

(1937-1970)
| Like many other racing greats, Bruce
McLaren was more than just talented - he was versatile.
Although he never ruled as Formula One's World
Champion, that did not diminish his greatness one bit. He was a designer and manufacturer
of racing machinery, a champion driver in the sports/racing field, a winner of Grand Prix
events and one of the most popular competitors to wear a helmet.
Born in Auckland, New Zealand, he contracted a
disease at age 9 which left his left leg a couple of inches shorter than the right. He
spent almost three years in hospitals, two of them in traction. But at age 14, his father
bought him his first car and young McLaren entered his first competitive event - a
hillclimb - in 1952. He won second in his class.
In 1954, McLaren took part in his first real race
and finished out of the money. But he wasn't discouraged. He acquired a Formula 2
Cooper-Climax and was the runner-up in the New Zealand championship series in 1957-58.
McLaren went to work for Cooper and thus began a
relationship that would last for more than seven years. McLaren began competing in Formula
2 and soon thereafter was in the German Grand Prix, where Formula 2 and Formula One cars
competed together. He was the first F2 car home and finished fifth overall.
In 1958, McLaren became Cooper's Formula One driver.
He won the United States Grand Prix that year and, at 22, became the youngest ever to win
a GP event. He continued to race with Cooper and, in 1962, he won at Monaco. During this
same time, he sped up his Sports Car activities, winning a three-hour race at Sebring.
In 1963 came the founding of Bruce McLaren Motor
Racing Ltd., although McLaren continued to race for Cooper through 1965, winning the New
Zealand GP in that year.
McLaren Motor Racing began with a car purchased from
Roger Penske and powered by an Oldsmobile engine. In 1964, it won in its first outing at
Mosport. It started an era, even though McLaren was competing in other people's cars as
well.
By 1965, McLaren severed all other relationships and
announced his own GP racing team. He won his first GP race since 1962 at Spa in 1968 and
his co-driver, Dennis Hulme, won twice that same year in the McLaren-Ford. It was in
Sports Car racing where McLaren's efforts shined. In 1966, the Can-Am Series began to
develop and McLaren cars finished second twice and third twice in six races. The next
year, they won five of six and in 1968, four of six. Remarkably, in 1969, McLarens won 11
of 11 races. McLaren won some and Hulme won others. Once, with Dan Gurney in a third car,
the trio finished 1-2-3.
In 1970, McLaren made the last of his Formula One
races, making his 100th start at Monaco that year. On June 2, he was at Goodwood by
himself, testing his newest Can-Am challenger, the M8D. The rear section of the car broke
away at speed, forcing the car to hit an earthen bank. McLaren died from his injuries.
His achievements, especially his contributions to the development of motorsports
technology, will never die.
Bruce McLaren, Inducted 1991 |


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