Race Report: Cadwell Park, 16 July 1972

cadwell-park_18_7_72

Race Report: Cadwell Park, 16 July 1972

cadwell-park_18_7_72

It was a two heats and a final scenario for this Forward Trust round but the ravages of the British GP support race two days earlier meant that most of the runners would automatically make the final as long as they didn’t wreck their cars in the heats.

Pole position sitter for the first heat was the familiar sight of Roger Williamson and his GRD 372, sharing the front row with Williamson were Rikki von Opel’s works Iberia Ensign and the March 723 of Stan Matthews. Next up was the new GRD of Mo Harness, the Lotus 69 of Roger Keele and the works JPS Lotus 73 of Bernard Vermilio.
It was Mike Walker in the second Iberia Ensign fastest in heat two with Barrie Maskell’s Lotus 69 and Tony Trimmer’s Lotus 73 alongside him at the front. Fourth fastest was the Brabham BT38 of Peter Hull with newcomer Ronnie MacKay in the MRE Brabham BT35 hire car in fifth.

Heat one was a Williamson walkover, he led from the start and at the end of the 8 laps his GRD was 18 seconds ahead of second place man Rikki von Opel. Bob Evans moved his March up to third, which he held to the flag despite the close attentions of Roger Keele’s Lotus 69, Vermilio ran in fifth until a spin at the Gooseneck lost him two places to John Bisignano and Stan Matthews. Harness had his GRD in seventh until his engine, which had been running badly from the start, blew up on the sixth lap. Mike Wild’s new Ensign was next despite having to do the last two laps with the car stuck in third gear due to a missing bolt in the gear linkage. Ross Ambrose’s Lotus 69 finished ninth which although qualifying for the final would be a nonstarter due to falling oil pressure as would the twelfth placed GRD of Japanese driver Keiichi Tahara which also had engine problems.

Mike Walker dominated heat two just as easily as Williamson had heat one and he won by a similar margin of 18 seconds, initially Tony Trimmer kept with the Ensign but a spin at Barn dropped him to fourth behind a battling Maskell and Hull. After swopping places continually at the finish it was Hull in second by a car’s length from the Lotus, Trimmer held onto fourth ahead of MacKay who went very well in his first F3 race. Next up were Gambs and Spitzley who had another good dice which had also included Dick Mallock until the U2 spun at Coppice near the end. Paul Butler would have made the final in his Brabham BT28 but he emulated Mallock with a spin at Coppice on lap 7 due to an oil leak that caused his retirement.

Roger Williamson made a demon getaway at the start of the 10 lap final so demon in fact that the judges thought long and hard about whether it was a little too good but after some thought they decreed it was legal. Not surprisingly Mike Walker was a little slower away and that break was all Williamson needed to lead the race for all 10 laps, the GRD driver pulled out a two second lead and despite Walker’s best efforts he couldn’t get any closer. Rikki von Opel held third for the entire race although towards the end he came under pressure from Peter Hull and Tony Trimmer. Hull’s race wasn’t improved by a spin at the hairpin on the second lap but because the track is so narrow no one else was able to pass him and he held his place. Vermilio finished well adrift in seventh whilst Bisignano took eighth from Keele on lap 7 and although the Lotus driver tried his best the American held on to the position to the flag. Barrie Maskell finished a fed-up fifteenth after needing a push start on the grid and setting off well behind everyone else.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Cadwell Park, 16 July 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: Hockenheim, 15 – 16 July 1972

hockeinheim_15_7_72

Race Report: Hockenheim, 15 – 16 July 1972

hockeinheim_15_7_72

A race for the usual German F3 runners entitled the Südwestpokal Rennen over 20 laps of the 6.788 km Hockenheim track.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Hockenheim, 15 – 16 July 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: Magny Cours, 14 July 1972

