OldRacingCars.com

Coppa Santamonica

Misano, 24 Aug 1975

ResultsLapsTime/Speed
1 Maurizio Flammini March 742 [22] - BMW M12/6
#7 Maurizio Flammini (see note 1)
50 1h 08m 40.0s
152.388 kph
2 Arturo Merzario Osella FA2/75 [001] - BMW M12/6
#1 Osella Squadra Corse (see note 2)
50 1h 08m 40.9s
3 Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi March 742 [20] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch
#11 Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi (see note 3)
50 1h 09m 38.7s
4 Giorgio Francia Osella FA2/75 [004] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch
#2 Osella Squadra Corse
50 1h 10m 26.4s
5 Cosimo Turizio March 742L [26] - BMW M12/6
#19 Cosimo Turizio (see note 4)
49
6 Roberto Farneti March 742/752 [742-8] - BMW M12/6
#12 Scuderia Everest/Scuderia del Passatore [Giancarlo Minardi]
(see note 5)
47
7 Carlo Franchi ("Gimax") March 742L [15] - BMW M12/6
#10 Cucine Elba Racing Team (see note 6)
45
8 Roland Binder March 732 [17] - BMW M12/6
#25 Roland Binder (see note 7)
45
9 Charly Kiser Osella FA2/75 - BMW M12/6
#21 Charly Kiser
44
10 Luciano Pavesi (unknown) Brabham BT41 [24] - Ford Novamotor
#14 Luciano Pavesi (see note 8)
39
11 Giancarlo Martini March 752 [7] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch
#4 Scuderia Everest/Scuderia del Passatore [Giancarlo Minardi]
38
12 Beat Blatter March 732 [13] - BMW M12/6
#23 Ambrozium H7 Racing Team (see note 9)
36
13 Luis Maria de Almenara March 732 [733] - Ford BDA Hart
#20 Luis Maria de Almenara (see note 10)
36
14 Alberto Colombo March 752 [1-2] - BMW M12/6
#9 Cucine Elba Racing Team
29
15 Francesco Cerulli-Irelli March 742L [28] - Ford BDA Hart
#16 Carlo Giorgio (see note 11)
25
16 Gabriele Serblin March 752 [4] - BMW M12/6
#8 Cucine Elba Racing Team
24
17 Francy Jerancic Surtees TS15 [08] - Ford BDA Hart alloy
#29 Francy Jerancic (see note 12)
20
DNS Hans Walther March 742L [743-5] - BMW M12/6
(see note 13)
Did not start

All cars are 2-litre F2 unless noted.

