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Mario Gabriele Andretti (born February 28, 1940) is an American former and businessman, who competed in from to , and IndyCar from 1964 to 1994. Andretti won the Formula One World Drivers' Championship in with , and won 12 Grands Prix across 14 seasons. In American open-wheel racing, Andretti won four IndyCar National Championship titles and the Indianapolis 500 in 1969; in stock car racing, he won the Daytona 500 in 1967. In endurance racing, Andretti is a three-time winner of the 12 Hours of Sebring.

Born in the Kingdom of Italy, Andretti and his family were displaced from during the Istrian–Dalmatian exodus and eventually emigrated to Nazareth, Pennsylvania in 1955. He began dirt track racing with his twin brother four years later, with Andretti progressing to USAC Championship Car in 1964. In open-wheel racing, he won back-to-back USAC titles in 1965 and 1966, also finishing runner-up in 1967 and 1968. He also contested stock car racing in his early career, winning the 1967 Daytona 500 with . He took his first major victory at the 12 Hours of Sebring that year with Ford. Andretti debuted in Formula One at the in with , where he qualified on pole position. He contested several further Grands Prix with Lotus in , when he won his third USAC title and the Indianapolis 500. In , Andretti took his maiden podium finish at the with STP, driving a privateer March 701. He signed for that year, winning at Sebring again.

Andretti took his maiden victory in Formula One at the season-opening in , on debut for Ferrari. He took his third Sebring victory the following year. After part-time roles for Ferrari and in and , respectively, Andretti joined the latter full-time for after finishing runner-up in the SCCA Continental Championship. He moved back to Lotus in , winning the season-ending and helping develop the 78. Andretti won four Grands Prix in , finishing third in the World Drivers' Championship. He won the title in after achieving six victories, becoming the second World Drivers' Champion from the United States. After winless and campaigns with Lotus, he moved to Alfa Romeo in . Following two fill-in appearances for and Ferrari in , Andretti retired from Formula One with 12 wins, 18 pole positions, 10 fastest laps and 19 podiums.

Andretti returned to full-time IndyCar racing in 1982, placing third in the standings with , amongst winning the Michigan 500. After finishing third again with Newman/Haas in his 1983 campaign, he won his fourth IndyCar title in 1984, 15 years after the previous and his first sanctioned by CART. He won the Pocono 500 in 1986 and remained with Newman/Haas until 1994; his victory at Phoenix in 1993 made him the oldest winner in IndyCar history, aged 53, as well as the first driver to win a race in four different decades. Andretti retired with 52 wins, 65 pole positions, and 141 podiums in IndyCar. His 111 official victories on major circuits across several motorsport disciplines saw his name become synonymous with speed in American popular culture. His sons, and , were both racing drivers, the former winning the CART title in 1991 and previously owning . Andretti is set to serve on the board of directors of Cadillac in Formula One from its debut season onwards. Andretti was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 2000.


Early life

Childhood in Italy
Mario Gabriele Andretti was born on February 28, 1940, to an family in Montona, , Kingdom of Italy (present-day Motovun, Croatia). He was born six hours before his twin brother . He is the son of Alvise "Gigi" Andretti, who worked as a farm administrator in Italy and for in the U.S., and his wife Rina. He also had an older sister, Anna Maria Andretti Burley.

Andretti's family owned a 2,100-acre farm in Montona, but after World War II, the Treaty of Paris (1947) transferred the territory to communist-controlled . As a result, the Andretti family joined the Istrian–Dalmatian exodus in 1948. The family lost all their land and was permitted to take only one truckload of possessions. They spent seven years in a refugee camp in , living in an abandoned college dormitory without running water.

The Andretti twins were interested in racing at an early age. At age five, they raced hand-crafted wooden cars through the Montona streets. After moving to Lucca, the brothers got a job parking cars at a local garage. In his autobiography, Andretti wrote, "The first time I fired up a car, felt the engine shudder and the wheel come to life in my hands, I was hooked. It was a feeling I can't describe. I still get it every time I get into a race car."

(1970). 9780809296729, Bantam.