magny-cours_14_7_72

Race Report: Magny Cours, 14 July 1972

magny-cours_14_7_72

Held as part of the Bastille Day celebrations this was very much a French affaire with most of the top domestic runners in attendance. Michel Leclere put his Alpine on pole followed by Jacques Coulon in the Filipinetti Martini, Leclere led from the start with Coulon close behind. After several laps of hard fighting Coulon passed the Martini and stayed in the lead until 5 laps from finish when his Holbay engine began to misbehave and he quickly fell away. This left Leclere to take the chequered flag from team-mate Serpaggi second and a very disappointed Coulon third. Of the other runners Jean-Pierre Jarier had been running well in the top half-dozen but he had to retire his La Vie Clare March 713M at half distance.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Magny Cours, 14 July 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: Brands Hatch, 14 July 1972

brands-hatch_14_7_72

Race Report: Brands Hatch, 14 July 1972

brands-hatch_14_7_72

Despite receiving in excess of 100 entries, more than enough for three heats and a final, for some reason best known to themselves the organisers accepted only 41 (35 to race plus 6 reserves) of which 39 arrived for this the supporting race to the British GP. This somewhat shortsighted attitude meant the very large crowd had to forgo the pleasure of seeing most of the best foreign drivers as well as many of the regular British runners.

Practice was held over two one hour sessions during the mornings of Thursday and Friday, the first session was generally a couple of seconds slower than the second due to oil dropped by the F5000 runners. Fastest of all, as is becoming his trademark, was Roger Williamson who suffered a blown head gasket on Thursday but after experimenting with different Dunlop compounds on Friday he was half a second fastest than the rest. Sharing the front row was Colin Vandervell and his Ensign, Vandervell suffered a slipping clutch on Thursday but was flying on Friday. Row two, unusually for Brands Hatch the organisers were using a 2X2 grid, consisted of Mike Walker’s Ensign and Tony Trimmer’s Lotus 73.

Tom Pryce headed row 3 with Stan Matthews who was having his best run to date in his March 723, next up were Jochen Mass in the works STP March, there was some problem with the car but the team couldn’t pinpoint exactly what it was and Brendan McInerney who was delighted with his new Ensign. Peter Hull led row 6, he had been second fastest on Thursday but gear selection problems slowed him on Friday, his time was shared by Brise who was 400rpm down due to a metering unit problem, von Opel who felt he should have gone quicker and Evans and Wood.
Of the rest of the runners, Maskell was in handling difficulties as were Skeaping and Jones although Jones was very pleased with the service from the GRD team in trying to sort things out with his new car. Roger Keele had a spin at Stirlings as the result of a puncture and was hit by the closely following James Hunt, the Dastle flipped twice and ended up inverted on a barrier, Hunt was very lucky to crawl out uninjured. Damage to Roger Keele’s Lotus was restricted to a couple of bent radius rods that were replaced for the race although he was a nonstarter when his shock absorber broke on the warm-up lap probably as a result of the accident. Other drivers in trouble were Vermilio whose Lotus was in bad gear selection difficulties, Bev Bond who crashed the Ehrlich, Lamplough who only did one session with engine problems, MacDonald with clutch problems, Horsley who had a shunt and O’Brien who didn’t qualify after an engine blow up.
Colin Vandervell had the edge at the start with Trimmer trying to follow him through but by Paddock it was Williamson from Vandervell, Walker, Trimmer and Mass. Further back Maskell braked hard to miss those in front, spinning as a result, several other drivers including Jones and Matthews taking to the grass to avoid him. Walker and Vandervell had agreed a plan to work together to try and beat Williamson but entering Druids Walker got inside Vandervell and slid wide allowing Trimmer and Mass to get through as well as giving Williamson the break he needed. At the end of lap 1 Williamson had a huge three second lead over Trimmer, Mass, Vandervell, Walker, Brise, Hull, Pryce, von Opel, Wood, Rousselot, Vermilio, and Skeaping. At the back were a recovering Maskell and McInerney, the latter having found himself pushed off at Druids. Of the midfield runners Stan Matthews called into the pits with handling difficulties with his March whilst Bond and Harness were out with broken engine mounts and a faulty fuel pump respectively.
Williamson continued to pull away at an unbelievable three seconds a lap whilst behind him Trimmer, Mass, Vandervell and Walker were having a great battle until lap 4 when Vandervell and Walker got ahead of the other two and began to pull away. The Brabhams of Brise and Hull were already out, Brise hit the barriers at Stirlings when trying too hard on lap 3 and Hull was out three laps later with a broken throttle cable. Pryce was another retirement when he was helped off at Druids which left von Opel in fifth from Sutcliffe, these two were pulling away from a battle between Rousselot, Vermilio, Evans, Skeaping and Wood.
By lap 7 Williamson was 13 seconds to the good and he was shown the “Easy” pitboard, second was Walker who was edging away from Vandervell and Mass. Tony Trimmer dropped 12 places when he went wide at Druids and hit Pryce’s abandoned Royale, fortunately he didn’t damage the Lotus 73. MacDonald was out on lap 8 after spinning at Hawthorns and Matthews retired with a puncture although he would have been disqualified anyway for reversing in the pit road .
Walker reduced the gap to Williamson to ten seconds by half distance but it was obvious that the GRD driver had everything well under control, Vandervell had pulled away from Mass who was suffering engine problems, next up was von Opel who had a couple of seconds in hand over Andy Sutcliffe. By this stage of the race the main interest was in the battle for seventh between Rousselot, Vermilio, Evans Skeaping and Wood. On lap 11 Evans was out with a damaged nose but Alan Jones moved his GRD up to take his place, Skeaping was next to go when a wheel stud sheered on lap 14. Meanwhile Jones had now moved to the front of the seventh place battle on lap 17 despite the best efforts of Vermilio to get ahead.
With only one lap remaining Mike Walker was an unfortunate retirement from second place when the engine in his Ensign cried enough although he had some consolation with a new lap record. So at the end of 20 laps it was Williamson who coasted to an easy 17.2 second win over Colin Vandervell, Mass took third despite his engine problems with von Opel fourth ahead of Sutcliffe and Jones. Late retirements were McInerney who bent a steering arm after light contact with Lamplough, Musetti who was another to go off at Druids and Lewis who had engine troubles.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Brands Hatch, 14 July 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: Salzburgring, 2 July 1972

