2023 Goodwood Festival of Speed: highlights from 30-year celebration

Historic Racing News

The 2023 Goodwood Festival of Speed refused to be blown off course. Here are some of the best moments of the weekend - from F1 stars on the hillclimb to a peek at the future of motor sport

Goodwood Festival of Speed 2023

Goodwood Festival of Speed 2023

Goodwood Media

It was shut down by weather for the first time in its history, and the queues of traffic seemed longer than ever, but the Goodwood Festival of Speed once more delivered on its 30th anniversary running.

New car debuts, the latest motor sport machinery and hordes of well-known faces offered plenty that was new, as the Festival enters its fourth decade.

Although high winds forced it to close on Saturday, leaving many ticketholders disappointed, the other three days offered plenty of action on the Hillclimb and rally stage, including the traditional shootout.

From F1 stars to legends of the sport, here are some of the best moments from the 2023 Goodwood Festival of Speed – in no particular order!

 

Richard Attwood’s tyre-smoking Porsche 917

Could there be a better way to celebrate 75 years since the making of Porsche‘s first sports car, than to watch Richard Attwood in his 1970 Le Mans 24 Hours-winning 917K tear up the hillclimb at Goodwood? Probably not.

Squirming under power at the start, the very first Porsche to take an overall Le Mans win roared back into life and flew up the Goodwood Hill in stunning fashion; the 83-year-old Attwood looking assured at the wheel.

It was, perhaps, the highlight of a Porsche-themed Festival to commemorate the anniversary: this year’s central sculpture featured 911s, endurance racers and the 718/2 grand prix car, and there was a daily demonstration run of classics up the hill.

 

Motorbike extravaganza

Giacomo Agostini at 2023 Goodwood Festival of Speed

15-time motorcycle world champion Giacomo Agostini soaks it in

PA via Goodwood

MotoGP joined the Festival in 2023 and did it in trademark style. Ducati, Aprilia, KTM and GASGAS brought bikes and a line-up of past and present stars, including current champion Pecco Bagnaia, Brad Binder, Pol Espargaró, Casey Stoner, Kevin Schwantz and Giacomo Agostini.

Also making a special appearance was Motor Sport‘s own MotoGP correspondent, Mat Oxley. You can read his report on Wednesday.

The machinery ranged from a 1949 AJS ‘Porcupine’ to 2022 bikes, making a two-wheeled spectacular that’s unlikely to be a one-off.

 

Stefan Johansson edition Lanzante 930 TAG Turbo

Lanzante 930 TAG Turbo by Stefan Johansson

Stefan Johansson designed the livery and is already familiar with the Lanzante’s engine

Lanzante

When Stefan Johansson puts his name to a car, he doesn’t do it by half. This version of the £1m+ Lanzante 930 TAG Turbo features paintwork by the former F1 driver-turned artist, with power from one of his old grand prix engines.

It’s one of 11 cars built by British automotive engineering firm Lanzante, each featuring Porsche 930 bodywork, and fitted with 1980s V6 twin-turbo McLaren-TAG F1 engines. Top speed is in the region of 200mph.

The one-off SJ87 model is powered by the unit that Johansson used in the 1987 Austrian Grand Prix, de-tuned to 503bhp, and the paint scheme which references Johansson’s helmet design, his Swedish heritage, as well as the red and white McLaren that donated its engine.

 

Sebastian Vettel hits the hillclimb

Sebastian Vettel Goodwood

Vettel stole the show on Sunday with flawless donuts in “Red Five”

Goodwood Media

Several current F1 drivers hit the Hillclimb over the weekend, but Sebastian Vettel was arguably the biggest grand prix star of the weekend as he addressed the crowd from the balcony of Goodwood House, and drove some jewels from his car collection

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Vettel got back behind the wheel of Nigel Mansell‘s ‘Red Five’ Williams FW14B from 1992, powered by sustainable fuel, and performed some donuts on its demo run. He also ran Ayrton Senna‘s 1993 McLaren MP4/8A which he coupled with a redesign of the Brazilian’s renowned yellow helmet.

The four-time F1 champion bought the Williams back in 2020, and has made it the face of carbon-neutral fuel, which he is backing to secure racing’s future. He first used the car during a demo run at the 2022 British Grand Prix.

Fellow countryman and former Haas F1 driver Mick Schumacher also took to the wheel of a legendary F1 car – his fathers Mercedes W02 – in a fitting tribute to one of motor sport’s greatest racing families.

 

Le Mans heroes

2023 Le Mans winning Ferrari team at Goodwood Festival of Speed

Ferrari’s Le Mans winners: Alessandro Pier Guidi, James Calado, Antonio Giovinazzi

PA via Goodwood

Ferrari’s winning team arrived at Goodwood after victory at this year’s Le Mans 24 Hours, its 499P car still caked in La Sarthe dirt and well behind barriers, should anyone inadvertently brush against its paintwork and clean it.

