
Stock Cars in Paris?
#1
Posted 26 March 2001 - 06:44
In one book, I noticed an item mentioning Stock Car auto races held on a dirt oval in the Olympic Stadium in Paris sometime in the late 1940's or early 1950's. Does anyone have any more info on this...or of any other oval track racing held in Europe outside of the U.K., Belgium and Holland?
Jim Thurman
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#2
Posted 26 March 2001 - 09:17
#3
Posted 26 March 2001 - 10:58
#4
Posted 26 March 2001 - 11:08
#5
Posted 26 March 2001 - 14:20
Originally posted by Darren Galpin
Michael - not strictly true in all cases. For example, Formula 1 Stock Cars launched the career of Dereck Warwick, and they are not of the type you describe.
Derek Daly also raced those cars.
They are what the Americans would call "Jalopies".
#6
Posted 26 March 2001 - 15:53

#7
Posted 26 March 2001 - 23:53
Originally posted by Michael Müller
The British very often consider their isles as "extra-european territory", so let's keep my expression "Europe" in that way ...![]()
"The British" do no such thing. I am British, live and work in France as do many other British people. We are thoroughly integrated with our French and other European colleagues and neighbours. We are and always have been European geographically and we have been part of the EU for nearly 30 years - would have been longer but for de Gaulle.
If you want to think in terms of national stereotypes fine, but kindly refain from telling the rest of the world how we consider ourselves and I'll refrain from telling everyone how the Dutch think. OK??



#8
Posted 27 March 2001 - 00:20
anyway the classification of Dirt Oval racing in the UK/Europe is more or less as follows.
Demolition Derbys - not racing but smash em ups. last moving wins.
Banger Racing - similar to the above except they actually race but removal of competitors is encouraged
Stock Car racing - Dirt track oval racing for saloons and even specially tuned machines. But nothing like the sprint cars in America and Australia/NZ. . These events do not encourage contact (though it is inevitable) and are the closest to proper circuit racing. The only Tarmac /Dirt crossover that I know of is the Legends cars that were part of the Eurocar package.
I'll have a nosey about and see if there is a BRSCC website for more info.
#9
Posted 27 March 2001 - 06:31
#10
Posted 27 March 2001 - 17:14
#11
Posted 28 March 2001 - 01:35
What do Europeans do it in? 2CVs? Volkswagens?
These days it would surely be Golfs and the like, so where is the protection?
Today's 'foldupeasy' cars are hardly a good start, unless they have internal cages like ETCC contenders... surely?
#12
Posted 28 March 2001 - 07:23
If you want to see fun stock car racing, you want to see them race Robin Reliant's. For those of you who don't know, these are three wheeled cars (one at the front), front engined, fibre-glass bodied. They are a tad unstable though.....
Talking of Robin Reliants, someone did take one drag racing once. They got a Rover V8 engine, and placed it in the back. As it was such a light car, it used to win many scratch races, to the extent that most people wouldn't race it any more due to the embarrassment of being beaten.
#13
Posted 28 March 2001 - 22:43
#14
Posted 29 March 2001 - 00:20
Ray, the cars range from VW Golf's, to 2CV's, Fiat Panda's, Citroën Visa's, etc. However, they are reinforced with a rollcage as rollovers are fairly common. They have no glass (windshield, side windows, lights, etc.). The drivers come from all over Europe.
#15
Posted 29 March 2001 - 01:14
#16
Posted 29 March 2001 - 02:28
Originally posted by Marcor
Do you consider it as a sport ? This kind of (TV) shows are like catch VS boxing !! I'm really bored when I saw it on "motorsport" TV shows. It's a waste of time to look at this ! Unluckily, especially on Eurosports, beside programs about F3 or simply real racing cars, there are craps like demo-derby, tractor pulling, auto-cross, ...
I don't consider it a form of sport, but it's undeniably a form of "motorized entertainment". They ARE called Stock Cars by the Eurosport commentators after all.
To each his own, I guess.
#17
Posted 03 April 2001 - 19:51
Originally posted by FLB
I don't consider it a form of sport, but it's undeniably a form of "motorized entertainment". They ARE called Stock Cars by the Eurosport commentators after all.
To each his own, I guess.
I agree with that, but what I was looking for is oval racing instead of "Demoltion Derby".
And yes, Fines, I have heard of oval racing in Germany. There were some American servicemen that carved out their own little dirt oval and ran modified VWs on it.
The only info I have refers to "Stock Cars" at Olympic Stadium in Paris in 1950.
Guess that's something that will have to be researched!

