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1973 24 Hours of Le Mans

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
41st 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance race
197324 Hours of Le Mans
Previous:1972Next:1974
Index:Races |Winners

The 197324 Hours of Le Mans was the 41st Grand Prix of Endurance and took place on 9 and 10 June 1973. It was the eighth round of the1973 World Championship of Makes.

Le Mans in 1973

The race promised to be close, with Ferrari, Matra and Porsche all having two wins in the championship along with a surprise victory for Mirage at Spa. It did indeed turn out to be one of the most tense Le Mans, with the race won in the pits as both Ferrari and Matra took turns in the lead only to be stymied by mechanical failures. All three Ferraris had time in the lead, but as mechanical issues overtook them it was the Matra ofHenri Pescarolo andGérard Larrousse, despite its own challenges, that took the chequered flag. In the end it was a comfortable six-lap margin over the second-placed Ferrari ofMerzario andPace with the Matra ofJabouille/Jaussaud third.

There was a certain symmetry for a French car and a French team winning the fiftieth anniversary of the first 24 Hours of Le Mans. Ferrari did win the GT category after a close tussle with Porsche, and BMW had the only finisher in the Group 2 Touring Car category.

Regulations

[edit]

In the second year of the new regulations, there were no changes. This year theAutomobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) extended the eligible classes to eight with an extra one each in Group 5 and 2.[1] Reserves were not kept, rather the ACO selected the 55 starters from those who arrived taking into account the results of the Four-Hour race at the Test Weekend.[2]

1973 was the 50th anniversary of the first race and there was much pomp and celebration. Included in this were races for pre-war and post-war cars and the first parade of historic Le Mans competitors. The French Post Office issued a special commemorative stamp.[2]

Entries

[edit]
1973 Le Mans winning Matra-Simca 670B at Hampton Court in 2023

The ACO received 112 applications. Even thoughAutodelta, the Alfa Romeo works team withdrew just days before the event there were 61 cars present for practice on race-week. With Sports-prototypes from Matra, Ferrari, Mirage and Ligier as well as Ford and BMW in Group 2, there were 22 ‘works’ entries.[1]

CategorySports-
Prototype
Group 5
Special
GT
Group 4
Special
Touring
Group 2
Total
Entries
Large-engines
>2.5L classes
2224652
Medium-engines
< 2.5L classes
9009
Total Cars3124661

After a distinct lack of success,Matra withdrew fromFormula One to concentrate on contesting the World Championship of Makes against Ferrari. Its new longtail MS670B was made lighter, more aerodynamic and, importantly, equipped with Porsche "Type 1983" gearboxes. The V12 engine was tuned back to put out 450 bhp.[3] and the car now ran on 13” tyres instead of the former 15”.[4]Adding two cars to their regular Championship team made a strong 4-car challenge in an all-French driver line-up.Jean-Pierre Beltoise andFrançois Cevert were constantly quickest but pushed their car hard, whereasHenri Pescarolo/Gérard Larrousse drove with endurance in mind, having got both of Matras victories to date. A third 670B was prepared forJean-Pierre Jabouille/Jean-Pierre Jaussaud whilePatrick Depailler/Bob Wollek had an older MS670.

After a dominant 1972 sportscar season, Ferrari was having a much tougher time this year with running in two World Championships, neglecting F1 by entering only one car and skipping some GP altogether. Having come from the latest round with a 1–2 victory at the Nürburgring, and with the championship carefully balanced, the works team arrived in force with now proven reliability. The latest iteration of the312PB was wider and longer to take bigger tyres and improve handling. The aerodynamic longtail chassis increased speed on Le Mans’ big straights while the improved V12 was now capable of 460 bhp in race-trim.[5] The regular team driver pairings ofJacky Ickx/Brian Redman (who had both Ferrari victories this year) andArturo Merzario/Carlos Pace were augmented byCarlos Reutemann/Tim Schenken.

After 1971John Wyer had retired from racing as thePorsche 917 sportscar class was discontinued. However, he resumedMirage M3 plans for his own Cosworth-powered car-design and again convincedGulf Oil to back the project. Former Ford engineerLen Bailey designed theMirage M6 based around theCosworth DFV engine, as he did in 1968 with the disappointingFord P68. However, the DFV engine was renowned for vibration and being hard on components so a V12 engine, like in the Mirage M2 BRM, was commissioned fromWeslake for a new coupé. But continual unreliability meant the Weslake project was shelved and the team focused on improving the V8 spyder refitted with ZF gearboxes,[6] buoyed by a 1-2 result at Spa.[7] Their drivers wereDerek Bell/Howden Ganley andMike Hailwood/John Watson (nursing a broken leg[7][4])/Vern Schuppan.

Alfa Romeo was more affected than Ferrari by theYears of Lead strikes and social troubles in Italy.Autodelta, the Alfa works team, felt their new 500 bhp flat-12 powered car was still unprepared for 24 hours and did not enter. But they were represented by their customer team, Scuderia Brescia Corse, with a V8 T33/3.[8]

Lola did return to Le Mans after a promising, but tragic, race the previous year. TheScuderia Filipinetti had taken overJo Bonnier’s team after his death. Despite the Swiss team’s owner Georges Filipinetti dying in May from a heart attack, a car was entered forJean-Louis Lafosse and Hughes de Fierlandt.[9][10] An ex-Bonnier Lola was also run by formerhill-climb champion Daniel Rouveyran.Alain de Cadenet also returned to Le Mans after a strong run the previous year in hisDuckhams-Cosworth, paired again withChris Craft. The body was redesigned to be more aerodynamic although no high-speed testing had been able to be done.[11] Ligier finally had the improved Citroen-Maserati V6 engine, now capable of 330 bhp and three cars were entered for the race, including one forGuy Ligier himself, withJacques Laffite.[12][2]

The 2-litre Group 5 class was well represented this year. The Chevron chassis was designed to accommodate a variety of engines and five were entered.Cosworth recommended an engine rebuild of their 2-litre FVC engine after only four hours of racing, so running 24 hours was problematic. They were up against a French ACE, a Lola and an old Porsche 910.[13] Perhaps the most interesting entry was the first Japanese car to race at Le Mans, and with the first Japanese drivers. Shin Kato’sSigma Automotive was entered to the race with the MC73, powered by aMazdaWankel twin-rotary engine. With a claimed performance of 260 bhp it was calculated as a 2292cc equivalent. Three were built for the Japanese series and one came to Le Mans.[4]

Once again it was Ferrari versus Chevrolet in the GTS Group 4. The365 GTB/4 “Daytona” now developed 440 bhp and nine were entered by the customer teams, many with works-prepared engines.[4][2]Vic Elford was coaxed out of semi-retirement by the FrenchCharles Pozzi team and there were four from theNorth American Racing Team (NART) including their young drivers’ Trofeo car (managed byPhil Hill).[14][4] Four Corvettes were entered: the two French cars of Henri Greder and the Ecurie Léopard.John Greenwood arrived with two cars, one carrying a special alloy 7-litre engine boosted to put out 700 bhp.[15]

Porsche could have entered any of its old underpowered low dragPorsche 908 versions again, but these had to carry ballast now as minimum weight had been increased for 1972, thus only privateers raced 908s after 1971, with Joest finishing 3rd in 1972. Filling out the Group 5 field were four older Porsche 908s, including the regular entries from the Spanish Escuderia Montjuïch and SwissAndré Wicky.[8] Instead, in preparation of what should become thePorsche 935 for new rules in 1975 which were postponed to 1976, they updated the ten year oldPorsche 911 design, which in 1972 was refined to the lightweight Carrera RS 2.7 "duck tail", and now had two RSR versions: homologated as GT, and somewhat unlimited, entered as 3-litre sportscar. Thus they came to Le Mans with bigger, burlier versions of the 911 to take on the big cars in Group 4 while developing a future car. Before homologation was granted the RSR versions scored three surprise wins, at1973 24 Hours of Daytona, atSebring beating the Group 5, and in what was to be the final World ChampionshipTarga Florio.[16] The Carrera RS was lightened, with a big rear spoiler and flared wheel-arches to take wider 11” tyres. The engine had been bored out to 2.7-litres, and now produced 240 bhp. The RSR-variant had a bigger 2.8-litre engine good for 300 bhp. As in 1971, Porsche factory entered as aMartini International sponsored team, now led by David Yorke (former team manager at Gulf-Wyer) and with two experimental versions capable of 320 bhp in the Sports category.[17][2] Further lightened, they had 14” tyres and were driven byGijs van Lennep/Herbert Müller andReinhold Joest/Claude Haldi. Additionally, a squadron of eleven standard GT-class 911s arrived for practice from privateer teams.[18]

In Group 2, theEuropean Touring Car Championship (ETCC) was again very popular with top drivers and close racing, and the mighty battle between the works teams of BMW and Ford spilled over into Le Mans. Ford Germany arrived with three 3-litre V6Ford Capri for driversDieter Glemser/John Fitzpatrick,Gerry Birrell/Hans Heyer andHelmut Koinigg/Jean Vinatier.[19]In response, BMW turned up with the3.0 CSL run by its newly set upBMW Motorsport works team underJochen Neerpasch (formerly at Ford). The car had a more powerful inline-6M49 with 360 bhp over the Capri's 300 bhp.[2][4] Their drivers wereChris Amon/Hans-Joachim Stuck andToine Hezemans/Dieter Quester with a third for the Wicky Racing Team.[20]

Practice

[edit]

At the March test weekend, Beltoise put in a time for the Matra four seconds faster than Ferrari had 12 months earlier. Ferrari, citing labour strikes in Italy, did not attend. But Merzario and Ickx immediately set the pace on Wednesday night when official practice started.[1] The only other sub-3:40 time was from the Cevert/Beltoise Matra; in fact these two works teams filled the top seven spots on the grid. Next were the two Gulf Mirages and the Gitanes Lola in tenth. None of the teams had been trying too hard to compete for a top time.[21]The smaller teams had a far tougher time. Both the Duckhams and the Ligiers were suffering from unstable aerodynamics. The Duckhams was running over ten seconds slower than it had the previous year. In the small-engine class, the Spanish Chevron was 13th (4:11.0) just ahead of theSigma rotary (4:11.1). The Porsche RSR prototypes were slower than their test weekend times, until van Lennep found performance improved with narrower rear tyres. Müller recorded a 4:14.9 to be 18th on the grid.[21]Several incidents gave the mechanics all-nighter repair jobs: John Watson's Mirage spun in the Porsche curves and the rear section lifted and clouted him on the head; Lola had a tyre blowout rip up the rear bodywork and Ferrari got an urgent call from the factory saying the valve springs were set wrong needing 48 changes per engine.[21][5]

