THE LIFE OF A RACING LEGEND-
MG
1925 - Cecil Kimber
took gold at the Land’s End Trial in a dedicated trials car built using
a special 1.5 liter OHV Hotchkiss engine. Kimber himself saw this car as
the first really definitive MG sports car and it has survived to this
day as ‘Old Number One’.
English cricket team
won their first test against Australia in 12 years.
1927 - A
privately-entered 14/40 MG won a 100 km race at San Martin, Argentina.
First broadcasts by
the British Broadcasting Corporation.
1930 - M-type MG’s
took the team prize in the Brooklands Double Twelve Race.
Uruguay won the first
World Cup football tournament.
1931 - EX120 was the
world’s first 750 cc car to set records of over 100 mph, at Montlhéry.
‘C’-type Montlhéry Midget, a production racer, swept the board in the
Brooklands Double Twelve race. A C-type claimed victory in the Ulster TT
race.
James Whale’s
‘Frankenstein’ was unleashed at the cinema.
1933 - Supercharged
1100cc six cylinder K3 MG Magnette won its class at Mille Miglia, making
MG the first non-Italian marque ever to win the team prize. A K3 driven
by Tazio Nuvolari, won the Ulster TT. A C-type Midget was class winner
and 6th overall at Le Mans.
British tennis player
Fred Perry won the US Open title.
1935 - A K3 won the
1100cc class at Le Mans.
US gangsters, Bonnie
Parker and Clyde Barrow, were shot dead by police.
1948 - MG T-series
took 3rd in the second Watkins Glen GP.
David Lean’s film
‘Oliver Twist’ was released.
1955 - ZA Magnettes of
Jacobs, Foster and Waller achieved a 1-2-3 finish in The Daily Express
Production Touring Car Race at Silverstone. The MGA made its debut as a
team of three EX182 production prototypes at Le Mans.
British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill resigned and Anthony Eden became his successor.
1956/57 - Production
MGAs took the team prize at Sebring. MGA and Magnette cars driven by
Nancy Mitchell, won the European Ladies Rally Championships. The EX181
achieved 245.64 mph as a 1500cc class car with Stirling Moss at the
wheel - 38 years before a 1433cc MGF (MG EX253) broke records with
217.4mph.
‘That’ll Be The Day’
sang Buddy Holly and the Crickets as the first tentative steps towards a
formal economic union within Europe were made.
1958 - MGA Twin Cam
secured 9th at Liège Rome Liège. Foster won the 1600cc Class
in the BRSCC Saloon Car Championship in a ZB Magnette.
Brazil’s great
footballer, Pelé dominated the 1958 World Cup which was held for the
first time in Sweden.
1960 - A special Twin
Cam Coupe won the 2-litre class at Le Mans.
The novel ‘Lady
Chatterley’s Lover’ was the subject of an obscenity trial in Britain.
1963 - A works MGB
achieved worthy results at Le Mans over the next three years.
‘Swinging’ London was
the fashion capital of the world - skirts were shorter while hair was
longer.
1964 - An MG 1100
driven by Foster and Hedges, secured a 1300cc class win in the six-hour
Touring Car Race at Brands Hatch.
‘Beatlemania’ shook
the world and paved the way for the Rolling Stones.
1965 - Hopkirk and
Hedges finished 11th at Le Mans - the best an MGB achieved
and second in its class. It was the last MG to tackle Le Mans.
1965 - MGBs took an outright win,
class 1-2-3 in the Brands Hatch 1000-mile race.
Russian, Colonel
Alexei Leonev was the first man to walk in space.
1966 - MGB won the
Marathon de la Route 84 hour race, Nürburgring.
England won the
football World Cup.
1968 - MGC GTS won its
class at Sebring.
Fashion shifted to
‘flower power’ – men’s hair got longer and women’s got shorter.
1983 - A 200 bhp MG
Metro Turbo driven by Tony Pond took three class pole positions, one
class win, four fastest laps in the Trimoco Saloon Car Championship.
‘Let’s Dance’ sang
David Bowie as seat belts were made compulsory in Britain.
1984 –The Turbo show
continued with Patrick Watts in the purpose-built 6R4.