Jim Thurman
#18
Posted 03 April 2001 - 22:12
#19
Posted 04 April 2001 - 05:22
Some time in the 1950s (I would have though mid 50s, rather than 1950), Autosport ran something about stock-car races in France, I think organised by Serge Pozzoli. I seem to remember a picture of pre-war US cars - reminiscent of pre-war Daytona Beach. Antoine Raffaëlli's Bugatti book also has picture of French stock-car races - and photographs of pre-war Bugatti coupés racing without wings and with railway-iron at front, in the best US tradition!
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#20
Posted 04 April 2001 - 06:34
#21
Posted 04 April 2001 - 19:33
I browsed through "1950 - The Year, The Races" by Jean-Paul Delsaux and couldn't find a mention of a stock car race in Paris.

#22
Posted 04 April 2001 - 20:32
#23
Posted 04 April 2001 - 22:46
Stock Cars, a name applied to the NASCAR monsters and also to pre-war 'series production' racing in Australia, in the speedway context, is a race with cars that are all barred up and encouraged to damage others as a part of the spectacle and a part of the strategy. Usually over a set number of laps.
demolition derbies are simply crash 'em out affairs where you can go anywhere and drive into anything. Rules obviously differ, but the one with which I was very briefly associated had a rule that only first and reverse gears be used. This was a case of the last moving car won, the event was last thing on the program and the wrecks were towed away the next morning. Reverse was the usual gear of choice, eliminating the problem of damaging your radiator (but endangering the SU fuel pump on the bracket in the boot of otherwise unstoppable Austin A99s!).
#24
Posted 05 April 2001 - 00:30
Originally posted by Ray Bell
Whenever this thread pops up I just can't help but think of that movie title.... The Cars That Ate Paris!
PARIS France??
No I know it's not - but please tell us all!!
#25
Posted 05 April 2001 - 01:04
#26
Posted 05 April 2001 - 07:25
#27
Posted 09 November 2007 - 21:48
Originally posted by Jim Thurman
Don Radbruch's question about oval Midget car racing in Europe prompted a query of my own.
In one book, I noticed an item mentioning Stock Car auto races held on a dirt oval in the Olympic Stadium in Paris sometime in the late 1940's or early 1950's. Does anyone have any more info on this...or of any other oval track racing held in Europe outside of the U.K., Belgium and Holland?
Jim Thurman
Ran across this former thread several nights ago and it bothers me. Does anyone perhaps have information on the event or even the stadium? The web has come a long way in the six years since original question put forward by Jim. So perhaps new information has been discovered?