It was close in the Group 2 and 4 categories with only three seconds covering the best Ferraris, Porsches, Fords and BMWs. Quickest was Glemser in the Ford Capri (4:16.0 for 22nd) ahead of Elford's Ferrari. The Corvettes were off the pace with Greenwood's being the best with a 4:19.6. His special-engine car was disqualified by the officials afterDon Yenko had had an accident doing illegal road-testing on public roads after a full differential change. His daughter, also in the car, was taken to the hospital for stitches.[15][21] The Kremer-Porsche caught fire when oil leaked onto the hot exhaust, necessitating a full engine-change, andWalter Brun put the Wicky-BMW into the Armco at the chicane.[21][20]

Race

[edit]

Start

[edit]

Bright sunshine in race week became dark clouds on Saturday morning, however by 4pm it was sunny again.[22] Honorary starter this year was Sylvain Floirat, President of Matra.[23] From the first lap, Merzario was bolting ahead, sent out as the ‘hare’ to lead the Matras into a race – a role he relished.[5][22] However, none of the other teams took the bait. A number of cars were coming in immediately with problems: Reinhold Joest's Martini Porsche with gearbox problems[17] and the Grossman Ferrari with a puncture.[14] Hailwood's Mirage had no clutch and Amon's BMW only had fifth gear. The Gitanes Lola, the Duckhams and theSigma also all had early issues.[22]

By the pit stops around the end of the first hour, Merzario had built a significant lead but already needed to change brakepads.[22] After the first driver changes, Carlos Pace only got six laps in the Ferrari until he had to stop, partly soaked in petrol from a split fuel tank, losing six laps.[5][24] Matra was now 1-2-3 with Cevert leading from Larrousse and Wollek, chased by Reutemann in the Ferrari. While the Matras were all running at the same speed, the Ferraris had a variety of strategies.Carlos Reutemann andTim Schenken were running among the Matras.Jacky Ickx andBrian Redman were running with the slowest 3-litre cars, theLolas and the Alfa Romeo.

After four hours, Jaussaud's front tyre blew out while going down the Mulsanne Straight. Ten laps were lost repairing the suspension. Less than an hour later, Beltoise had almost the same thing happen, and his Matra lost eight laps.[3][22] As the Pescarolo/Larrousse car had been delayed fixing its brakes the lead fell to the Wollek/Depailler Matra. Then at 9.30pm, their car was in the pits with a terminal oil-pump problem and suddenly the Matra challenge was looking very shaky.[23] At the same time, the GT-leadingSam Posey’s NART Ferrari lost five minutes in a poor pitstop, allowing the Charles Pozzi car of Elford/Ballot-Léna to take the category lead.[14] These cars were all having a close running battle with the Martini Porsche, the Spanish 908, the Maublanc Chevron 2-litre and the fastest Capri.[22]

Night

[edit]

So by 10pm after six hours, it was now the Schenken/Reutemann Ferrari leading from Pescarolo/Larrousse. Third was Ickx/Redman, hitherto run conservatively, ahead of the Hailwood/Watson/Schuppan Mirage, Merzario's Ferrari and the Brescia Alfa Romeo. Wollek's Matra was 7th and the Müller/van Lennep Porsche 8th. Then when Pescarolo was delayed again, this time by a faulty gear selector, Ferrari was running 1–2. Both Merzario and Cevert were pushing their cars hard to make up lost time and just before midnight, Cevert put in the fastest lap of the race.[22]

Soon after midnight, Schuppan went wide at Tertre Rouge, hit the barrier and rolled his Mirage.[7][22] The Merzario/Pace Ferrari was back in the pits, this time for 40 minutes replacing a slipping clutch.[5] The Elford/Ballot-Léna spent 11 minutes changing brakepads, allowing the NART Ferrari through to the GT-lead again.[14] In Group 2, all three Fords had been badly as night fell. The Birrell/Heyer car was out early, and its drivers transferred to the other team cars. The Glemser/Fitzpatrick car had got as high as tenth with the Hezemans/Quester BMW close by in 12th. Both cars were delayed before midnight and spent the rest of the night working back through the field.[19]

Then at 2.30am the leader was stopped out on the track by a broken conrod, and soon after Beltoise's Matra (now running 5th) again had a tyre blow out on it but this time it threw him into the guard-rails.[23][25] So at half-time, Ickx was leading Pescarolo by two laps, while 8 laps further back Facetti in the surprising Alfa Romeo was ahead of Merzario and the Martini Porsche.[25] After all the mechanical problems with the Group 5 cars, the NART Ferrari 365 was sixth leading the GTs, hounded by the Kremer and Sonauto Porsches and Elford's Ferrari. Ecuadorian Guillermo Ortega's privateer Porsche 908 rounded out the top-10.[26]

