1960 Belgian Grand Prix

Belgium  1960 Belgian Grand Prix
Race details
Race 5 of 10 in the 1960 Formula One season
Date 19 June 1960
Official name XXI GROTE PRIJS VAN BELGIE
Location Spa-Francorchamps, Francorchamps, Belgium
Course Grand Prix Circuit
Course length 14.12 km (8.774 mi)
Distance 36 laps, 508.32 km (315.864 mi)
Pole position
Driver Cooper-Climax
Time 3:50.0
Fastest lap
Driver Australia Jack Brabham
United Kingdom Innes Ireland
United States Phil Hill
Cooper-Climax
Lotus-Climax
Ferrari
Time 3:51.9
Podium
First Cooper-Climax
Second Cooper-Climax
Third Cooper-Climax
The remains of Alan Stacey's car after his fatal accident in the 1960 Belgian Grand Prix. In the inset, Stacey before the race.

The 1960 Belgian Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held at Spa-Francorchamps on 19 June 1960. It was the fifth race of the 1960 Formula One season. It is remembered as one of Formula One's darkest days due to the deaths of Chris Bristow and Alan Stacey and the serious accidents of Stirling Moss and Mike Taylor.

Practice and race

Practice for the event saw Stirling Moss and Mike Taylor injured in separate accidents, Taylor suffering injuries which would end his racing career and Moss injured seriously enough to keep him out of racing for a number of months. In the race, Chris Bristow, driving a year-old Cooper for the British Racing Partnership, got off line at Malmedy, crashed into an embankment there four feet high and was hurled into some barbed wire which beheaded him, killing him instantly. Five laps later, Alan Stacey was hit in the face by a bird at Masta and crashed fatally. It would be the darkest weekend for the sport until the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix.

The race distance had been lengthened to 36 laps from 24 laps. The results highlight an unusual quirk in the rules regarding classification of non-finishers. Under modern rules, Graham Hill would have been classified third, since he completed lap 35 before the lapped Olivier Gendebien. Hill then retired, in the pits, but was not classified since he did not push his car over the line after the winner took the finish (as required by the rules of the time). In fact the rule about crossing the finishing line was inconsistently applied – at the 1959 German Grand Prix, Harry Schell was classified seventh despite only completing 49 of the race's 60 laps.[1]

Classification

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 2 Australia Jack Brabham Cooper-Climax 36 2:21:37.3 1 8
2 4 New Zealand Bruce McLaren Cooper-Climax 36 + 1:03.3 14 6
3 34 Belgium Olivier Gendebien Cooper-Climax 35 + 1 Lap 5 4
4 24 United States Phil Hill Ferrari 35 + 1 Lap 4 3
5 18 United Kingdom Jim Clark Lotus-Climax 34 + 2 Laps 10 2
6 32 Belgium Lucien Bianchi Cooper-Climax 28 + 8 Laps 15 1
Ret 10 United Kingdom Graham Hill BRM 35 Engine 6  
Ret 16 United Kingdom Alan Stacey Lotus-Climax 24 Fatal accident 17  
Ret 22 Belgium Willy Mairesse Ferrari 23 Transmission 13  
Ret 26 Germany Wolfgang von Trips Ferrari 22 Transmission 11  
Ret 36 United Kingdom Chris Bristow Cooper-Climax 19 Fatal accident 9  
Ret 30 United States Chuck Daigh Scarab 16 Engine 18  
Ret 6 Sweden Jo Bonnier BRM 14 Engine 7  
Ret 14 United Kingdom Innes Ireland Lotus-Climax 13 Spun off 8  
Ret 8 United States Dan Gurney BRM 4 Engine 12  
Ret 38 United Kingdom Tony Brooks Cooper-Climax 2 Gearbox 2  
Ret 28 United States Lance Reventlow Scarab 1 Engine 16  
DNS 12 United Kingdom Stirling Moss Lotus-Climax 0 Accident 3  
DNS 20 United Kingdom Mike Taylor Lotus-Climax 0 Accident 19  
Source:[2]

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1 New Zealand Bruce McLaren 20
2 2 Australia Jack Brabham 16
1 3 United Kingdom Stirling Moss 11
1 4 United States Jim Rathmann 8
5 United Kingdom Innes Ireland 7

Constructors' Championship standings
Pos Constructor Points
1 United Kingdom Cooper-Climax 30
2 United Kingdom Lotus-Climax 17
3 Italy Ferrari 15
4 United Kingdom BRM 6
5 United Kingdom Cooper-Maserati 3

References

  1. Hayhoe, David & Holland, David (2006). Grand Prix Data Book (4th edition). Haynes, Sparkford, UK. ISBN 1-84425-223-X
  2. "1960 Belgian Grand Prix". formula1.com. Archived from the original on 22 December 2014. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
Previous race:
1960 Dutch Grand Prix
FIA Formula One World Championship
1960 season
Next race:
1960 French Grand Prix
Previous race:
1958 Belgian Grand Prix
Belgian Grand Prix Next race:
1961 Belgian Grand Prix
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