Racing Retrospective: Sir Stirling Moss’s 1955 Mercedes-Benz 300 SLR – The Greatest Car, Driver and Race?

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It is only fair to add some context to Moss winning by 30 minutes and in a record time. This Mille Miglia was completely dry, compared with many years – in 1954, Ascari had completed the race, in poor weather, in 11 hours 26 minutes but still with a 30 minute lead. In 1955, Fangio had been hampered by a fuel injection failure in the late stages – it was not until Florence that Moss’s lead was over 5 minutes and Bologna before it was truly substantial. As is so often the case, Moss’s success had many factors – the weather, the presence of Jenks, the 300SLR, the support and planning by Mercedes-Benz, his own good luck, the bad luck afflicting others – but I’d suggest Moss’s skill as a driver and in bringing that together with the other factors in the professional (some might say controlling) way he managed all his life perhaps made the difference.

And after the race? Jenks wrote up his notes that night and sent them by post to London; Moss took some an amphetamine-barbiturate mix (probably) and drove to Stuttgart in a Mercedes-Benz saloon to meet the directors of Mercedes-Benz. That was the start of a long running relationship celebrating this achievement and of the car itself.

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