1954 Mille Miglia
The 1954 Mille Miglia (officially XXI Mille Miglia [1]), was a motor race open to Sports Cars, GT cars and Touring Cars. It was the 21st Mille Miglia and the third race of the 1954 World Sportscar Championship. The race was held on the public roads of Italy on 2 May 1954 using a route based on a round trip between Brescia and Rome, with the start and finish in Brescia.[2] It was won by Alberto Ascari driving a Lancia D24.
As in previous year, the event is not strictly a race against each other, as is a race against the clock. The cars are released at one-minute intervals with the larger professional class cars going before the slower cars, in the Mille Miglia, however the smaller displacement slower cars started first. Each car number related to their allocated start time. For example, Giuseppe Farina’s car had the number 606, he left Brescia at 6:06am, while the first cars had started late in the evening on the previous day.[2]
The previous August, Italian racing legend Tazio Nuvolari died. As a mark of respect, the route of this race, near it finish would pass through Mantua, where he was a resident.[3]
Report
Entry
A total of 483 cars were entered for the event, across nine classes based on engine sizes, ranging from up to 750cc to over 2.0 litre, for Grand Touring Cars, Touring Cars and Sport Cars. Of these, 378 cars started the event.[2]
Fresh from their loss in Florida at the 12 Hours of Sebring, Lancia entered in force with four newly revised D24 cars, these were piloted by Piero Taruffi, Alberto Ascari, Eugenio Castellotti and Gino Valenzano. The cars were modified by race car designer Vittorio Jano. These enhancements featured an enlarge version of their V6 engine, so that could produce 265 bhp.[3]
Ferrari for their part arrived with four 300 bhp 4.9 litre, Ferrari 375 Plus’s for Giuseppe Farina, Umberto Maglioli, Giannino Marzotto and his brother Paolo Marzotto. For 1954, the Mille Miglia was a round of the World Sports Car Championship; the home teams faced strong challengers. From Great Britain, came Aston Martin and Austin-Healey, and West Germany sent Porsches.[3][4]
Also amongst the entry was the four-time winner, Clemente Biondetti, but by the time of the race, he was very sick man, fighting cancer, and only had a few months left to live.[3]
Race
The race started at 21:01 on 1 May, when Domenico Stragliotto and Adolfo Montorio departed Brescia in their Iso Isetta. The faster cars would leave the following morning, when conditions were foggy mixed with little rain. After nine and half hours, all the cars were on their way to Rome.[2][3]
The Lancias took the early lead, with Taruffi's D24 controlling the pace, averaging 108.9 mph, on the opening stages into Ravenna, with a lead of 90 seconds, over Ascari and Castellotti. The Ferrari of Maglioli was back in fourth. On the run into Rome, the Lancia of Castellotti developed distributor problems, and was forced into retirement, moving Maglioli into third. Further trouble hit the Lancia of Taruffi, when his sprung an oil leak and he soon retired. Ascari had taken it easy in the early stages, now assumed the lead.[2][3]
On the run back to Brescia, Ascari's Lancia suffered a throttle spring return failure, and this was temporarily replaced by a rubber band. This and other problems started to affect the Lancia and by the time Ascari reached Florence, he had enough and wanted to retire from the event. It was only after a long stop for repairs, he was persuaded to continue. By Bologna, all the top Scuderia Ferrari cars were out, and the path was clear for Ascari to win.[3]
For Ferrari, they had not lost a Mille Miglia since 1947, but this they were sounded thrashed by the team from Torino, with Ascari, winning in a time of 11hr 26:10mins., averaging a speed of 72.80 mph. 33:51mins adrift in second place was Ferrari 500 Mondial of Vittorio Marzotto, who salvaged some honour for Maranello marque with second place and a class win. The third different car on the podium was the Maserati of Musso. Another Ferrari came home in fourth, driven by Biondetti, in what was to be his last Mille Miglia; he was lifted exhausted from the car at the finish.[3][5][6][7]
With the British attack failing to make it back to Brescia, it was left to the Germans to provide some opposition to the Italian teams. Encountering a lowered gate at a railway crossing, the Porsche driver, Hans Herrmann drove his low 550 Spyder under it, narrowly missing an express train. This daring act gave Porsche a first in class and an amazing sixth overall.[2][8]
The event was marred by two fatal accidents, which cost the French driver, Andre Pouschol his life and that of his co-driver F. Saisse and eight spectators injured when his Citroën 15 Six crashed into a signpost near Vicenza. The second accident cost the Italian navigator, S. Dal Cin his life when F. Mancini crashed his Maserati A6GCS.[9][10][11]
Classification
Mille Miglia
Of the 378 starters, 182 were classified as finishers. Therefore, only a selection of notably racers has been listed below.
Class Winners are in Bold text.
