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ferrari monza

Maranello Masterpieces at Road America, 1956

April 13, 2026 By pete

In the classic June Sprints that’s still run today some seventy years later, Carroll Shelby drove Luigi Chinetti’s 4412CC, 330HP in-line, six-cylinder 121 LM (0558LM) in this SCCA National event on the 4.0-mile road racing course near Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin. Shelby survived the challenges of a host of Ferraris and the three D-Type Jaguars of the Briggs Cunningham racing team. He led all 38 laps of the 152-mile race, setting the fastest race lap, and beating Lou Brero’s D-type across the line by six seconds. 0558LM was raced by the factory with Umberto Maglioli, Phil Hill, and Eugenio Castellotti in 1955 before going to Luigi Chinetti, who provided it to Hill and Shelby to race in 1956. (Caption by Jeff Allison)

Photos by Glen Glendenning
Captions by Jeff Allison and Pete Vack

Bob Birmingham and Glen Glendenning have previously featured the cars at the 1956 June Sprints at Road America, but we purposely left out the large contingent of Ferraris that entered the Sprints that year. We present them herein.

While gathering up the photos for this piece, three points of interest came to our attention:

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Tagged With: Carroll Shelbly, Cincinnati gang, Ebby Lunken, Ferrari 750 Mondial, Ferrari 857, ferrari monza, john edgar, June Sprints 1956, Road America 1956

Mystery Car: Playing the Numbers

April 6, 2026 By pete

By the Editor

Here it is, two weeks after we published the above photo with a plea for help as in Who, What, Where and When? There were no fully correct answers, though some responded that it looked like a Ferrari. This has never happened before in the long 25 years of VeloceToday and many mystery contests!

Or, maybe, just maybe, we have actually found a photo of a Ferrari race car that no one can easily identify. In this day of Google and AI, Barchetta and Ferrarichat, that is hard to believe. Just when you thought we knew it all up pops this strangely painted Ferrari.

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Tagged With: 500 Mondial, 750 Mondial, Ferrari 0506M, Ferrari 0506MD, Ferrari in crash, Ferrari mondial, ferrari monza, four cylinder ferraris

Ferrari 750 Monza: Beauty Saved

March 16, 2026 By pete

By Peter Darnall
From the Archives, February 2021

Déjà vu: a feeling that one has seen or heard something before . . .

I came across an old friend at Thunderhill recently. I had not seen her in more than fifty years—and she had not changed a bit. She was drawing quite a bit of attention in the paddock, which was just the way I remembered our last meeting in the Del Monte Forest in the spring of 1956.

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Tagged With: ferrari monza, Ferrari s/n 0510 M, Patrick Ottis Company, Peter Darnall, Phil Hill Monza, Shelby Ferrari

Best of Alan Boe: Ferrari s/n 0628 M

September 15, 2025 By pete

Story and photos by Alan Boe
From the VeloceToday Archives, November 2018

In the mid-1950s Ferrari was deeply immersed in the business of building, selling, and racing an impressive array of sports cars; four, six and twelve cylinder engines were employed in spyders and berlinettas bodied by Touring, Vignale, Scaglietti, and Pinin Farina on chassis of varying wheelbases. The ability to manufacture such an amazing variety of sporting machinery did not seem particularly out of the ordinary…for Ferrari. It was accepted practice then, but it would be impossible today! And none of Ferrari’s competition of the time was ever able to produce anywhere near the range of sports racing cars that Ferrari did.

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Tagged With: Alan Boe, ferrari 860 monza, Ferrari mondial, ferrari monza, Ferrari sn 0628 M, Ferrari sport racers, SN 0628M

Mike Sparken, Part 1 by Graham Gauld

June 20, 2022 By pete

Mike Sparken, winning at Oulton Park in the rain with his trusty 750 Monza.

First published by VeloceToday in 2012.
In the 1950s, if you had talent and the necessary finances, you could become a successful racing driver as a private entrant. This is the story of one of them, a French-born racing driver by the name of Mike Sparken. We were working on this article when on September 21, 2012. Sparken died at his home in the South of France at the age of eighty-two.

By Graham Gauld

Mike Sparken, or Michael Poberejsky, to cite his proper name, was born in Paris in 1930 to a wealthy Russian family that had left Russia for Paris at the time of the 1917 Revolution.

