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carroll shelby

When Allen Met Graham

April 7, 2025 By pete

Carroll Shelby in John Edgar’s Ferrari 410S leads Dan Gurney in Frank Arciero’s Ferrari 375 Plus at Palm Springs on April 13, 1958. One of the many photos I shared with the Ferrari Archivist.

Story and Photos by Allen R. Kuhn
From the VeloceToday archives, March, 2022

I would like to start this series of short stories – they are not Galleries as before – by telling a true story about Graham Gauld, and how he saved our skin when we were in Italy/France in 2006 for our seven-week tour of the Continent. The story really began in Maranello, so bear with me….

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Tagged With: Allen R. Kuhn, Allen R. Kuhn photography, carroll shelby, dan gurney, Graham Gauld, Hill Ferrari, jim clark, phil hill, richie ginther

Mimmo Dei’s Scuderia Centro Sud

May 20, 2024 By pete

Story by Graham Gauld

If you were a journeyman racing driver or a tyro and lived near Modena, Guglielmo Dei’s Scuderia Centro Sud had many attractions.

First of all, it was a driver’s school, but it was also a club with its own clubhouse in a small villa at 646 via Emilia Ovest. There, you could sit at tables under the trees and talk motor racing or perhaps share stories of how you had driven a racing car on the nearby Modena Autodromo.

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Tagged With: carroll shelby, Carroll Shelby Maserati, Graham Gauld, Guglielmo Dei, maserati 250F, masten Gregory, Mimmo Dei, Racing car schools, Scuderia Centro Sud

Frank Lance, Lonestar Master Mechanic, Part 3

November 20, 2023 By pete

Mansfield, March 1961. Based on Jim Hall’s grimy face, a photo taken just after the race. From the left: Frank Lance, Jim, body man Foy Barrett and part-time mechanic Billy Billings, next to Jim’s feature winning Maserati 570S. Harry Heuer’s Meister Brauser Scarab is in the background.

As told by Frank Lance to Willem Oosthoek
All photos by Bob Jackson [Willem Oosthoek Collection], unless stated otherwise.

The 1961 season started well for Jim Hall. During the Polar Prix at Green Valley in February he raced a Porsche RSK to a feature win, beating preliminary winner Delmo Johnson in his Jaguar XK-SS [chassis 701].

Frank: “That was the former Penske RSK. Jim had a new Porsche RS-60 that he raced at Green Valley in August 1960, beating Delmo’s XK-SS for first overall. Roger wanted an RS-60 because Bob Holbert was beating him with his own RS-60. So, Roger made a deal with Jim to swap cars, although not engines. I had to remove the engine from the RS-60 and reinstall it in the tired RSK that Penske sent us. We took it to Green Valley in the new year and again won overall in a race against my old friend, the XK-SS Jaguar, now with Chevy power.

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Tagged With: Bob Schroeder, carroll shelby, Chuck Daigh, Delmo Johnson, Enus Wilson, Frank Lance, Harry Heuer's Meister Brauser, J.C. Kilburn, jim hall, John Mecom, Ken Miles, Maserati 570S, maserati birdcage, Maserati mechanics, phil hill, Racing Mechanics, Toly Arutunoff, willem oosthoek, Willis Murphy

Frank Lance, Lonestar Master Mechanic

November 6, 2023 By pete

Dallas, November 1960. Frank Lance welding the cracked tubes on Jim Hall’s Birdcage Maserati, chassis 2463. The tube structure between the shock absorbers needed reinforcing as well.

As told by Frank Lance to Willem Oosthoek.
All photos by Bob Jackson [Willem Oosthoek Collection] unless otherwise stated

I met Frank at the Old Race Drivers Reunion, organized by R. David Jones, a former SCCA top official, at his Soldier Creek Ranch in Fort Worth a few years ago. In addition to Frank, I met Bill Janowski, Delmo Johnson, Bob Schroeder, Jim Hall, Willis Murphy, J.C. Kilburn, Enus Wilson, Toly Arutunoff, John Mecom and many other people associated with motor racing in The Golden Age. Frank stood out with his excellent memory at 90 years of age, and I decided he deserved to have his race history in writing. Frank and I put together his story via email and I used the many photos from my collections. Parts of this series appeared earlier in my book “Sports Car Racing in the South”(Dalton Watson). Most images of Frank’s early years were the work of Dallas Times Herald photographer Bob Jackson, a racing enthusiast. Jackson became a winner of the 1964 Pulitzer Prize for Photography for his image of Jack Ruby shooting Lee Harvey Oswald in the Dallas Courthouse.