The garage owners noticed the brothers' passion for racing and brought them to watch the 1954 Mille Miglia, which was won by two-time Formula One champion . Ascari became Andretti's personal idol. The twins also visited Monza for the Italian Grand Prix, where Andretti saw Ascari race against Juan Manuel Fangio. Although the twins did not have a grandstand seat, Andretti recalled "being just mesmerized, overwhelmed by the sound, by the speed."


Move to the United States
Following a three-year wait for U.S. visas, the Andretti family moved to the United States in 1955. After an eleven-day journey on the SS Conte Biancamano, they sailed into New York Harbor on Anna Maria's birthday of June 16. With just $125 in cash, they settled in Nazareth, Pennsylvania, where Alvise Andretti's brother-in-law Tony lived. Although Alvise planned to leave after five years, the family never left the United States.

Andretti opposed leaving Italy at the time. His father felt that moving to America would give his children the best opportunity to succeed in life,

(2013). 9781628475869, In Flight Books.
but did not want his sons to become motor racers, as the sport was extremely dangerous at the time. Andretti planned to become a welder, but racing was "the only passion he really had career wise," and he admitted that he might not have been able to become a racer if he had stayed in Italy. Andretti's father did not watch him race until Andretti reached IndyCar in 1964.

In his 1970 biography, Andretti said that he became a U.S. citizen on April 15, 1964. (His IndyCar debut was April 19, 1964.) Andretti later revealed that he actually obtained U.S. citizenship on April 7, 1965.


Early racing career

Debut in dirt track racing
at the 2007 Indianapolis 500 pole day.|left]]The first car Andretti regularly drove was his father's 1957 Chevrolet, which the twins did not race, but nonetheless upgraded with features like a muffler and fuel injection. The twins were surprised to find that Nazareth hosted a half-mile dirt track, Nazareth Speedway. They used money they made working at their uncle's station to refurbish a 1948 Hudson, using a stolen beer barrel as a fuel tank. The car was ready to race when the twins were 19 years old, but the minimum age to race was 21, so the brothers convinced a newspaper editor to falsify their drivers' licenses. After Aldo got into a major accident, the local chief of police spotted the forgery but turned a blind eye to save Aldo's health insurance.

The twins did not tell their father that they were racing until Aldo fractured his skull in a race and spent 62 days in a coma. Andretti's father nearly disowned Mario when the latter insisted on racing again, but eventually relented. Aldo also resumed racing, but suffered a career-ending accident in 1969.

The twins got off to a good start, picking up two wins each in sportsman racing after their first four races. In their first two weeks of racing, they won $300; they had previously been making $45 a week at the gas station. From 1960 to 1961, Mario won 21 out of 46 races. The twins raced against each other only once, at in 1967; Mario won, with Aldo finishing 10th after a brake failure.

To intimidate their opponents, the twins bought Italian racing suits and fabricated a story about racing in junior formulae back in Italy. Andretti maintained the fiction for many years. In 2016, he admitted that the story was fabricated. He recalled that it "psyched the out, big time."


Single-seater racing
Despite his early successes in modified stock cars, Andretti's goal was to race in single-seater open-wheel cars. He started by racing midget cars in the American Racing Drivers Club (ARDC) series from 1961 to 1963, starting with 3/4 (sized) midgets before graduating to full-sized midgets. In March 1962, he won a midget race, which he dubbed "my first victory of any consequence." He raced in over one hundred events in 1963, and scored 29 top-five finishes in 46 ARDC races. He finished third in the 1963 ARDC season standings.
(2025). 9780760313992, MBI Pub Co..
On in 1963, Andretti won three feature races at two different tracks, an afternoon race at Flemington and a doubleheader at Hatfield, after which reporter told him that "you just bought the ticket to the big time."

From midget cars, the next step on the East Coast racing ladder was sprint car racing, first with the United Racing Club (URC) series and then with the United States Auto Club (USAC) series. Andretti attempted to secure a full-time URC ride, but received only spot starts. However, USAC team owner Rufus Gray gave him a full-time drive for 1964. He won one race at and finished third in the season standings behind veterans and . To cover his expenses, he worked as a foreman at a golf cart factory.

