Everything about Bruce Mclaren totally explained
er |
Years = - |
Team(s) =
McLaren,
Cooper,
Eagle |
Races = 104 (100 starts) |
Championships = 0 |
Wins = 4 |
Podiums = 27 |
Points = 188.5 (196.5) |
Poles = 0 |
Fastest laps = 3 |
First race =
1959 German Grand Prix |
First win =
1959 United States Grand Prix |
Last win =
1968 Belgian Grand Prix |
Last race =
1970 Monaco Grand Prix |
}}
, -
| Team(s) =
Cooper Car CompanyBriggs CunninghamAston MartinFord Motor CompanyShelby-American Inc.
| Best Finish = 1st
| Class Wins = 1
}}
Bruce Leslie McLaren (born
August 30 1937– died
June 2 1970), born in
Auckland,
New Zealand, was a race-car designer, driver, engineer and inventor.
His name lives on in
Team McLaren which has been one of the most successful in
Formula One championship history, with McLaren cars and drivers winning a total of 19 world championships. McLaren cars totally dominated
CanAm sports car racing with 56 wins, a considerable number of them with him behind the wheel, between
1967 and
1972 (and five constructors’ championships), and have won three
Indianapolis 500 races, as well as
24 Hours of Le Mans and
12 Hours of Sebring.
Early life
As an eleven year old, McLaren contracted a disease in his hip which left his left leg shorter than the right. He spent two years in traction, but later often had a slight limp.
Les and Ruth McLaren, his parents, owned a service station and workshop in
Remuera,
Auckland. Bruce spent all of his free hours hanging around the workshop. The McLaren family homestead is located in Ngaruawahia in the Northern Waikato region and still stands today.
Career
Les McLaren restored an aging
Austin 7 Ulster which 14-year-old Bruce used in
1952 when he entered his first competition, a
hillclimb. Two years later he took part in his first real race and showed promise. He moved up from the Austin to a
Ford 10 special and a
Austin-Healey, then an F2
Cooper-Climax sports. He immediately began to modify and improve it—and master it—so much so that he was runner-up in the 1957–8 New Zealand championship series.
His performance in the New Zealand Grand Prix in
1958 was noted by great
Australian driver
Jack Brabham (who would later invite McLaren to drive for him). Because of his obvious potential the New Zealand International Grand Prix organisation selected him for its ‘Driver in Europe’ scheme designed to give a promising Kiwi driver year-round experience with the best in the world. McLaren was the first recipient and
Dennis Hulme was another later.
McLaren went to Cooper and stayed seven years. He raced in F2 and was entered in the
German Grand Prix at the
Nürburgring in which F2 and F1 cars competed together. He astounded the motor racing fraternity by being first F2, and fifth overall, in a field of the best drivers in the world.
McLaren joined the Cooper factory F1 team alongside Jack Brabham in
1959 and won the
1959 United States Grand Prix at age 22 years 80 days, becoming the youngest ever GP winner up to that time. He followed that with a win in the Argentina Grand Prix, the first race of the 1960 Formula One season. (Forty three years later, another Kiwi racer,
Scott Dixon, would become the youngest ever winner in any major open-wheel racing formula anywhere in the world when he won the
CART Nazareth (Pennslyvania, USA) 225 when 20 years, 9 months and 14 days old.)
McLaren won the
Monaco Grand Prix in
1962. The next year he founded Bruce McLaren Motor Racing Ltd, which remains in the Formula One championship simply as
Team McLaren. McLaren continued to race and win in Coopers (including the New Zealand GP in
1964).
McLaren left Cooper at the end of 1965, and announced his own GP racing team, with co-driver and fellow Kiwi
Chris Amon. Amon left in 1967 to drive for Ferrari. In 1968, McLaren was joined by another fellow Kiwi Dennis Hulme, who had become world champion in 1967. McLaren won his first GP in his own McLaren car at
Spa in
1968 and Hulme won twice in the McLaren-Ford. In tribute to his homeland, McLaren's cars featured the "speedy Kiwi" logo.
It was in powerful sports car racing where McLaren's design flair and ingenuity were graphically demonstrated. Just as the Can-Am Series began to become very popular with fans in
Canada and the
U.S., the new McLaren cars finished second twice, and third twice, in six races.
In
1967 they won five of six races and in
1968, four of six. The following year McLarens proved unbeatable, winning 11 of 11 races. In two races, they finished 1-2-3. (McLaren, Hulme and
Mark Donohue).
In he and co-driver
Chris Amon won the prestigious 24 Hour race at
Le Mans in a
Ford GT40.
Death
Bruce McLaren died (aged 32) when his
Can-Am car crashed on the Lavant Straight just before Madgwick corner at
Goodwood Circuit on
June 2 1970 in
England. He had been testing his new M8D when the rear body work came adrift at speed. The loss of aerodynamic downforce destabilized the car, which spun, left the track and hit a bunker used as a flag station.
Motorsport author
Eoin Young has noted that Bruce McLaren had "virtually penned his own epitaph" in his 1964 book
From the cockpit. Referring to the death of team mate
Timmy Mayer, McLaren had written:
"The news that he'd died instantly was a terrible shock to all of us, but who is to say that he hadn't seen more, done more and learned more in his few years than many people do in a lifetime? To do something well is so worthwhile that to die trying to do it better can't be foolhardy. It would be a waste of life to do nothing with one’s ability, for I feel that life is measured in achievement, not in years alone."
Legacy
- Bruce McLaren Intermediate School in West Auckland was named after him shortly after his death. It was originally going to be called Henderson South Intermediate.
- In 2000 Motorsport NZ and the Prodrive Trust created the The Bruce McLaren Scholarship to help up and coming New Zealand racing drivers.
- Inducted into the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame in 1990.
- Inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 1991.
- Inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 1995.
- The Bruce McLaren Trust, based in Auckland, New Zealand, perpetuates his memory and runs a small museum from the flat where Bruce grew up (above a petrol station in Remuera)
- On January 20 2007, at New Zealand's round of the A1 Grand Prix series, it was announced that there's to be a movie made about Bruce McLaren.
Complete Formula One World Championship results
(Races in
bold indicate pole position)
Further Information
Get more info on 'Bruce Mclaren'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://bruce_mclaren.totallyexplained.com">Bruce McLaren Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |