The Canadian-American Challenge Cup, or Can-Am, was an SCCA/CASC sports car racing series from 1966 to 1974, and again from 1977 to 1987.
The Can-Am rules were deliberately simple and placed few limits on the entries. This led to a wide variety of unique car body designs and powerful engine installations. Notable among these were Jim Hall's Chaparral Cars and entries with over 1,000 horsepower.
The Group 7 category was essentially a Formula Libre for sports cars; the regulations were minimal and permitted unlimited engine sizes (and allowed turbocharging and supercharging), virtually unrestricted aerodynamics, and were as close as any major international racing series ever got to have an "anything goes" policy. As long as the car had two seats, bodywork enclosing the wheels, and met basic safety standards, it was allowed. Group 7 had arisen as a category for non-homologated sports car "specials" in Europe and, for a while in the 1960s, Group 7 racing was popular in the United Kingdom as well as a class in Hillclimbing racing in Europe. Group 7 cars were designed more for short-distance sprints than for endurance racing. Some Group 7 cars were also built in Japan by Nissan and Toyota, but these did not compete outside their homeland (though some of the Can-Am competitors occasionally went over to race against them).
SCCA sports car racing was becoming more popular with European constructors and drivers, and the United States Road Racing Championship for large-capacity sports racers eventually gave rise to the Group 7 Can-Am series. There was good prize and appearance money and plenty of trade backing; the series was lucrative for its competitors but resulted, by its end, in truly outrageous cars with well over 1,000 horsepower (750 kW) (the Porsche team claimed for its 917/30 in qualifying trim), wings, active downforce generation, very light weight and unheard of speeds. Similar Group 7 cars ran in the European Interserie series from 1970 on, but this was much lower-key than the Can-Am.
On-track, the series was initially dominated by Lola Cars, followed by a period in which it became known as the "Bruce McLaren and Denis Hulme show", the works McLaren team dominated for five consecutive seasons (1967-1971) until the Porsche 917 was perfected and became almost unbeatable in 1972 and 1973. After Porsche's withdrawal, Shadow dominated the last season before Can-Am faded away to be replaced by Formula 5000. Racing was rarely close—one marque was usually dominant—but the noise and spectacle of the cars made the series highly popular.
The energy crisis and the increased cost of competing in Can-Am meant that the series folded after the relatively lackluster 1974 season; the single-seater Formula 5000 series became the leading road-racing series in North America and many of the Can-Am drivers and teams continued to race there. F5000's reign lasted for only two years, with a second generation of Can-Am following. This was a fundamentally different series based initially on converted F5000 cars with closed-wheel bodies. There was also a two-liter class based on Formula Two chassis. The second iteration of Can-Am faded away as IMSA and Champ Car racing became more popular in the early 1980s but remained active until 1987.
Can-Am remains a well-remembered form of racing due to its popularity in the 1960s and early 1970s, the limited number of regulations allowing extremely fast and innovative cars and the lineup of talented drivers. Can-Am cars remain popular in historic racing today.
For 1972 the 917/10K with a turbocharged 900 horsepower five-litre flat-12 was introduced. Prepared by Roger Penske and driven by Mark Donohue and George Follmer these cars won six of the nine races. In 1972 Porsche introduced an even more powerful car, the 917/30KL. Nicknamed the "Turbopanzer" this car was seen as a monster. With 1,100 or 1,580 horsepower (820/1161 kW in race or qualifying trim) available from its 5.4 litre flat-12 and weighing 1,800 lb (816 kg) with better downforce this car won six of eight races in the 1973 championship.http://www.wspr-racing.com/wspr/results/canam/canam1973.html 1973 Can Am results Porsche's dominance was such that engine rules were changed to try to reduce the lack of competition for one marque by enforcing a fuel-consumption rule for 1974. This kind of alteration of rules to promote equality is not unknown in other forms of American motorsport. The category that the car had been created for and competed in was discontinued and in 1975 Donohue drove this car to a closed-course world-speed record of 221 mph (average)(356 km/h) at the Talladega Superspeedway (then called the "Alabama International Motor Speedway"). It was capable of 240 mph (386 km/h) on the straights.
British-born mechanic and engineer Peter Bryant designed the Ti22 (occasionally known as the Autocoast after one of the team's major backers) as an American-built challenger to the British McLarens and Lolas. The car made extensive use of titanium in its chassis and suspension, and Bryant experimented with aerodynamics and with early use of carbon-fibre to reduce weight. Although the car was quick it did not achieve consistent success; problems with the team's funding saw Bryant move on to Don Nichols' UOP LLC-sponsored Shadow team. The Shadow marque had made its debut with an astonishing car with tiny wheels and radiators mounted on top of the rear wing designed by Trevor Harris; this was unsuccessful, and more conventional cars designed by Bryant replaced them; Bryant was sidelined when Shadow moved into Formula One but after his departure, turbocharged Shadows came to dominate as Porsche and McLaren faded from the scene.
The Can-Am name still held enough drawing power to lead SCCA to introduce a revised Can-Am series in 1977 based on a closed-wheel version of the rules of the recently canceled Formula A/5000 series. This grew steadily in status, particularly during the USAC/CART wars of the late 70s and early 80s, and attracted some top road-racing teams and drivers and a range of vehicles including specials based on rebodied single seaters (particularly Lola F5000s) and also bespoke cars from constructors like March as well as smaller manufacturers. To broaden the appeal of the series a 2L class was introduced for the last several years—cars often being derived from F2/Formula Atlantic. The series peaked in the early 80s but as the CART Champ Car series and IMSA's GTP championship grew in stature it faded. In 1987 the series changed as Indycars started to become a source of cars. The SCCA took away the Can-Am name but the series continued as the Can-Am Teams Thunder Cars Championship. After a single year the teams took the sports bodies off and evolved into American Indycar Series.
In 1991, after 18 months of development, a Shelby Can-Am series was created using a production line of Sports bodied cars designed by Carroll Shelby powered by a 3.3 litre Dodge V6. The series ran for five years before it was dropped by the SCCA. A large number of cars were relocated to South Africa and ran from 2000 onwards.
The name was once again revived in 1998, when the United States Road Racing Championship broke away from IMSA. Their top prototype class was named Can-Am, but the series would fold before the end of 1999 before being replaced by the Grand American Road Racing Championship. The Can-Am name would not be retained in the new series.
1966 | John Surtees | Team Surtees | Lola T70-Chevrolet |
1967 | Bruce McLaren | McLaren | McLaren M6A-Chevrolet |
1968 | Denny Hulme | McLaren | McLaren M8A-Chevrolet |
1969 | Bruce McLaren | McLaren | McLaren M8B-Chevrolet |
1970 | Denny Hulme | McLaren | McLaren M8D-Chevrolet |
1971 | Peter Revson | McLaren | McLaren M8F-Chevrolet |
1972 | George Follmer | Penske Racing | Porsche 917/10 |
1973 | Mark Donohue | Penske Racing | Porsche 917/30 TC |
1974 | Jackie Oliver | Shadow Racing Cars | Shadow DN4A-Chevrolet |
1975–1976 | No series | ||
1977 | Patrick Tambay | Carl Haas-Hall Racing | Lola T333CS-Chevrolet |
1978 | Alan Jones | Carl Haas-Hall Racing | Lola T333CS-Chevrolet |
1979 | Jacky Ickx | Carl Haas Racing | Lola T333CS-Chevrolet |
1980 | Patrick Tambay | Carl Haas Racing | Lola T530-Chevrolet |
1981 | Geoff Brabham | Team VDS | Lola T530-Chevrolet / VDS 001-Chevrolet |
1982 | Al Unser Jr. | Galles Racing | Frissbee GR3-Chevrolet |
1983 | Jacques Villeneuve Sr. | Canadian Tire | Frissbee GR3-Chevrolet |
1984 | Michael Roe | Norwood/Walker | VDS 002-Chevrolet / VDS 004-Chevrolet |
1985 | Rick Miaskiewicz | Mosquito Autosport | Frissbee GR3-Chevrolet |
1986 | Horst Kroll | Kroll Racing | Frissbee KR3-Chevrolet |
1987 | Bill Tempero | Bill Tempero | March 85C-Chevrolet |
1979 | Tim Evans | Diversified Engineering Services | Lola Cars-Ford |
1980 | Gary Gove | Pete Lovely VW | Ralt-Hart |
1981 | Jim Trueman | TrueSports | Ralt-Hart |
1982 | Bertil Roos | Elite Racing | Marquey CA82-Hart |
1983 | Bertil Roos | Roos Racing School | Scandia B3-Hart |
1984 | Kim Campbell | Tom Mitchell Racing | March 832-BMW |
1985 | Lou Sell | Sell Racing | March 832-BMW |
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