Chequered Past
The eleventh of June appears more than once in the history of the twenty-four hours of Le Mans — and the first of those appearances casts a shadow over everything that follows. In 1955, a crash in the third hour of the race killed more than eighty people and changed motorsport forever. This episode examines what happened, why the race continued, and what the disaster set in motion — in the regulations, in the circuit design, and in the sport’s long, slow reckoning with the question of safety. The three races that follow show how Le Mans evolved in the decades after. In 1977, a Porsche that should have been out of contention — damaged, running deep in the field — became the first car shared by three drivers to win Le Mans outright. In 1988, Jaguar ended seven consecutive Porsche victories on a gearbox held together by the torque of its engine and the nerve of its driver — while elsewhere on the same circuit, a Frenchman quietly broke the four hundred kilometre an hour barrier on the Mulsanne Straight, setting a record that can never be beaten. And in 2011, two of the most violent accidents in the modern race’s history produced something the crowd in 1955 could not have imagined: both drivers walked away. Four races. One date. And a thread running through all of them that begins in the worst moment in the sport’s history and ends, fifty-six years later, with two drivers climbing out of cars that had been destroyed at three hundred kilometres an hour. Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2506134/fan_mail/new] Music by #Mubert Music Rendering [https://mubert.com/render]
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