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1960 Italian Grand Prix

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1960 Italian Grand Prix
Autodromo Nazionale di Monza layout
Autodromo Nazionale di Monza layout
Race details
Date 4 September 1960
Official name XXXI Gran Premio d'Italia
Location Autodromo Nazionale di Monza, Monza, Italy
Course Permanent road course
Course length 10.000 km (6.214 miles)
Distance 50 laps, 500.000 km (310.686 miles)
Weather Warm, dry
Pole position
Driver Ferrari
Time 2:41:4
Fastest lap
Driver United States Phil Hill Ferrari
Time 2:43.6
Podium
First Ferrari
Second Ferrari
Third Ferrari
Lap leaders

The 1960 Italian Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held at Monza on 4 September 1960. It was race 9 of 10 in the 1960 World Championship of Drivers and race 8 of 9 in the 1960 International Cup for Formula One Manufacturers. The race was won by American driver Phil Hill driving a Ferrari 246 F1.

Race summary

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The 1960 season had been a frustrating one for Ferrari's Formula One program as they campaigned their obsolete Dino 246, a front-engined car as the rear-engined design established supremacy. Due to the boycott by British teams, the championship had already been decided for Jack Brabham and Ferrari had gone without a victory. Seeing an opportunity, the Italian organizers decided to maximize Ferrari's one advantage —straight line speed — by using the combined Monza road and banked oval circuit, making the fast Monza even faster.[citation needed]

Citing the fragility of their cars and the dangers of the banking, the major British factory teams of the day—Lotus, BRM, and Cooper, all boycotted the event, leading to a cobbled together field of private entrants and Formula 2 cars. Because of this boycott by the British teams, none of the drivers who started the race had previously won a Formula One World Championship Grand Prix.

The race was a processional affair, with Ginther leading at the start and eventually being overtaken by Hill. The pair with teammate Willy Mairesse raced on to a rare 1–2–3 team result for Scuderia Ferrari. The boycott also allowed Scuderia Castellotti to score its only world championship points with Giulio Cabianca finishing fourth in his Cooper T51, two laps behind Hill and ahead of Scuderia Ferrari's fourth entry, Wolfgang von Trips in a 1.5 L-engined (conforming to F2 regulations) Ferrari 156 F2 car.

It was the first victory by an American driver in a Grand Prix since Jimmy Murphy in 1921, and, excluding the Indy 500, the first by an American in the Formula One World Championship.

It was the last Formula One World Championship victory by a front-engined car, although the Ferguson P99 won the non-championship Gold Cup at Oulton Park in 1961.

Classification

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Qualifying

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Pos No Driver Constructor Time Gap
1 20 United States Phil Hill Ferrari 2:41.4
2 18 United States Richie Ginther Ferrari 2:43.3 +1.9
3 16 Belgium Willy Mairesse Ferrari 2:43.9 +2.5
4 2 Italy Giulio Cabianca Cooper-Castellotti 2:49.3 +7.9
5 36 Italy Giorgio Scarlatti Cooper-Maserati 2:49.7 +8.3
6 22 West Germany Wolfgang von Trips Ferrari 2:51.9 +10.5
7 6 United Kingdom Brian Naylor JBW-Maserati 2:52.4 +11.0
8 4 Italy Gino Munaron Cooper-Castellotti 2:53.1 +11.7
9 34 Italy Alfonso Thiele Cooper-Maserati 2:55.6 +14.2
10 26 West Germany Hans Herrmann Porsche 2:58.3 +16.9
11 8 United Kingdom Arthur Owen Cooper-Climax 3:01.5 +20.1
12 24 West Germany Edgar Barth Porsche 3:02.1 +20.7
13 10 West Germany Wolfgang Seidel Cooper-Climax 3:07.0 +25.6
14 28 United States Fred Gamble Behra-Porsche-Porsche 3:10.6 +29.2
15 12 Italy Piero Drogo Cooper-Climax 3:11.9 +30.5
16 30 United Kingdom Vic Wilson Cooper-Climax 3:16.5 +35.1
Source:[1]

Race

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Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 20 United States Phil Hill Ferrari 50 2:21:09.2 1 8
2 18 United States Richie Ginther Ferrari 50 + 2:27.6 2 6
3 16 Belgium Willy Mairesse Ferrari 49 + 1 Lap 3 4
4 2 Italy Giulio Cabianca Cooper-Castellotti 48 + 2 Laps 4 3
5 22 West Germany Wolfgang von Trips Ferrari 48 + 2 Laps 6 2
6 26 West Germany Hans Herrmann Porsche 47 + 3 Laps 10 1
7 24 West Germany Edgar Barth Porsche 47 + 3 Laps 12  
8 12 Italy Piero Drogo Cooper-Climax 45 + 5 Laps 15  
9 10 West Germany Wolfgang Seidel Cooper-Climax 44 + 6 Laps 13  
10 28 United States Fred Gamble Behra-Porsche-Porsche 41 + 9 laps 14  
Ret 6 United Kingdom Brian Naylor JBW-Maserati 41 Gearbox 7  
Ret 34 Italy Alfonso Thiele Cooper-Maserati 32 Gearbox 9  
Ret 4 Italy Gino Munaron Cooper-Castellotti 27 Engine 8  
Ret 36 Italy Giorgio Scarlatti Cooper-Maserati 26 Engine 5  
Ret 30 United Kingdom Vic Wilson Cooper-Climax 23 Engine 16  
Ret 8 United Kingdom Arthur Owen Cooper-Climax 0 Accident 11  
DNS 14 United Kingdom Horace Gould Maserati Fuel system
Source:[2]

Notes

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  • This was Phil Hill's first win and his first pole position in his Formula One World Championship career, and also the first pole position for an American driver (excluding the Indianapolis 500 races).
  • It was the Formula One World Championship debut race for Italian drivers Alfonso Thiele and Piero Drogo, British drivers Arthur Owen and Vic Wilson, and for American driver Fred Gamble.
  • This was Ferrari's third home win of an Italian Grand Prix. The Scuderia was already the most constructor and engine supplier at an Italian Grand Prix with three wins, four pole positions, five fastest laps and eighteen podiums in eleven Formula One World Championship Italian Grands Prix.

Championship standings after the race

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  • 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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  1. ^ "1960 Italian GP Qualification". ChicaneF1.com. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  2. ^ "1960 Italian Grand Prix". formula1.com. Archived from the original on 22 December 2014. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  3. ^ a b "Italy 1960 - Championship • STATS F1". www.statsf1.com. Retrieved 1 March 2019.


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1960 Portuguese Grand Prix
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1960 United States Grand Prix
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1959 Italian Grand Prix
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1961 Italian Grand Prix
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1959 French Grand Prix
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