Andretti continued to race in sprint cars after progressing to IndyCar. In 1965 he won once at Ascot Park, and finished tenth in the season standings. In 1966 he won five times (Cumberland, , , Salem, and Phoenix), but finished second in the standings, behind . In 1967 he won two of the three events that he entered.


USAC IndyCar career
From 1956 to 1978, the top open-wheel racing series in North America was the USAC National Championship, alternatively referred to as or . In 1971, USAC split off its dirt-track races into a separate National Dirt Car Championship. The pavement championship retained the name USAC Championship Car Series, while the dirt championship had fewer races and was later rebranded to the "Silver Crown Series."


Breaking in (1964)
Andretti entered IndyCar during the 1964 season, while still racing full-time in sprint cars. On April 19, 1964, the Doug Stearly team gave him a spot start at the 1964 Trenton 100. He started 16th and finished 11th.

Andretti spent the first portion of the 1964 season trying to find a full-time IndyCar drive. An opening appeared to materialize when one of the big three IndyCar teams, Dean Van Lines Racing Division (DVL), lost to injury. Andretti met with DVL's chief mechanic, Clint Brawner, to ask for the drive. Although Andretti had come with an introduction from his sprint car team owner, Rufus Gray, Brawner turned Andretti down, as he was skeptical of sprint car racing and felt that Andretti was not ready to compete. He hired to replace Hulse. Andretti joined Lee Glessner's outfit, but was forced to sit out the 1964 Indianapolis 500.


Dean Van Lines, Andretti Racing, and STP (1964–1971)
got his big break with DVL midway through the 1964 season, after the youngster impressed Brawner in two races: a sprint car race in Terre Haute, Indiana and an IndyCar race at Langhorne Speedway, where Andretti finished ninth, just three places below Mathouser, who had the better car. Brawner had mentored a young A. J. Foyt, and noticed that Andretti "worked as diligently on the car as Foyt had as a rookie with me." Andretti was pleased to join what he called one of the "few outfits worth driving for." He completed the final eight races of the season with DVL, finishing 11th in the season standings. He was named IndyCar Rookie of the Year. After the season, Brawner agreed to make Andretti his permanent driver in place of Hulse.


1965–1969: Years of domination
The Andretti-Brawner combination would soon come to dominate the sport. It quickly attracted technical and financial support from Firestone and Ford; Brawner said that Ford treated DVL like a . From 1965 to 1969, Andretti won three USAC IndyCar titles. He also came within 93 points of winning five in a row; for comparison, at the time, 100 points was the difference between finishing sixth and seventh at the Indianapolis 500. At the peak of his statistical dominance, Andretti won 29 of 85 USAC championship races between 1966 and 1969.

In 1965, Andretti's first full season with DVL, he took advantage of the team's new , a derivation of the Formula One chassis. His third-place finish at the 1965 Indianapolis 500 earned him the race's Rookie of the Year award. He won his first IndyCar race at the Hoosier Grand Prix. Although he won only one race that year, he scored six second places and three third places, and scored points in 16 out of 18 races. His closest competitor, A. J. Foyt (who had won four of the last five USAC titles) won five races but failed to score seven times. At age 25, Andretti became the youngest IndyCar champion in history, a record he held for thirty years until Jacques Villeneuve won the 1995 title. To his irritation, however, when he appeared on Johnny Carson at the end of the season, he was introduced as the Indy 500 Rookie of the Year, which he felt downplayed his title win.

In 1966, Andretti won his second straight USAC title. In contrast to his maiden title win, Andretti won eight of fifteen starts and led 1,142 laps, nearly 1,000 laps more than his closest competitor. He led 54.5% of all laps in 1966, a record until 's 66.8% in 1970, and still the second-highest figure in history as of the 2022 season. Andretti also took pole at the 1966 Indianapolis 500, but retired after 27 laps with a mechanical failure.

In 1967, Andretti lost the season USAC championship to A. J. Foyt. Although Andretti won eight races, Foyt won the 1967 Indianapolis 500; Andretti was on pole at Indianapolis but lost a wheel. Andretti fought through broken ribs to stay in the title race. Foyt carried a 340-point lead over Andretti going into the season-ending Rex Mays 300 at Riverside. Andretti ran out of fuel with four laps to go and settled for third, costing him 180 points. Ordinarily, he would have won the championship anyway, as third place was worth 420 points and Foyt had crashed on lap 50. However, Foyt's tire sponsor Goodyear arranged for him to commandeer 's car to prevent Andretti, a Firestone man, from winning. Foyt piloted McCluskey's car to fifth place. Despite a point deduction, he won the championship by 80 points. Andretti received his first Driver of the Year award but was deflated by how the season ended, saying, "I had the championship in my hands, and then it was gone."

DVL owner Al Dean died at the end of the 1967 season. Per his wishes, the team was wound up. The estate sold the team's assets to Andretti, who became an owner-driver under the name Andretti Racing Enterprises. Brawner stayed on as chief mechanic. In 1968, Andretti once again lost the title at the final race of the season at Riverside, but this time in a reversal of the events of 1967. Andretti held a 304-point lead over at the start and led Unser on track by 47 seconds at one point. However, his engine failed on lap 58. He borrowed 's car (whose brakes were dead) and then 's car for the final stretch. He fought back to third, but received only 165 points instead of the usual 420 since only his laps in Ruby's car were counted. Unser finished second, scoring 480 points. Unser won the title by 11 points, the narrowest margin in USAC history. Despite losing the title, Andretti set records for second-place finishes in a season (11 times in 27 starts) and podium finishes in a season (16), which still stand to this day.

+Andretti Racing Enterprises IndyCar wins
1 ! rowspan="4"1968August 4USACCircuit Mont-Tremblant Heat 1 (R)2Mario AndrettiHawk IIIFord Indy DOHC V8FirestonePole26
2August 4USACCircuit Mont-Tremblant Heat 2 (R)2Mario Andretti (2)Hawk IIIFord Indy DOHC V8FirestonePole38
3September 2USACDuQuoin (DO)2Mario Andretti (3)Kuzma 60 D L4 252 cuFirestone694
4September 22USAC (O)2Mario Andretti (4)Hawk II L4 168 cuFirestone2172
-winning at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Museum.|250x250px]]Unhappy about being an owner-driver, and concerned that Firestone was cutting back its sponsorship budget, Andretti sold the team to 's before the 1969 season. Granatelli retained the DVL cars and staff, although Brawner disliked Granatelli and insisted that he not participate in racing decisions. Andretti won nine races in 1969, including the 1969 Indianapolis 500 and the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb. He won his third title and was named ABC's Wide World of Sports Athlete of the Year. His 5,025 points were a USAC record, and he scored nearly twice as many points as runner-up (2,630). His IndyCar prize money of $365,165 (including a $205,727 check for winning the Indianapolis 500) was, by one count, the largest single-season haul in the history of American sports to that point, and his total pay that year (including endorsements) was estimated at as much as $1 million.
(1971). 9780448054292, Tempo Books.


1970–1971: Team split and struggles
The core of the team split up after the 1969 title season, when Goodyear persuaded STP mechanics Clint Brawner and Jim McGee to start their own team. Andretti remained with STP, which agreed to sponsor him during the 1970 Formula One season in a privateer March.

Various reasons were given for the split. Brawner said that he and McGee left because Granatelli and Firestone were underpaying them, and added that his old-school thinking clashed with Andretti and McGee's desire to innovate. He was particularly hurt that Andretti wanted to retire the old Brawner Hawk for a chassis from . However, it was also rumored that Andretti forced out Brawner, which Andretti denied. In his foreword to Brawner's 1975 autobiography, Andretti wrote that "we had our disagreements, but until things started turning sour near the end, we worked them out."

(1975). 9780801960642, Chilton Book Co..
He added that "there are many reasons why our operation fell apart. ... Racing relationships are like Hollywood marriages: they seldom last long." McGee said that Andretti and Brawner had been "feuding for years," but "certainly respected each other." He opined that Brawner was unwilling to work for Granatelli. According to an , Brawner's wife Kay hexed Andretti's family after the STP split, giving rise to the so-called "."

Neither side fully recovered from the split. The Brawner/McGee team's financial backer went broke, and McGee returned to STP in 1971. Meanwhile, Andretti settled for a fifth-place finish in 1970, and the STP Formula One team shut down after one season. In 1971, Andretti fell to ninth in USAC's paved track championship. He scored no points in the dirt track standings, with a best finish of 13th.


