From its distinctive orange and green livery to the shriek from its rotary engine, the 1991 Le Mans-winning Mazda 787B remains one of the distinctive cars from the tail end of the fabulous Group C era.
Its unlikely victory in the 24 Hours is one of the most famous in the race’s long history. Still the only occasion on which a Japanese team has come out on top in the endurance classic, it was achieved despite the presence of the next-generation Peugeot 905s, the TWR Jaguar squad, and the usual array of Porsche 962s run by crack privateers.
That’s not to suggest that Mazda wanted for talent. Its World Championship programme was run by the ORECA team, and Jacky Ickx acted a consultant. Nigel Stroud designed the car, and the winner was driven by Volker Weidler plus then-current F1 racers Bertrand Gachot and Johnny Herbert.
The trio had also shared a 787 at La Sarthe in 1990, but retired.
“My only experience at Le Mans was after they’d put in the chicanes on the Mulsanne,” remembers Herbert. “I never did it when they had the full straight, when you’d sit there were waiting for things to go wrong…