1963 Tony Bettenhausen 200

1963 Tony Bettenhausen 200
Race details
7th round of the 1963 USAC Championship Car season
DateAugust 18, 1963
Official name17th Tony Bettenhausen 200
LocationThe Milwaukee Mile
West Allis, Wisconsin
CoursePermanent racing facility
1 mi / 1.609 km
Distance200 laps
200 mi / 321.8 km
WeatherTemperatures reaching up to 73 °F (23 °C); wind speeds approaching 22 mph (35 km/h)[1]
Pole position
DriverJim Clark (Team Lotus)
Time32.93 (109.323 mph / 175.902 km/h)
Podium
FirstJim Clark (Team Lotus)
SecondA. J. Foyt (Sheraton-Thompson)
ThirdDan Gurney (Team Lotus)

The 1963 Tony Bettenhausen 200 was the seventh round of the 1963 USAC Championship Car season, held on August 18, 1963, at the 1-mile (1.6 km) Milwaukee Mile, in West Allis, Wisconsin.

The race was the first American Championship Car race won by a rear-engined car. Jim Clark and Team Lotus had finished second at the 1963 Indianapolis 500 after a controversy surrounding the lack of a black flag for winner Parnelli Jones, whose car was leaking oil. Colin Chapman and Team Lotus decided to return to Champ Car competition at Milwaukee and Trenton later in the year. The rear-engined Lotuses dominated practice and qualifying, breaking the track record by over a second. In the race, Clark led all 200 laps and lapped the entire field, save for second place A. J. Foyt. Clark's teammate Dan Gurney finished third, battling a misfire.[2]

Although a rear-engined car would not win the Indianapolis 500 until 1965, the win signaled a shift in Champ Car design. The last win for a front-engined roadster on a paved track was the opening round of the 1965 season at Phoenix,[3] barely a year and a half after Clark's Milwaukee victory.

  1. ^ "1963 Tony Bettenhausen 200 weather information". Old Farmers' Almanac. Retrieved 2013-07-13.
  2. ^ Case, Dean. "The Day the Dinosaurs Died". Retrieved 28 February 2011.
  3. ^ Crucean, Gene (January 8, 2010). "American Motorsports Timeline". Crucean Auto Racing Photography. Retrieved 6 March 2011.