Brief guide to the history of the 24 Hours of Le Mans

In 1969, Jackie Ickx put on his leather driving gloves and walked down the track to his race car, while the other drivers made the traditional “run and jump” exit. He did this as a protest, encouraging other drivers to run with their seat belts fastened. Jackie Ickx would go on to win the 24 Hours of Le Mans in a Ford GT 40. He won this event six times. The traditional start where drivers ran across the track towards their cars was last used in 1969.

The 24 Hours of Le Mans is steeped in history and prestige. It is the most popular race in the world. If you are “anyone”, you race at Le Mans… if you win, you are “everyone”.

At Le Mans, the race cars accelerate to 85% during most of the long straights and top speeds of 200 mph are reached until your knuckles turn white under your leather driving gloves as your grip on the steering wheel softens. resembles the grip of rubber on the road. while testing the brake system, slowing the car down to 50mph, from the Mulsanne straight into the fearsome Porsche curves.

The outcome of each curve determined the fate of the next.

“The Flying Scot” Jim Clark, refused to race at Le Mans. He considered it too dangerous.

The Detroit News said on June 17, 1966: “This race track is a cornfield runway in the age of jet planes. It was built 50 years ago for cars going 65 mph. Tomorrow 55 cars racing, some of them capable of reaching 225 mph down the straight. and all of them above the 130 mph class – they’ll be down at 10am Detroit time and it’ll be a miracle if no one dies. Nobody is fearless. Some of these drivers are scared.”

Back in the days when driving gloves were put on leather helmets and goggles, a drag race had a whole different meaning. When Duncan Hamilton won Le Mans in 1953 in a Jaguar C-Type, he was so drunk that when the team offered him coffee during pit stops, he refused, saying it made his arms shake, accepting only brandy!

These days Le Mans is a 24-hour race through thousands of gear changes, millions of crankshaft revolutions and constant forces on every component, you drive every lap like a qualifier. This makes the 24 Hours of Le Mans the purest challenge in motorsport.

Corvette Racing took the podium at the Le Mans 24 Hours on Sunday 13-14 June 2015 as Oliver Gavin, Tommy Milner and Jordan Taylor wrote the final chapter of a storybook comeback that ended with the team winning the GTE category. Pro in his No. .64 Chevrolet Corvette C7.R. The trio in their No. 64 Chevrolet Corvette C7.R completed 337 laps for 2,864.50 miles in a frantic battle that ultimately saw the Corvette win its class by five laps. Sunday’s win follows Corvette Racing’s victories earlier this year in the 24 At Daytona and Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring in the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship.