Entry The event attracted more cars than in previous seasons, with 78 racing cars were registered for this event, instead of the 58 in 1959, of which 77 arrived for practice. Only these, 69 qualified for, and started the race. Reigning World Champions, Ferrari had entered three of their latest
250 TR 60 and
Dino 246 S for their squad of drivers;
Phil Hill,
Wolfgang von Trips,
Richie Ginther,
Willy Mairesse,
Ludovico Scarfiotti and
Cliff Allison. As
Aston Martin elected to miss the championship in concentrate on
Formula One, there was no other factory entrants in the S3.0 class, therefore their main opposition would come from the works
Porsches of
Jo Bonnier,
Hans Herrmann,
Edgar Barth,
Graham Hill and
Olivier Gendebien, despite these were smaller engined cars and less powerful, the marque was victorious twelve months earlier and in the last round,
12 Hours of Sebring.
Race , s/n 0784, driven to a second place overall by
Phil Hill and
Wolfgang von Trips. Even before the race started, Ferrari had a frightening accident where Allisons’s
250 TR suffered a blown tyre, and was withdrawn from the event. At the start, the remaining three
Scuderia Ferrari’s in the Sport category were the favourites. The cars of the Rodríguez brothers and that of Hill and von Trips, who were supposed to attack. Once von Trips has moved into the lead, it was decided they should continue to race flat-out, and not back off, to try and maintenance their advantage. In the fight for the victory, the Porsche of Bonnier/Herrmann moved ahead of the Ferraris, however it was the all Italian crew of
Umberto Maglioli and
Nino Vaccarella in their
Maserati Tipo 61 who were on a charge. On lap five, Maglioli passed Hermann, only to ceded the leadership to Palermo-born Vaccarella who betrayed his audience: everyone looked at him with his breath a bit 'suspended, it did not seem possible; Nino completed the sixth lap slightly increasing the advantage of Hermann; the seventh his Maserati, the number 200, it did make the fastest lap and was passing with a lead over three minutes. On the seventh lap, Maglioli waiting for him to finish the race brilliantly, but did not reach Vaccarella: a stone had punctured the fuel tank. The Porsche of Bonnier/Herrmann inherited the lead, to record their second straight win in Sicily, and their second consecutive win in the World Sportscar Champions. They took the victory, with their
718 RS 60 completing 10 laps, covering 447.388 miles in just over 7½ hours of racing, averaging a speed of 59.239 mph. Second place went to the works Ferrari of von Trips and Hill in a Dino 246 S, albeit over 6 mins adrift. The podium was complete by another works Porsche, of Olivier Gendebien and Herrmann who were further 2½ mins behind. ==Official Classification==