Richie Ginther | |
---|---|
![]() Ginther in 1966 | |
Born | Paul Richard Ginther (1930-08-05)5 August 1930 Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Died | 20 September 1989(1989-09-20) (aged 59) Touzac, Charente, France |
Formula One World Championship career | |
Nationality | ![]() |
Active years | 1960–1967 |
Teams | Ferrari,Scarab,BRM,Honda,Cooper,Eagle |
Entries | 54 (52 starts) |
Championships | 0 |
Wins | 1 |
Podiums | 14 |
Career points | 102 (107)[a] |
Pole positions | 0 |
Fastest laps | 3 |
First entry | 1960 Monaco Grand Prix |
First win | 1965 Mexican Grand Prix |
Last entry | 1967 Monaco Grand Prix |
24 Hours of Le Mans career | |
Years | 1957,1960–1964,1966 |
Teams | Ferrari,Aston Martin,BRM,Ford,NART |
Best finish | DNF |
Paul Richard "Richie"Ginther (5 August 1930 – 20 September 1989) was an Americanracing driver, who competed inFormula One from1960 to1967. Ginther won the1965 Mexican Grand Prix withHonda.
Born inHollywood, Ginther competed in Formula One forFerrari,Scarab,BRM,Honda,Cooper andEagle, winning theMexican Grand Prix in1965 withHonda, when he became the first driver to win for Honda in Formula One. He finished third in the1963 World Drivers' Championship withBRM, and scored 14 podiums across eight seasons.
Ginther was inducted into theMotorsports Hall of Fame of America in 2008.
Richie Ginther was born on 5 August 1930 inHollywood.[2] His family moved to Ohio for his father's work before moving back to California and toSanta Monica, the same Californian town as future Formula One World ChampionPhil Hill, and it was through Hill, a friend of Ginther's older brother, George, that he first began to race.[3] After finishing school in 1948, Ginther followed in his father's footsteps and went to work forDouglas Aircraft, initially in the tool and die shop. In his spare time he helped Hill to repair, maintain and race his collection of old cars andhot rods,[4] as Hill's racing career began to gather pace. Ginther made his race debut atPebble Beach in 1951,[4] driving aFord-enginedMG T-type sports car.[5]
However, Ginther's career was put on hold shortly after, when he wasdrafted for two years ofnational service during theKorean War. During this time he received training and experience working in aircraft and engine mechanics,[4] skills which he would later put to good use during his driving career. On emergence from the military, Hill requested that Ginther join him, principally as a riding mechanic, in driving a privately entered 4.1-literFerrari in the 1953Carrera Panamericana. The pair ran high in the rankings until Hill lost control, crashed, and wrote off the car. Both Ginther and Hill were unharmed and returned in 1954 to take second place,[3] beaten only by the works Ferrari ofUmberto Maglioli.
Nineteen fifty-four was also the year that Ginther returned to race driving himself, mostly in a self-preparedAustin-Healey.[4] His results were impressive enough that the following yearVW andPorsche dealer John von Neumann hired him to drive a Porsche in domestic competitions. When von Neumann started dealing in Ferrari cars in 1956, Ginther also got the chance to drive these.[3] In between working in von Neumann's Ferrari dealership — including trips to the Ferrari factory in Italy to sort customer problems[4] — Ginther began to build an impressive racing reputation on the West Coast. This, and his choice of Ferrari mounts, brought him to the attention of the East Coast Ferrari franchise-holder, three-time24 Hours of Le Mans-winner,Luigi Chinetti. Aside from importing Ferrari road cars, Chinetti also operated a successful race team, soon to metamorphose into Ferrari's official motorsport presence in North America:NART. Ginther first raced for Chinetti in 1957 and with him made his first appearances in international-level events, first in the12 Hours of Sebring and then driving a two-literFerrari 500 TR in the1957 Le Mans race.