Heat 1 Laps Time Speed
1Maurizio Flammini2538m 26.2s143.583 kph
2Arturo Merzario2536m 27.6s
3Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi2537m 02.7s
4Giorgio Francia25
5Alberto Colombo25
6Cosimo Turizio25
7Giancarlo Martini24
8Roberto Farneti23
9Francesco Cerulli-Irelli23
10Carlo Franchi ("Gimax")21
11Roland Binder21
12Charly Kiser20
13Francy Jerancic19
14Luciano Pavesi15
15Beat Blatter13
16Luis Maria de Almenara13
17Gabriele Serblin10
Heat 2 Laps Time Speed
1Arturo Merzario25
2Maurizio Flammini25
3Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi25
4Cosimo Turizio25
5Giorgio Francia25
6Roland Binder24
7Carlo Franchi ("Gimax")24
8Luciano Pavesi24
9Roberto Farneti24
10Charly Kiser24
11Beat Blatter23
12Luis Maria de Almenara23
13Giancarlo Martini14
14Gabriele Serblin14
15Alberto Colombo4
16Francesco Cerulli-Irelli2
Qualifying
1 Arturo Merzario (F2) 2-litre Osella FA2/75 [001] - BMW M12/6 1m 13.6s
2 Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi (F2) 2-litre March 742 [20] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch 1m 14.7s
3 Maurizio Flammini (F2) 2-litre March 742 [22] - BMW M12/6 1m 14.8s
4 Giancarlo Martini (F2) 2-litre March 752 [7] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch 1m 15.1s
5 Alberto Colombo (F2) 2-litre March 752 [1-2] - BMW M12/6 1m 15.3s
6 Giorgio Francia (F2) 2-litre Osella FA2/75 [004] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch 1m 15.6s
7 Gabriele Serblin (F2) 2-litre March 752 [4] - BMW M12/6 1m 15.7s
8 Francesco Cerulli-Irelli (F2) 2-litre March 742L [28] - Ford BDA Hart 1m 15.7s
9 Cosimo Turizio (F2) 2-litre March 742L [26] - BMW M12/6 1m 15.8s
10 Carlo Franchi ("Gimax") (F2) 2-litre March 742L [15] - BMW M12/6 1m 17.6s
11 Hans Walther * (F2) 2-litre March 742L [743-5] - BMW M12/6 1m 17.6s
12 Roberto Farneti (F2) 2-litre March 742/752 [742-8] - BMW M12/6 1m 18.0s
13 Charly Kiser (F2) 2-litre Osella FA2/75 - BMW M12/6 1m 18.0s
14 Luciano Pavesi (unknown) Brabham BT41 [24] - Ford Novamotor 1m 18.5s
15 Roland Binder (F2) 2-litre March 732 [17] - BMW M12/6 1m 18.6s
16 Luis Maria de Almenara (F2) 2-litre March 732 [733] - Ford BDA Hart 1m 20.0s
17 Beat Blatter (F2) 2-litre March 732 [13] - BMW M12/6 1m 21.0s
18 Francy Jerancic (F2) 2-litre Surtees TS15 [08] - Ford BDA Hart alloy 1m 26.4s
 
* Did not start

Notes on the cars:

