1960 United States Grand Prix

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United States  1960 United States Grand Prix
Race details
Race 10 of 10 in the 1960 Formula One season
File:Riverside International Raceway 1967.svg
Date November 20, 1960
Official name III United States Grand Prix
Location Riverside International Raceway
Riverside, California
Course Permanent road course
Course length 5.271 km (3.275 mi)
Distance 75 laps, 395.325 km (245.643 mi)
Weather Temperatures up to 75.9 °F (24.4 °C); wind speeds up to 9.9 miles per hour (15.9 km/h)[1]
Pole position
Driver Lotus-Climax
Time 1:54.4
Fastest lap
Driver Australia Jack Brabham Cooper-Climax
Time 1:56.3 on lap 71
Podium
First Lotus-Climax
Second Lotus-Climax
Third Cooper-Climax

The 1960 United States Grand Prix was a Formula One race held on November 20, 1960 at Riverside International Raceway in Riverside, California.


Summary

For whatever reason (unfamiliarity of the fans with open-wheeled cars and European drivers; media disapproval of Eastern promoters; lack for an ongoing championship battle), promoter Alec Ulmann had no more success drumming up support for the 1960 United States Grand Prix at Riverside International Raceway in California than he had the year before in Sebring, Florida.

Set in the desert near the Box Spring Mountain complex east of Los Angeles, the Riverside track featured a particularly demanding uphill esses section, just past the start-finish line. Riverside resident and local hero Dan Gurney headed the field as the natural favorite of the crowd, which numbered only about 25,000. Jack Brabham, who had already clinched his second consecutive World Championship a few weeks prior in Portugal, was back with teammate Bruce McLaren in the factory Cooper-Climaxes. Team Lotus had cars for Jim Clark, Innes Ireland and John Surtees, while Rob Walker entered a Scottish blue Lotus for Stirling Moss. BRM had three mid-engined P48s for Jo Bonnier, Graham Hill and Gurney. With the Championship chase over, Enzo Ferrari decided to keep his cars at home, believing his time would be better spent preparing for the new 1.5-liter Formula for 1961. The old man's drivers, Phil Hill and Wolfgang von Trips, however, were allowed to enter the race with other teams. Hill particularly wanted to protect his third place position in the Championship behind Cooper teammates Brabham and McLaren.

Moss won the pole battle, well ahead of Brabham and Gurney, who completed the front row. Phil Hill was astonished at the "incredible" difference in handling between the year-old, rear-engined green and red Cooper he was given for the race and the Monza winning Dino Ferrari he had been driving all season, but he managed to put it only thirteenth on the grid.

On his way to the track in nearly perfect weather on Sunday morning, race promoter Ulmann realized that, indeed, he had bitten the hand that might have fed him. Following the rousing success of the Los Angeles Times-sponsored Sports Car Grand Prix that summer, where a crowd of 70,000 packed RIR, Ulmann said plainly that a genuine Formula One Grand Prix would surely do even better, since the Times race wasn't really a Grand Prix at all!

Ulmann's words angered Times publisher Otis Chandler, and only Ulmann was surprised when the biggest daily paper in Los Angeles and most of the local media completely ignored the event.

The small crowd of Riverside veterans who were on hand for the race, however, were stunned by the spectacle of the F1 cars. As Brabham took the early lead into Turn One, ahead of Gurney and Moss, the Riverside radio and PA announcer could only call their names and utter, "Wow." The Coopers of Phil Hill and Olivier Gendebien stalled on the grid, but were restarted and got under way. On lap 4, Surtees spun his Lotus in front of teammate Jim Clark, putting himself out, and causing the nosecone from his car to be used to replace the now-shattered one on Clark's.

Still leading, Brabham paid the price for over-reacting to last year's sputtering last lap at Sebring. Not wanting to run out of fuel again, he had overfilled his tanks, and excess fuel was spilling and being ignited by the heat of his exhaust. Two stops failed to find the source of the problem, or to assuage Brabham's concern over the noises and flames erupting from the back of the car.