Also in 1957, Ginther was signed to drive theAston Martin of Joe Lubin[6] and over the next three years would continue to compete in manysports car racing events in both Aston and Ferrari machinery, with great success. That June, he won a 15-lapGT race at the newLime Rock Park, and won the opening race of the national championship in hisFerrari.[7] In early-1958, he piloted a two-liter Ferrari to victory at the County Fairgrounds inPomona, California, averaging 83.8 mph (134.9 km/h),[8] and won in a three-liter GT in a five-lap qualifying preliminary for theSCCA Pacific Coast Championship.[9] By the end of the year Ginther had captured the Pacific Coast Sports Car Championship outright.[2] He triumphed by a wide margin at Pomona at the opening sports car race of 1959, in a von Neumann 4.1-liter Ferrari,[10] and in June 1959, won in a three-literFerrari TR in the first Hourglass road races inSan Diego, California.[11] Throughout this period he continued to mix his race driving with a steady job at von Neumann's dealership, and by late 1959 the strain was beginning to show.[12]
Ginther made his F1 debut at the1960 Monaco Grand Prix driving for Ferrari, which he stayed with through1961. In the September1960 Italian Grand Prix inMonza, he placed second to Hill.[2] Ginther led from the start until the 25th lap when Hill passed him and led until the finish.[13]
Following the1960 season the Ferrari team gave up 1000 cc in engine size. The 2500 cc engine,permitted the previous year, was replaced by a 1.5-liter rear-engine model, with 110 less horsepower. However, the newer engine was superior in both "profiling" and handling. The conservativeEnzo Ferrari was the last major Formula 1 race car manufacturer to make the transition to cars with engines in the rear.[14]In 1961, Ginther was the No. 3 Ferrari driver, behind No. 1Wolfgang Von Trips and No. 2 Hill.Giancarlo Baghetti occasionally piloted a fourth car. The team manager was Romulo Tavoni.[15]
On May 14, 1961, Ginther finished second toStirling Moss at the1961 Monaco Grand Prix, 3.6 seconds behind, a few hundred feet. He was driving a new rear-engine Ferrari with a 120-degree V-6 which had a lower center of gravity.[16] Ginther had qualified second, just ahead of Hill, with an average speed of 70.7 mph (113.8 km/h), and a qualifying time of 1:39.3. He eclipsed the previous course record of 1:39.6, before Moss took pole position the day after.[17]
In August 1961, Ginther and Baghetti were teammates at thePescara Grand Prix, a world auto manufacturers' championship event. Their Ferrari was leading on the 10th lap when it stopped on a straight stretch with a flat tire.[18] Ginther averaged more than 133 mph (214 km/h) on the 6.2-mile (10.0 km)Autodromo Nazionale Monza in September 1961, to lead the first day of qualifying for the1961 Italian Grand Prix.[19] Von Trips qualified first with Ginther taking the third starting position afterRicardo Rodriguez.[20] Ginther retired in the race. Von Trips died in a spectacular crash on the second lap, which also killed eleven spectators, when his Ferrari climbed a 5-foot-high (1.5 m) earth embankment. It brushed a wire fence employed to restrain a portion of the crowd and struck the spectators.[21] Some who were injured eventually succumbed and brought the total to 15 deaths. The Ferrari team ceased competition until January 1, 1962, as a mark of respect to Von Trips.[22]
In1962, Ginther switched to the British-basedBRM team to race alongsideGraham Hill. The highlight of his time at BRM was finishing equal-second (with Hill) in the1963 World Championship. Ginther scored more points than his British teammate over the whole season, but only a driver's six best scores were counted towards the championship.
His reputation as a solid "team player" and excellent test and development driver earned him an invitation to join the works Honda F1 team for 1965, for whom he scored his one and only GP win, at the1965 Mexican Grand Prix. The win was also Honda's first in Formula 1. Ginther averaged 151.7 kilometres per hour (94.3 mph) over the curving 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) track in the 65 lap Mexico City event. His speed eclipsed the previous course record of 150.185 km/h (93.321 mph) established byDan Gurney in 1964. It was the first time Honda had entered the Mexican Grand Prix.[23] Honda reentered international competition in the1966 Italian Grand Prix. The team was three years old and had encountered difficulty in the preparation of a larger engine. Ginther led in Italy before his car crashed into a retaining wall and he broke his collarbone.[24] He signed with theEagle F1 team in 1967 and raced in theRace of Champions. His last race entered was theMonaco Grand Prix, but he failed to qualify.
Ginther won one race, achieved 14 podiums, and scored a total of 107 championship points.
He appeared in an uncredited role in the 1966 filmGrand Prix as John Hogarth, a driver in the Japanese funded "Yamura" team. He also acted as one of the technical racing advisors for the movie.
