Porsche 3.0L Flat-8 22
P
1.6
38   Daren Cars Ltd.   Jeremy Richardson
  Allistair Cowin
Daren Mk.2 Ford 1.8L I4 22
S
2.0
70   Andre Wicky Racing Team   Willy Meier
  Mario Ilotte
Porsche 910 Porsche 1.9L Flat-6 21
S
2.0
68   Worcestershire Racing Association   John Bamford
  Peter Creasey
Chevron B8 BMW 1.8L I4 20
S
2.0
23   Hans-Dieter Blatzheim   Hans-Dieter Blatzheim
  Ernst Kraus
Porsche 907 Spyder Porsche 1.9L Flat-6 19
S
2.0
64   Intertech Steering Wheels   Tony Goodwin
  Peter Taggart
Chevron B8 BMW 1.9L I4 15
GT
+2.0
81   Hediri Racing   Peter Peter
  Dieter Eymann
Shelby GT350 Ford 4.7L V8 13
P
3.0
12   Keith Grant   Peter Gaydon
  Keith Grant
Brabham BT8 Climax 2.7L V8 12
P
3.0
16   Michael May   Hannelore Werner
  Mike Kranefuss
Ford Capri RS Turbo Ford 2.3L Turbo V6 12
P
2.0
32   Philips Autoradio Racing   Guy Edwards
  Roger Enever
Astra RNR2 Ford 1.6L I4 12
P
3.0
6   Autodelta SpA   Rolf Stommelen
  Piers Courage
Alfa Romeo T33/3 Alfa Romeo 3.0L V8 11
P
3.0
21   John Wyer Automotive Engineering   Pedro Rodríguez
  Leo Kinnunen
Porsche 908/03 Porsche 3.0L Flat-8 11
S
5.0
54   Gesipa Racing Team   Helmut Kelleners
  Jürgen Neuhaus
Porsche 917K Porsche 4.5L Flat-12 9
S
2.0
72   Martin Blackie   Martin Blackie
  Peter Humble
Chevron B8 BMW 1.9L I4 7
GT
2.0
100   Martini BMW   Karl-Heinz Becker
  Friedheim Theissen
Porsche 911S Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 7
P
3.0
16   Oreste Berta   Luis Di Palma
  Carlos Marincovitch
Berta LR Ford DFV 3.0L V8 5
P
3.0
14   Max Wilson   Max Wilson
  Mac Daghorn
Lola T70P BRM 3.0L V12 4
S
2.0
75   Northern Ireland Cars   John L'Amie
  Tommy Reid
Porsche 910 Porsche 1.9L Flat-6 4
S
5.0
57   SpA Ferrari SEFAC   Ignazio Giunti
  Arturo Merzario
Ferrari 512S Ferrari 5.0L V12 2

Statistics edit

  • Pole position: #24 John Wyer Automotive Engineering Porsche 908/03 (Jo Siffert/Brian Redman) - 7:43.3 (110.334 mph/177.566 km/h)
  • Fastest lap: #25 John Wyer Automotive Engineering Porsche 908/03 (Pedro Rodriguez)- 7:50.4 (108.590 mph/174.758 km/h)
  • Time taken for winning car to cover scheduled distance: 6 hours, 5 minutes and 21.2 seconds
  • Average Speed: 165.003 km/h (102.528 mph)
  • Weather conditions: Cloudy, overcast

References edit

  1. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2004-03-20. Retrieved 2012-08-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ "Motorsport Memorial -".


World Sportscar Championship
Previous race:
1000km of Spa
1970 season Next race:
24 Hours of Le Mans