Trieste-Opicina hillclimb

Trieste-Opicina (1911–1971) is a hillclimb up the Opicina hill in Trieste, northeastern Italy.[1][2][3] Also known as Albo d'Oro automobilistico. The race was suspended twice, around First and Second World War. After a serious crash of Austrian Herbert Jerich in a Ford Escort TC and subsequent safety concerns the race was cancelled after its 1971 edition.[4] From 2017, the historic race was recreated as a tour on closed roads around Trieste.[5]

Winners

DateWinner overallAutomobileDistanceTime (min)Average speed
4 June 1911Otto HieronimusLaurin & Klement7.4 km (4.6 mi)6:07.672.742 km/h (45.200 mph)
20 June 1926Emilio RichettiBugatti 20009.5 km (5.9 mi)7:50.072.766 km/h (45.215 mph)
19 June 1927Ettore FranchettiDiatto 26007:29.080.623 km/h (50.097 mph)
30 September 1928Gildo StrazzaLancia Lambda VIII serie7:50.472.713 km/h (45.182 mph)
16 June 1929Achille VarziAlfa Romeo 6C 1750 SS13.5 km (8.4 mi)9:43.684.571 km/h (52.550 mph)
15 June 1930Tazio NuvolariAlfa Romeo P29.5 km (5.9 mi)5:59.495.158 km/h (59.128 mph)
14 June 1931Luigi CatalaniAlfa Romeo 6C 1750 GS6:09.092.782 km/h (57.652 mph)
12 June 1932Luigi CatalaniAlfa Romeo 6C 1500 SS6:08.892.935 km/h (57.747 mph)
25 June 1939Guido KozmannLancia Aprilia8.715 km (5.415 mi)6:35.079.427 km/h (49.354 mph)
31 October 1948Alberto ComiratoFiat - Comirato 11009 km (5.6 mi)6:03.289.055 km/h (55.336 mph)
29 October 1950Giulio CabiancaOSCA Mt4 13505:22.8100.371 km/h (62.368 mph)
23 September 1951Umberto MarzottoFerrari 212 Export spider Vignale[6]5:14.4102.922 km/h (63.953 mph)
15 June 1952Pietro PalmieriFerrari 225 S spider Vignale5:25”099.962 km/h (62.114 mph)
21 June 1953Franco CornacchiaFerrari 250 MM berlinetta Pinin Farina[7]5:15.7102.629 km/h (63.771 mph)
20 June 1954Franco BordoniGordini 24 S4:47.0112.891 km/h (70.147 mph)
29 June 1955Franco BordoniMaserati 300S4:42.8114.568 km/h (71.189 mph)
6 October 1957Adolfo TedeschiMaserati 200SI8.85 km (5.50 mi)4:32.3117.003 km/h (72.702 mph)
5 October 1958Ada PaceAlfa Romeo Giulietta SV Zagato5:03.6104.941 km/h (65.207 mph)
26 July 1959Giulio CabiancaOSCA Mt4 15004:27.7119.014 km/h (73.952 mph)
24 July 1960Mennato BoffaMaserati Tipo 60 "Birdcage"[8]4:22.4121.417 km/h (75.445 mph)
23 July 1961Edoardo Lualdi GabardiFerrari 250 GT Berlinetta SWB10.15 km (6.31 mi)6:15.497.336 km/h (60.482 mph)
22 July 1962Edoardo Lualdi GabardiFerrari 250 GTO[9]4,54.8123.948 km/h (77.018 mph)
21 July 1963Francesco GhezziLotus (Formula Junior)4:44.6128.391 km/h (79.778 mph)
19 July 1964Franco PatriaSimca Abarth 20004:40.2130.407 km/h (81.031 mph)
18 July 1965Edoardo Lualdi GabardiFerrari 250 LM[10]4:44.1128.617 km/h (79.919 mph)
31 July 1966Giacomo "Noris" MoioloPorsche Carrera 64:34.2133.260 km/h (82.804 mph)
28 May 1967Edoardo Lualdi GabardiDino 206 S[11]4:23.7138.567 km/h (86.102 mph)
25 May 1969Franco PiloneSimca Abarth 20004:27.3136.7 km/h (84.9 mph)
24 May 1970[12]Giampiero Moretti (MOMO)Ferrari 512 S8.02 km (4.98 mi)3:12.5149.985 km/h (93.196 mph)
23 May 1971Alessandro MonciniPorsche 911 RS (Gr. 4)4:23.6109.529 km/h (68.058 mph)

The Trieste–Opicina motorcycle race (1920–1958)

Officially titled “Trieste – Poggioreale”, it is more known as “Trieste–Opicina”, arranged by the Moto Club Trieste.

DataDriverMotorcycleDistanceTime (min)Average speed
12 December 1920Giovanni FerlugaIndian9 km (5.6 mi)9:3456.348 km/h (35.013 mph)
March 1922Romolo SpallanzaniGalloni8:0066.88 km/h (41.56 mph)
11 March 1923Guido MentastiNorton8:3464.74 km/h (40.23 mph)
25 April 1926Ugo PriniGuzzi7:2274.69 km/h (46.41 mph)
1 May 1927Giovanni FerlugaHarley-Davidson sidecar7:2274.69 km/h (46.41 mph)
May 1929Marino FabianAJS8:0267.47 km/h (41.92 mph)
14 May 1931Pietro MartaRudge9.5 km (5.9 mi)6:3586.582 km/h (53.800 mph)
5 May 1932Arduino BertosNSU9 km (5.6 mi) 5:5591.165 km/h (56.647 mph)
June 1933Carlo CovacichNorton5:5790.553 km/h (56.267 mph)
June 1947Giovanni BosichBMW9.5 km (5.9 mi) 6:2489.01 km/h (55.31 mph)
10 October 1948Alberto TrencaMatchless 3509 km (5.6 mi) 5:57.0390.670 km/h (56.340 mph)

See also

References

  1. "1911 - 1971 LA STORIA". Archived from the original on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  2. "The Trieste Opicina race". discover-trieste.it. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  3. "TRIESTE-OPICINA HILL-CLIMB". motorsportmagazine.com. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  4. "1911-1971 Albo d'Oro". clubdeiventiallora.org (in Italian). Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  5. "The rebirth of the Trieste-Opicina hill climb". classiccartrust.com. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  6. "212 Export s/n 0090E". barchetta.cc. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  7. "250 MM PF Berlinetta 0256MM". barchetta.cc. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  8. "Detail - Tipo 60/61 Birdcage s/n 2465". barchetta.cc. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  9. "250 GTO s/n 3413GT". barchetta.cc. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  10. "250 LM 6217". barchetta.cc. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  11. "206 S s/n 028". barchetta.cc. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  12. "Hillclimb Trieste-Opicina 1970 - Race Results". racingsportscars.com. Retrieved 12 January 2020.

Literature

  • Tito Angelo Anselmi; Gabriella De Benedetti (2003). Legenda-Le edizioni dell'Opificio (ed.). Trieste Opicina Sessant'Anni di Epopea. ISBN 9781554075584.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.