Story by Brandes Elitch
Photos by Hugues Vanhoolandt
Putting on any big event is too big a job for one person, but one person has to have the vision and the contacts, and yes, the reach and forcefulness, to make it come alive. With the Pebble Beach Concours, it was Lorin Tryon and Jules Heumann, both gone now, but Chief Judge Chris Bock has been there for a long time and has a steady hand on the throttle.
After Steve Earle founded General Racing in 1970, his vision forever changed the landscape of vintage motorsports, in conjunction with the nearby Laguna Seca track. However, try to think of one person who is the long term force behind any major Concours, (and there are a surprising number of them), and I think you will draw a blank. Not so here, where the main factor is the force and personality of the organizer, Gordon McCall.
Sixteen years ago, The Quail Motorsports Gathering at the Quail Lodge in Carmel started out an exhibition of some of the most desirable cars, both old and newer, in a garden party setting, located on an exclusive golf course, with exceptional cuisine. How exceptional, you ask? Well, there are six restaurants on the grounds, each one part of the Peninsula Hotel family with additional treats such as wine, caviar, oysters, gelato, champagne, and more – do I need to go on? I suspect that some people attend just to go from restaurant to restaurant, with an occasional peek at the cars on display. There is also live music at each restaurant, and I was floored by the local band Monterey International playing “Summer Wind,” as well as some unique instruments I have never seen before, from Asia and other venues. The show lasts six hours, which for a serious observer, is not enough time to visit all the restaurants and inspect all the cars, but it sure is fun to try.
This year, the featured classes were the 50th anniversary of the Lamborghini Espada (I counted twelve) and Islero, (3B1A7056 photo) the great Lancias, the great Ferraris, supercars, custom coachwork, plus prewar and postwar sports and racing cars. I will make a perhaps iconoclastic remark that while you can see great Ferraris just about anywhere in California, the Lancia display was absolutely fantastic, and no, you are not likely to see this again anywhere, except perhaps at Retromobile or Essen. This was the highlight of the day for me. It is worthy of a separate column, but I will touch on it here.
The cars that spoke
The Great Lancias
This was a feature called “The Great Lancias,” and it featured six race and rally cars from the 1980’s, all owned by John and Suzanne Campion of Florida. How they were able to acquire this extraordinary collection is beyond me.
In this limited space I cannot convey even a small part of the overall event, which must take an entire year to plan. Thanks to Gordon McCall and his staff and all the volunteers who make it happen, and not incidentally for the contributions to five local charities.
Roger Hoffmann says
Great coverage and photos! One note though: this 1952 Siata Gran Sport was not the Ernie Mcafee car featured in Hot Rod magazine, but was clearly inspired by it, as they both had the Studebaker 232 V8. This car was an East Coast version, titled from the mid-fifties on the VIN number of the 1953 Studebaker engine.
Richard Kreines says
The outstanding , in depth reports by Brandes Elitch keep coming. Thank you for your excellence. The photos are also top notch. Congratulations BEST RK
David K Adams says
The Aurelia engine was a 60 deg. V6, not 90. It was the first production V6- and managed to avoid the need for a balance shaft due to deVirgilio’s design talents; something forgotten in most industry V6s since(most saddled with balance shafts), including my wife’s Dodge Caravan.
Denton says
As an answer to your question, regarding naming a man behind a major Concours, the MAN is Bill Warner, and we are all in debt to his Amelia award winning Concours every Spring. Among a long list of awards for the Concours, Bill was recently the recipient of the Bulgari Award, for preserving America’s automotive heritage. I can’t think of a better choice.
No question the Quail is the class of the Monterey Weekend, and Gordon has the same vision as Bill. Both events show the wide spectrum of what makes the automobile so special to so many.
And yes, a 75 series custom woody Caddy is a sight to behold. Thanks for the picture and the story behind the car. And after all, the heritage of Cadillac is French, so it belongs on VT!
Denton says
I believe all Aurelia B series engines were 60 degree V6’s, not 90 degree. Acknowledged as the first production V6 engines. DeVirgilio was obsessed with keeping a narrow engine, so even the valves were placed inline with the cylinder axis for that purpose. That carried over to the extreme with the later Fulvia V4’s with +/- 12 degree V’s plus a single DOHC head covering the narrow V. Incredible engineering and packaging.
Ching -A-Trailer says
Do you and your readers know that a fake fiberglass replica Cobra was displayed at The Quail one year?? I think it was 2012 or 2013 and it was unplanned and probably unknown to the organizers! For 20 years I’ve owned and driven a 41 year old British built fiberglass Pilgrim Cobra replica. RHD, no sidepipes, stripes or other ‘boy racer’ parts it looks like an unrestored relic and due to the silver underpainting where the color coat has chipped and worn away most people believe it is aluminum. Anyway, one year a friend and I are driving down Carmel Hwy when we spot Ferrari 250 GTO chassis 4757GT on the road in front of us and we follow – all the way to the entrance of The Quail. The Ferrari pulls up and is waved through.
On an impulse I follow in my authentic looking but beat-up thoroughly fake car with a thousand miles of road grime and dead bugs plastered all over and we’re ushered in as well!
What a great day I and my friend had, I just wish I’d taken photos!