  1. March 742 [22] (Maurizio Flammini): New to the CSAI's Equipe Nationale, then managed by Eugenio Dragoni, for Maurizio Flammini to drive in F2 in 1974. After Dragoni's sudden death in April 1974, the team was managed by Ottorino Maffezzoli, the Monza circuit director. Flammini reappeared in this car from June 1975 onwards, running as part of the Trivellato Racing Team, and won at Mugello in July and Misano in August. Flammini joined the March works F2 team for 1976, but brought the old 742 out for a few races in 1977. In March 1977, the ex-Flammini March 742 was advertised by Yolanda Fawsitt (Haddenham, Buckinghamshire), although Autosport gave her name as Solanda Fowsitt. Subsequent history unknown.
  2. Osella FA2/75 [001] (Arturo Merzario): New for Arturo Merzario to race for Osella Squadra Corse at Vallelunga in October 1974. Rebuilt to 1975 specification and raced by Giorgio Francia in the early part of the season, then by Diulio Truffo, and then my Merzario for the last three races. Rebuilt to 1976 specification and raced by Gianfranco Trombetti at the start of that season. Subsequent history unknown.
  3. March 742 [20] (Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi): New to the CSAI's Equipe Nationale as a spare car but sold on unused to Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi, who raced it twice in F2 late in 1974. Pesenti-Rossi raced the car again in 1975 but was more focused on his F3 campaign with a March 743. After a single F2 race with the 742 at the start of 1976, Pesenti-Rossi acquired a 762 and a 763, and the 742 was not seen again. Reports that it went to the Brambillas are now thought to be incorrect. In early 1978, Nigel Clarkson (Cirencester, Gloucestershire) ran a F2 March in the Aurora series. This was described as a 762 when he failed to qualify for the two Easter races but was identified as a 742 with BDX engine when it reappeared in September. Clarkson recalls that "the car was a disaster having been put together from a bunch of bits by an Australian John Gillmeister" and believes it later became a Special Saloon. According to Kevan McLurg, Scot Ron Cummings bought a dismantled March 742 from Clarkson in 1980, and this was used as a basis of such a Special Saloon, a Lotus Esprit that he raced in 1982 with an 1800cc Cosworth engine. He then fitted a 3400cc Ford GAA to it, and raced it in this form from 1983 to 1988. In 1985, it was crashed at Brands Hatch, and rebuilt using a March acquired from the Channel Islands. Cummings then bought a March 802 in AC bodywork and the March-based Esprit was driven by Ricky Gauld (Huntly, Aberdeenshire, Scotland) in GT racing at Ingliston in 1989 and 1990. Gauld bought the March from Ron Cummings, recalling that it was "an ex Super Saloon", and used it in March form in hillclimbs in 1994. Meanwhile, the original 742 monocoque and associated parts were sold by Cummings to Hall & Fowler (late Hall & Hall). Rick Hall remembers the transaction and recalls selling such a car to Graham Williams. Some years later, in 2009, the 742 monocoque still with original chasis plate and all its associated parts were acquired by dealer Kevan McLurg from someone in the English northwest. Initially he sold it all to Tony Dunderdale as spares for his own car, but when Dunderdale sold his own 742, the remains of 742-20 were sold by McLurg to a man in Belgium. Subsequent history unknown.
  4. March 742L [26] (Cosimo Turizio): New to Trivellato Racing Team and raced by Cosimo Turizio in F2 in 1974, entered by Scuderia Vesuvio and sponsored by insurance company Lloyd Centauro Italia. He started the season with the car in standard short-nose customer specification, but it was in works long-nose form by Mugello in July. Turizio retained the car for 1975, when he was again entered by Scuderia Vesuvio, and was sponsored by Lloyd Centauro. Subsequent history unknown.
  5. March 742/752 [742-8] (Roberto Farneti): New to Trivellato Racing Team, and raced in F2 by Giancarlo Martini, entered by Scuderia Everest. In 1975, Martini raced for Giancarlo Minardi's Everest-sponsored Scuderia del Passatore, and the March 742 was retained as a muletto. It was raced by Martini at Enna, by Roberto Farneti at Misano when it had 752 bodywork, and is very probably the car raced by Lorenzo Niccolini at Vallelunga in October. The car was then retired and according to a later advertisement it was acquired by Antonino Missiroli who fitted a non-F2 BMW engine and used the car for track days only. It then passed to a Mr Guerzoni (Bolzano) in 1985, but its history is then unknown until acquired by Christian Bouveron (Prunoy, France) in 2007. It was advertised by Bouveron in 2017 when it was restored to Everest livery and in long-nose 1974 specification. Bought by Gerard Gamand in 2019, who commenced a restoration of the car.
