Ex-Scuderia Filipinetti 1968 L-88 Corvette. Photo: Jim Williams

1968 L-88 Corvette – The Mulsanne Monster

Ex-Scuderia Filipinetti 1968 L-88 Corvette

As the only sports car model to be in continuous production for more than 50 years, the Chevrolet Corvette holds a very special place in world, as well as American, automotive history. Like the story of so many classic sports cars, a significant portion of the Corvetteโ€™s history can be traced to its competition and development, both in the U.S. and abroad.

Design work on the first Corvette began in 1952 with just 300 of the early 6-cylinder models being constructed by the end of 1953. By mid-December 1953, one of Chevroletโ€™s most talented development engineers and a former Le Mans racer himself, Zora Arkus-Duntov, wrote a memo to one of his superiors promoting the need for Chevrolet to appeal to the burgeoning hot rod crowd. In this memo he stated, โ€œIf it is desirable or not to associate the Corvette [with] speed, I am not qualified to say but I do know that in 1954 sports car enthusiasts will get hold of the Corvette and whether we like it or not, will race itโ€ฆ Since we cannot prevent people from racing Corvettes, maybe it is better to help them to do a good job at it.โ€ Amazingly, General Motors was not keen to promote the Corvette as a high performance car. In fact, the next four decades would be heralded by an internal clandestine battle over the Corvette at GM. On the one side sat a corpยญorate board that wanted absolutely no โ€œofficialโ€ involvement in racing and on the other, was a handful of die-hard enthusiasts within the company, like Duntov, who risked their own positions at GM in order to develop and prove the Corvetteโ€™s worth in competition.

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