Pos. | No. | Class | Driver(s) | Entrant | Car - Engine | Time | Reason Out | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | 602 | S+2.0 | Scuderia Lancia | Lancia D24 | 11hr 26:10 | |||
2nd | 523 | S2.0 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari 500 Mondial | 12hr 00:01 | |||
3rd | 500 | S2.0 | Officine Alfieri Maserati | Maserati A6GCS/53 | 12hr 00:10 | |||
4th | 601 | S+2.0 | Clemente Biondetti | Ferrari 250 MM Morelli Spider | 12hr 15:36 | |||
5th | 506 | S2.0 | Officine Alfieri Maserati | Maserati A6GCS | 12hr 27:43 | |||
6th | 351 | S1.5 | Porsche | Porsche 550 Spyder | 12hr 35:44 | |||
7th | 440 | GT+1.5 | Scuderia Lancia | Lancia Aurelia B20 | 12hr 47:12 | |||
8th | 326 | T+1.3 | Alfa Romeo 1900TI | 12hr 51:52 | ||||
9th | 439 | GT+1.5 | Fiat 8V Zagato | 12hr 52.38 | ||||
10th | 343 | S1.5 | O.S.C.A. MT4 1500 | 12hr 55:08 | ||||
11th | 305 | T+1.3 | Alfa Romeo 1900TI | 12hr 56:10 | ||||
12th | 428 | GT+1.5 | Lancia Aurelia B20 | 13hr 09:42 | ||||
13th | 553 | S+2.0 | Ferrari 212 Export | 13hr 10:34 | ||||
14th | 516 | S2.0 | Ferrari 500 Mondial | 13hr 12:38 | ||||
15th | 512 | S2.0 | Ferrari 500 Mondial Pinin Farina Spyder | 13hr 14:33 | ||||
16th | 425 | GT+1.5 | Lancia Aurelia B20 | 13hr 16:06 | ||||
17th | 430 | GT+1.5 | Lancia Aurelia B20 | 13hr 19:49 | ||||
18th | 416 | GT+1.5 | Fiat 8V | 13hr 25.29 | ||||
19th | 534 | S+2.0 | Ferrari 375 MM Berlinetta | 13hr 31:38 | ||||
20th | 524 | S2.0 | O.S.C.A. MT4 1100 | 13hr 31:52 | ||||
21st | 411 | GT+1.5 | Olivier Gendebien | Jaguar XK120 | 13hr 34:03 | |||
22nd | 312 | T+1.3 | Alfa Romeo 1900TI | 13hr 38:12 | ||||
23rd | 550 | S+2.0 | Austin-Healey 100 | 13hr 38:34 | ||||
24th | 433 | GT+1.5 | Lancia Aurelia B20 | 13hr 40:39 | ||||
25th | 444 | GT+1.5 | Lancia Aurelia B20 | 13hr 41:55 | ||||
26th | 431 | S2.0 | Lancia Aurelia | 13hr 42:45 | ||||
27th | 528 | S2.0 | Triumph TR2 | 13hr 52:31 | ||||
28th | 317 | T+1.3 | Alfa Romeo 1900TI | 13hr 53:12s. | ||||
29th | 229 | GT1.5 | Porsche | Porsche 356 1500 Super | 13hr 53:50 | |||
30th | 331 | T+1.3 | Alfa Romeo 1900 TI | 14hr 00:53 | ||||
33rd | 228 | GT1.5 | Porsche | Porsche 356 1300 Super | 14hr 11:23 | |||
34th | 219 | GT1.5 | Porsche 356 1300 Super | 14hr 13:14 | ||||
36th | 424 | GT+1.5 | Jaguar XK120 | 14hr 17:00 | ||||
41st | 156 | T1.3 | Fiat 1100/103 TV | 14hr 34:35 | ||||
52nd | 457 | S2.0 | Alfa Romeo 1900 TI | 14hr 46:06 | ||||
55th | 349 | S1.5 | Thirion/Bousquet | Gordini T15S | 14hr 49:47 | |||
65th | 2320 | S750 | DB HBR Panhard | 15hr 03:16 | ||||
66th | 2206 | T750 | Renault 4CV | 15hr 04:33 | ||||
86th | 028 | T1.3 | Fiat 1100/103 | 15hr 35:12 | ||||
94th | 507 | S2.0 | Triumph TR2 | 15hr 42:16 | ||||
100th | 2137 | T750 | Renault 4CV | 15hr 53:41 | ||||
159th | 2341 | S750 | Marino-Fiat Coupe | 18hr 49:59 | ||||
177th | 2101 | T750 | Iso Isetta | 22hr 10:02 | ||||
DNF | 253 | T+1.3 | Citroën 15 Six | Fatal Accident | ||||
DNF | 409 | S1.5 | Giacomo Pagani | Stanguellini Bialbero | DNF | |||
DNF | 519 | S2.0 | Maserati A6GCS | 6hr 31:38 | Fatal Accident – Dal Cin | |||
DNF | 526 | S+2.0 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari 375 Plus | 5hr 45:57 | Accident | ||
DNF | 538 | S+2.0 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari 375 Plus | Driver illness | |||
DNF | 539 | S+2.0 | David Brown | Aston Martin DB3S | Accident | |||
DNF | 540 | S+2.0 | Scuderia Lancia | Lancia D24 | Distributor | |||
DNF | 541 | S+2.0 | Scuderia Lancia | Lancia D24 | Accident | |||
DNF | 545 | S+2.0 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari 375 Plus | 5hr 41:51 | Accident | ||
