For the 1968 Formula One season, after two years of driving the team's sole entry, Bruce McLaren was partnered by
Denny Hulme. Hulme was world champion with the
Brabham team in 1967 and had raced for McLaren that year in
Can-Am, a North American sports car racing series. For the first round of the 1968 world championship – the
South African Grand Prix, which was held in January, four months before the second round – only Hulme competed, using the M5A to finish fifth. The M7A's first race was the
Race of Champions at
Brands Hatch, run to Formula One rules but not part of the world championship. There, McLaren won from pole position while Hulme was third. Another victory came at the non-championship
BRDC International Trophy at
Silverstone, this time with Hulme finishing first and McLaren second. In the M7A's championship debut in
Spain, Hulme was second and McLaren retired, then in
Monaco McLaren crashed and Hulme was fifth and last. At the
Belgian Grand Prix, they were fifth and sixth on the grid. Hulme took the lead and held it until a
half shaft failed two thirds of the way in. McLaren was then second behind
Jackie Stewart's
Matra but Stewart had to make a
pit stop for fuel on the final lap, giving McLaren the win, although he initially believed he had finished second. It was the McLaren team's first world championship victory and Bruce McLaren became the second driver, after
Jack Brabham, to win in a car bearing their own name; it was also the last win of his career. After Belgium, McLaren's Goodyear tyres suffered a slump in competitiveness and the team and their car fell behind rivals
Graham Hill in his Lotus and Stewart in his Matra. At the
Dutch Grand Prix McLaren crashed out and Hulme retired with ignition failure. After Lotus had begun the first experimentation with wings in Monaco and Ferrari and Brabham had debuted full height wings in Belgium, McLaren fitted a rear wing to their car for the
French Grand Prix. However, mounted above the engine on the
sprung mass of the car, it was not as effective as Lotus's wing mounted on the
unsprung suspension components. in the cockpit at the
1969 German Grand Prix; he crashed in the race An improvement in form came at the
Italian Grand Prix where the cars ran without wings and Goodyear brought their new G9 specification tyre. McLaren qualified on the front row and led to begin with until he slowed at the scene of an accident and was caught by Stewart, Hulme and
Jo Siffert in a Lotus. A
slipstreaming battle ensued; McLaren retired with an oil leak at mid-distance but Hulme went on to win. From the
Canadian Grand Prix onwards, a third M7A was driven by
Dan Gurney whose
Anglo American Racers team – for whom Bruce McLaren had driven for three races in 1967 – had run out of funding for their own Eagle cars. Gurney retired with overheating in Canada, but Hulme and McLaren continued their success by finishing first and second respectively, albeit after their strongest challengers had all retired. Hulme was then jointly in the lead of the Drivers' Championship with two races to go. He ran competitively towards the beginning of the
United States Grand Prix but ultimately retired via a spin, pit stops to repair damaged brake lines and a gearbox output shaft failure which spun him again, this time into a crash. McLaren was sixth, Gurney fourth. Going into the final race in
Mexico, Hulme retained a chance of defending his title. McLaren finished second there, but Hulme crashed out because of a broken suspension damper allowing Hill to win the Drivers' Championship. (white balaclava) prepares to take his seat in his M7C, prior to the
1969 Dutch Grand Prix For 1969 McLaren, with an unchanged driver line-up, designed a new four-wheel drive car, the
M9A, but whilst that was being readied, continued with the old car. The M9A was eventually unsuccessful and appeared only once, driven by
Derek Bell at the
British Grand Prix. At the
South African Grand Prix Hulme scored a podium with the M7A; Bruce used the M7B version and the pair were joined by
Basil van Rooyen in another M7A. In South Africa the works cars used rear wings mounted directly to the suspension on tall struts; at the
Race of Champions Bruce McLaren's M7B was fitted with a similarly strutted front wing in the practice session but it was not used in the race. Hulme was third at the Race of Champions and then at
International Trophy Bruce McLaren switched to the M7C variant. McLaren qualified 13th on the grid at the
Spanish Grand Prix but took advantage of the crashes and breakdowns of those ahead of him to finish second. In the practice sessions at
Monaco, high front wings were added to the cars but before the race the CSI banned wings altogether. This left the team to make do with a small "ducktail" rear
spoiler, McLaren and Hulme racing to fifth and sixth respectively. Wings were then re-allowed, albeit not mounted on the suspension, and with teams searching for the best solution McLaren initially opted for a "tea tray" rear wing and later a more conventional, low-mounted aerofoil. Meanwhile, the Colin Crabbe Antique Automobiles team bought the M7B and
Vic Elford drove it at the
Dutch Grand Prix, finishing 10th. McLaren was fourth, third and third at the
French, British and
German Grands Prix respectively, but in each Hulme, who qualified on the first row in France and Britain, was sidelined into retirement by mechanical failure. Elford took a best finish of fifth in France but then crashed and destroyed the M7B at the
Nürburgring in Germany. The
Italian Grand Prix at
Monza produced another slipstreaming battle; this time McLaren finished fourth, albeit only 0.19 seconds behind winner Stewart. More unreliability in
Canada and the
United States restricted the cars to a best finish of fifth before, at the season ending
Mexico race Hulme scored the M7's only win of the year. With McLaren's introduction of the new
M14A in 1970, the M7 had only one more works outing when Dan Gurney used an M7A at the
1970 British Grand Prix. Privateer
John Surtees bought the M7C as a stopgap until his own Surtees TS7 car was ready. He raced it at four Grands Prix, retiring from three and finishing sixth in the
Netherlands. The car then switched hands to
Jo Bonnier who used it for two more races that year. The M7D was used intermittently with the
M14D by
Andrea de Adamich and
Nanni Galli, qualifying for and starting only one race, the
French Grand Prix where de Adamich finished unclassified. By 1971 the only type's only entrant was Bonnier with his M7C. He used it at five races and had a best result of 10th in the
Italian Grand Prix.
World championship results table (
key)
Non-championship results table (
key) ==PC simulation==