salzburgring_2_7_72

Race Report: Salzburgring, 2 July 1972

salzburgring_2_7_72

This race was entitled the Bavariarennen and took place over 25 laps of the 4.238 km circuit, the entry consisted of the usual German F3 runners.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Salzburgring, 2 July 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: Clermont ferrand, 2 July 1972

clermont-ferrand_2_7 _72

Race Report: Clermont ferrand, 2 July 1972

clermont-ferrand_2_7 _72

Although this FFSA Formula Three Trophy race supported the French GP there were surprisingly few foreign entries and the majority of the field was made up of domestic runners. This was possibly partially due to the fact that there was no start money on offer and also that the grid was restricted to 25 starters.

Fastest in qualifying was Roger Williamson in his usual GRD 372, he soon came to terms with the difficult track and his pole time was less than 12 seconds away from some of the slower F1 boys. F3 returnee Jean-Pierre Jabouille set the second fastest time in Depailler’s Monaco winning car, it was thought that Alpine wanted the F2 driver in one of the cars to continue their run of success in the French championship races. Two more Alpines were to be found on the second row of the 2X2 grid, the works car of Michel Leclere and the 1971 ex-Depailler car now handled by Lucien Guitteny.

Row three was Jean-Pierre Jarier, once again going very well in the La Vie Clare March 713M and the first of the numerous Martini Mk9s this one driven by Jacques Coulon. Further down the grid the man who builds the Martinis, Richard Knight, who had semi-retired was out giving a customer’s car a run. Both of the works Dastles arrived for James Hunt and Bubbles Horsley but worn out engines and wheel bearing problems afflicted both cars, Horsley did not qualify and although Hunt made it a broken upright meant he non-started. Bev Bond was initially first reserve in the Ehrlich ES1 but Hunt’s withdrawal meant he made it onto the back of the grid. UK non-qualifiers were John MacDonald (March 713M), David Powers (March 723) and Brian McGuire (Brabham BT38), Tony Brise could have expected to make the race but his BT38 was stuck at Calais due to problems with the French Customs.