Henry
#28
Posted 09 November 2007 - 23:34
#29
Posted 09 November 2007 - 23:58
I vaguely remember an article in French magazine "Le Fanauto" (probably by Serge Pozzoli) many many years ago (the magazine itself disappeared about 15 years ago) about a place called Buffalo where that kind of races took place around that time frame.Originally posted by Jim Thurman
Don Radbruch's question about oval Midget car racing in Europe prompted a query of my own.
In one book, I noticed an item mentioning Stock Car auto races held on a dirt oval in the Olympic Stadium in Paris sometime in the late 1940's or early 1950's. Does anyone have any more info on this...or of any other oval track racing held in Europe outside of the U.K., Belgium and Holland?
Jim Thurman
I think "Buffalo" was near the Porte de Champerret in North-West Paris but my recollection of this article is very dim. I might still have the magazine but I won't have access to my collection before a couple of weeks.
One things I remember is that the article insisted on how great cars, including a Hispano-Suiza, were wrecked in those events (there was little or no interest in preserving them at the time)
#30
Posted 21 July 2011 - 11:41
http://www.dadsstyle...car-racing.html
#31
Posted 21 July 2011 - 12:05
Fascinating, but gruesome at the same time!
#32
Posted 21 July 2011 - 12:10
For you Europeans the pic on Grahams header is an Aussie Stockcar 50s and early 60s style. Sometimes known as 'Heavys' as in Heavy Stock car and apart from a few Pommy cars of the 50s nothing European would live with them now or in the past.Here is a picture of Jean Gueydon and his Type 44 Bugatti stock car at Huveaune stadium in Marseilles. The Huveane stadium was the original home ground for the Olympic Marseille football team from 1904 to 1937.
http://www.dadsstyle...car-racing.html
I have seen those winged things raced in the UK which are about as developed as a late 60s stockcar or a 70s Stock Rod in Oz yet alone what the Americans raced
#33
Posted 21 July 2011 - 12:21
#34
Posted 21 July 2011 - 15:07
Tracks like Fangel, Løvel, Ørnedalen, Hobro and Nisseringen were short ovals at about 600 meters (2/5 mile) that was also used by 2- and 3-wheel speedway riders. Korskro, at a full kilometer (3/5 mile), was something exstraordinare and hosted an annual Grand Race that attracted foreign drivers. Horse racing tracks were also used.
By the 1970s this type of racing was dominated by rear engined NSUs, Sunbeam Imps and Fiat-Abarths and when the tarmac circuits had difficulty in attracting the audience and competitors, the dirt tracks flourished. So much so that by 1976 Porsche 911s started to hound the smaller cars. By the end of the decade Ring Djursland held a number of Rallycross events and most of the either group 1 saloons or combined group 5 and Special Saloons were also seen at the dirt tracks. The horse racing tracks was gone by this point and gradually right hand corners were added to most of the above circuits. Korskro disappeared from the dirt track schedule from about 1980, leaving Fangel as the only oval track during most of the 1980s to it's closure in 1994.
Norway and maybe Sweden has or has had something called Bilspeedway - ecentially meaning car speedway, run like a 2-wheel speedway event, but with cars. From what I have seen, it's been a selection of rallycross, hillclimb and rally cars used on what looks like speedway and horse racing circuits.
Jesper
#35
Posted 22 July 2011 - 11:31
I vaguely remember an article in French magazine "Le Fanauto" (probably by Serge Pozzoli) many many years ago (the magazine itself disappeared about 15 years ago) about a place called Buffalo where that kind of races took place around that time frame.
I think "Buffalo" was near the Porte de Champerret in North-West Paris but my recollection of this article is very dim. I might still have the magazine but I won't have access to my collection before a couple of weeks.
One things I remember is that the article insisted on how great cars, including a Hispano-Suiza, were wrecked in those events (there was little or no interest in preserving them at the time)
962C,
Here are a couple of clips of stock cars at the Buffalo Stadium at Paris from the British Pathe website:
http://www.britishpa...rd.php?id=49617
http://www.britishpa...rd.php?id=63989
#36
Posted 27 July 2011 - 16:46

So, oval racing has taken place in U.S., Canada, Mexico, Virgin Islands, Guam, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa. Rhodesia, U.K., Ireland, France, Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, Russia...
#37
Posted 29 July 2011 - 04:20
Thanks to all who posted here for reviving this thread and providing much more info
So, oval racing has taken place in U.S., Canada, Mexico, Virgin Islands, Guam, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa. Rhodesia, U.K., Ireland, France, Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, Russia...

Some French stock cars (though not many) followed the British specials; this one was builr by Guy Curval: http://www.oldstox.c...ages/curval.jpg
USA style Sprint cars are now being raced in limited numbers in the UK: http://www.uksprintcars.co.uk/
The typical British "stock car" used on short ovals today is illustrated by this 2008 photograph.
http://www.oldstox.c.....pril 2008.jpg
Because they race on tarmac/concrete AND on loose red shale grit, the top drivers use a different chassis and engine for each surface.
"Midget" cars are also popular on UK ovals: http://www.gpmidgets.co.uk/
An economy spec. formula similar in appearance to Legends is the Rebels: http://www.oldstox.c...athan leads.jpg


#38
Posted 29 July 2011 - 08:35
In 1957 a group of Swedish drivers and cars travelled down to Italy. Someone had invited them in a try to export the show. But it didn't become a hit down there and the Swedes returned home after only a couple of shows.
#39
Posted 01 August 2011 - 16:06
Don Radbruch's question about oval Midget car racing in Europe prompted a query of my own.
In one book, I noticed an item mentioning Stock Car auto races held on a dirt oval in the Olympic Stadium in Paris sometime in the late 1940's or early 1950's. Does anyone have any more info on this...or of any other oval track racing held in Europe outside of the U.K., Belgium and Holland?
Jim Thurman
In 2007 a French publisher, E-T-A-I, brought out 'STOCK CARS EN FRANCE 1953-1970', written by veteran French stock car pilot Guy Curval and Philippe Berthonnet.
It is a large format high-quality printing, costs a bit, but has fabulous photographs and facts.
The publisher's website is www.etai.fr and their e-mail is passionautomobile@etai.fr