12 Hours of Casablanca
The 12 Hours of Casablanca was a sports car endurance race organised on the route of the future Ain-Diab Circuit in Morocco. Only two editions were held in 1952 and 1953, before the race was replaced by the Moroccan Grand Prix in Agadir for the 1954 season.
History
The race was held on a road circuit, partially on the main road from Casablanca, that was initially 4.2 kilometers long in 1952. By 1953, the route was changed to 3.26 kilometers. The competition was intended for sports racing cars and for passenger cars as well. The starting grid was of a 'Le Mans start'-type.1952
In December 1952, the first edition of the 12 Hours of Casablanca race was held. 24 entrants had started the race, but only 14 of them finished and were classified.No. | Drivers | Car | Laps | |
1st | 22 | Charles Pozzi Lucien Vincent | Talbot-Lago T26GS | 264 |
2nd | 25 | Jean Lucas Jacques Péron | Ferrari 225 S berlinetta | 263 |
3rd | 16 | Georges de Tudert Robert Lacaze | Delahaye 135S | 250 |
1953
The second edition of the endurance race was held in 1953. This time 17 cars finished the race. Casimiro de Oliveira and Alberto Ascari had crashed during practice in their Ferrari 375 MM and had to change teams and cars. Luckily for Ascari, he joined Luigi Villoresi in the Ferrari 500 Mondial and arrived second at the finish line in the actual race. The 500 Mondial that won its class, was based on a Ferrari 625 TF berlinetta chassis that was destroyed in a fire, rebodied by Scaglietti and equipped with a 2.0-litre engine. Charles Pozzi, who won the first edition with his Talbot-Lago T26GS, failed to arrive for the race.Class | No. | Drivers | Car | ||
1st | 1st | S+2.0 | 2 | Giuseppe Farina Piero Scotti | Ferrari 375 MM spyder |
2nd | 1st | S2.0 | 20 | Luigi Villoresi Alberto Ascari | Ferrari 500 Mondial spyder |
3rd | 2nd | S+2.0 | 6 | Pierre Levegh Philippe Etancelin | Talbot-Lago T26GS |
4th | 3rd | S+2.0 | 8 | Roy Salvadori "Mike Sparken" | Aston Martin DB3 coupé |
5th | 4th | S+2.0 | 7 | Graham Whitehead Peter Whitehead | Aston Martin DB3 |
6th | 2nd | S2.0 | 25 | Jean-Louis Armengaud Élie Bayol | Osca MT4 1100 coupé |