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Tagged With: agadir racing, aston martin vignale, ferrari monza, ferrari privateers, ferrari sn 0504m, Graham Gauld, jean lucas, john wyer, Le mans ferrari, michelotti, mike sparken, peter collins, portago, reg parnell, salvadori

Mike Sparken Part 2 by Graham Gauld

June 20, 2022 By pete

Mike Sparken would end up with this 1938 Alfa Berlinetta, but he would not have it for long…

By Graham Gauld
Photos by Graham Gauld unless otherwise noted

First published by VeloceToday in 2012. We have learned how Mike Sparken came into motor racing, his exploits with his very special Aston Martin DB3 and his Ferrari Monza, and how he had retired from racing after the British Grand Prix of 1955, where he drove a Gordini into seventh place. But what he did after he retired from racing would make him famous throughout the world…

Throughout his racing career, and later into his time with the Grand Prix Drivers Club, he met up with another well-known private entrant of the time who was born and spent his early life in Brazil and then moved to Paris; Hernano da Silva Ramos. [Read more…] about Mike Sparken Part 2 by Graham Gauld

Tagged With: alfa 2.9 le mans, alfa coupe 2.9, alfa museum trades, Alfetta 158, ferrari monza, french racing drivers, gordini, hernano de Silva Ramos, mke sparken, sparken alfas

Déjà vu, Italian Style

February 2, 2021 By pete

By Peter Darnall

Déjà vu: a feeling that one has seen or heard something before . . .

I came across an old friend at Thunderhill recently. I had not seen her in more than fifty years—and she had not changed a bit. She was drawing quite a bit of attention in the paddock, which was just the way I remembered our last meeting in the Del Monte Forest in the spring of 1956. [Read more…] about Déjà vu, Italian Style

Tagged With: ferrari monza, Ferrari s/n 0510 M, Patrick Ottis Company, Peter Darnall, Phil Hill Monza, Shelby Ferrari

Ferrari Serial Number 0628 M

November 20, 2018 By pete

Story and photos by Alan Boe

In the mid-1950s Ferrari was deeply immersed in the business of building, selling, and racing an impressive array of sports cars; four, six and twelve cylinder engines were employed in spyders and berlinettas bodied by Touring, Vignale, Scaglietti, and Pinin Farina on chassis of varying wheelbases. The ability to manufacture such an amazing variety of sporting machinery did not seem particularly out of the ordinary…for Ferrari. It was accepted practice then, but it would be impossible today! And none of Ferrari’s competition of the time was ever able to produce anywhere near the range of sports racing cars that Ferrari did.

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Tagged With: Alan Boe, ferrari 860 monza, Ferrari mondial, ferrari monza, Ferrari sn 0628 M, Ferrari sport racers, SN 0628M

Mike Sparken Part 2: The Alfa 2.9 Berlinetta

October 3, 2012 By pete

Alfa 2.9 Berlinetta

Mike Sparken would end up with this 1938 Alfa Berlinetta, but he would not have it for long...

By Graham Gauld
Photos by Graham Gauld unless otherwise noted

Last week we learned how Mike Sparken came into motor racing, his exploits with his very special Aston Martin DB3 and his Ferrari Monza, and how he had retired from racing after the British Grand Prix of 1955, where he drove a Gordini into seventh place. But what he did after he retired from racing would make him famous throughout the world…

Throughout his racing career, and later into his time with the Grand Prix Drivers Club, he met up with another well-known private entrant of the time who was born and spent his early life in Brazil and then moved to Paris; Hernano da Silva Ramos.

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Tagged With: alfa 2.9 le mans, alfa coupe 2.9, alfa museum trades, Alfetta 158, ferrari monza, french racing drivers, gordini, hernano de Silva Ramos, mke sparken, sparken alfas

Mike Sparken: Private Entrant Part I

September 26, 2012 By pete

Mike Sparken, winning at Oulton Park in the rain with his trusty 750 Monza.

In the 1950s, if you had talent and the necessary finances, you could become a successful racing driver as a private entrant. This is the story of one of them, a French-born racing driver by the name of Mike Sparken. We were working on this article when on September 21, Sparken died at his home in the South of France at the age of eighty two. Our sincere condolences to his family; we wish he could have lived to read the following story.

By Graham Gauld

Mike Sparken, or Michael Poberejsky, to cite his proper name, was born in Paris in 1930 to a wealthy Russian family that had left Russia for Paris at the time of the 1917 Revolution.

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Tagged With: agadir racing, aston martin vignale, ferrari monza, ferrari privateers, ferrari sn 0504m, Graham Gauld, jean lucas, john wyer, Le mans ferrari, michelotti, mike sparken, peter collins, portago, reg parnell, salvadori

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