1967 24 Hours of Le Mans


The 1967 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 35th Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on 10 and 11 June 1967. It was also the seventh round of the World Sportscar Championship.
Dan Gurney and A.J. Foyt won the race after leading from the second hour, becoming the first all-American victors - car, team and drivers - of the race. Ferrari were second and third, and these top-three cars all broke the 5000 km mark in total distance covered for the first time. All overall records were broken – fastest, furthest, a new lap record and biggest engine to win, along with a number of class records.

Regulations

After the previous year's complete change in the CSI – the FIA Appendix J – there were no significant changes or updates to the regulations.
In an effort to reduce the speed disparity between the classes, the Automobile Club de l'Ouest lifted its minimum average speed for qualification, from to. They also now required all cars to qualify to be within 85% of the pole-position car’s average speed. There was also about a 2.5% increase to the minimum distances on the Index of Performance.

Entries

Once again there was a marked imbalance between the categories with only six Sports Cars and seven GTs versus the 41 Prototypes in the starting line-up. It bought together the best of the world’s racing drivers with 37 who had, or would, race in Formula 1. There were five World Champions and in the previous month, eleven drivers had raced in the Monaco Grand Prix and seven in the Indy 500.
CategoryClassesPrototype
Group 6
Sports
Group 4
GT
Group 3
Total
Entries
Large-engines2.5 - 7.0L21 2 3 26
Medium-engines1.6 - 2.0L81 2 11
Small-engines1.0 - 1.3L11 0 011
Total Cars40 3 5 48