It was Williamson who led Jabouille into the first corner at the start and once in front he was confident that he could keep the other cars behind him due to the problem of overtaking at this circuit. Two drivers were out immediately, somebody moved over on Ulf Svensson who then hit Bernard Beguin’s Martini, both cars spun and retired. Ascending the hill behind the pits Ethuin spun the Narval and was struck by Knight’s Martini which reared up over a low guard rail and dropped down a 50 foot ravine, Knight suffered a broken collar bone but more seriously the spectating wife of a photographer received serious chest injuries.
Behind Williamson and Jabouille it was Guitteny, Jarier, Rousselot, Rabbione, Leclere and Coulon. Mike Walker was down in eleventh after being delayed at the start and out were Stan Matthews with broken throttle slides, Alain Serpaggi with no third or fourth gears and Rikki von Opel with a broken clutch. Despite Jabouille’s best efforts Williamson continued to lead and the two drivers were pulling away at a second a lap from the chasing pack. Rousselot moved up to third outbraking Guitteny and Jarier into the pits hairpin, Jarier and Leclere then had a great battle until a bit of a misunderstanding saw Leclere leave the track under braking and hit a course marker which damaged the Alpine’s suspension and causing its immediate retirement.
At half distance Williamson still led with Jabouille indulging in some fist-waving in second, third was Rabbione whose Martini had lost its airbox and as a result was flying, next came Rousselot, Guitteny, Jarier and Coulon. Further back Lacarrau was ahead of the Dhotel/Walker battle followed by Wood, Andersson, Lewis and Bond all of whom were spread out from each other. Next retirements were Lacarrau and Dhotel who hit each other when they were blinded by the dust raised by the helicopter dealing with the injured from the Richard Knight opening lap accident, Mike Walker was lucky to avoid the two colliding Martinis.

On lap 8 Williamson suddenly appeared on his own as Jabouille had hit the rear of the GRD under braking and had fallen back into the middle of the third place battle. Williamson was now able to relax and so at the end of the 10 laps it was the Englishman in first from Rabbione who was immediately disqualified for his lack of airbox this moved Rousselot up to second making it a GRD 1-2. Guitteny took third from the disgruntled Jabouille with Jarier fifth despite his March having lost most of its oil. At the end of the race all the leading cars were scrutineered and weighed in public, much to everyone’s relief, and happily they were all declared fully legal.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Clermont ferrand, 2 July 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: Brands Hatch, 25 June 1972

brands-hatch_25_6_72

Race Report: Brands Hatch, 25 June 1972

brands-hatch_25_6_72

There was a good field for this round of the Lombard North Central Championship and taking pole position in his first race since he broke his leg at Monaco was Tom Pryce. The talented young Welshman was still limping from his injury but was going well, equalling the lap record in his brand new Royale RP11.

It was the RP11 of Pryce that leapt into the lead at the start with the similar car of Val Musetti an astonishing second after an excellent start from row two, by the end of the first lap it was Pryce ahead of Andy Sutcliffe’s GRD and Rikki von Opel’s Ensign, Musetti having fallen away to sixth. Over the next eight laps Pryce extended his lead leaving Sutcliffe and von Opel to fight over second, fourth was Tony Brise who had started well down the grid and was catching the two in front of him. Suddenly Pryce’s lead began to dwindle as the Royale began to misfire with suspected fuel starvation and by lap 10 Sutcliffe had caught Pryce and on the following lap the GRD driver took the lead. Pryce managed to keep von Opel at bay for the next few laps although the Ensign driver was getting worried by the sight of Tony Brise looming ever larger behind him. Pryce started to lap some backmarkers on lap 17 and in the confusion von Opel was able to find a way past and a lap late Brise joined him.