DNF | 546 | S+2.0 | Piero Scotti | Ferrari 375 Plus | 6hr 12:53 | Accident | ||
DNF | 547 | S+2.0 | Scuderia Lancia | Lancia D24 | 5hr 30:19 | Oil loss | ||
DNF | 548 | S+2.0 | Franco Bordoni | Gordini T24S | Accident | |||
DNF | 549 | S+2.0 | Ferrari 250 MM | DNF | ||||
DNF | 558 | S+2.0 | Lancia Aurelia B20 | DNF | ||||
DNF | 606 | S+2.0 | Donald Healey | Austin-Healey 100 | 8hr 02:30 | DNF | ||
DNF | 547 | S+2.0 | Donald Healey | Austin-Healey 100 | Brake Pipe | |||
DNF | 606 | S+2.0 | Scuderia Ferrari | Ferrari 375 Plus | Accident | |||
DNF | 609 | S+2.0 | David Brown | Aston Martin DB3S | 6hr 08:45 | Accident | ||
DNF | 613 | S+2.0 | H. W. Motors | HWM Jaguar | Shock absorber | |||
DNF | 2215 | T750 | Renault 4CV | DNF | ||||
DNF | 2224 | T750 | Renault 4CV | 8hr 31:43 | DNF | |||
Class Winners
Class | Winners | ||
---|---|---|---|
Vetture Sport oltre 2000 | 602 | Lancia D24 | Ascari |
Vetture Sports 2000 | 523 | Ferrari 500 Mondial | V. Marzotto |
Vetture Sports 1500 | 351 | Porsche 550 Spyder | Herrmann / Linge |
Vetture Sports 750 | 2320 | DB HBR Panhard | Faure / Storez |
Gran Turismo oltre 1500 | 440 | Lancia Aurelia B20 | Serafini / Mancini |
Gran Turismo fino 1500 | 229 | Porsche 356 1500 Super | von Frankenberg / Sauter |
Turismo Serie Speciale +1300 | 326 | Alfa Romeo 1900 TI | Carini / Artesiani |
Turismo Serie Speciale 1300 | 156 | Fiat 1100/103 TV | Mandrini / Ferraris |
Turismo Serie Speciale 750 | 2206 | Renault 4CV | Rédélé / Pons |
Standings after the race
Pos | Championship | Points |
---|---|---|
1= | 14 | |
14 | ||
3 | 8 | |
4 | 5 | |
5= | 4 | |
4 | ||
- Note: Only the top five positions are included in this set of standings.
Championship points were awarded for the first six places in each race in the order of 8-6-4-3-2-1. Manufacturers were only awarded points for their highest finishing car with no points awarded for positions filled by additional cars. Only the best 4 results out of the 6 races could be retained by each manufacturer.
References
- Programma Ufficiale, XXI Mille Miglia (1954), www.collectorstudio.com Retrieved on 5 April 2015
- http://www.racingsportscars.com/race/Mille_Miglia-1954-05-02.html
- http://www.grandprixhistory.org/mille_miglia_1954.htm
- http://www.racingsportscars.com/results/Mille_Miglia_1954-05-02.html%5B%5D
- http://www.ultimatecarpage.com/winners/&race=mm
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2014-10-17.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- David Venables, “The Classic Motor Racing Circuits of Europe" (Ian Allan Publishing, ISBN 0 7110 3481 8, 2010)
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-01-04. Retrieved 2014-10-17.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2014-10-17.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-08-09. Retrieved 2014-10-17.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1300&dat=19540504&id=ZLYUAAAAIBAJ&sjid=xMUDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3993,487235
- http://www.teamdan.com/wsc/1954/54mille.html%5B%5D
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-10-21. Retrieved 2014-10-17.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
Further reading
- Anthony Pritchard. The Mille Miglia: The World’s Greatest Road Race. J H Haynes & Co Ltd. ISBN 978-1844251391
- Leonardo Acerbi. Mille Miglia Story 1927-1957. Giorgio Nada Editore. ISBN 978-8879115490
World Sportscar Championship | ||
---|---|---|
Previous race: 12 Hours of Sebring |
1954 season | Next race: 24 Hours of Le Mans |