Defending champions Ford, along with Porsche, had the biggest representation with ten cars. The new Ford GT40 Mark IV was an updated version of the Ford J-Car, which was shelved following the fatal accident of Ken Miles in August 1966. The Mark IV had an all new chassis designed and built in the United States. The big-block 427 cu in Ford Galaxie-derived engine from the Mk.II was now pushing out 530 bhp. Four cars were ready for Le Mans: two for Shelby American who had the American pair of Dan Gurney and A.J. Foyt in one car and defending champion Bruce McLaren with Mark Donohue in the other. The team had to fabricate a roof "bubble" to accommodate the helmet of Dan Gurney, who stood more than 190 cm tall. The other two went to Holman & Moody with its teams of Mario Andretti/Lucien Bianchi and Denny Hulme/Lloyd Ruby.
After a humiliating loss to the Ferrari works team at the opening round at Daytona Ford had won the next round at Sebring with Mario Andretti and Bruce McLaren driving the new Mk IV. For safety in numbers, Ford also entered three Mk IIB's run by Shelby American, Holman & Moody and Ford France
This year Ferrari chose to concentrate its efforts on the large-Prototype category. The latest evolution of the 250P, the 330 P4 had new bodywork, a better gearbox and the engine reworked, now putting out 450 bhp. Although lighter and with far better handling, it could not match the big Fords on sheer straight-line pace. Four were built and all were at Le Mans. The works team, now under Franco Lini, brought three of the cars. F1 team drivers Chris Amon and Lorenzo Bandini had won at Daytona and Monza but after Bandini was killed at Monaco Amon drove with Nino Vaccarella in the open-top, spyder, version. Team regulars Ludovico Scarfiotti/Mike Parkes had the second and Klass/Sutcliffe the third. The other P4 was run by the Equipe Nationale Belge for Willy Mairesse/”Beurlys”.
There were also three updated P3's for the other customer teams: Maranello Concessionaires, Scuderia Filipinetti and the North American Racing Team for Pedro Rodriguez/Giancarlo Baghetti. NART also ran their older modified-P2 again.
After the success in 1966, John Wyer and Ford had split amicably. J.W. Automotive had purchased the Ford Advanced Vehicles facility and set about adapting the GT40. With a new narrow-cockpit body design by Len Bailey, the Mirage M1 had new suspension and carried the 351 cu in Ford engine. After Jacky Ickx and Dick Thompson sensationally won the Spa 1000km, race two cars were entered for Le Mans. Ickx co-drove with Alan Rees and Thompson had David Piper.
Also rewarded for their work with the Ford GT project, Lola Cars returned to Le Mans with the new T70. John Surtees had won the inaugural Can Am series in North America with a Chevrolet V8 engine. The Mk3 GT version was taken to Le Mans, now powered by an Aston Martin engine developing 450 bhp. Surtees had David Hobbs as co-driver, with a second car for Chris Irwin/Peter de Klerk
The most striking cars this year were the two Chaparrals. The new model 2F had a high-mounted adjustable wing pushing down on the rear wheels. It was now fitted with a Chevrolet big-block 427 cu in that produced over 550 bhp through a three-speed automatic transmission. Previous race-winner Phil Hill raced with Mike Spence with Bruce Jennings/Bob Johnson in the second car.
Once again, Porsche arrived with a new Carrera variant – the 910 was lower and lighter than the homologated 906. With a bigger 2.2L engine it had performed consistently in the season so far, culminating in a victory in the Targa Florio, But for Le Mans, the team was cautious and went back to the 2.0L engines in two cars, for Rolf Stommelen/Jochen Neerpasch and Targa Florio winners Udo Schütz/Joe Buzzetta. However, the team also introduced another new car: the longtail 907 built almost specifically for the Mulsanne Straight. Two cars were present, driven by 1964 race-winner Jochen Rindt with current Hillclimb champion Gerhard Mitter and Jo Siffert/Hans Herrmann.
As neither Alfa Romeo nor Dino showed, Porsche's main opposition would be from Matra. Their new MS630 still used the 2-litre BRM engine, but it was built to also be capable of carrying the Ford 4.7-litre V8 as well as a new Matra 3-litre engine still being developed. Although capable of 290 km/h its handling meant it was still slower than the Porsche. The same driver-combinations returned: Jean-Pierre Beltoise/Johnny Servoz-Gavin alongside Jean-Pierre Jaussaud/Henri Pescarolo.
Last present in 1964, Team Elite returned to Le Mans with the new Lotus 47, the race version of the Lotus Europa. Colin Chapman’s new design was fitted with a 165 bhp Ford 1.6-litre twin-cam engine.
Alpine arrived with seven entries of its A210 including two for its customer team, Ecurie Savin-Calberson. A range of the Renault-Gordini engine were offered in 1000, 1300 and 1500cc; that latter engine was raced by veterans Mauro Bianchi/Jean Vinatier. There was also an older M64 entered by NART. The two drivers, Therier and Chevallier, had been chosen from 200 applicants in a speed-trial by team-owner Luigi Chinetti.
After bring the Mini-Marcos to Le Mans in 1966, this year Frank Costin came up with an unusual aerodynamic design for privateer racer Roger Nathan. With a plywood frame, fibreglass bodywork, it had a 1-litre Hillman Imp engine mounted at a 54° angle, putting out 97 bhp. And making up the class were the returning entries from CD-Peugeot, Marcos and Austin-Healey.
There were only six cars in the Group 4 Sports Cars category, as many of the prototypes could not be produced in sufficient numbers. Ford had entered three GT40s in for Ford France, Scuderia Filipinetti and John Wyer’s J.W. Automotive.
Porsche entered a standard 906 for Ben Pon and Vic Elford, making his Le Mans debut, as well as French privateer Christian Poirot. Abarth was back at Le Mans for the first time since 1962, with the French Ecurie du Maine running one of the new 1300 GT. It had Abarth’s own 1.3-litre DOHC engine, that developed 147 bhp.
In a similarly small field, there were only the seven entrants in the Group 3 GT category. The Scuderia Filipinetti and Equipe Nationale Belge teams supplemented their Prototype entries with Ferrari 275 GTBs. They were up against Belgian privateer Claude Dubois, running a burly Shelby-modified Ford Mustang GT350, and an American-entered second generation Corvette Stingray. Finally, there were four Porsche 911 S, as the car started becoming the privateer’s car of choice.
This year also saw the increasing significance of the “war” between the tyre-companies, as they partnered with major manufacturers: Goodyear with Ford, Firestone with Ferrari, Dunlop with Porsche and Michelin with Alpine.