Morning

[edit]

Dawn came with mist and a light drizzle, but cleared to be another sunny day.[23] But then after leading for seven hours, the lead Ferrari started sounding rough and just after 9am Redman brought it in with a split exhaust header.[23][27] Coincidentally, a lap later Pescarolo also came in, with brake problems.[25] It was the Matra that got back out into the lead just 15 seconds before the Ferrari.[5] Mid-morning the third-placed Alfa Romeo's gearbox's broke. Seventy minutes were spent repairing it.[8][25]

In the GT race, the NART Ferrari was running sixth and still held a narrow lead over the Kremer Porsche, made easier when the Porsche lost time in the early morning with a jammed brake calliper and detached exhaust. TheGregg/Chasseuil Sonauto Porsche was in 8th overall at 6am when a puncture on the Mulsanne Straight damaged the suspension dropping down the order.[18] They were not alone, as most of the GT field had serious problems in the morning.[25] In Group 2, it was resolved when the remaining Ford of Glemser/Fitzpatrick/Heyer got a broken conrod at 10.40am, leaving the BMW as the last Group 2 car running.[19]

Then at 11am Minter bought the GT-leading Ferrari from 7th, smoking badly from a cracked piston.[14] At the same time Ickx brought the pursuing Ferrari in with a split fuel cell like its sister-car had had earlier, costing 25 minutes and six laps to repair. But an hour later the Matra's starter motor failed in a regular pit-stop costing 20 minutes, and it was even once again.[3][25]

Finish and post-race

[edit]

Finally, with barely 90 minutes to go, the Ickx/Redman Ferrari was out – another conrod had broken and the car was wheeled away to a standing ovation from the crowd in the grandstand opposite.[5][25] After that Pescarolo and Larrousse were able to ease off and cruise to the finish. In the end they finished six laps ahead of the Merzario/Pace Ferrari.[23] Eighteen laps further back (and still not overtaken Ickx's retired Ferrari on distance) was the recovering Matra of Jabouille/Jaussaud.

In a very close finish, the French Ferrari of Elford/Ballot-Léna was sixth, barely a lap ahead of the hard-charging Kremer Porsche, with Ortega's privateer Porsche 908 between them. Ninth was the other Pozzi Ferrari of Serpaggi/Dolhem with Georg Loos’ Porsche RSR in tenth.[18] The Brescia Corse Alfa Romeo had had a troubled end to the race with gearbox, clutch then fuel-pump issues after a solid first half but eventually got home in 15th.[8]

After the win at Le Mans, Matra stormed home in the Championship winning the next two rounds. The final round in Argentina was cancelled due to lack of support, giving Matra the championship with five victories (all to Pescarolo/Larrousse) to Ferrari's two.[6]In the European GT season it was Claude Ballot-Léna and Clemens Schickentanz, both driving Porsche RSRs who shared the championship on equal points.[28] Toine Hezemans won the European Touring Car Championship for BMW.[29]Later in the summer, “Pesca” and Larrousse came back to Le Mans to be presented with theLegion d’Honneur, France's highest order of merit.[3] Still to date, 1973 was the final time that the Alfa Romeo works team raced at Le Mans.[5][8] Scuderia Ferrari's factory team would be absent from prototype racing at Le Mans for 50 years until their return and win in2023.

Official results

[edit]

Finishers

[edit]

Results taken from Quentin Spurring's book, officially licensed by theACO[30] Class Winners are inBold text.

