1923 Italian Grand Prix
The 1923 Italian Grand Prix was a Grand [Prix motor racing|Grand Prix] motor race held at Monza on 9 September 1923.
It was the first race to be designated as the European Grand Prix. Rules required a capacity limit of 2 liter, minimum weight of 650 kg, and 800 km distance, as in the Indy 500. Alfa Romeo suffered a fatal crash in practice and withdrew its other cars.
Only FIAT had superchargers and won 1-2 in a race of attrition. Only one of the American Miller 122 could also cover the full distance, taking several minutes more, while the best of the Benz RH came in fourth, and also last to be classified. The three Benz RH Tropfenwagen were down on power, but featured innovations like streamlined tear shape body with the Rear mid-engine, rear-wheel-drive layout that took four more decades to dominate single seater racing ever since.
Classification
| Pos | No | Driver | Car | Laps | Time/Retired |
| 1 | 14 | |1861 |
|1861