Race drivers are the ones who receive all the attention and glory in the press. Their mechanics seldom do. Yet, Frank Lance’s career should get our attention as well. Frank served as the racing mechanic for five of the most prominent Texas drivers and team owners of the fifties and sixties: Jim Hall, Ebb Rose, Carroll Shelby, John Mecom and A.J. Foyt. He saw it all, from amateur [SCCA] and professional [USAC] sports car racing in the U.S., international long-distance racing at Daytona, Sebring and Le Mans, Formula One racing at Watkins Glen, Riverside and Mexico City, to the Indianapolis 500, where he was part of the winning team twice. And all that in only a ten-year timeframe.

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Tagged With: Bob Schroeder, carroll shelby, Chuck Daigh, Delmo Johnson, Enus Wilson, Frank Lance, J.C. Kilburn, jim hall, John Mecom, Ken Miles, Maserati mechanics, phil hill, Racing Mechanics, Toly Arutunoff, willem oosthoek, Willis Murphy

Jeff Allison Captions Ferraris by Glendenning

May 2, 2022 By pete

By Jeff Allison

This article first appeared in Prancing Horse, the quarterly magazine of the Ferrari Club of America.

Before his passing in 2014, Glen Glendenning sent David Rex a box full of loose photo scrapbook pages—you know the kind with the black mounts that you’d slip over the corners of a photo, lick the glue on the back of the mount and position the photo on a page. Remember, they tasted terrible! Rex provided the photos to editor Pete Vack for possible use in VeloceToday.com. Luckily, Glendenning had written brief descriptions under some of the photos, and the pages were in chronological order. Taken with a 35MM single-lens reflex camera, Glendenning obviously had access to the pits, the track, and the people. He owned a public relations firm with a film lab, producing twenty-six films for the Schlitz brewery, so photography probably was natural for him. [Read more…] about Jeff Allison Captions Ferraris by Glendenning

Tagged With: briggs cunningham, carroll shelby, Ebby Lunken, Ferrari race photos, fred wacker, Glen Glendenning, Honest John Kilborn, jeff allison, jim kimberly, Loyal Katskee, Prancing Horse magazine

Allen R. Kuhn: Of Gauld and Ferrari

March 7, 2022 By pete

Carroll Shelby in John Edgar’s Ferrari 410S leads Dan Gurney in Frank Arciero’s Ferrari 375 Plus at Palm Springs on April 13, 1958. One of the many photos I shared with the Ferrari Archivist.

Story and Photos by Allen R. Kuhn

I would like to start this series of short stories – they are not Galleries as before – by telling a true story about Graham Gauld, and how he saved our skin when we were in Italy/France in 2006 for our seven-week tour of the Continent. The story really began in Maranello, so bear with me…. [Read more…] about Allen R. Kuhn: Of Gauld and Ferrari

Tagged With: Allen R. Kuhn, Allen R. Kuhn photography, carroll shelby, dan gurney, Graham Gauld, Hill Ferrari, jim clark, phil hill, richie ginther

The Laughlin-Shelby Scaglietti Corvette

March 1, 2021 By pete

From the Archives, December 2011

By Wallace Wyss

In 1959 Carroll Shelby won the biggest race there was in sports car racing, and that was the 24 Hours of Le Mans. He quit driving shortly after that, and just in time, because a heart condition he had managed to hide from the SCCA medical techs was threatening to take him out if he didn’t quit. He wasn’t worried about what he would do next; he was already was working on a plan to build his own sports car.

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Tagged With: american italian sports cars, carroll shelby, cobra, corvette italia, corvettes, ferra tdf, jim hall, shelby, shelby sports cars, tdf, tour de france corvette, wallace wyss

Cobra Daytona Coupes

October 16, 2018 By pete

By Peter Brock
From the VeloceToday Archives

As soon as the first Daytona Cobra Coupe, CSX 2287, was completed and tested successfully at Riverside Raceway on February 1st 1964, Carroll Shelby decided to

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Tagged With: building Daytona coupe, carroll shelby, cobra daytona coupe, constructing the Daytona coupe, Peter Brock cobra, Peter Brock Coupe, Peter Brock Daytona, Shelby Daytona Cobra, Shelby Daytona coupe

Peter Brock: Building the Daytona Coupes in Modena

October 27, 2015 By pete

Fifty years on, Peter Brock poses with Peter Brock and the prototype Daytona,

Fifty years on, Peter Brock poses with a photo of Peter Brock and the prototype Daytona. Our story deals with the first of five Coupes built in Modena. Courtesy Peter Brock collection.