PosClassNo.TeamDriversChassisEngineTyreLaps
1S
3.0
11FranceEquipe Matra-SimcaShellFranceHenri Pescarolo
FranceGérard Larrousse
Matra-Simca MS670BMatra 3.0L V12G355
2S
3.0
16ItalySpA Ferrari SEFACItalyArturo Merzario
BrazilCarlos Pace
Ferrari 312PB-73Ferrari 3.0L F12G349
3S
3.0
12FranceEquipe Matra-SimcaShellFranceJean-Pierre Jabouille
FranceJean-Pierre Jaussaud
Matra-Simca MS670BMatra 3.0L V12G331
4S
3.0
46GermanyMartini Racing TeamSwitzerlandHerbert Müller
NetherlandsGijs van Lennep
Porsche 911 Carrera RSRPorsche 2.8L F6D328
5S
3.0
3Spain Escuderia Montjuïch
Switzerland Haberthur Racing[8]
Spain Juan Fernandez
Spain Francisco Torredemer
Switzerland Bernard Chenevière
Porsche 908/03Porsche 3.0L F8G319
6GTS
5.0
39France AutomobilesCharles PozziUnited KingdomVic Elford
FranceClaude Ballot-Léna
Ferrari 365 GTB/4Ferrari 4.4L V12M316
7S
3.0
4Ecuador G. Ortega
(private entrant)
Ecuador Guillermo Ortega
Ecuador Fausto Morello
Porsche 908/02KPorsche 3.0L F8G316
8GTS
3.0
45GermanyKremer Racing TeamGermanyErwin Kremer
Switzerland Paul Keller
Germany Clemens Schickentanz
Porsche 911 Carrera RSRPorsche 2.8L F6D316
9GTS
5.0
40France AutomobilesCharles PozziFrance Alain Serpaggi
FranceJosé Dolhem
Ferrari 365 GTB/4Ferrari 4.4L V12M315
10GTS
3.0
63Germany Gelo Racing TeamGermanyGeorg Loos
GermanyJürgen Barth
Porsche 911 Carrera RSRPorsche 2.8L F6D311
11TS
5.0
51GermanyBMW MotorsportNetherlandsToine Hezemans
AustriaDieter Quester
BMW 3.0 CSLBMW 3.3L S6D307
12GTS
+5.0
30France Greder Racing TeamFrance Henri Greder
France Marie-Claude Beaumont
Chevrolet Corvette C3Chevrolet 7.0L V8M303
13GTS
5.0
38United StatesNorth American Racing TeamFranceFrançois Migault
United States Luigi Chinetti Jr
Ferrari 365 GTB/4Ferrari 4.4L V12G299
14GTS
3.0
48France SonautoBP RacingUnited StatesPeter Gregg
FranceGuy Chasseuil
Porsche 911 Carrera RSRPorsche 2.8L F6G298
15S
3.0
60
(reserve)
Italy Scuderia Brescia CorseItalyCarlo Facetti
Italy “Pam” (Marsillio Pasotti)
Italy Teodoro Zeccoli
Alfa Romeo Tipo 33TT3Alfa Romeo 3.0L V8G298
16GTS
3.0
41Switzerland Schiller Racing Team
(private entrant)
Switzerland Jean Selz
Switzerland Florian Vetsch
Porsche 911 Carrera RSPorsche 2.7L F6F298
17GTS
3.0
42France R. Mazzia
(private entrant)
France Pierre Mauroy
France Marcel Mignot
Porsche 911 Carrera RSPorsche 2.8L F6D290
18GTS
+5.0
69
(reserve)
France Écurie LéopardFrance Jean-Claude Aubriet
France "Dépnic" (Jean-Claude Depince)
Chevrolet Corvette C3Chevrolet 7.0L V8M282
19S
3.0
18France C. Laurent
(private entrant)
France Claude Laurent
France Martial Delalande
France Jacques Marché
Ligier JS2Maserati 3.0L V6M270
20GTS
5.0
34BelgiumEcurie FrancorchampsFranceJean-Claude Andruet
United Kingdom Richard Bond
Ferrari 365 GTB/4Ferrari 4.4L V12G270
21S
3.0
52Switzerland Wicky Racing TeamSwitzerlandAndré Wicky
MoroccoMax Cohen-Olivar
Switzerland Philippe Carron
Porsche 908/02KPorsche 3.0L F8F270

Did Not Finish

[edit]
PosClassNoTeamDriversChassisEngineTyreLapsReason
DNFS
3.0
15ItalySpA Ferrari SEFACBelgiumJacky Ickx
United KingdomBrian Redman
Ferrari 312PB-73Ferrari 3.0L F12G332Engine
(24hr)
DNFGTS
5.0
6United StatesNorth American Racing TeamUnited StatesSam Posey
United States Milt Minter
Ferrari 365 GTB/4Ferrari 4.4L V12G254Engine
(21hr)
DNFTS
3.0
55GermanyFord Motorenwerke
Deutschland
GermanyDieter Glemser
United KingdomJohn Fitzpatrick
GermanyHans Heyer
Ford Capri LVFord 3.0L V6D239Engine
(20hr)
DNFS
2.0
25Switzerland M. Dupont
(private entrant)
Switzerland Michel Dupont
Switzerland Paul Blancpain
Chevron B23Cosworth FVC 1980cc S4F229Gearbox
(22hr)
DNFGTS
5.0
33United Kingdom J.C. Bamford Excavators
(private entrant)
United Kingdom Neil Corner
United Kingdom Willie Green
Ferrari 365 GTB/4Ferrari 4.4L V12M214Gearbox
(18hr)
DNFGTS
5.0
37United StatesNorth American Racing TeamArgentinaRubén Luis di Palma
ArgentinaNestor García-Veiga
Ferrari 365 GTB/4Ferrari 4.4L V12G211Transmission
(18hr)
DNFGTS
5.0
36United StatesNorth American Racing TeamUnited States Bob Grossman
France Lucien Guitteny
Ferrari 365 GTB/4Ferrari 4.4L V12G192Accident
(19hr)
DNFS
3.0
19France AutomobilesLigierFrance Alain Couderc
France Jean-Pierre Paoli
Ligier JS2Maserati 3.0L V6M174Oil leak
(17hr)
DNFGTS
5.0
56
(reserve)
France Shark Racing Team
(private entrant)
France Jean-Claude Guérie
France Cyril Grandet
Ferrari 365 GTB/4Ferrari 4.4L V12D174Gearbox
(17hr)
DNFS
3.0
7France ÉquipeGitanes
Cigarettes de France
FranceJean-Louis Lafosse
SwedenReine Wisell
BelgiumBaron Hughes de Fierlandt
Lola T282Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0L V8G164Transmission
(20hr)
DNFS
3.0
8United KingdomGulf Research RacingUnited KingdomDerek Bell
New ZealandHowden Ganley
Mirage M6Cosworth DFV 3.0L V8F163Oil pump
(18hr)
DNFTS
5.0
50GermanyBMW MotorsportNew ZealandChris Amon
GermanyHans-Joachim Stuck
BMW 3.0 CSLBMW 3.3L S6D162Accident
(16hr)
DNFS
3.0
17ItalySpA Ferrari SEFACAustraliaTim Schenken
ArgentinaCarlos Reutemann
Ferrari 312PB-73Ferrari 3.0L F12G162Engine
(12hr)
DNFS
3.0
10FranceEquipe Matra-SimcaShellFranceFrançois Cevert
FranceJean-Pierre Beltoise
Matra-Simca MS670BMatra 3.0L V12G157Accident
(12hr)
DNFTS
3.0
53GermanyFord Motorenwerke
Deutschland
FranceJean Vinatier
AustriaHelmut Koinigg
United KingdomGerry Birrell
Ford Capri LVFord 3.0L V6D152Engine
(15hr)
DNFS
2.0
22France R. Touroul
(private entrant)
France Raymond Touroul
FranceJean-Pierre Rouget
Porsche 910Porsche 1985cc F6D142Fuel system
(13hr)
DNFGTS
3.0
49France J. Egreteaud
(private entrant)
France Jean Egreteaud
France Jean-Claude Lagniez
Porsche 911 Carrera RSPorsche 2.8L F6D140Axle
(14hr)
DNFS
3.0
9United KingdomGulf Research RacingUnited KingdomMike Hailwood
United KingdomJohn Watson
AustraliaVern Schuppan
Mirage M6Cosworth DFV 3.0L V8F122Accident
(10hr)
DNFGTS
3.0
44Switzerland Porsche Club RomandFrance Jean-François Piot
Switzerland Peter Zbinden
Porsche 911 Carrera RSPorsche 2.8L F6D110Gearbox
(10hr)
DNFGTS
3.0
43Germany Max Moritz Racing TeamGermany Gerd Qvist
Germany Manfred Laub
Germany Jürgen Zink
Porsche 911 Carrera RSPorsche 2.8L F6G103Accident
(10hr)
DNFGTS
3.0
78
(reserve)
France J. Sage
(private entrant)
France Hervé Bayard
France René Ligonnet
Porsche 911 Carrera RSPorsche 2.8L F6F95Engine
(10hr)
DNFS
2.0
21France P. Maublanc
(private entrant)
France Pierre Maublanc
France Robert Mieusset
Chevron B21/B23BMW-Schnitzer M12 1991cc S4[13]F90Engine
(9hr)
DNFS
3.0
14FranceEquipe Matra-SimcaShellFrancePatrick Depailler
FranceBob Wollek
Matra-Simca MS670BMatra 3.0L V12G84Oil pump
(8hr)
DNFS
3.0
5United KingdomDuckhams Oil
Motor Racing
United KingdomAlain de Cadenet
United KingdomChris Craft
Duckhams LM72Cosworth DFV 3.0L V8D81Transmission
(13hr)
DNFS
2.5
26JapanSigma AutomotiveJapan Tetsu Ikuzawa
JapanHiroshi Fushida
France Patrick Dal Bo
Sigma MC73Mazda 12A 2-Rotor
(2.3L equiv.)
B79Transmission
(12hr)
DNFS
3.0
47GermanyMartini Racing TeamGermanyReinhold Joest
SwitzerlandClaude Haldi
Porsche 911 Carrera RSRPorsche 2.8L F6D65Out of fuel
(7hr)
DNFS
2.0
28France J. Henry
(private entrant)
FranceJacques Henry
France Fred Stalder
France Bernard-Etienne Grobot
Lola T290Cosworth FVC 1850cc S4G64Engine
(8hr)
DNFS
2.0
27Spain Escuderia MontjuïchSpain José Juncadella
SpainJorge de Bagration
Chevron B23Cosworth FVC 1930cc S4F52Gearbox
(6hr)
DNFS
3.0
61
(reserve)
France D. Rouveyran
(private entrant)
France Daniel Rouveyran
France Christian Mons
France Christian Ethuin
Lola T280/282Cosworth DFV 3.0L V8G38Gearbox
(5hr)
DNFGTS
+5.0
29United StatesJohn Greenwood RacingUnited StatesJohn Greenwood
United States Bob Johnson
Chevrolet Corvette C3Chevrolet 7.1L V8BF37Engine
(4hr)
DSQS
3.0
62
(reserve)
France AutomobilesLigierFranceGuy Ligier
FranceJacques Laffite
Ligier JS2Maserati 3.0L V6M24Premature oil
refill (4hr)
DNFS
2.0
2Switzerland DinitrolTotal Blancpain
(private entrant)
France Roger Dubois
BelgiumChristine Beckers
France Pierre Pagani
Chevron B21/23Cosworth FVC 1796cc S4M9Fuel injection
(3hr)
DNFTS
3.0
54GermanyFord Motorenwerke
Deutschland
United KingdomGerry Birrell
GermanyHans Heyer
Ford Capri RSFord 3.0L V6D4Electrics
(3hr)
DNFTS
5.0
58
(reserve)
SwitzerlandWicky Racing TeamSwitzerlandWalter Brun
Switzerland Cox Kocher
Switzerland Jean-Pierre Aeschlimann
BMW 3.0 CSLBMW 3.3L S6F1Engine
(2hr)

