RE: Oulton Park Gold Cup

RE: Oulton Park Gold Cup

Wednesday 7th July 2004

Oulton Park Gold Cup

Huge celebration of speed at the end of August


The Oulton Park Gold Cup meeting reaches its landmark 50th birthday this August (28th-30th).

The anniversary event will be celebrated in style with the biggest festival of classic motoring and motorsport ever seen in the North Of England.

More than a thousand classic race and road cars will be on display or competing, plus a parade of fifty of the most notable vehicles of the last Century and a host of attractions for enthusiasts, families and motorsport fans alike.

The star of the inaugural Gold Cup in 1954 was a young Stirling Moss. The race, which brought together the Grand Prix cars of day, ran in its original format until the mid-70s after which rule changes banned them from competing outside the Formula One Championship.

The meeting gave the people of the North West the chance to become the first in Britain to see Moss’s works Maserati 250F in action. It only just happened, though, as the car only arrived in the UK from the factory in Italy the morning of the race. Having been rushed through customs, it reached Oulton too late for qualifying and Moss had to start from the back of the field.

Undaunted, the 24-year old had passed 12 cars on the first lap and, by the fourth, he had taken the lead. After that, and with no competition to speak of, Moss proved his outright speed by completing a series of demonstration laps setting the lap record for the newly constructed 2.7-mile circuit configuration being used for the very first time that day.

That first Gold Cup was also memorable for Roy Salvadori’s lucky escape after his 250F’s throttle stuck open at Druids, sending him catapulting into the trees. An exhaustive search of the foliage uncovered a bent Maserati and a miraculously unharmed Salvadori. Trees had to be felled in order to get the car back to the team!

Moss remains the Gold Cup king, having won it five times, but others to have scooped the prestigious prize include Jack Brabham, John Surtees, Jim Clark and Jackie Ickx.

These days, the Gold Cup is not a single race, but a celebration of historic motor racing. The Historic Sports Car Club hosts several of its popular championships as well as guest races featuring an eclectic array of historic machinery ranging from the Grand Prix cars of Formula One’s golden age to the throaty sportscars of the 1950s and ‘60s.

Tickets cost £20 for the weekend or £15 per day and can be bought in advance by contacting the Oulton Park hotline on 0870 950 9000. Children aged 15 and under go free. Visit www.motorsportvision.co.uk for further details.

Author
Discussion

XM5ER

Original Poster:

5,094 posts

254 months

Friday 9th July 2004
quotequote all
Anyone going?

Which day is best for noise and nostalgia?

lazyitus

19,926 posts

272 months

Friday 9th July 2004
quotequote all
As I attend this meeting nearly every year, imagine my dismay with it being the same weekend as my wedding!

Reckon I can go on Sunday for a few hours unnoticed?



Thought not!

If you've never been, sort it out! Simply ace and one of the few races remaining with such heritage and history behind it.

XM5ER

Original Poster:

5,094 posts

254 months

Friday 9th July 2004
quotequote all
Damn, thats a bummer!

Good luck for the wedding.

I think I will have to make the effort for this this year. Never been to a car race meet, I did too many bike race meets many years ago and got very bored in the end. This looks sufficiently different to make the effort.