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24 Heures
du Mans
1972
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by Michael Keyser
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The plan for Le Mans was to run the engine that we'd used
at the Targa and the Nürburgring in the first practice session,
then change to the fresh engine for qualifying and the race.
It was with both surprise and delight that Jürgen announced
at dinner that evening that he had arranged for the loan
of an engine from the factory. There was some question as
to whether the bearings in the normal 2.5 motors would go
the distance. The factory motor was 2.5 liters, but had
a shorter stroke than the spare we'd brought and was therefore
thought to be more reliable. It was through Jurgen that
we had also obtained an entry for the race itself, the concession
being that the car had to be entered under the name of Louis
Meznarie, the owner of a local garage, and one of our co-drivers
had to be Frenchman, Sylvan Garrant. So with the car having
been fully prepared by Hans, we headed for France with high
hopes.
I'd been to Le Mans in both 1970 and 1971 to take photographs
for the book I was working on, so I was intimately familiar
with the circuit itself having traipsed from one end to
the other shooting every curve and corner. This time around,
however, I was to be a participant, and the experience would
be decidedly different.
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In 1970 I'd been a member of David Piper's 917 team and
had stayed with them at the Hotel de la Cane in a small
village called Sceaux sur Huisne which was on the main highway
between Chartes and Le Mans. It was a quaint little place
that had a garage on the grounds, so I'd made arrangements
earlier in the year for both the race team and the film
crew to stay there, the film crew having reassembled with
two valuable additions, Peter Samuelson and Jean Pierre
Avice.
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owned Samuelson's, a London film rental and production house,
and Jean Pierre was a Frenchman who had grown up in Le Mans.
Together they'd handled pre-production for the French portion
of the shoot, Jean Pierre having worked on Steve McQueen's
film, Le Mans, two years earlier. Shortly after meeting
him, he related the story of getting a call from the police
in the middle of the night during the production with the
news that they'd arrested one of the mechanics who was working
on the film. The mechanic had gotten quite drunk at a local
disco and decided to impress a girl he'd picked up by taking
her for a spin in one of the Ferrari 512s that was being
used in the movie. On arriving at the hotel, Peter and Jean
Pierre gave each of the film and race crew a packet of materials
that would come in handy in the event they ran into problems,
not the least of which was the name and home phone number
of the chief of police, who after the Le Mans shoot had
become a friend of Jean Pierre's.
The tales of going through tech inspection, or scrutineering,
at Le Mans are legendary, the exercise being more one of
ceremony than function. It would seem that the members of
the ACO (Automobile club de l'Ouest), the organizing body
at Le Mans, who are in charge of deciding who races and
who doesn't, and under what conditions, spend the entire
year leading up to the event in eager anticipation of jerking
the chains of competitors who have never experienced nitpicking
in the Gallic tradition. Luckily, with Jean Pierre at the
helm, we were able to communicate with the ACO officials,
and technically being a French entry, we sailed through
tech in less than an hour. |

Factory driver Jurgen Barth and John Russell
arrive at Le Mans from Stuttgart.
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The race car arrives .. Michael Keyser owner/
driver of Todd Hall. John Russell, customer service
and race development from Porsche factory along
with girlfriend, Martha Chambers "Mac" at Le Mans
1972. The car was driven by Sylvain Garant, of France
, Jürgen Barth, of Deutschland, Michael Keyser,
of USA and finished 13th over all.
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Because much of the eight-mile Le Mans circuit consists
of public roads, which are closed for practice and the race,
all sessions start late in the afternoon and continue into
the early evening. I'd met our French driver, Sylvan Garrant,
at scrutineering, and he seemed to be a nice enough fellow;
tall and slightly balding with a word or two of English
in his vocabulary. My knowledge of French was just as limited,
but Jürgen spoke it fairly fluently, so we were able to
communicate in a round-about way. Once out on the track
in the first practice session, it was less than a minute
before I was headed down the famous Mulsanne Straight.
Because of it's sheer length (over 3 miles) and the many
high-speed tales that are associated with it, this stretch
of road had become bigger than life in my mind. I'd photographed
it from one end to the other and driven up and down it in
a street car, but now I was strapped into a race car with
nothing but an unending ribbon of asphalt ahead of me. I'd
driven at Daytona several times in 1970 and 1971, so I was
familiar with sustained high speed in a 911, but still the
first time down the Mulsanne, it seemed to go on forever.
The notorious right-hand kink toward the end, which had
hardly been noticeable in a street car, suddenly became
an actual curve. Although there was a fair amount of runoff
area beyond the shoulders of the road, the twin-tiered Armco
barriers lining the straight looked as if they could easily
launch a car into the thick woods beyond if struck at the
wrong angle. At the end of the Mulsanne the track made a
sharp 90 degree turn past the signaling boxes before heading
back in the direction of the pits.