Did Not Start

[edit]
PosClassNoTeamDriversChassisEngineTyreReason
DNSS
3.0
57
(reserve)
France C. Poirot
(private entrant)
France Christian Poirot
FranceJean Rondeau
GermanyJürgen Barth
Porsche 908/02KPorsche 3.0L F8DDid not qualify
DNQS
2.0
65
(reserve)
France M. Elkoubi
(private entrant)
France Yves Martin
Italy Ugo Locatelli
Italy Massimo Martino
ACE PB-2Cosworth BDA 1898cc S4GDid not qualify
DNQS
2.0
66United Kingdom Promoto Racing Services
(private entrant)
United Kingdom Brian Robinson
Spain José Uriarte
France Hervé Leguellec
Chevron B19/21Cosworth FVC 1850cc S4FDid not qualify
DNSGTS
+5.0
68
(reserve)
United StatesJohn Greenwood RacingUnited StatesDon Yenko
United States Ron Grable
United States Jim Greendyke
Chevrolet Corvette C3Chevrolet 7.0L V8BFDisqualified
DNQGTS
3.0
75
(reserve)
Switzerland Porsche Club RomandSwitzerland Pierre Greub
Germany Paul Keller
France Philippe Farjon
Porsche 911 Carrera RSPorsche 2.8cc F6DDid not qualify
DNQGTS
3.0
84
(reserve)
FranceL. Meznarie
(private entrant)
France Jean-Claude Boucher
France Jacques Guérin
France Didier Jaunet
Porsche 911 Carrera RSPorsche 2.8cc F6DReserve

Class Winners

[edit]
ClassSports
Winners
ClassSpecial GT
Winners
ClassSpecial Touring
Winners
Sports
3000
#11 Matra-Simca MS670BPescarolo / Larrousse *GTS
>5000
#30 Chevrolet Corvette C3Greder / Beaumont *TS
Sports
2500
no finishersGTS
5000
#39 Ferrari 365 GTB/4Elford / Ballot-Léna *TS
5000
#51 BMW 3.0 CSLHezemans / Quester
Sports
2000
no finishersGTS
3000
#45 Porsche 911 Carrera RSRKremer / Keller / SchickentanzTS
3000
no finishers
  • Note: setting a new class distance record.

Index of Thermal Efficiency

[edit]

For Group 2 and Group 4 cars.[31][16][32]

PosClassNoTeamDriversChassisScore
1GTS
3.0
45Germany Kremer Racing TeamGermany Erwin Kremer
Switzerland Paul Keller
Germany Clemens Schickentanz
Porsche 911 Carrera RSR1.049
2GTS
5.0
40France Automobiles Charles PozziFrance Alain Serpaggi
France José Dolhem
Ferrari 365 GTB/41.043
3=TS
5.0
51Germany BMW MotorsportNetherlands Toine Hezemans
Austria Dieter Quester
BMW 3.0 CSL0.98
3=GTS
5.0
39France Automobiles Charles PozziUnited Kingdom Vic Elford
France Claude Ballot-Léna
Ferrari 365 GTB/40.98
3=GTS
3.0
63Germany Gelo Racing TeamGermanyGeorg Loos
GermanyJürgen Barth
Porsche 911 Carrera RSR0.98
6GTS
3.0
41Switzerland Schiller Racing Team
(private entrant)
Switzerland Jean Selz
Switzerland Florian Vetsch
Porsche 911 Carrera RS0.89
7GTS
3.0
48France Sonauto BP RacingUnited States Peter Gregg
France Guy Chasseuil
Porsche 911 Carrera RSR0.88
8GTS
+5.0
30France Greder Racing TeamFrance Henri Greder
France Marie-Claude Beaumont
Chevrolet Corvette C30.80
9GTS
3.0
42France R. Mazzia
(private entrant)
France Pierre Mauroy
France Marcel Mignot
Porsche 911 Carrera RS0.77
10GTS
+5.0
69
(reserve)
France Écurie LéopardFrance Jean-Claude Aubriet
France “Depnic” (Jean-Claude Depince)
Chevrolet Corvette C30.73
  • Note: Only the top ten positions are included in this set of standings.

Statistics

[edit]

Taken from Quentin Spurring's book, officially licensed by theACO

  • Fastest Lap in practice –A.Merzario, #16 Ferrari 312 PB-73 – 3:37.5secs; 225.77 km/h (140.29 mph)
  • Fastest Lap – F. Cevert, #10 Matra-Simca MS670B – 3:39.6secs; 223.61 km/h (138.94 mph)
  • Winning Distance – 4,853.94 km (3,016.10 mi)
  • Winner's Average Speed – 202.25 km/h (125.67 mph)
  • Attendance –  ?