  6. March 742L [15] (Carlo Franchi ("Gimax")): Sold to Trivellato Racing Team and raced by Gabrielle Serblin in F2 in 1974. Retained by Trivellato as a spare car for 1975 and raced by Alberto Colombo, Francesco Cerulli-Irelli, Serblin and "Gimax" (Carlo Franchi). Raced by Gimax at a few Italian F2 races in 1976 and 1977 then to Richard Jones and Robin Smith for the Aurora AFX series in mid-1978, using the Cosworth BDG (or BDA) engine from the pair's Chevron B31 sports car that had been wrecked at Le Mans. Also raced by fellow sports car racer Tony Charnell at the end of 1978. The car is then unknown for two years, until an "Atlantic March" 742 with 772 bodywork was advertised by Ralph Halley, an Opel dealer in Milngavie, a suburb of Glasgow. It was bought from Halley by Jim McGaughey (Lochgilphead, Argyll and Bute, Scotland) and rebuilt as a Renault 5GT special saloon for 1981, using bodywork modelled on the new Renault 5 Turbo by Graham Kelly, a 1930cc Cosworth FVC acquired from Jimmy Jack, and a Hewland FT200 gearbox. It debuted in this form at Ingliston in April 1981, and won McGaughey the 1981 Scottish GT Championship. He then fitted an ex-F2 BMW M12 engine acquired from hillclimber Barrogill Angus, and raced it again in 1982 and 1983. When the special saloon's career ended, it was acquired by the Higgins Brothers of Lincolnshire, and was bought from them by Ian Jones in 1990, by which time it was in a very sorry state. Jones reskinned the monocoque using the original bulkheads, fabricated new suspension parts, and fitted late-1974 (long-nose) F2 bodywork. Jones sold it to Richard Evans in 2010, and by 2012 it was completed with a Gathercole BDG in Stebel livery and was raced in the Derek Bell Trophy races at the HSCC Superprix at Brands Hatch. Shared by Evans and Andrew Smith in Historic F2 from 2013 onwards.
  7. March 732 [17] (Roland Binder): Bought brand new by Roland Binder (Esslingen, Germany) late in the 1973 season and raced by him through the 1974 and 1975 seasons. Replaced for 1976 by a Lola T450.
  8. Brabham BT41 [24] (Luciano Pavesi): New to Luciano Pavesi and run for him in Italian Formula 3 in 1973 by Scuderia Ala d'Oro. Retained for 1974 when it was fitted with a 2-litre Novamotor twin cam and run for Pavesi again by Scuderia Ala d'Oro. Retauined again for 1975, again run by Scuderia Ala d'Oro.
  9. March 732 [13] (Beat Blatter): To Roland Salomon for Swiss championship events from June onwards, replacing a GRD 272, and also some F2 races that season. After winning the Swiss title, the car was damaged in a hillclimb near the end of the season and rebuilt on a new tub in time for the Estoril F2 race. Salomon continued with the car in 1974 but focused on national events. Sold to Beat Blatter 1975 for Swiss Championship events. Then sold to Alain Jaccard (Thônex, Canton of Geneva, Switzerland) in 1976, when the car moved to eastern France, fitted with a 1600cc Ford engine, and used in the 1600cc class of French course de côte. To Michel Salvi (Malbuisson, Franche-Comté, France) for the 1978 hillclimb season, agai with the 1600cc Ford. Retained by Salvi for 1979, then sold to Jacques Bonnot (Chalon-sur-Saône, Franche-Comté) as a rolling chassis with Hewland FG400 gearbox but not raced by him. Later sold to Sébastien Brisard and being prepared in 2023 for historic racing.
  10. March 732 [733] (Luis Maria de Almenara): New to Max Bonnin at some point during the 1973 Formula 3 season. Sold during 1974 to Luis Maria de Almenara Juandò (Barcelona, Spain), who raced it at Magione in September 1974. Then rebuilt as a March 732 for Formula 2 in 1975, using an ex-Alpine Hart BDA engine. De Almenara raced the car at five races in Formula 2 in 1975, but failed to qualify for four of them. He also ran it at the Carrera en Cuesta a la Rabassada hillclimb in Spain in October 1975, finishing second. A photograph of the car at Rabassada shows it wearing works-style 742 bodywork with side radiators, and the rollhoop casing cut down as happened to the 752s early in the 1975 season. Subsequent history unknown.