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There were two more long straights connected by fast sweeping
right-handers, then the track took a fairly severe right-hand
dive into the slower left-hand Indianapolis. A short chute
led to the equally slow Arnage corner, beyond which another
straight led to what in years past had been the infamous
right-left-right flick known as White House. This section
of track had undergone extensive redesign since the 1971
race, White House having been eliminated. In its place were
a series of tricky 3rd and 4th gear right and left hand
off-camber sweepers, connected by short straights. The Ford
Chicane at the head of the pit straight, taken in 2nd gear,
led to the run past the pits and a fast uphill right-hand
sweeper. After cresting the rise under the Dunlop bridge,
the track dove down to the left and right "esses", then
on to the tight right-hand Tertre Rouge corner and the downhill
shute that put you back onto the Mulsanne, or Les Hunaudières,
as the straight is actually known.
My first impression of the track was how smooth its surface
was, there being barely a bump to be found along its entire
8.47 mile length. Apart from holding on for dear life and
gritting your teeth down the straight, learning the circuit
seemed like child's play after the Targa and Nurburgring.
After several laps it was apparent that the new section
of off-camber sweepers was going to be the most difficult
section to deal with. If you didn't get the first one right,
you were set up wrong for the next one, and each one after.
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Everyone helped out back in 1972!
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Although Ferrari had backed out of the race at the last
moment for fear of besmirching their perfect record, the
powerful Matra team with the resources of the French government
behind it was here in force, three 670s and one 660 spyder
having been entered for a multinational team of drivers.
Alfa had three long-tail cars, and Jo Bonnier two Lola T-280s
with detuned Ford DFV engines. Rounding out the cars believed
to have an outside chance for an overall win was a longtail
908 coupe rented from the Siffert museum and entered by
Reinhold Jost. The rest of the field consisted of 908 spyders,
a 910, a 907, several Ligiers, and a healthy dose of 2-liter
prototypes and sedans, among them nine Ferrari 365 GTBs
and seven 911s, ours included.

Todd Hall Porsche at the end
of the Mulsanne straight
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Jean Pierre had received permission from the ACO for us
to put cameras on cars during the practice sessions, and
in addition to our 911, we got footage from three other
prototypes, including one of Jo Bonnier's Lola's. We'd rented
a helicopter with a special anti-vibration Tyler mount to
get some aerial shots, and also had a 1,000mm lens on hand
which we intended to use for shots down the Mulsanne straight.
One of the trucks the crew was using was to be driven through
the forest to the kink in the straight, giving us a platform
from which we hoped to get some dramatic long lens shots
of the start. Jean Pierre had also arranged for two gendarmes
on motorcycles to be at our disposal throughout the race
so our camera crews could go anywhere they wanted unimpeded.
The day of the race dawned sunny, but the weather forecast
called for intermittent showers starting early that evening.
The late afternoon start time at Le Mans gave us plenty
of time to get to the track, and once there, ample opportunity
for the pre-race jitters to build. I'd elected to start,
Jürgen would take over next, and our French co-driver, Sylvan
Garant, would follow. Promptly at 4 P.M. we were waved away
on the pace lap, which was anything but that. We'd qualified
44th out of 55 cars in the race, and by the time I got around
to the Mulsanne the cars ahead had strung out far ahead
and for all intents and purposes we were racing. By the
time I crossed the start-finish line, the rest of the field
up front was well away.
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Thinking back twenty-three years, I can't recall anything
dramatic that happened during the first two hours. We were
one of the slower cars in the race, and consequentially,
the Matras, Alfas, Lolas, etc. seemed to constantly be passing
us. The etiquette I adopted on the Mulsanne was to stick
in the right lane and hope I didn't arrive at the right-hand
kink at the same moment as a faster car. If this happened,
it took a concerted effort to cut the curve short and avoid
drifting across to the left side of the track. Although
I hadn't been conscious of passing many cars, by the time
I turned the wheel over to Jürgen we'd moved up to 32nd
place.
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It was just about this time that the first rain shower
of the evening blew through and Jurgen pitted for rain tires.
As I ate a Grand Marnier crepe and watched the cars on the
track throw up rooster tails of spray as they sped by, I
knew I'd probably have the unenviable opportunity of driving
at Le Mans in the rain. Thankfully the English crew from
Firestone had hand-grooved several sets of our slicks into
what they promised would be "demon" rain tires. We had a
two way radio in the car for the first time which worked
sporadically due to the length of the track, and each time
he passed the pits Jürgen reported in that all was well.
Sylvan took over, and two hours later when he handed the
car back to me, also reported that there were no problems.