Parnelli (1972–1975)
For the 1972 season, Andretti left STP and joined Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing. Parnelli was IndyCar's dominant team at the time, with 1970 champion and 1971 champion . Andretti persuaded the team to hire Lotus designer , and Jim McGee also joined the team. The combination was expected to be a "superteam."

Andretti never won an IndyCar title with Parnelli. In his three full-time IndyCar seasons with the team (1972–1974), Andretti finished 11th, 5th, and 14th, while his teammate Leonard won the 1972 title. He did better on dirt tracks, winning the 1974 title after winning three out of five races. He nearly won the 1973 title as well, but teammate Al Unser beat him even though Andretti won two out of three races.

During this period Andretti was increasingly drawn to . He made guest appearances in with in 1972, and raced in Formula 5000 in 1974 and 1975. In 1975, Andretti stopped competing full-time in IndyCar, instead driving full-time for the Parnelli Formula One team. After quitting Formula One in early 1976, Parnelli released Andretti from his USAC contract so that he could focus on Formula One.


Penske (1976–1978)
While racing with , Andretti appeared sporadically in IndyCar with McGee's new team, . In nineteen races from 1976 to 1978, he won one race (at in 1978) and collected eight top-five finishes.


Stock car racing career
At the height of his IndyCar career, Andretti also made thirty appearances in top-level stock car racing from 1965 to 1969. Along with A. J. Foyt, he is one of two drivers to ever win 's most prestigious race, the Daytona 500, without being a full-time stock car driver.

In USAC, Andretti scored one win and eight top-five finishes in sixteen races from 1965 to 1968. His best season performance was 1967, when he competed in eight out of 22 races, won round 12 at , and finished seventh in the standings.

In the NASCAR Grand National Series, Andretti was less successful on average, with one win, one top-five finish, and three top tens in fourteen races from 1966 to 1969. He primarily drove for Ford works team , securing the drive through his connections at Ford headquarters. He generally did not get the first pick of equipment and pit crews, and said that a lack of technical support forced him to ask a rookie, , for help setting up his car. Sports Illustrated noted that Andretti's setup favored (in American parlance, "loose") to an extent that was considered extreme at the time. After convincing the team to give him a top-spec engine, he won the 1967 Daytona 500, but alleged that the team tried to sabotage his race so that its lead driver, , could inherit the win. His friend backed up the accusation. Andretti stopped competing in NASCAR after 1969, as race seats at teams of the caliber of Holman-Moody rarely came open after the 1960s. (53:05-54:27)

In the 1970s and 1980s, Andretti competed in six editions of the International Race of Champions (IROC), an invitational stock car series with a limited calendar. He won and finished second in and . He won three races in twenty events.


Formula One career

Part-time roles (1968–1970)
Although the Indianapolis 500 dropped off the Formula One calendar in 1960, some teams continued racing at Indianapolis, including 's . At the 1965 Indianapolis 500, Lotus star won and Andretti finished third as the top-placed rookie. On Clark's recommendation, Chapman invited Andretti to race in Formula One, saying, "When you're ready, call me."

Andretti joined Lotus for the 1968 Italian Grand Prix. He was delighted by the Lotus 49B, saying that its handling was a major improvement over IndyCar. He beat the lap record in testing, but was disqualified after flying back to America for a contractually required race. He later said that the Monza officials broke a promise to waive the applicable rule on his behalf.

Andretti got his real start in Formula One at the 1968 United States Grand Prix and took pole. Due to his disqualification at Monza (where he had qualified tenth), he became the first Formula One driver to start his first race from pole. overtook him on the first lap, but the two drivers were neck-and-neck until Andretti's nose cone broke, forcing him to pit. He eventually retired with a clutch failure, but he had made a strong impression. Reviewing the race , Motor Sport wrote that Andretti displayed "that same assurance of absolute control in one saw in Jim Clark's driving."

