The Race Retro show at the end of February was a first for me. It sounded promising – a show given over to historic racing in all it’s guises. First impressions were not favourable. The show is held at Stoneleigh Park near Coventry, an odd assortment of decaying 70s buildings dotted around a windswept and muddy agricultural show ground. Having to park in a muddy field a 10 minute walk from the exhibition halls was not the best start but it’s fair to say the show itself was a cracker. Surprisingly big it sprawled through several large halls hosting traders, clubs, race championship organisers, book sellers, car restorers and auto jumblers. Whilst many of those present had also been at Autosport only a few weeks previously there was a more relaxed feel to the show and better bargains to be had. The show is set to become a regular feature of my yearly calendar.

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The show hosted a fine selection of McLarens. This is a Can Am M8D ex Denny Hulme from 1970. It has a 7.6 Litre 680hp V8 engine. Tragically Bruce McLaren was killed testing a M8D at Goodwood.

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This is the1972 McLaren M19 that American Peter Revson drove in the Indy 500 that year. He came home 31st. Revson would be tragically killed at Kyalami driving for Shadow in 1974.

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I presume this rare old thing is an original and not a replica? It currently seems to be used to transport a stock car racing team. Embassy racing ran a Shadow race car and was owned and managed by two times world champion Graham Hill. He also drove for the team in its earliest years. Hill found running a team a difficult job and initially struggled. However by 1974 things were looking much more promising. Sadly Hill and pretty much the entire team were killed in 1975 in a plane crash when returning from testing at Paul Ricard in France . The team did not carry on and all the assets, presumably including this transporter, were sold.

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One of Graham Hill’s finest achievements was winning the triple crown of motor racing – Monaco, Indy 500 and Le Mans. I have always thought that the Hills (father and son) were unfairly underated. Hill senior’s victory at Le Mans in 1972 at the age of 43 was particularly impressive. His co driver (and future multiple Le Mans winner) , Henri Pescarolo was initially sceptical that the “old man” would be quick enough but now freely admits Hill was the faster of the two of them. I had long been looking for a model of the fabulous Hill / Pescarolo Matra V12 but to no avail, so I was delighted to find this nice old French model, produced to celebrate that historic victory, at Race Retro.

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Corgi produced this nice model of Hill’s 1974 Embassy Racing Shadow just a few months before he died.

At a recent sports memorabilia auction, amongst the football programmes and boxing gloves, I saw an interesting lot – the black nose cone and rear wing of a 70’s formula 1 car. The catalogue entry noted they were from a mid seventies Shadow race car driven by Welsh star Tom Pryce who had signed the nosecone. I remembered a bit about Shadow from my youth and even had the Corgi toy car. I also knew a little about Tom Pryce, principally that he died in an accident before he was able to properly make his mark. So thinking that the nose cone would look good hung from the wall of my garage I made bid and found myself the owner of both items.

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Nosecone of Tom Pryce’s Shadow

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Rear Wing of Tom Pryce’s Shadow

Once I got them home I decided to research exactly which Shadow car they came from and how they had ended up in a small auction in London. The auctioneer told me the vendor was an elderly lady who had asked him to clear her late husband’s garage. The nose cone and wing had been hung on the wall for a very long time. Her husband had been involved in running the British GP at Brands Hatch and had apparently collected other nose cones and memorabilia from other teams including Tyrell and McLaren. As such it seemed reasonable to assume that the cone was collected at Brands Hatch, but when?

The Anglo American Shadow team were primarily known for running their cars in the black livery of their main sponsor, the oil company UOP, with their logo emblazoned on the noses and the wings. However those I had bought, whilst black and carrying other sponsors logos (Good Year and Valvoline), did not have any reference to UOP. After UOP ceased sponsoring the team at the end of the 1975 season the team changed their livery from black to the red of their new sponsor. So when had they run in black cars without the reference to UOP? A trawl of the Internet revealed that Shadow continued to run their cars in a black livery sans the reference to UOP for most of the 1976 season before they obtained new sponsors. I even found some photos of Tom’s car in action, perhaps showing the actual parts I had bought.

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Tom Pryce’s Shadow DN5B, 1976, Brazilian GP – on the way to a fine 3rd place finish

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Tom Pryce’s Shadow DN5B, Monaco GP 1976, on the way to finish 7th

Tom’s car ran the same black non UOP livery at the British GP at Brands Hatch in 1976, the race famously won by Hunt before he was disqualified and the win awarded to Lauda. The controversy surrounding the race stemmed from a big pile up on the opening lap which damaged many cars and led to the race being restarted. Tom, who went on to finish a splendid 4th, could well have been involved in the accident. Both the nose cone and wing show damage – were they replaced before the restart and were the damaged parts left with the vendor’s husband as a souvenir? It seems likely to me.

Shadow were a major team for some time but never quite made it. Their best F1 GP result was a single win by Alan Jones in the Austrian GP in 1977. They eventually folded in 1980. Tom Pryce was widely recognised as a very talented driver. He won the Race of Champions at Brands Hatch in 1975. His best GP results were two 3rd place finishes at Austria in 1975 and Brazil in 1976. Tragically we will never know how good he would have been in a competitive car as he was killed in a freak accident that was not his fault at Kyalami during the 1977 South African GP. All of which makes the nose cone and wing I now own a poignant reminder of a great team and a great man.

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