Practice

At the April Test Weekend, Bandini was fastest in the Ferrari P4 spyder with a sensational lap record of 3:25.4, ahead of Parkes in the other P4, then Surtees in the Lola. Although Donohue could reach in the Ford MkIV. he could only get 4th fastest time. The weekend also had tragedy when Roby Weber in the new Matra lost control at full speed on Mulsanne Straight. The car skidded and somersaulted off the track. Trapped in the burning car Weber died before marshals could reach the accident in time.
By race week, Ford had made further aerodynamic improvements and the MkIVs were going even faster. However the cars were very unstable at high speed creating a lot of concern among the drivers, and all the cars had problems with their windscreens cracking and popping out at the high speeds The Ferrari team was not without its own problems: the NART P2, going slow, got in the way of Klass’ P4 sending him off into the trees and wrecking the car but leaving the driver uninjured. Pole position went to Bruce McLaren, just ahead of the surprisingly rapid Chaparral of Phil Hill. Then came the Fords of Andretti, Hulme, Bucknum and Gardner before Parkes’ Ferrari down in 7th with 3:28.9.
Initially qualified with their 5.7-litre engines, the Mirages then both had failures and JWA decided to change back to the 5.0-litre engines. However, the scrutineers pointed out that this could not be done as the cars still carried the larger fuel tanks for the 5.0+ class. Ford, however, managed to supply two engines slightly larger than 5 litres to allow the cars to race. The Team Elite Lotus had a similar problem but resolved theirs by putting empty plastic bottles in the fuel tank.
All speeds were up and during the race twenty cars were recorded doing over 300 km/h over a flying kilometre on the Mulsanne Straight:
DriversCarSpeed
Andretti / BianchiFord Mk IV343 km/h
Gurney / FoytFord Mk IV340 km/h
Hulme / RubyFord Mk IV340 km/h
McLaren / DonohueFord Mk IV333 km/h
Bucknum / HawkinsFord Mk IIB332 km/h
Surtees / HobbsLola T70 Mk3 GT330 km/h
P.Hill / SpenceChaparral 2F320 km/h
Scarfiotti / ParkesFerrari 330P4310 km/h

Race

Start

Although the day started overcast, the race started in fine weather. Bucknum's Ford and Rodriguez's NART P3 were first away, while both Chaparrals were among the last as Jim Hall insisted on his drivers doing up their full race-harness before leaving. At the end of the first lap it was the Mk IIBs of Bucknum and Gardner leading Gurney's MkIV, then the Ferraris of Rodriguez and Amon, and Surtees in the Lola. On the fourth lap the Lola's engine broke a piston. Spence meanwhile made great pace to work his way back up the field.
Early visitors to the pits included Hulme's Mk IV to fix a sticking throttle, Bianchi's Mk IV to check his windscreen after an errant stone cracked it and Gardner's Ford for a new front tyre. Dubois bought the Shelby Mustang in missing half its front spoiler after bumping fenders in the startline rush and Jaussaud because his Matra's door wouldn’t shut properly. Bucknum continued to lead past the first hour, up to the first pitstops. After all the leaders had pitted, it was Foyt now leading from Hill in the Chaparral and the Fords of Andretti and McLaren with Parkes in 5th.
Suddenly Mike Salmon's JWA Ford GT burst into flames at over 300 km/h down the back straight with a full tank of fuel. Salmon bravely got the car near to a marshal post at Mulsanne corner before jumping out but was taken to hospital with severe 2nd and 3rd-degree burns. After two hours, the three Americans Foyt, Hill and Andretti already had a lap on the Ferraris and the rest of the field. After his early delay, Hulme then set a new lap record of 3:23.6, faster than the record pole time. The Ferraris were playing a long game, driving within their capability to last the distance. The Porsches of Siffert/Herrmann and Mitter/Rindt, now up to 14th and 15th overall, had a comfortable lead in the Index of Performance. However the big British cars were all out before dark: both the Mirages and the second Lola gone with engine issues after running outside the top-10.