Out in front Sutcliffe kept a cool head and took the flag 2 seconds ahead of von Opel who managed to hold off Brise to the tune of 0.2 seconds for second and third respectively. Pryce managed to hold onto fourth ahead of a tight battle between Russell Wood, whose March was running the new-style bodywork, Peter Hull (Brabham BT38) and the second gear-less Chevron B20 of Chris Skeaping, they finished in that order 0.8 second apart.
Major retirements were the GRDs of Masami Kuwashima and Neil Ginn who collided at Druids on lap 3, Ian Ashley (Royale RP11) with a broken fuel pump and Brian McGuire’s Brabham BT38 with no oil pressure.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Brands Hatch, 25 June 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: Rouen, 25 June 1972

rouen_25_6_72

Race Report: Rouen, 25 June 1972

rouen_25_6_72

This race was a round of the French F3 Championship and several of the UK runners who had been racing at Anderstorp and Estoril decided to join in the fun. There was a qualifying session on the Thursday before the race to select the 20 runners for the race, amongst those not making it through were Barrie Maskell whose trailer broke down at Southampton stranding his Lotus 69, the March 723s of Davy Powers and Stan Matthews, the Brabham BT38 of Randy Lewis and the Ensign F371 of Ken Sedgley all of whom had various engine maladies, the other non-qualifiers were sundry French F3 runners.
Practice was dominated by the two works Alpine-Renault A364s of Michel Leclere and Alain Serpaggi although Colin Vandervell went well to equal Serpaggi’s time with his Ensign despite not liking the circuit very much.

Walker was pleased with his fifth fastest time which was equalled by F3 returnee Jean-Pierre Jarier who racing one of the March 713Ms of James Hunt’s former team La Vie Clare. The two JPS Lotuses of Bernard Vermilio and Tony Trimmer were running well to set the eighth and tenth fastest times, they sandwiched James Hunt who, like Steve Thompson at Monaco, was showing there was nothing much wrong with the Dastle Mk9. Other UK based runners on the grid were Bob Evans who set a 2:05.8 after aerodynamic problems with his March 723, Mike Tyrrell (Ensign F372) with a 2:06.1 and John MacDonald who set a 2:07.4 with his March 713M. Amongst the four non qualifiers on the day were Bubbles Horsley with a 2:09.0.
Once again the 25 lap race was an Alpine benefit, Serpaggi lead Leclere away from the grid but lap 2 saw Leclere move into the lead and the two cars proceeded to pull away from the rest of the field. There was a nine car battle going on behind the two leaders, Colin Vandervell managed to pull away from them for a few laps on lap 2 but then he was caught and passed by Guitteny and then Walker. The Iberia Ensign of Walker had been baulked at the start and had dropped to twelfth but some inspired driving saw him move up to fourth at the finish only 1 second behind Guitteny.
After Walker and Guitteny broke away from the pack the remaining bunch consisting of Vandervell (Ensign), Vermilio (Lotus), Jarier (March), Hunt (Dastle), Trimmer (Lotus), Coulon (Martini), Ethuin (Narval) and Rabbione (Martini) had a frantic battle passing and repassing each other all round the track. Coulon was first out of the group when he was punted into the barrier by Jarier, the Martini driver was able to continue further down the field, Vermilio found himself forced wide into the catchfencing which tore a corner off the Lotus. Team-mate Trimmer had his nosecone knocked askew by a Martini and Ethuin was out with overheating, this left Hunt and Jarier fighting over sixth. Hunt led on the penultimate lap and looked slightly more in control than Jarier who was locking his brakes up everywhere but on the last lap Jarier made it past and Hunt’s attempt to regain the place was thwarted by a tardy backmarker. Behind them Trimmer led Beguin home, next there was a very tight battle between Tyrrell, Evans and Compain, Compain had been chopping Evans at every opportunity but at the last corner the March driver forced the Martini wide and Evans was able to follow Tyrrell home in eleventh.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Rouen, 25 June 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: Neiderstestten, 25 June 1972

niederstetten_25_6_72

Race Report: Neiderstestten, 25 June 1972

niederstetten_25_6_72

This was a German F3 race that had a small class for Swiss drivers, it was held over 20 laps of the 2.665 km airfield circuit.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Neiderstestten, 25 June 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: Estoril, 18 June 1972

estoril_18_6_72

Race Report: Estoril, 18 June 1972

estoril_18_6_72

This was the first race meeting to be held at the new Estoril circuit which was opened by the President of Portugal. The F3s were the star attraction and were racing in the grandly named Taca Joao Ortigao Ramos Formula Three Race, they were allocated two practice sessions on the Saturday afternoon, one of 30 minutes and one of an hour.