It was sharing the limelight with the other hero of the race: NASCAR’s Garage 56 car, which reverted to type after its circuit-racing prowess, as Jenson Button generated clouds of tyre smoke on the hillclimb.

That’s not to forget the Festival’s tribute to the race’s centenary, which featured several of this year’s competitors as well as winners from the past, including Emanuele Pirro in the three-time winning Matra Simca MS670.

 

Lambo unveils LMDh monster 

Lamborghini LMDh car

Lamborghini will now vie for sports car racing’s greatest prize

Lamborghini

There were plenty of new cars to gawp at, including models from Porsche, Hyundai, Caterham, and Ferrari. One of the most significant may turn out to be Lamborghini’s SC63.

The LMDh Hypercar is intended to race in both the World Endurance Championship and IMSA for the first time in 2024, occupying spots at Le Mans, Daytona 24 Hours and the Sebring 12 Hours, as it competes for top honours for the first time.

After Ferrari‘s success at Le Mans 2023 – returning from a 50-year hiatus to take an historic victory – Lamborghini will aim to follow in its footsteps with a long-awaited debut at the top of sports car racing.

 

McLaren Solus GT wins the hill climb

The McLaren Solus GT was one of many cars at Goodwood that looked as if it were pulled straight from a video game – in fact the Solus GT actually was – but it was titled the fastest of bunch after topping the hill-climb charts on Sunday afternoon.

In the absence of the electric McMurtry Spéirling, which smashed the Hillclimb record in 39.08sec last year, the McLaren, piloted by Marvin Kirchhofer, claimed victory with a 45.34sec run, crossing the finish line at 149.1mph.

It was almost a second faster and 19mph quicker across the line than Travis Pastrana in the Subaru GL Family Huckster — an 850mph estate.

McLaren’s single-seater hypercar began life as a concept vehicle, contained to the virtual world of sim racing. Last year, the company announced a limited run of £2.5m machines, powered by a naturally aspirated 5.2 litre V10 engine.

It wasn’t the only marque to steal headlines at Goodwood though, as the Rimac Nevera also entered the history books as the fastest production EV (the McMurtry was not road legal) to ever ascend the hill – setting a final time of 49.32sec.

Full Goodwood 2023 hill climb results (top 10): 

Position  Car Driver Finish speed (mph) Time
1 McLaren Solus GT Marvin Kirchhöfer 149.1mph 45.34
2 Subaru GL Family Huckster Travis Pastrana 130.0mph 46.37
3 McLaren-Cosworth M26 Michael Lyons 132.3mph 46.89
4 Porsche 911 GT3 Cup Adam Smalley 124.9mph 47.40
5 Nissan Skyline GT-R R32 (Calsonic) Jake Hill 123.5mph 48.18
6 Chrysler Viper GTS-R Florent Moulin 130.8mph 48.29
7 Rimac Nevera Miro Zrncevic 129.3mph 49.32
8 Ford Puma WRC Adrien Fourmaux 115.3mph 49.47
9 Ferrari 488 Challenge Andrew Morrow 122.2mph 49.88
10 Porsche 911 GT2 RS Clubsport 25 Olaf Manthey 117.7mph 51.44

 

Aston Martin unveils new limited edition Valour 

Aston Martin

The Aston Martin Valour – revealed at Goodwood

Aston Martin

Like many manufacturers, Aston Martin will soon be hopping aboard the EV-express, with its first electric super car due in 2025. But before it bounds into the future, Aston took time to honour the past with the reveal of the limited edition Valour, complete with a 705-hp twin-turbo V-12 engine and a six-speed manual gearbox.

Inspired by retro designs, the Valour is pitched as a tribute to the best of Aston’s racing history under one roof with only 110 examples being produced — in honour of the company’s 11 decades in business.

 

The crashes

Adrian Newey F1 Leyton House

Adrian Newey’s first F1 crashes on Goodwood hill climb

Goodwood

The Goodwood Hill climb is a tricky stretch of tarmac at the best of times  – and the adverse weather conditions of the weekend didn’t make it any easier.

Combine that with drivers determined to demonsrate just what their machinery can do, and it’s all but guaranteed that some will be walking away red-faced.

The festival opened with one high-speed encounter with the bales at the tricky Molecomb; Hyundai’s RN22E meeting barriers in an explosive scattering of straw.

Then there was a lucky escape when a Jaguar MK1 parted company with its left-rear wheel, which bounced into a crowd of spectators, who escaped without serious injury.

Sunday brought a series of mishaps, separately involving a Mercedes-AMG GT, BMW M1, Porsche 911 GT1 and the 1990 Leyton House CG901 – one of Adrian Newey’s first attempts at F1 car design. The latter became unsettled on a straight before spinning into a nearby straw bale in a bizarre incident.