Madonna had her first
big hit with ‘Like A Virgin’.
1985 - 3rd
place for the 6R4 team in the RAC Rally was clinched by Tony Pond.
‘Live Aid’ fed
millions as Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, entered the world stage.
1986 – Tony Pond took
6th place in the RAC Rally, three other 6R4s secured the team
prize.
Video games became the
latest craze.
1987 – 6R4 driven by
David Gillanders, won the UK National Rally Championship and Will Gollup
won the Lydden Winter Rallycross Championship (1986/87) and took the
European Rallycross title.
The All Blacks won
Rugby Football’s first World Cup final
2001 – Two MG Lola
EX257’s entered the 24 Hours of LeMans after an absence of 36 years
driven by Mark Blundell, Julian Bailey, Kevin McGarrity (car 33),
Anthony Reid, Warren Hughes and Jonny Kane (car 34). Car 33 competed for
just over 12 hours putting in an impressive performance. Car 34 retired
with low oil pressure after 4½ hours.
MG Sport & Racing
Limited embarks on another new chapter - Touring Cars. Anthony Reid gave
MG Sport and Racing their first podium finish with a tactical drive to
win the sprint race at Brands Hatch on October 7. The same weekend
witnessed Warren Hughes secure MG’s first pole position.
JRR Tolkein’s ‘Lord Of
The Rings’ and J K Rowling’s ‘Harry Potter’ fight it out for top movie
box office charts
2002 - To be
continued…
If you didn’t
experience MG’s past, don’t miss its future….
MG LE MANS BACKGROUND INFO
The MG name goes back
a long way at Le Mans. Different models have appeared at the classic
French endurance race over the years, with the MG Lola EX257s keeping up
the MG tradition, taking on the greats of the sport.
The 1930 race saw the
first appearance for MG, when two Midgets contested the event. In a
classic era of Le Mans, dominated by huge Bentleys, the 847cc cars sadly
failed to last the full distance, but that didn’t stop another C-Type
Midget being entered the next year. Crewed by Francis Samuelson and
Freddy Kendell, the car was still running at the end, but was not
classified by the organizing the final results.
Another C-Type was
entered in 1932, but the first great landmark in MG’s Le Mans history
came a year later when a supercharged C-Type was brought home a superb
sixth overall by Maurice Baumer and Ludovic Ford. Not only did the car
finish well in the outright positions, it won the under 750cc class – a
great achievement.
In 1934 things got
even better for MG, with a supercharged K3 Magnette finishing an amazing
fourth place overall – the best finish for the British manufacturer. Roy
Eccles and Charles Martin shared the supercharged machine, and claimed
the 751 – 1000cc class crown.
Seven MG’s were
entered in 1935, with most of the attention on the three entered by
Captain George Eyston, the famous Land Speed Record holder. The three
lady crews were Doreen Evans and Barbara Skinner, Joan Richmond and Mrs
Gordon Simpson, and Margaret Allen and Coleen Eaton – the first
all-female team entry in the history of the race. Impressively, all
three cars took the chequered flag, claiming 24th, 25th and 26th places.
Post-war, Le Mans
success proved elusive for many years. On the first running of the race
once hostilities had ended, the MG of Curly Dryden and George Phillips
was disqualified for receiving outside assistance – the guilty mechanic
even being driven back to the pits in the car before it re-joined the
race, with reports suggesting he was even waving to the crowd! In 1951
Phillips teamed up with Alan Ripon to drive a modified TD, but were
eliminated by an engine problem.
Two MG’s finished in
the ill-starred 1955 race, while in 1959 an MG Car Club entry retired
with six hours to go after an eventful race, which included hitting a
dog on the straight!
1960 saw another class
win for MG, with Roy Lund and Colin Escot this time bringing the car to
the end of the race, avoiding any strays, to finish 12th overall.
1965 saw a modified
MGB driven by Andrew Hedges and rally ace Paddy Hopkirk. Competing
against the might of Ferrari and a host of seven-liter Fords, the 1800cc
car – featuring modified nose aerodynamics to enhance the time spent at
speed on the long straights at the circuit – put in a strong
performance, and the duo brought the car home a very creditable 11th
overall.