Practice was dominated by the two Alpine-Renaults with Alain Serpaggi heading team-mate Michel Leclere by half a second, joining them on the front row was the Gitanes GRD 372 of Pierre-François Rousselot who was concerned with the way his car was weaving on the track and was relieved to find most of the other runners suffering from the same problem on the new surface. Row two saw Manfred Möhr’s Brabham BT35 fourth fastest despite having three pistons fail in his Novamotor during the second session, next to him was local driver Ernesto Neves who was going very well indeed in the Ross Ambrose Lotus 69 he had hired for the race. Leading the third row was the first of the Martinis, the Holbay Mk9 of Jacques Coulon, next to him was the Novamotor powered Mk9 of Bernard Beguin which had a suspect piston ring and there was doubt it could last the race, completing the row was American Ken Mackintosh in his Ensign F371. Row four was all Ensign with the F371 of Ken Sedgley ahead of the similar car of Antiguan Mike Tyrrell.

Joel Auvray’s Martini was next up which was odd as neither the Frenchman or his car were at the circuit but the timekeepers still gave him a time! Auvray’s grid space was left empty so the other row five inhabitants were John MacDonald’s March 713 and Randy Lewis in his new Brabham BT38, the American was suffering brake problems in the untested car. Brian McGuire was the next timed runner which again like the imaginary Auvray was interesting as he was at Thruxton. Next up was Jorge Pinhol who suffered a leaking water pump during the first session, an old Holbay was fitted to his GRD for the second session but a burnt out starter motor and a flat battery meant he missed the faster second session completely. Joining Pinhol on row seven were American Cliff Haworth in his Martini Mk9 and Tony Binnington in his March 713M. Final runners were Italian Togna Fiorenzo’s Brabham BT35, Bob Shellard in his ex-Peter Hull Brabham BT28, Portuguese runner Carlos Azevedo’s hired BT38 and Ray Caruthers Martini Mk9 which had all sorts of engine problems.

Not surprisingly it was the two Alpines that led away at the start of the 50 lap race, at the end of lap 1 it was Leclere, his nose cone bottoming badly, with a healthy lead over Serpaggi, Neves was third from Coulon, Rousselot and Beguin with a gap back to Mackintosh, Sedgley and Tyrrell. Möhr’s good grid position was negated by a terrible start that left him tenth at the end of the opening lap. By lap 5 the two Alpines were well in the lead, circulating a couple of seconds apart, behind them there was a big battle for third between Rousselot, Neves, Coulon and Beguin but the latter began to fall away over the next few laps, next came Mackintosh from a recovering Möhr followed by Sedgley, MacDonald, Pinhol, Lewis, Binnington, Fiorenzo, Powers and Haworth. Retirements by this stage were Tyrrell with a broken throttle cable and Caruthers and Azevedo both of whom were out with engine problems.
The status quo remained over the next five laps although Möhr was beginning to suffer from a broken petrol breather that was spraying petrol over him, Pinhol had pulled himself up to MacDonald but was out on lap 11 when his engine lost all its water. By half distance up at the front Leclere was extending his lead as Serpaggi was suffering from chunking front tyres whilst Coulon was pulling away from Rousselot in third. Neves promising run came to an end a couple of laps later when his engine blew and Möhr was forced to retire with a bad petrol burn on his thigh leaving Mackintosh an untroubled eighth.
The rest of the race was an Alpine demonstration run, by lap 41 Leclere had lapped everybody up to and including third man Coulon and he crossed the finishing line on lap 50 some 14 seconds ahead of the Serpaggi car. Coulon, Rousselot and Beguin finished a lap down in third, fourth and fifth with Mackintosh sixth and Lewis who had passed MacDonald on lap 33 and Sedgley on the last lap a pleased seventh.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Estoril, 18 June 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