The rain had stopped, but the track was still wet, so we
changed to intermediate tires. As is the case with most
24 hour races, there was little chance of getting any real
sleep. We had a small caravan back in the paddock and with
three drivers had four hours off between stints. When I
wasn't behind the wheel, I rested nervously and perhaps
caught an odd wink or two during the night, but never really
slept.
In the early morning hours, the notorious ground fog I'd
heard so much about reared its ugly head. Storming down
the Mulsanne I'd suddenly rush into a patch, not knowing
whether it was ten feet deep or a quarter mile. Each lap
it would move, so I never knew if it was the same patch
or a different one. At some point I'd have to decide whether
to lift, and invariably when I did, the fog would clear,
leaving me wondering if discretion really was the better
part of valor.
At around 8:30 the next morning we were still running strong,
albeit in 25th place, and I was due to take over. During
the night we'd gotten out of sequence and Jürgen was in
the car when it pitted. On exiting the car he told me that
there had been an accident on the far side of the course
and to be careful as there was debris on the track. When
I arrived at the second of the two fast sweepers after the
Mulsanne corner, course marshals were strung out along the
Armco barriers furiously waving yellow flags. As I slowed
I saw a set of long skid marks that led to the blackened
hulk of a Ferrari GTB, that was up against the guardrail
smoldering. The next time around, I noticed pieces of yellow
fiberglass strewn along the left hand Armco, but no sign
of another car anywhere.
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Jurgen Barth Pit Straight in the winning Martini Porsche
936 in 1977.
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It was only after the race that I learned Jo Bonnier, in
one of the yellow Lolas with a Ford DFV, had been the other
car involved. According to Vic Elford, who'd been directly
behind him in one of the Alfas at the time of the accident,
Jo had pulled to the inside on the entrance to the sweeper
to pass the Ferrari driven by Frenchman Florian Vetsch.
Vetsch hadn't seen Jo and had closed the door, clipping
the front end of the Lola and sending it spinning into the
Armco, which rather than stopping the car, had launched
it into the thick forest. At a speed of 150 miles per hour
plus, poor Bonnier never had a chance and had been killed
instantly. Vic Elford had pulled to the side of the road
to try and help, but there was nothing he could do. After
the race Jean Pierre managed to get a copy of the French
TV footage shot by a cameraman who happened to be in the
area, which we ultimately included in our film. Unaware
of what had happened at the time, I continued on.
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Now over the radio I learned that we were just behind
the only other 911 still remaining in the race. A short
time later I spotted the car on the side of the road halfway
down the Mulsanne with its engine lid up. This good fortune
was short-lived, however, because toward the end of my stint,
while negotiating the tricky new section of off-camber sweepers,
I managed to put my right-side tires in the marbles. Before
I could recover the car understeered off the track, sliding
across the grass and into the Armco barrier.
To say I was chagrined was a gross understatement. I'd made
a mistake, no matter how slight, and from the force of the
impact I was certain our race was finished. Luckily the
pits were only a short distance away and I was able to limp
in with the right front tire flat. Once out of the car,
I saw that the damage was superficial and not as severe
as it had felt. In short order, Sylvan was in the car and
away.
I had two more turns behind the wheel, and each time I paid
extra special attention to the line at the place I'd gone
off earlier. I obviously hadn't learned my lesson, because
two years later, driving a 3-liter Carrera in the 1974 race,
I did the exact same thing, at almost the exact same time,
at almost the exact same place! Luckily, it was once again
superficial damage and we were able to finish.
I was behind the wheel when the checkered flag fell at 4
P.M., and in spite of my earlier off-track excursion, the
last few laps were extremely satisfying. The track workers
had left their posts and now lined the track as we passed
with their flags waving. An enthusiastic group of Americans
had been camping just after the Indianapolis turn and waved
the Stars and Stripes wildly when I passed. As I pulled
into the impound area, the heavens literally opened up and
the rain poured down in torrents. The Matra of Graham Hill
and Henri Pescarolo finished 1st, followed by a similar
car driven by Francois Cevert and Howden Ganley. We ended
up in 13th place, having covered 2,413.19 miles at an average
speed of 100.54 miles per hour, and due to the fact (I'm
convinced) that we were running the short-stroke 2.5 factory
engine, we were the only 911 to finish.
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editors note- The above article came to our attention
when PCA member Mark Russell saw a picture of his brother
John right here on this site! Mark contacted Michael to
get a few more pics from 1972 and even got the following
quote from Jurgen Barth -
"Yes Le Mans in 1972 wars good fun John with Martha
and late one more I been working with Mike and had also
a realy nice french gilfrend so i lernd my frech from her
at least the first word and so good fun and good racing
at the time with Toad Hall - FIA WC 1972. I think still
a lot about this time - Jürgen two"
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