Motor race
4 Hours of Barcelona |
|
Venue | Circuit de Catalunya |
---|
First race | 1933 |
---|
First ELMS race | 2008 |
---|
Last race | 2023 |
---|
Duration | 4 Hours |
---|
Previous names | Coppa Montjuich Trofeo Nuvolari Trofeo Juan Jover |
---|
Most wins (driver) | Francisco Godia Sales (4) |
---|
Most wins (team) | Escuderia Montjuïc (2) |
---|
Most wins (manufacturer) | Porsche (6) |
---|
The 4 Hours of Barcelona (formerly the 1000 Kilometres of Catalunya and the Coppa Montjuich) was a sports car race held at the Circuit de Catalunya in Montmeló, Catalunya, Spain. The race began as a non-championship event at the Montjuïc circuit in 1954.
Results
Year |
Overall Winner(s) |
Entrant |
Car |
Distance/Duration |
Race Title |
Championship |
Report
|
1933[1]
|
Ignacio Macaya José Pons |
|
Ford 3620cc |
1,000 km (620 mi) |
1000km del A.C.C. |
Non-championship |
report
|
1934–1953: Not held
|
Montjuïc
|
1954
|
Joaquin Palacio Pover |
|
Pegaso Spyder |
1 hour |
Coppa Montjuich |
Non-championship |
report
|
1955
|
Willie Daetwyler |
|
Ferrari 750 Monza |
1 hour |
Coppa Montjuich |
Non-championship |
report
|
1956: Not held
|
1957
|
Gerardo de Andres |
|
Mercedes-Benz 300 SL |
76 km (47 mi) |
Trofeo Nuvolari |
Non-championship |
report
|
1958
|
Alex Soler-Roig |
|
Porsche 356 Carrera |
76 km (47 mi) |
Trofeo Nuvolari |
Non-championship |
report
|
1959
|
Alex Soler-Roig |
|
Porsche RS |
38 km (24 mi) |
Trofeo Nuvolari |
Non-championship |
report
|
1960–1961: Not held
|
1962
|
Francisco Godia Sales |
|
Aston Martin DB4 |
45 km (28 mi) |
Trofeo Nuvolari |
Non-championship |
report
|
1963
|
Alex Soler-Roig |
|
Porsche 356 Carrera |
57 km (35 mi) |
Trofeo Juan Jover |
Non-championship |
report
|
1964
|
Charles Vögele |
|
Lotus 19-Climax |
114 km (71 mi) |
Trofeo Juan Jover |
Non-championship |
report
|
1965
|
Francisco Godia Sales |
|
A.C. Cobra-Ford |
76 km (47 mi) |
Trofeo Juan Jover |
Non-championship |
report
|
1966
|
Juan Fernández |
|
Porsche 906 |
95 km (59 mi) |
Trofeo Juan Pinol |
Non-championship |
report
|
1967
|
Javier de Vilar Juan Fernández |
|
Porsche 911 S |
6 hours |
6 Horas de Barcelona |
Non-championship |
report
|
1968
|
Brian Muir Francisco Godia Sales |
Escuderia Montjuïc |
Ford GT40 |
6 hours |
6 Horas de Barcelona |
Non-championship |
report
|
1969
|
Francisco Godia Sales Juan Fernández |
Escuderia Montjuïc |
Porsche 908 |
12 hours |
12 Horas de Barcelona |
Non-championship |
report
|
1970: Not held
|
1971
|
Jo Bonnier Ronnie Peterson |
Scuderia Filipinetti |
Lola T212-Ford |
1,000 km (620 mi) |
1000 km de Barcelona |
Non-championship |
report
|
1972
|
John Burton |
Canon Racing Team |
Chevron B21-Ford |
400 km (250 mi) |
400 km de Barcelona |
European 2-Litre Championship |
report
|
1973
|
Gérard Larrousse |
Archambeaud Racing |
Lola T292-BMW |
400 km (250 mi) |
400 km de Barcelona |
European 2-Litre Championship |
report
|
1974–1998: Not held
|
Circuit de Catalunya
|
1999
|
Emmanuel Collard Vincenzo Sospiri |
JB Giesse Team Ferrari |
Ferrari 333 SP |
2 hours, 30 minutes |
ATP ISRS Trophy Barcelona |
Sports Racing World Cup |
report
|
2000
|
Christian Pescatori David Terrien |
JMB Giesse Team Ferrari |
Ferrari 333 SP |
2 hours, 30 minutes |
ATP Trophy |
Sports Racing World Cup |
report
|
2001
|
Christian Pescatori Marco Zadra |
BMS Scuderia Italia |
Ferrari 333 SP |
2 hours, 30 minutes |
Barcelona 2 hours, 30 minutes |
FIA Sportscar Championship |
report
|
2002
|
Sébastien Bourdais Jean-Christophe Boullion |
Pescarolo Sport |
Courage C60-Peugeot |
2 hours, 30 minutes |
Barcelona 2 hours, 30 minutes |
FIA Sportscar Championship |
report
|
2003–2007: Not held
|
2008
|
Nicolas Minassian Marc Gené |
Team Peugeot Total |
Peugeot 908 HDi FAP |
1,000 km (620 mi) |
1000 km de Catalunya |
Le Mans Series |
report
|
2009
|
Jan Charouz Tomáš Enge Stefan Mücke |
Aston Martin Racing |
Lola-Aston Martin B09/60 |
1,000 km (620 mi) |
1000 km de Catalunya |
Le Mans Series |
report
|
2010–2018: Not held
|
2019
|
Roman Rusinov Job van Uitert Jean-Éric Vergne |
G-Drive Racing |
Aurus 01 |
4 hours |
4 Hours of Barcelona |
European Le Mans Series |
report
|
2020: Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
|
2021
|
Louis Delétraz Robert Kubica Yifei Ye |
Team WRT |
Oreca 07 |
4 hours |
4 Hours of Barcelona |
European Le Mans Series |
report
|
2022
|
Tom Gamble Philip Hanson Duncan Tappy |
United Autosports |
Oreca 07 |
4 hours |
4 Hours of Barcelona |
European Le Mans Series |
report
|
2023
|
Salih Yoluç Charlie Eastwood Louis Delétraz |
Racing Team Turkey |
Oreca 07 |
4 hours |
4 Hours of Barcelona |
European Le Mans Series |
report
|
2024
|
Lorenzo Fluxá Malthe Jakobsen Ritomo Miyata |
Cool Racing |
Oreca 07 |
4 hours |
4 Hours of Barcelona |
European Le Mans Series |
report
|
References
External links
|
---|
24 hours | |
---|
12 hours | |
---|
10 hours | |
---|
9 hours | |
---|
8 hours | |
---|
6 hours | |
---|
4 Hours | |
---|
2 hours | |
---|
1000 miles | |
---|
1000 km | |
---|
Other | |
---|
Defunct races are indicated in italics |