International Championship for Makes Standings

[edit]

As calculated after Le Mans, Round 8 of 10[33]

PosManufacturerPoints
1Italy Ferrari85 (110)*
2France Matra84
3West Germany Porsche68 (82)*
4United Kingdom Lola36
5United Kingdom Chevron29
6United Kingdom Mirage28
7Italy Lancia15
8United States Chevrolet12
9Italy Alfa Romeo9
  • Note: Only the best 7 of 10 results counted to the final Championship points. The full total earned to date is given in brackets
Citations
  1. ^abcSpurring 2011, p.113
  2. ^abcdefMoity 1974, p.135
  3. ^abcdSpurring 2011, p.116-7
  4. ^abcdefClarke 1997, p.144-5: Autosport Jun14 1973
  5. ^abcdefghSpurring 2011, p.118-9
  6. ^abAutomobile Year 1973, p.158
  7. ^abcSpurring 2011, p.120-1
  8. ^abcdefSpurring 2011, p.126
  9. ^Spurring 2011, p.133
  10. ^Wimpffen 2007, p.116-7
  11. ^Spurring 2011, p.131
  12. ^Spurring 2011, p.132
  13. ^abSpurring 2011, p.128
  14. ^abcdeSpurring 2011, p.125
  15. ^abSpurring 2011, p.134
  16. ^abSpurring 2011, p.139
  17. ^abSpurring 2011, p.122
  18. ^abcSpurring 2011, p.123
  19. ^abcSpurring 2011, p.130
  20. ^abSpurring 2011, p.129
  21. ^abcdeClarke 1997, p.147: Autosport Jun14 1973
  22. ^abcdefghClarke 1997, p.148-9: Autosport Jun14 1973
  23. ^abcdefSpurring 2011, p.115
  24. ^Clarke 1997, p.155-6: Road & Track Oct 1973
  25. ^abcdefgClarke 1997, p.150-1: Autosport Jun14 1973
  26. ^Spurring 2011, p.137
  27. ^Automobile Year 1973, p.163
  28. ^Automobile Year 1973, p.203
  29. ^Automobile Year 1973, p.206
  30. ^Spurring 2011, p.2
  31. ^Clausager 1982, p.164-5
  32. ^Moity 1974, p.190
  33. ^"International Championship for Makes".World Sports Racing Prototypes.com. Retrieved2018-06-25.

References

[edit]
  • Armstrong, Douglas – English editor (1974) Automobile Year #21 1973-74 Lausanne: Edita S.A.
  • Clarke, R.M. - editor (1997) Le Mans 'The Ford and Matra Years 1966-1974' Cobham, Surrey: Brooklands BooksISBN 1-85520-373-1
  • Clausager, Anders (1982) Le Mans London: Arthur Barker LtdISBN 0-213-16846-4
  • Laban, Brian (2001) Le Mans 24 Hours London: Virgin BooksISBN 1-85227-971-0
  • Moity, Christian (1974) The Le Mans 24 Hour Race 1949-1973 Radnor, Pennsylvania:Chilton Book CoISBN 0-8019-6290-0
  • Spurring, Quentin (2011) Le Mans 1970-79 Yeovil, Somerset: Haynes PublishingISBN 978-1-84425-539-9
  • Wimpffen, János (2007) Spyders and Silhouettes Hong Kong: David Bull PublishingISBN 1-893618-83-8
  • (in French)24 heures du Mans 1973 inAutomobile Historique n°49, June/July 2005

External links

[edit]
  • Racing Sports Cars – Le Mans 24 Hours 1973 entries, results, technical detail. Retrieved 25 Jun 2018
  • Le Mans History – Le Mans History, hour-by-hour (incl. pictures, quotes, YouTube links). Retrieved 25 Jun 2018
  • World Sports Racing Prototypes – results, reserve entries & chassis numbers. Retrieved 25 Jun 2018
  • Team Dan – results & reserve entries, explaining driver listings. Retrieved 25 Jun 2018
  • Unique Cars & Parts – results & reserve entries. Retrieved 25 Jun 2018
  • Formula 2 – Le Mans results & reserve entries. Retrieved 25 Jun 2018
  • Motorsport Memorial – details of the year's fatal accidents. Retrieved 25 Jun 2018
  • YouTube – Race highlights with French commentary (50min). Retrieved 25 May 2025
  • YouTube – Colour amateur footage (no sound), in three parts (Pt 1 - 8mins). Retrieved 6 Jul 2018
  • YouTube – Colour amateur footage (no sound), in three parts (Pt 2 - 6mins). Retrieved 6 Jul 2018
  • YouTube – Colour amateur footage (no sound), in three parts (Pt 3 - 7mins). Retrieved 6 Jul 2018
  • YouTube – Colour amateur footage (no sound), of the vintage parade races (8mins). Retrieved 6 Jul 2018
  • YouTube – B/w French news report of race (1min). Retrieved 6 Jul 2018
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