Night

Soon after 10pm, as night was falling, Amon's Ferrari suffered a puncture while running 5th. Because of a faulty mallet he could not change the tyre out on the track and while crawling back to the pits, sparks from the wheel hub started a fire in the engine. Amon was forced to bale out quickly at a distance from any marshal posts and the car was burnt to a wreck. Not long later the Chaparral had to pit with its aileron stuck in the brake position, making the car lose about 20 km/h off its top speed. Bucknum lost two hours to get a water-pipe rewelded then had to creep around for two laps to reach the mandatory 25-lap minimum for liquids replenishment Twice Lloyd Ruby ditched his Ford in the Mulsanne corner sandtrap, losing all the time Hulme had made up having to get repairs to the undertray. The second incident proved terminal.
The Rodriguez/Baghetti NART Ferrari had slipped down the field and retired after 2am with a burnt piston. By 3am Ford was 1-2-3 with Gurney leading Andretti and McLaren by three laps. At 3:35 am, still running second, Andretti pitted J-7. A.J. Foyt, who had brought in J-5 at the same time, was complaining loudly about his American rival’s aggressive driving. Distracted by this “discussion,” a mechanic changing the front brake pads on J-7 installed a pad backward. Andretti accelerated out of the pits and under the Dunlop bridge, but when he braked for the first time, from high speed going into the Esses, a front brake locked, and J-7 spun, hitting the earth banks and ending up in disarray in the middle of the track. Andretti, with three broken ribs, leapt out and behind the wall. Soon behind him at speed came McCluskey who deliberately hit the other wall believing the wreck might still have the driver trapped inside, then Schlesser who tried to weave between the two. Both crashed and suddenly Ford were down three cars. McCluskey, carrying the injured Andretti, commandeered a marshal's car and drove back to the Ford medical centre.
McLaren picked up a second puncture going through the debris, and then lost more time with clutch issues. To top it off, the rear engine bonnet later flew off racing down the Mulsanne straight and another 45 minutes were lost retrieving and refitting it, dropping them to 6th.
This left the Gurney/Foyt car with a 5-lap lead and elevated the Parkes/Scarfiotti Ferrari to second and the Hill/Spence Chaparral fighting back up to third. During the night, Gurney had eased off a little to preserve his car, and Parkes came up behind in the second-place Ferrari to unlap himself. For several miles Parkes hounded the Ford, flashing his lights in Gurney's mirrors until an exasperated Gurney simply pulled over at Arnage corner and stopped on a grass verge. Parkes stopped behind him, and the two race leaders sat there in the dark, motionless Finally Parkes conceded his attempt at provoking a race with Gurney was not going to work and he pulled out and resumed the race, with Gurney following shortly after. The Siffert/Herrmann Porsche still led the Index of Performance although it was now being chased by the improving Alpine of Larrousse/Depailler.

Morning

Dawn arrived clear and cold, with little mist this year. The Chaparral developed an oil-leak in the transmission dropping it down the order and then eventual retirement. The Belgian Ferrari P4 had been having a consistent race and slotted into third, with the other P4 of Klass/Sutcliffe now in fourth. However, a broken fuel-injection pump forced their retirement mid-morning. The Corvette retired with a broken conrod while leading the GT category.
Bucknum and Hawkins, early race-leaders, had driven hard to get back up to 6th after their overnight delay when they were finally halted by engine issues at 9.40am. So by 10am, the three-quarter mark, there were only 16 cars still running. Gurney and Foyt had already covered 293 laps, twenty more than McLaren and Amon had the previous year at the same time. With a decent lead, the leading Ford could afford to drop its lap times by 30 seconds a lap. Even though the Ferraris were lapping 10 seconds a lap faster and could go 20% further between fuel-stops, they were unable to make significant inroads, and the remaining quarter of the race was largely uneventful.

