It seems incomprehensible that a
driver as talented as Derek Bell has only started in nine
World Championship Grands Prix. He seemed to be jinxed when
it came to Formula 1 - always in the wrong car at the wrong
time - and eventually he was passed over in favour of younger
talent.
Tentatively
entering the sport with a Lotus Seven in 1964, Bell soon
moved into Formula 3, initially with a Lotus which was run
- with the support of his step-father 'Colonel Hender' -
under the Church Farm Racing banner. It proved to be a character-building
couple of years for Bell, who realised that he needed the
help of wiser and more experienced heads if his career was
to progress. He therefore decided to team up with Peter
Westbury, which got his career onto a stable footing and
brought results as well.
Despite
a lack of funds, Bell and his step-father financed a season
of Formula 2 in 1968 with a Brabham BT23, which brought
him to the attention of Ferrari, who offered him a drive
midway through the season. His debut for the Scuderia started
badly with Derek in the midst of a huge pile-up in the F2
Monza Lottery GP. Fortunately he was exonerated from blame
and looked set to win at Zandvoort until his gearbox failed.
Bell tasted Grand Prix racing in the scarlet cars and enjoyed
a trip down-under to contest the Tasman championship. Unfortunately
for Derek, Ferrari withdrew from the bulk of their programme
in mid-1969, leaving him without a drive apart from a one-off
outing in the 4WD McLaren. To the rescue came Tom Wheatcroft,
who, after financing a disastrous foray to the Tasman series,
sponsored Derek for a full Formula 2 season in 1970, Clay
Regazzoni just pipping him to the title. He was also invited
by Jacques Swaters to drive a Ferrari 512 in the Spa 1000
Km - a race which was to lay the foundations of his future
sports car success - and scored his only World Championship
point with an appearance for Team Surtees at Watkins Glen.
For 1971 Derek was paired with Jo Siffert in the Gulf/John
Wyer Porsche as the team took the sports car championship.
Derek stayed with Gulf/Wyer through the next three years,
proving his worth as a top-drawer sports car driver while
his miscellaneous Grand Prix appearances with Tecno and
Surtees proved forgettable.
The
1975 season brought the first of his five Le Mans victories
with Jacky Ickx in the Gulf and a successful championship
campaign for Alfa Romeo - winning three times with Pescarolo
- in the T33. The next few seasons saw a globe-trotting
Derek competing in F5000, G8, touring cars, Formula Atlantic,
World Championship of Makes events, etc. before joining
the Rothmans Porsche factory squad which was to dominate
sports car racing in the eighties (Derek taking the drivers'
championship - with Hans Stuck - in 1985 and 1986). In recognition
of his many fine performances Bell was awarded the MBE in
1986. The nineties found Derek enjoying the cut and thrust
of racing in IMSA. With a Nissan GTP he took a splendid
second place in the 1993 Sebring 12 Hours and finished fourth
in the GTP championship standings.
After
finishing sixth in the 1994 Le Mans 24 Hours, Derek announced
he had driven in the French classic for the last time. But
as he began his 32nd year in motor sport, the urge to race
was still there. At Sebring he shared the second-place Spice-Chevrolet
with Andy Wallace and Jan Lammers and, contrary to his earlier
intentions, he was persuaded back to the Sarthe circuit
once again, tempted by the chance of sharing a McLaren GTR
with his son Justin and Wallace, the trio finishing a fine
third overall.
Although
an advanced age for a racing driver, Derek has continued
to race selectively for sports car teams around the globe,
confirming that his experience and reliability are still
highly regarded commodities.
(c)
'Who is Who' by Steve Small, 2000