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A Historic 50+ Years of Sebring International Raceway
A Look Back over the Last 50+ Years
- 1941 - Hendricks Field built near Sebring
as a military training base.
- 1950 - Alec Ulmann suggests Sebring Airport
as a site for a sports car road race. Sam Collier
6 Hour Memorial race held on December 31 is first
racing event ever held at Sebring and the first sports
car endurance held in the U.S.
- 1952 - First 12 Hours of Sebring race held
on March 15.
- 1953 - The 12 Hours of Sebring is the first
event of the new FIA sports car world championship.
- 1954 - Stunning upset as an OSCA co-driven
by Stirling Moss wins.
- 1955 - Confusing finish: Hill/Shelby Ferrari
is flagged winner, then Hawthorn/Walters Jaguar declared
winner.
- 1956 - The legendary Fangio drives a Ferrari
to victory. Amoco becomes official sponsor and begins
long relationship with Sebring race. Automobile Racing
Club of Florida (ARCF) formed to replace AAA, which
announced it will no longer sanction racing.
- 1957 - Fangio wins his second consecutive
Sebring race. First live national radio broadcast.
- 1959 - Sebring hosts first ever Formula
One race in the U.S. in December. Poorly attended,
that race moves to Riverside the following year.
- 1960 - Major factory teams don't show due
to exclusive gas/oil controversy. Ulmann adds "support
races" to weekend schedule for the first time.
- 1961 - Olivier Gendebien and Phil Hill win
their third 12 Hours of Sebring race.
- 1963 - Rear-engine Ferrari wins. Perhaps
greatest field of drivers ever assembled for an American
sports car race.
- 1964 - Ferrari wins fourth consecutive Sebring
race despite strong challenge from Ford Cobras.
- 1965 - First American car to win Sebring
in over a decade as Chevrolet Chaparral wins with
Hap Sharp and Jim Hall driving.
- 1966 - First Trans-Am race ever held at
Sebring. Tragedy strikes as driver Bob McLean is
killed. Later in the race, four spectators are killed
when Mario Andretti collides with Don Wester. Dan
Gurney's car, leading with four minutes left, stops
on course. As he tries to push the car across the
finish line, the Miles/Ruby Ford passes him in the
final minute.
- 1967 - Promoter Alec Ulmann announces the
race will be moved to the new Palm Beach International
Raceway (now called Moroso Motorsports Park) in West
Palm Beach. Two months later he changes his mind.
First major change made to the circuit as the Webster
Turn is replaced with the Chicane.
- 1968 - Trans-Am race included within the
12-hour race.
- 1969 - Last "Le Mans Start" in
which drivers run to their cars to start race.
- 1970 - Considered greatest Sebring race
ever. Closest finish ever as Andretti gives Ferrari
a 22-second victory over actor Steve McQueen and
Peter Revson.
- 1972 - Mario Andretti wins his third 12
Hours of Sebring. Ulmann announces this will be last
Sebring race as the FIA has withdrawn its sanction
and the race will no longer be on the international
calendar.
- 1973 - Sebring revived under IMSA sanction.
Peter Gregg and Hurley Haywood drive Porsche to victory
in a race of production cars and no prototypes.
- 1974 - Race cancelled due to "energy
crisis." Several hundred fans show up anyway
to party.
- 1975 - Race revived with John Greenwood
as promoter. Factory BMW wins.
- 1976 - Porsche wins the first of 13 consecutive
Sebring races.
- 1978 - Charles Mendez takes over promotion
of race. Coca-Cola announces name sponsorship. FIA
sanction restored.
- 1983 - Sebring Airport Authority takes over
promotion of race. First major circuit change in
20 years takes place as a new section bypasses airport
runway. In biggest upset in endurance racing history,
a GTO Porsche records the overall win.
- 1984 - Another big upset as an aging Porsche
935 wins. Paddock moved out, increasing course length
to 4.86 miles.
- 1985 - A.J. Foyt wins his first Sebring
race, the last win of his career.
- 1986 - First live national TV broadcast
on TBS.
- 1987 - Million-dollar enhancement program
results in new 4.11 mile course which bypasses old
runways.
- 1989 - Nissan's dominating win ends 13-year
Porsche win streak.
- 1990 - Nissan wins second straight Sebring
race. Top three cars all finish on the same lap -
first time in Sebring history. Sebring Airport Authority
leases facility to Mike Cone; major improvements
begin immediately.
- 1991 - Despite heavy rains, a record crowd
watches Nissan take its third straight victory on
the newly renovated 3.7-mile circuit.
- 1992 - Sebring celebrates its 40th anniversary.
Toyota wins first endurance race with Juan Fangio
II and Andy Wallace driving.
- 1993 - Toyota wins again despite heavy rains
which caused the first red-flag in Sebring history.
- 1994 - World Sports Car era begins, GT Nissan
wins overall.
- 1995 - Ferrari records historic win, first
in 23 years at Sebring. Chicane is relocated and
renamed the Fangio Chicane.
- 1996 - Oldsmobile scores first victory for
an American manufacturer at Sebring in 27 years.
- 1997 - Sebring acquired by International
Motorsports Speedway Group. Ulmann Straight is resurfaced.
FIA GT race held in October. IMSG sells Sebring Lease
to Panoz Motor Sports.
- 1998 - A record 24 lead changes as the Momo
Ferrari wins Sebring in a thrilling battle with the
Panoz Team. A major improvement program begins following
the race, including the reconfiguration of the Hairpin
and resurfacing of several sections of the circuit.
- 1999 - Closest Sebring finish ever as BMW
wins by a nine second margin. New pit tower and media
center constructed as part of multi-million dollar
improvement program. Hotel constructed adjacent to
the Hairpin near the track entrance.
- 2000 - Audi finishes first and second.
- 2001 - Audi wins again; Saleen scores a
stunning upset in GTS.
- 2002 - Sebring celebrates its 50th Anniversary
with a spectacular event and a record crowd.
- 2003 - Audi Team Joest becomes the first
team to record four straight Sebring victories.
- 2004 - Audi wins five straight Sebring overall
victories. Team Corvette with Fellows/O'Connell win
GTS class for third straight year.
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