While making an attempt to qualify for the1967 Indianapolis 500, Ginther broke a fuel line in his American Eagle Indy Car. A mix of ethanol and gasoline, was sprayed down his back. This experience, along with the recent fiery death of close friendLorenzo Bandini, along with other factors, led to his sudden retirement.[25]
He participated in a rally with sixty-five other competitors, including actorJames Garner, in June 1969. The California Sports Car Club event was three hours cross country fromLos Angeles toHuntington Beach. It benefited students from theBraille Institute.[26]Ginther managed aPorsche 911S with two American drivers during the 39th24 hours of Le Mans, in June 1971.[27]
Ginther died of a heart attack while on vacation with his family in France, in Touzac, near Bordeaux, on September 20, 1989.[28]
He was inducted into theMotorsports Hall of Fame of America in 2008.[29]
In 2020, to mark what would have been Ginther's 90th birthday, a biography was released about Richie's life and career by Richard Jenkins, published by Performance Publishing.[30] "Richie Ginther: Motor Racing's Free Thinker" won the RAC Motoring Book of the Year Award for its depth of research and previously unpublished information[31]
(key) (Races initalics indicate fastest lap)
Year | Entrant | Chassis | Engine | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | WDC | Pts.[a] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1960 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari246P | Ferrari | ARG | MON 6 | 500 | 9th | 8 | ||||||||
FerrariDino 246 | NED 6 | BEL | ITA 2 | USA | ||||||||||||
Reventlow Automobiles Inc | ScarabF1 | Scarab | FRA DNS | GBR | POR | |||||||||||
1961 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari156 | Ferrari | MON 2 | NED 5 | BEL 3 | FRA Ret | GBR 3 | GER 8 | ITA Ret | USA DNA | 5th | 16 | |||
1962 | Owen Racing Organisation | BRMP48/57 | BRM | NED Ret | MON Ret | 8th | 10 | |||||||||
BRMP57 | BRM | BEL 13 | FRA 3 | GBR 13 | GER 8 | ITA 2 | USA Ret | RSA 7 | ||||||||
1963 | Owen Racing Organisation | BRMP57 | BRM | MON 2 | BEL 4 | NED 5 | FRA Ret | GBR 4 | GER 3 | ITA 2 | USA 2 | MEX 3 | RSA Ret | 3rd | 29 (34) | |
1964 | Owen Racing Organisation | BRMP261 | BRM | MON 2 | NED 11 | BEL 4 | FRA 5 | GBR 8 | GER 7 | AUT 2 | ITA 4 | USA 4 | MEX 8 | 5th | 23 | |
1965 | Honda R&D Co | HondaRA272 | Honda | RSA | MON Ret | BEL 6 | FRA Ret | GBR Ret | NED 6 | GER | ITA Ret | USA 7 | MEX 1 | 7th | 11 | |
1966 | Cooper Car Company | Cooper T81 | Maserati | MON Ret | BEL 5 | FRA | GBR | NED | GER | 11th | 5 | |||||
Honda R&D Co | HondaRA273 | Honda | ITA Ret | USA NC | MEX 4 | |||||||||||
1967 | Anglo American Racers | EagleMk1 | Weslake | RSA | MON DNQ | NC | 0 | |||||||||
Advance Muffler/Bruce Bromme | NED DNA | BEL | FRA | GBR | GER | CAN | ITA | USA | MEX | |||||||
Source:[32] |
(key)
Year | Entrant | Chassis | Engine | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1960 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari246 | FerrariV6 | GLV | INT | SIL 9 | LOM | OUL | ||||||||||||||||
1961 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari156 | Ferrari | LOM | GLV | PAU | BRX | VIE | AIN | SYR WD | NAP | LON | SIL | SOL | KAN | DAN | MOD | FLG | OUL | LEW | VAL | RAN | NAT | RSA |
1962 | Owen Racing Organisation | BRMP578 | BRM | CAP | BRX | LOM WD | LAV | GLV 10 | PAU | AIN Ret | INT Ret | NAP | MAL | CLP | RMS Ret | SOL | KAN | MED | DAN | OUL Ret | MEX | RAN 15 | NAT 3 | |
1963 | Owen Racing Organisation | BRMP578 | BRM | LOM 5 | GLV Ret | PAU | IMO | SYR | AIN 4 | INT Ret | ROM | SOL | KAN | MED | AUT | OUL 2 | RAN | |||||||
1964 | Owen Racing Organisation | BRMP261 | BRM | DMT WD | NWT | SYR | AIN DNS | INT WD | SOL | MED | RAN | |||||||||||||
1966 | Stirling Moss Racing Team | BRP | BRMV8 | RSA Ret | SYR | |||||||||||||||||||
Cooper Car Company | CooperT81 | Maserati | INT Ret | OUL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1967 | Anglo American Racers | EagleMk1 | Weslake | ROC 10 | SPC | INT | SYR | OUL | ESP |
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap.)
Year | Team | Car | Class | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | Pos. | Pts | Class |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1963 | John Willment Automobiles | Ford Cortina GT | B | SNE | OUL | GOO | AIN | SIL Ret | CRY 8† | SIL | BRH | BRH | OUL | SIL | 29th | 6 | 12th |
Source:[33] |
† Events with 2 races staged for the different classes.
Year | Team | Co-Driver(s) | Car | Class | Laps | Pos. | Class Pos. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1957 | ![]() | ![]() | Ferrari 500 TRC | S 2.0 | 129 | DNF | DNF |
1960 | ![]() | ![]() | Ferrari 250 TRI/60 | S 3.0 | 204 | DNF | DNF |
1961 | ![]() | ![]() | Ferrari 246 SP | S 2.5 | 231 | DNF | DNF |
1962 | ![]() | ![]() | Aston Martin DP212 | E +3.0 | 78 | DNF | DNF |
1963 | ![]() | ![]() | Rover-BRM | Exp. | 310 | NC | NC |
1964 | ![]() | ![]() | Ford GT40 | P 5.0 | 63 | DNF | DNF |
1966 | ![]() | ![]() | Ferrari 330 P3 Spyder | P 5.0 | 151 | DNF | DNF |