By Peter Brock

As soon as the first Daytona Cobra Coupe, CSX 2287, was completed and tested successfully at Riverside Raceway on February 1st 1964, Carroll Shelby decided to build five more. He felt he had a score to settle with Enzo Ferrari and finally had the weapon to do it. The Daytona’s radical design had been so controversial within the Shelby organization that most of those employed there figured Shelby’s plan to race in Europe against Ferrari would evaporate as soon as the first Coupe was tested and found to be a failure. That resistant attitude changed dramatically as soon as test driver Ken Miles called from Riverside trackside to inform Shelby that he’d shattered the track’s lap record by 3.5 seconds!

Brock on the Grid with the six Coupes. Jonathan Sharp photo.

Brock on the Goodwood grid with five of the six Daytona Cobra Coupes. Jonathan Sharp photo.

[Read more…] about Peter Brock: Building the Daytona Coupes in Modena

Tagged With: building Daytona coupe, carroll shelby, cobra daytona coupe, constructing the Daytona coupe, Peter Brock cobra, Peter Brock Coupe, Peter Brock Daytona, Shelby Daytona Cobra, Shelby Daytona coupe

Carroll Shelby and the OSCA

May 16, 2012 By pete

carroll shelby portrait

A Shelby portrait taken in about 1956 by racing photographer Alix Lafontant. It is inscribed “The very best to my good friend Alix. – Carroll Shelby.”

By Carl Goodwin

Photos by Alix Lafontant copyright Carl Goodwin.

1956 was a great year for Carroll Shelby driving the Italian cars he loved. Up until a late-season off-course excursion in the sand at Thompson Raceway, he had notched 19 wins at road courses from coast to coast, driving a Ferrari 4.4, Ferrari Monza, Maserati 300S, and a Maserati 450S.

We were accustomed to seeing Shelby toss around the big Ferraris and Maseratis owned by John Edgar and Tony Parravano, but he was also a great driver in under two liter Italian cars such as the OSCA. One such race was at Road America.

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Tagged With: carl goodwin, carroll shelby, carroll shelby race results, jim kimberly, OSCA, osca and carrrol shelby, road america, shelby osca

Shelby’s TdF

December 7, 2011 By Wally

Art by Wallace Wyss

By Wallace Wyss

In 1959 Carroll Shelby won the biggest race there was in sports car racing, and that was the 24 Hours of Le Mans. He quit driving shortly after that, and just in time, because a heart condition he had managed to hide from the SCCA medical techs was threatening to take him out if he didn’t quit. He wasn’t worried about what he would do next; he was already was working on a plan to build his own sports car.

Although he was known for winning most of his victories in Ferraris and Maseratis, if you search deep down in the racing records you find that, among the fifty different marques of cars he drove was a Buick-powered special called “Ol’ Yaller”.

Shelby knew that the biggest expense in developing a new car was designing and engineering the chassis, the engine and transmission. If he could find a ready-made chassis that already had an existing engine and transmission, well then the problem was considerably smaller– only clothing it in an appropriately Italian sexy style and promoting it. He had spent too much time in Italy not to know that there were great designers and coachbuilders there. He also knew there was a snob appeal to having a car bodied in Italy. He probably had it in for Enzo Ferrari [according to historian Willem Oosthoek, when Shelby boasted of all his victories in the U.S., an unimpressed Enzo asked him: “But what was your competition?” Ed.]
so he thought why not stick it to the old man by having Ferrari’s own body builder build it?

His first idea was to use the All American Corvette. Hence the Corvette Italia.
[Read more…] about Shelby’s TdF

Tagged With: american italian sports cars, carroll shelby, cobra, corvette italia, corvettes, ferra tdf, jim hall, shelby, shelby sports cars, tdf, tour de france corvette, wallace wyss

History Detectives Caption Rare Photos

August 4, 2010 By Lynch

With our thanks to Michael T. Lynch, William Edgar, Willem Oosthoek and David Seielstad.

Dale LaFollette of

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Tagged With: carroll shelby, ferrari 4.9, ferrari 875, jim hall, jim kimberly, john edgar, kimberly ferrari, maserati 300S, maserati 450s, phil hill, phil hill ferrari 875, road america

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