Among the Revival’s 60th-birthday celebrations will be many famous Minis – but none quite like Fitz’s
The intention was to pursue a new avenue for one of the best up-and-coming tuners of the 1960s, but instead the Broadspeed GT 2+2 turned into an abrupt cul-de-sac.
No matter. Today at Goodwood, in the 60th-anniversary year of the Mini upon which it is based, John Fitzpatrick considers the GT ‘S’ race version with a smile.
“I remember Ralph [Broad] telling me he was going to do it and then seeing it in the workshop,” he says. “And it turned out to be a pretty little car.”
But not the spark Broad intended.
In 1966, the Birmingham garage owner and saloon-car racing entrant expected his Cooper ‘S’-based GT to begin a new chapter for his growing concern, from Johnny-come-lately ace fettler to true car constructor.
“He decided to enter it in some races to get some publicity and I drove it,” says ‘Fitz’, as he is universally known. “But it never really took off. BMC were dead against it, they didn’t want to know because it wasn’t their idea. I only raced it at a few places: Brands [Hatch], Mallory Park, Oulton [Park] – club races.