The Australian's troubles left Moss well in front, and when Gurney's BRM blew a core plug, Moss' teammate Bonnier took second, ahead of Ireland, Graham Hill and Texan Jim Hall, driving his first Grand Prix. Just before halfway through the 75-lap race, Graham Hill retired with a broken gearbox, and Bonnier began to drop back when a broken valve spring caused a misfire. Brabham had been charging up through the field since his pit stops, however, and eventually finished a battling fourth, behind teammate McLaren. Phil Hill ran fifth in the unfamiliar Cooper until a spin dropped him behind Bonnier, who got his ailing BRM home for two points.

Moss won the last race of the two-and-a-half liter era going away, and grabbed third in the Championship for the second year in a row. It was his fourteenth victory under the outgoing regulations, one less than five-time World Champion Juan Manuel Fangio.

Having failed to realize his dream for Formula One in the US a second time, Ulmann nobly used his own money to pay prize and appearance fees. Winner Moss got a check for $7,500, a staggering amount for the time, and while suppliers had to wait a few months for theirs, they received every penny. Happily, the following year would see the United States Grand Prix finally settle in to a regular home, with a loyal and appreciative crowd in Watkins Glen, New York. But a Formula One race would eventually return to California. In 1976, the United States Grand Prix West would come to Long Beach, only 60 miles away.

Classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 5 United Kingdom Stirling Moss Lotus-Climax 75 2:28:52.2 1 8
2 10 United Kingdom Innes Ireland Lotus-Climax 75 + 38.0 7 6
3 3 New Zealand Bruce McLaren Cooper-Climax 75 + 52.0 10 4
4 2 Australia Jack Brabham Cooper-Climax 74 + 1 Lap 2 3
5 15 Sweden Jo Bonnier BRM 74 + 1 Lap 4 2
6 9 United States Phil Hill Cooper-Climax 74 + 1 Lap 13 1
7 24 United States Jim Hall Lotus-Climax 73 + 1 Lap 12  
8 14 United Kingdom Roy Salvadori Cooper-Climax 73 + 2 Laps 15  
9 26 Germany Wolfgang von Trips Cooper-Maserati 72 + 3 Laps 16  
10 23 United States Chuck Daigh Scarab 70 + 5 Laps 18  
11 25 United States Pete Lovely Cooper-Castellotti 69 + 6 Laps 20  
12 7 Belgium Olivier Gendebien Cooper-Climax 69 + 6 Laps 8  
13 20 United States Robert Drake Maserati 68 + 7 Laps 22  
14 8 United Kingdom Henry Taylor Cooper-Climax 68 + 7 Laps 14  
15 18 France Maurice Trintignant Cooper-Maserati 66 + 9 Laps 19  
16 12 United Kingdom Jim Clark Lotus-Climax 61 + 14 Laps 5  
Ret 17 United Kingdom Graham Hill BRM 34 Gearbox 11  
Ret 19 United Kingdom Ian Burgess Cooper-Maserati 29 Ignition 23  
Ret 21 United Kingdom Brian Naylor Cooper-Maserati 20 Engine 17  
Ret 16 United States Dan Gurney BRM 18 Blown core plug 3  
Ret 4 United Kingdom Ron Flockhart Cooper-Climax 11 Transmission 21  
Ret 6 United Kingdom Tony Brooks Cooper-Climax 6 Spun Off 9  
Ret 11 United Kingdom John Surtees Lotus-Climax 3 Accident 6  
Source:[2]

Championship standings after the race

  • Notes: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings. Only the best 6 results counted towards each Championship. Numbers without parentheses are Championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored.

References

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External links

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  • Dennis Shattuck (February, 1961). "Grand Prix of the U.S.". Road & Track, 78-81.


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1960 Italian Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
1960 season
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