Here is the original text of my column from 4 August 1999:
Rear View Mirror for 4 August 1999
Don CappsThe Corsa dei Milioni, the 1933 Gran Premio di Tripoli – the Race that was Rigged?
As is often the case, legend – or myth – often makes for a better story than the plain ol’ truth. In his book, Speed was my Life, Alfred Neubauer, the team manager of the Mercedes-Benz teams of the 1930’s and the 1950’s, wrote a chapter entitled, “The Race that was Rigged.” Our good friend Dennis David has graciously consented to make that chapter (
http://www.ddavid.com/formula1/trip1933.htm ) available for you to read before we get started. It is actually very entertaining and reads very quickly. I must also thank the wonderful Betty Sheldon for her great work in unearthing the details of this race and surprising even your Scribe with what she found. Betty and her husband Paul have performed feats of magic digging up the murky details of past races and many of us owe them a great deal of thanks for filling in those annoying gaps in our records. Thanks to both of you, Dennis and Betty, for your help with this article!
The Neubauer version of the 1933 Gran Premio di Tripoli is accurate in several instances: it did take place in 1933 at the Mellaha circuit outside Tripoli; it was won by Achille Varzi; Tazio Nuvolari was second; there was a lottery connected to the race results; the unfortunate Sir Henry Birkin did die several weeks after the race; and, there was some sort of collusion as to the outcome of the race. As for the rest, especially the wonderful and colorful details (I really liked the mysterious Sophia, the blue smoking jacket, and white scarf with the genuine pearl scarf-pin and just the entire hotel room scene – almost as much as Campari and the bottle of Chianti…), well, Neubauer was never one to let mere facts get in the way of a good story. Unfortunately, the Neubauer version of things served as the basis for many – inaccurate – articles in magazines from Sports Car Graphic to Car and Driver to Autosport. Now to try to separate Myth, Legend, and Truth from each other:
On 7 May 1933, the 30 starters of the VII Gran Premio di Tripoli sat on the grid of the Mellaha circuit just outside the city and waited to start the first of the race’s 30 laps around the 13.1 kilometer circuit, a distance of 393 kilometers. The outcome of the Corsa dei Milioni and the Lotteria dei Milioni were going to be decided after – well, being decided.
The grid, as was the norm for that time, was determined by drawing ballots and the race numbers applied accordingly – even numbers starting from the pole, # 2 all the way back to the last on the grid, # 60. Luigi Premoli in PBM-Maserati was on the pole with the Scuderia Ferrari Alfa Romeo 8C-2300 of the great Tazio Nuvolari next to him on the first row of the grid. The field was arranged in row of four. Achille Varzi, was on the outside of row two in a works (Automobiles Ettore Bugatti) Bugatti 51. And on the fourth row of the grid was Baconin Borzacchini in another Scuderia Ferrari Alfa Romeo.
At the start, Carlo Gazzabini, on the second row next to Sir Henry (Tim) Birkin, Maserati 8C-3000, took off like a rocket in his Alfa Romeo 8C-2300 grabbing the immediate lead. However, as the field came around to complete its first lap, Birkin was leading the race. Birkin was followed by Nuvolari, Giuseppe Campari (works Maserati 8C-3000), Goffredo Zehender (Raymond Sommer-entered Maserati 8CM) who started from the fifth row, pole-sitter Premoli, and the rest of the pack. When the field came round the next time, it was led by Campari who passed both Nuvolari and Birkin and was starting to already draw out a cushion. On this lap Luigi Fagioli peeled off and pitted his Maserati 8CM for a plug change.
Just short of the halfway point, 14 laps, Campari pitted. His oil tank coming adrift and causing problems with lubricating the engine. After several quick, frantic attempts to bolt it in place, the offending tank was secured in place with rope found in the pits. However, after several more laps Campari was forced back into the pits to retire. Yet another attempt to make further repairs was halted once it became apparent that the lack of oil had produced a death rattle in the engine of the Maserati.
On the same lap that Campari originally pitted, so had Birkin. Birkin pitted his Maserati to refuel. The stop was utterly routine, the only drama being Birkin accidentally getting a burn on his arm from the exhaust pipe, an all too common occurrence and an occupational hazard in those days. Birkin was to die on 22 June 1933, from what most initially thought was as the result from the burn he received.
When Campari pitted, Nuvolari swept into the lead. Varzi and Zehender were in second and third places, and Birkin, fourth, going very well and showing no apparent ill effects of the burn suffered during his pit stop. After 23 laps, Nuvolari roared into the pits for the modern equivalent of a “splash-and-go.” The pit stop took only 20 seconds, quite a remarkable time when it is realized that most pit stops of the day were measured in minutes.
Nuvolari screamed out of the pits after Varzi. Over the last several laps of the race Nuvolari carved big chunks of time off the lead Varzi had built up. On the last part of the last lap Nuvolari was almost literally side-by-side with Varzi. Going into the last turn before the finishing straight, however, the advantage lay with Varzi. His Bugatti could still both out-brake and out-accelerate the Nuvolari Alfa Romeo. And Varzi was using all the road and his Bugatti was as wide as he could make it. Despite the frantic efforts of Nuvolari to pass him before last turn, Varzi braked later into the corner and then rushed away from Nuvolari. At the finish line Varzi was a scant 0.2 seconds ahead of the Flying Mantuan after Nuvolari’s heroic effort to catch the Bugatti simply fell short. Had there been a 31st lap, the finish could have easily been reversed.
Gee, this is the same race that Neubauer described? It most certainly isn’t and yet it is. This was the race as it was described in L’Auto Italiana, R.A.C.I., and Motor Sport, all leading racing journals of the day. It was an exciting race in which Varzi was fortunate to eke out a win by the narrowest of margins over one of the best drivers of his day. Nuvolari did not meekly follow Varzi across the line; if it had been possible, the victory garland would have been around Nuvolari’s neck, not Varzi’s.
But what about Louis Chiron? Sorry, he wasn’t even there! What about Borzacchini and the oil drums? The Alfa he drove retired with transmission problems, not from contact with any of the scenery, particularly oil drums. What about Marshal Italo Balbo? He didn’t become the Governor of Tripoli until the Spring of 1934, almost a year after the race. And didn’t Tim Birkin die on 22 June 1933 of septicemia as a result the burns he received during his pit stop? True, that is the date Birkin died, but it now thought that the actual cause of his death was from recurrent malaria, a result of his service during the Great War. But what about The Fix? There was one, wasn’t there? Yes, there was an agreement about the finish, but hardly the sort of affair that Herr Neubauer dreamed up. In fact, the truth is maybe more interesting in many ways than the myth!
It is very possible that the entire truth may never be known. What follows is based the best information available. Between Betty Sheldon and Valerio Moretti, When Nuvolari Raced, this is what appears to be as close to the truth as I can get.
The story starts with the Italian colony of Libya in North Africa. It is looking for sources of income to offset the balance of payments from Rome. Tourists are not being attracted in as large a numbers as desired, much less immigrants. The Italian government is looking for ways to entice people to visit and then settle in Libya. So far, the results have not been encouraging. With motor racing a p