  11. March 742L [28] (Francesco Cerulli-Irelli): New to Carlo Giorgio, fitted with a very unusual Holbay Ford Pinto engine and raced in F2 in 1974, entered by Scuderia Jolly Club. Giorgio retained the car for 1975, when he used a Hart Ford BDA. He returned very briefly in 1976, when the car was used to test the new Armaroli V6 engine, but it did not qualify for its only race. He returned for a fourth season in 1977 when the March had its original 742 sidepods but a 762 cockpit and 762 nose, and used a Hart 420R engine. He failed to qualify for three of his five races that season and did not go the distance in the other two. He raced the car again in 1978, when it has a distinctive rollhoop extension. This was carried over when it moved from its 762 bodywork to full 782 bodywork during the season. He failed to qualify for all his six races that season, except at the Nürburgring in April where he was 37th and slowest in practice, but everyone was allowed to start. For the 1979 season, Giorgio acquired a pukka March 782. The 742 ended with a record of 25 F2 races but 12 failures to qualify and only five classified finishes. Many years later, in 2016, the monocoque from this car was in the garage of Silvio Pederzini in Padova, Italy. It showed signs of having had a 782 roll hoop forward stay stiffening plate added just forward of the rear seat panel, showing it was the car Giorgio used in 1978.
  12. Surtees TS15 [08] (Francy Jerancic): This car was not seen in 1973, but was raced by John Watson as a works Bang & Olufsen Team Surtees entry at the opening race of the 1974 season where it was described as "one of last year's cars dusted off". It was then José Dolhem's works car at the next four races before disappearing again. To Yugoslavian driver Francy Jerancic for 1975, entered in four F2 races by Avto-Moto društvo (AMD) Škofja Loka. Jerancic returned for three races in 1977. In early 1978, the car was advertised by David Winstanley's Lodge Corner Agencies (Crewe, Cheshire), but the advert said that details were still to come from Yugoslavia, which suggests the car was not actually in Crewe. As it was not advertised again, it may never have arrived. Subsequent history unknown, but some time around 1990, this car was bought by Pasqualino Turatello from Flavio Tullio. Pasqualino Turatello's son Francesco understands that the car had previously been used in Swiss hillclimbs. Flavio Tullio's son Matteo recalls that Flavio owned the car twice, selling it to Bertola of Torino and then buying it back, before selling it to Turatello. Matteo believes it was used by Bertola in French hillclimbs using a Fiat Volumetrico engine. It is listed in its 2013 FIA HTP as a Surtees TS15/A with chassis number TS15/08. Used by Francesco Turatello in historic hillclimbs in 2014.
  13. March 742L [743-5] (Hans Walther): Invoiced to Obermoser, but instead of being used in Formula 3, this car was rebuilt to Formula 2 specification for Jo Vonlanthen (Frauenfeld, Switzerland) after he wrecked his new 742 at the opening race of the F2 season. It remained in standard 742 short-nose specification, even after Vonlanthen's 742 was repaired and converted to long-nose specification. The 743 was raced by Vonlanthen at Hockenheim in April, by Dieter Basche at Hockenheim in June, by Vonlanthen at Mugello in July, by Jean-Pierre Jaussaud at Nogaro in September. It may also have been the car used by Vonlanthen in Swiss and German domestic events during 1974. It was converted to long-nosed specification over the close-season, and was raced by Vonlanthen at Estoril, the opening round of the 1975 season. The car then went to Hans Walther (Guntalingen, Switzerland) and was raced by him in Swiss national events during 1975. Walther retained the car for 1976, again using it in Swiss events but failing to qualify for three of his four F2 races. Subsequent history unknown but according to Wisu Willimann, it later went to Edmond Veigel (Lausanne, Switzerland) who fitted a Cosworth FVC engine. At the end of the 1990s it was bought from Veigel by Hans-Markus Huber (Berne, Switzerland) and restored with a BMW engine. It was sold by Huber to another owner but finances for a restoration ran out and the car has been in limbo since then.

Sources

Note that the identification of individual cars in these results is based on the material presented elsewhere in this site and may in some cases contradict the organisers' published results.

All comments, clarifications, corrections and additions are most welcome. Please email Allen (allen@oldracingcars.com) if you can help in any way with our research.

Individual sources for this event

Motoring News (28 Aug 1975 p1) only comments briefly on this non-championship race but Autocourse (1974/75 p195) carries full results. The F1 Register (A Record of Grand Prix and Voiturette Racing Vol 10, p150) gives a full entry list which identifies Cerulli-Irelli's car as entered by Carlo Giorgio (i.e. 742-28, the same car he then drives at Silverstone as a Jolly Club entry). Beat Blatter's March is listed as a Loris Kessell entry (implying 742-27) but this is a 732 according to Autocourse. Gimax is listed as a Cucine Elba Racing Team entry alongside Serblin and Colombo implying he's in the Trivellato spare 742 again. The other mystery car, Roberto Farnetti's March 742-BMW, is identified in F1R as the usual Trombetti 742-21. As the team travelled directly to Silverstone, it is assumed that Merzario used 001 and Francia 004, as in England.