Finish and post-race

In the end it was a comfortable victory for the all-American Ford with Gurney and Foyt winning by four laps, having led for all but the first 90 minutes of the race. Theirs was the only one of the ten Fords that did not to have any issues throughout the race. Perhaps surprisingly for such a big engine, they also won the Index of Thermal Efficiency from their record distance covered. Ferrari salvaged some pride after the previous year's debacle with second and third, with McLaren/Donohue fighting back to fourth.
Siffert and Herrmann were 5th in their Porsche 2-litre, covering just 12 km less than the 1966 winners. They led home four more Porsches including Pon/Elford in 7th, being the first Group 4 car home. The privateer Porsche in 8th just beat the Alpine of Grandsire/Rosinski who won the 1300-class. The Swiss Ferrari GTB of Spoerry/Steinemann was the first GT home, coming 11th, nine laps ahead of the French 911. The Austin-Healey, perennial finishers, was the only British car to make it to the end, in 15th. The little Abarth, after a race bedevilled by issues, did finish but had not completed enough laps to be classified.
When the winners mounted the victory stand, Gurney was handed the traditional magnum of champagne. Looking down, he saw Ford CEO Henry Ford II, team owner Carroll Shelby, their wives, and several journalists who had predicted disaster for the high-profile duo of Gurney and Foyt. They had said that the two drivers, who were strongly competitive in the United States, would break their car in intramural rivalry. Instead, both drivers took special care to drive the car with discipline and won easily. On the victory stand, Gurney shook the bottle and sprayed everyone nearby, establishing a tradition re-enacted in victory celebrations the world over ever since.
"What I did with the Champagne was totally spontaneous. I had no idea it would start a tradition. I was beyond caring and just got caught up in the moment. It was one of those once-in-a-lifetime occasions where things turned out perfectly… I thought this hard-fought victory needed something special”.

Gurney, incidentally, autographed and gave the bottle of champagne to Life Magazine photographer, Flip Schulke, who used it as a lamp for 30 years. Schulke later returned the bottle to Gurney, who placed it in his All American Racers team headquarters’ boardroom in California.
Chaparral got its due reward a month later with the only victory for the 2F at Brands Hatch. It was a suitable finale for Phil Hill, 1961 F1 World Champion to retire from a distinguished sports-car racing career that included three Le Mans victories.

Official results

Finishers

Results taken from Quentin Spurring's book, officially licensed by the ACO Class Winners are in Bold text.
PosClassNoTeamDriversChassisEngineLaps
1P
+5.0
1 Ford Motor Company
Shelby-American Inc.
Dan Gurney
A. J. Foyt
Ford Mk IVFord 7.0L V8388
2P
5.0
21 SpA Ferrari SEFAC Ludovico Scarfiotti
Mike Parkes
Ferrari 330 P4Ferrari 4.0L V12384
3P
5.0
24 Equipe Nationale Belge Willy Mairesse
“Beurlys”
Ferrari 330 P4Ferrari 4.0L V12377
4P
+5.0
2 Ford Motor Company
Shelby-American Inc.
Bruce McLaren
Mark Donohue
Ford Mk IVFord 7.0L V8359
5P
2.0
41 Porsche System Engineering Jo Siffert
Hans Herrmann
Porsche 907 langheckPorsche 1991cc F6358
6P
2.0
38 Porsche System Engineering Rolf Stommelen
Jochen Neerpasch
Porsche 910 kurzheckPorsche 1991cc F6351
7S
2.0
37 Porsche System Engineering Ben Pon
Vic Elford
Porsche 906Porsche 1991cc F6327
8S
2.0
66
'
C. Poirot
'
Christian Poirot
Gerhard ‘Gerd’ Koch
Porsche 906Porsche 1991cc F6321
9P
1.3
46 Société Automobiles
Alpine
Henri Grandsire
José Rosinski
Alpine A210Renault-Gordini 1296cc S4321
10P
1.3
49 Ecurie Savin-Calberson André de Cortanze
Alain LeGuellec
Alpine A210Renault-Gordini 1296cc S4318
11GT
5.0
28 Scuderia Filipinetti Dieter Spoerry
Hans-Heinrich 'Rico' Steinemann
Ferrari 275 GTB
Competizione
Ferrari 3.3L V12317
12P
1.3
48 Ecurie Savin-Calberson Roger Delageneste
Jacques Cheinisse
Alpine A210Renault-Gordini 1296cc S4311
13P
1.6
45 Société Automobiles
Alpine
Mauro Bianchi
Jean Vinatier
Alpine A210Renault-Gordini 1470cc S4311
14GT
2.0
42 Auguste Veuillet Robert Buchet
Herbert Linge
Porsche 911 SPorsche 1991cc F6308
15P
1.3
51 Donald Healey Motor Company Clive Baker
Andrew Hedges
Austin-Healey Sprite Le MansBMC 1293cc S4289
N/C*S
1.3
64
'
Ecurie du Maine Marcel Martin
Jean Mesange
Abarth 1300 OTFiat-Abarth 1289cc S4262