At the end of the 1968 season, Chapman offered Andretti a full-time drive to replace Clark, who had died in an accident that April. Andretti declined, not wishing to give up his stable USAC career. For the next two years, he made only sporadic appearances in Formula One with Lotus and STP-March. The cars were mostly uncompetitive, and he finished only one race in his first three seasons. At the one race he finished, the 1970 Spanish Grand Prix, he collected his first Formula One podium after several drivers ahead of him retired with mechanical issues.


Ferrari (1971–1972)
Andretti signed with in and entered seven out of 11 races, completing two. In his Ferrari debut, he achieved his maiden Grand Prix win at Kyalami after race leader 's engine failed with four laps to go. He also won the non-championship Questor Grand Prix in California. Following the Questor win, offered to make Andretti his No. 1 driver for 1972, but Andretti declined, later remarking that "Formula didn't pay much back then ... but I always figured I'd get another opportunity." Andretti also raced five times in , but scored no podiums. He did not compete in the season.


Parnelli (1974–1976)
In the mid-1970s, Andretti encouraged Parnelli, his IndyCar team, to sponsor a Formula One car. To prepare for a Formula One challenge, the team secured funding from Firestone, which agreed to make special tires for the team. In addition to Maurice Philippe, the team hired more Lotus veterans, including Jim Clark's old crew chief Dick Scammell and administrator Andrew Ferguson.

Parnelli ran Andretti in the two North American end-of-season races in . He qualified third at the but did not start the race due to a mechanical failure. Parnelli also ran Andretti in the North American Formula 5000 series in 1974 and 1975, both times finishing second to . In each season, Andretti won as many races as Redman, but his results were less consistent.

In 1975, Andretti became a full-time Formula One driver for the first time. He was disappointed by the Parnelli VPJ4, which he felt was derivative of the Lotus 72. More importantly, sponsor Firestone pulled out ahead of the season. The VPJ4 had been designed for Firestone's custom tires, and without them, its performance suffered. The car also suffered from frequent brake failures. At the , Andretti qualified fourth and reached first after a multi-car crash on the first lap. However, the crash damaged his suspension, forcing his eventual retirement. He finished third at the non-championship 1975 BRDC International Trophy Race. At the , he was nearly killed when his brakes failed during qualifying, but finished fourth with the team's backup car. He finished 14th in the Drivers' Championship, scoring five points.

Parnelli skipped the first race of the 1976 season, so Andretti started the year with Lotus and returned to Parnelli for the next two races. Parnelli pulled out of Formula One after round three when sponsor Viceroy withdrew funding. Andretti only learned of the decision when a reporter asked him about it as the grid lined up to start the race. He later admitted that "I was the only one, really, that wanted the."


Lotus (1976–1980)

1976
The day after Andretti learned Parnelli was shutting down, he met Lotus' Colin Chapman, who told him, "I wish I had a decent car for you." Andretti took the Lotus job anyway, promising Chapman that "we will make the car better." He negotiated for number one driver status, mindful of Chapman's reputation for giving only one driver the best machinery. With this authority, he borrowed his teammate's car when it was faster at a particular circuit, or when his own car was unavailable.
(1979). 9780600394693, Hamlyn.

The Lotus 77 was not competitive, and with five races to go, Andretti had scored just five points, leaving him mired in 13th place. He asked to switch to the next year's car in mid-season, but Chapman declined. At the , Andretti scored his first podium since March 1971. He collected three podiums in the final five races and lapped the field in his victory at the season-ending . The late-season flurry of results moved Andretti up to 6th in the Drivers' Championship, with 22 points.


Ground effect revolution
Andretti's timing was fortuitous, as he rejoined Lotus at the eve of the ground effect revolution. Since mid-1975, Lotus had been trying to shape the car to generate (making the car faster in the corners) without a large rear wing (whose drag would make the car slower on the straights). The Lotus design team added sidepods with vents to take in air, which was then channeled under the floor to facilitate the . The car was effectively sucked towards the ground, allowing it to take corners at unusually high speeds. Andretti, whose STP-March team had experimented with sidepods in 1970, encouraged the team to make the sidepods even bigger.

Andretti, who received praise on several occasions for his technical feedback, took a close interest in developing the car. He knew that Lotus had a reputation for dangerous designs and worked with his mechanics to ensure that Chapman did not do anything "too radical." technology was still primitive at the time, but Lotus devised a way to model air flow on track by hiring a photographer to take pictures of wind-sensitive bristles that were mounted on the chassis in tests. While testing the car at , Andretti noticed that the car's downforce was much stronger when he drove close to a nearby fence. Chapman added sideskirts to keep the air flowing in one direction."Mario Andretti: Addicted to Adrenaline" (2024), at 1:08-1:10.

Andretti also helped the team with his ability to set up a car; one commentator said that "aside from Andretti, only was known for great technical understanding ... an increasingly vital quality for racecar drivers as racecars became increasingly sophisticated." Andretti said that "if people say I'm overly obsessed with setting up my car, that's up to them ... I make tiny adjustments to the car, and I can feel them." Drawing on his extensive USAC oval racing experience, Andretti optimized his cars for each track by exploiting subtle differences in tire size ('stagger') and suspension set-up ('cross weighting') on each side of the car.

(1986). 9780905138374, Hazleton Publishing.
Engineer Nigel Bennett recalled that Andretti would request seemingly imperceptible adjustments before the race, such as "Lower the front springs by an eighth of a turn."


1977: Reliability issues
In , the Lotus 78 was one of the fastest cars on the grid, and Andretti won four races, more than any other driver. At Zolder, Andretti took pole by 1.54 seconds, infuriating Chapman, who wanted to hide the car's quality from his competitors.

At round four, Andretti won the United States Grand Prix West. He scored a dominant win at the , but also held his own under close racing, winning the after a dramatic last-lap pass on John Watson. He also won his first after three attempts, an achievement in which he took great pride. Andretti concluded that the Lotus 78 was his favorite Formula One car, even more than the next year's title-winning Lotus 79.

Other than the wins, Andretti endured a snakebit season. Lotus had commissioned special engines, which proved to be unreliable, and Andretti suffered engine failures while leading at Spielberg, in second at Silverstone, and battling for third at Zandvoort. His engine also failed at Hockenheim. Lotus' Peter Wright and Ralph Bellamy felt that if Chapman had settled for a regular engine, Lotus would have won the title. For his own part, Andretti rued Chapman's tendency to "pull the last litre or two of fuel out of the cars before the race," noting that he ran out of fuel at three races in 1977 (Kyalami, Anderstorp, and Mosport). Andretti also retired in third at Interlagos with an electrical failure, and crashed at Zolder while fighting for the lead, which he called "one of the biggest mistakes of his career." Ferrari dominated the Constructors' Championship with 95 (97) points to Lotus' 62, and Andretti finished third in the Drivers' Championship, with 47 points, 25 behind Ferrari's , who skipped the last two races.


1978: World Champion
Andretti won his first and only Formula One World Drivers' Championship in . Before the season, the team signed and made him the highest-paid driver in Formula One. Although Chapman agreed to pay Andretti the same salary, Andretti felt that he had earned number one driver status given how much time he had invested to develop the car. Enzo Ferrari offered to double Andretti's salary, but withdrew the offer after Chapman "raised hell with Enzo". Chapman placated Andretti by offering him a bonus of $10,000 a point. In addition, Chapman promised to impose to give Andretti the lead if Lotus was leading 1–2.

The team stayed with the 78 for the first five races while Chapman perfected the next car. At the season-opening , Andretti took pole and led from start to finish. After five races, he was tied for second place in the standings with 18 points, five adrift of Patrick Depailler.

Lotus unveiled the Lotus 79 at the . The new car included an improved diffuser to facilitate airflow at the back of the car. With plenty of downforce in hand, Lotus ran a small rear wing that increased the car's top speed, fixing what Andretti felt was the 78's biggest weakness. The 79 did introduce a new weakness, as a design flaw overheated the brake fluid. Andretti's smooth driving style suited the car, whose downforce was so great that the chassis might have buckled in the hands of a more choppy driver. At Belgium, Andretti took pole by eight-tenths of a second, led from start to finish, and won by ten seconds.

Andretti dominated the rest of the season, winning five of the next eight races, while teammate Peterson finished second with two wins. Lotus had four 1–2 finishes in 1978, and Andretti won them all, generating speculation that Chapman had ordered Peterson to let Andretti win. Two rounds before Andretti clinched the title, Peterson denied being ordered to let Andretti by at any point, which Andretti repeated after the season. However, Peterson then "ostentatiously" followed Andretti to a 1–2 finish at Zandvoort.

Andretti clinched the championship at the Italian Grand Prix, with two races to go. He did not celebrate, as Peterson had suffered a major crash and died later that night due to complications from leg surgery. Outside the hospital, Andretti laconically said, "Unhappily, motor racing is also this." In 2018, Andretti said that "I could never truly celebrate and I never will. It was an enormous jolt. You never really totally recover from it."


1979–1980
Andretti never won another Grand Prix after 1978. Following the 1978 title season, lead sponsor pulled funding. In , the team rolled out the Lotus 80, whose downforce overwhelmed the car's suspension, generating issues, and whose weak chassis popped out rivets while driving. Andretti scored a podium in the Lotus 80's debut at Jarama. His new teammate refused to drive the car at all, and Andretti drove it only three times before returning to the Lotus 79, which was already out of date.Nye (1986) p. 100 Andretti finished 12th in the standings, with 14 points, 6 points behind Reutemann, who left for after the season.

Following the failure of the Lotus 80, Chapman tried to solve the problem by developing the Lotus 88, a complex and innovative carbon-fiber, dual-chassis structure. In theory, one chassis would absorb the porpoising while the other chassis would carry the driver. The team used a transitional car, the Lotus 81, for , while Chapman developed the 88. Lotus replaced Reutemann with two talented teammates, Elio de Angelis and (briefly) , but the team was again unsuccessful.Nye (1986) p. 196 Andretti scored only one point all season. Over the course of the season, he lost faith in the developing Lotus 88, declaring that Chapman "got bored and started going crazy with other things that were outside of the rules." He left Lotus at the end of the season, shortly before Chapman was about to unveil the Lotus 88 for 1981. After his departure, the FIA banned the Lotus 88.


Alfa Romeo (1981)
at the 1981 Dutch Grand Prix.]]For the 1981 season, Andretti signed a sponsorship deal with , whose advertising chief John Hogan gave him a choice between the two Marlboro-sponsored teams, Alfa Romeo and . Andretti picked the Italian team due to his friendship with one of their engineers and the higher salary on offer. Before the 1981 season, the FIA outlawed sliding sideskirts, which the Alfa Romeo design team had relied on to generate ground effect. Andretti finished fourth on his debut at the United States Grand Prix West, but the team was otherwise uncompetitive. He finished 17th in the Drivers' Championship, with 3 points. He left the team after the season, explaining that the new generation of Formula One cars required "toggle switch driving with no need for any kind of delicacy ... it made leaving Formula One a lot easier than it would have been."
(1986). 9780850597929, Patrick Stephens Ltd.


Stand-in appearances (1982)
During the season, Andretti briefly raced for both the Drivers' and Constructors' Championship-winning teams, and Ferrari. Andretti joined Williams for the United States Grand Prix West after Reutemann abruptly quit. He damaged his suspension after contacting a wall and retired. IndyCar commitments prevented him from signing a full-time contract, and Williams' won the Drivers' Championship.

Andretti then replaced the injured at Ferrari for the last two races of the season. He took pole and finished third at the . At the season-ending , Andretti's final Formula One race, he retired with a suspension failure, but Niki Lauda's engine failure clinched the Constructors' Championship for Ferrari. Andretti agreed to serve as 's reserve driver for one U.S. race in 1984, but declined to be considered for a reserve role in 1986, effectively ending his Formula One career.


CART IndyCar career

Penske (1979–1980)
during the 1980 CART season.]]In 1979, a new organization, Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART), set up the IndyCar World Series,
(1983). 9780905138251, Hazleton Publishing.
which displaced the USAC championship. CART was formed because the larger and more institutional IndyCar teams, like Andretti's , wanted the sport to emphasize technical innovation (the costs of which deterred new entrants) and a more structured commercial strategy. After Penske helped start CART, Andretti sporadically competed in CART during the 1979 and 1980 seasons, winning one race at Michigan in 1980.


Patrick (1981–1982)
Andretti switched to for the 1981 season. The move reunited him with , the team's sponsor, and Jim McGee, