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TEAM
QUAIL AT LE MANS
The Great Drivers |
Olivier GENDEBIEN
4 times winner(1958, 1960, 1961, 1962)
One colour appeared several times on a works Ferrari during Grand Prix meetings
in the fifties: Belgian yellow. The most prominent example is that of Belgian
sports car ace Olivier Gendebien, who raced a yellow Ferrari at his 1958 home
Grand Prix. Born from a wealthy Belgian family (some sources actually convert
his wealth into aristocracy) in Brussels on 12 January 1924, Gendebien was a
paratrooper in World War II before spending some four years in forestry in the
Congo, where he met a rally driver named Charles Fraikin. Legend goes that
Fraikin was lamenting the lack of a co-driver with whom to compete when he would
return to Europe. So, after their journey back to Belgium and racing a Veritas
in the GP des Frontières at Chimay, finishing sixth, Gendebien joined Fraikin,
initially to drive a Jaguar in rally events.
They stayed together until 1955, but by then Gendebien had full well proven
himself as a driver in his own right. By the time they split up they had become
known as 'the eternal bridesmaids' due to the number of times they had to be
content with second place. Twice they just missed winning the Liège-Rome-Liège
Rally but in 1955 it was third time lucky with a Mercedes 300SL. Without his
partner, Olivier had great success, winning his class with a Plymouth in the
Round Italy Rally, the Tulip Rally and the Northern Roads Rally in a Porsche,
all in 1954.
His career then gathered pace. Such was the impression made that he was offered
a contract to drive a works Ferrari in sportscar events and selected Grands
Prix. His first race for the team nearly ended in disaster, when in late 1955 he
crashed heavily in practice for the Tourist Trophy at Dundrod, suffering
concussion. He was fit for the start of 1956 and, with virtually no single-seater
experience behind him, finished fifth on his Grand Prix debut at the Argentine
GP, followed by sixth in the Mendoza GP. The season also saw a splendid run of
finishes in sportscar races, including second places at Buenos Aires, in the
Supercortemaggiore at Monza and in the Nürburgring 1000kms (with Alfonso de
Portago), third at Le Mans (with Trintignant) and the Targa Florio. Having found
his way into Jacques Swaters' Ecurie Francorchamps (by then renamed Equipe
Nationale Belge), Gendebien managed to cause a stir by the end of 1956 finishing
third with a 250GT in both the Liège-Rome-Liège Rally and the Tour de France. It
had been a great season, and six more in Ferrari's great sportscar team were to
follow.
In April 1957, with his cousin Jacques Washer as a passenger in the ENB 250 GT,
Olivier scored a brilliant victory in the Tour of Sicily and then was a stunning
third overall in the last Mille Miglia. He subsequently won, with the same car,
the Reims 12 Hours (with Paul Frère) and then wrapped up the season with a win
in the Tour de France (with Lucien Bianchi). Belgium had a new star, and Olivier
was starting to get on a roll. He won again at the Reims 12 Hours in 1958 before
starting off on a string of victories at the Targa Florio (with Musso), to be
followed by the 1961 edition (with Von Trips) and finally the 1962 one (with
Mairesse and Ricardo Rodriguez). Other famous wins included the Sebring 12 Hours
editions of 1959 (with Phil Hill, Dan Gurney and Chuck Daigh), 1960 (this time
in a Porsche, with Hans Herrmann) and 1961 (again with Phil Hill) and the
Nürburgring 1000kms in 1962.
His most remarkable achievement was his unbeaten run of four wins at the Le Mans
24 Hours in 1958, 1960, 1961 and 1962, after the last of which he retired. Three
times he shared the glory with Phil Hill, whilst 1960 was the year that
Paul Frère
co-drove. Gendebien's sportscar success overshadowed an impressive Grand Prix
record. Although he managed just 14 starts between 1956 and 1961, he scored
points in half of them. For most of that time he was Ferrari's spare driver,
filling in in odd races, but he scored his best results with BRP's Yeoman Credit
Cooper T51 in 1960, finishing third at Spa - where team mate
Chris Bristow
was killed - and then a fine second to Jack Brabham at Reims. Despite missing
four of the season's nine GPs, he earned a creditable sixth place in the World
Championship.
In 1961 Gendebien was back with Ferrari for what was his last GP drive at Spa,
when he was the fourth man on the team for the Belgian Grand Prix. He was given
a 156 "shark-nose" but unlike his teammates, who had the latest 120-degree V6
engines at their disposal, he had to contend with the less powerful 65-deg unit.
Again, his car was painted yellow for the race and entered by Ecurie
Francorchamps (ENB having recovered its original name by then). He gloriously
led in the opening laps, but was overwhelmed by his team mates and finished
fourth.
As said, Gendebien retired in 1962, at 38 years of age, after his fourth Le Mans
success. A look at a list of former co-drivers (Peter Collins, Alfonso de
Portago, Luigi Musso and Wolfgang von Trips) perhaps helps to explain his
decision to get out at the top, with his head, body and limbs all intact. Aged
74, he died on 2 October 1998. In My Terrible Joys Enzo Ferrari memorably
described Gendebien as: "A gentleman who never forgets that noblesse oblige and,
when he is at the wheel, he translates this code of behaviour into an elegant
and discerning forcefulness. He drives without hurting the car, taking care of
it and one can always count on him to drive with the precision of clock
machinery. One has to let him talk, however, when he wins, and that happens
quite frequently."