Did Not Start

Class Winners

PosClassNoTeamDriversChassisScore
1P
+5.0
1 Ford Motor Company
Shelby-American Inc.
Dan Gurney
A. J. Foyt
Ford Mk IV1.49
2P
2.0
41 Porsche System Engineering Jo Siffert
Hans Herrmann
Porsche 907 langheck1.45
3P
1.3
49 Ecurie Savin-Calberson André de Cortanze
Alain LeGuellec
Alpine A2101.44
4P
1.3
48 Ecurie Savin-Calberson Roger Delageneste
Jacques Cheinisse
Alpine A2101.43
5P
1.3
46 Société Automobiles Alpine Henri Grandsire
José Rosinski
Alpine A2101.42
6P
1.6
45 Société Automobiles Alpine Mauro Bianchi
Jean Vinatier
Alpine A2101.28
7P
5.0
21 SpA Ferrari SEFAC Ludovico Scarfiotti
Mike Parkes
Ferrari 330 P41.27
8P
5.0
24 Equipe Nationale Belge Willy Mairesse
“Beurlys”
Ferrari 330 P41.24
9P
1.3
51 Donald Healey Motor Company Clive Baker
Andrew Hedges
Austin-Healey Sprite Le Mans1.21
10P
+5.0
2 Ford Motor Company
Shelby-American Inc.
Bruce McLaren
Mark Donohue
Ford Mk IV1.13

Taken from Moity's book.
PosClassNoTeamDriversChassisScore
1P
2.0
41 Porsche System Engineering Jo Siffert
Hans Herrmann
Porsche 907 langheck1.306
2P
5.0
21 SpA Ferrari SEFAC Ludovico Scarfiotti
Mike Parkes
Ferrari 330 P41.299
3P
2.0
38 Porsche System Engineering Rolf Stommelen
Jochen Neerpasch
Porsche 910 kurzheck1.281
4P
5.0
24 Equipe Nationale Belge Willy Mairesse
“Beurlys”
Ferrari 330 P41.275
5P
+5.0
1 Ford Motor Company
Shelby-American Inc.
Dan Gurney
A. J. Foyt
Ford Mk IV1.270
6P
1.3
46 Société Automobiles Alpine Henri Grandsire
José Rosinski
Alpine A2101.269
7P
1.3
49 Ecurie Savin-Calberson André de Cortanze
Alain LeGuellec
Alpine A2101.257
8P
1.3
48 Ecurie Savin-Calberson Roger Delageneste
Jacques Cheinisse
Alpine A2101.232
9P
1.6
45 Société Automobiles Alpine Mauro Bianchi
Jean Vinatier
Alpine A2101.196
10S
2.0
37 Porsche System Engineering Ben Pon
Vic Elford
Porsche 9061.193

Taken from Quentin Spurring's book, officially licensed by the ACO
As calculated after Le Mans, Round 4 of 4
PosManufacturerPoints
1 Porsche24
2 Ford20
3 Ferrari9
4 Alfa Romeo2

;Citations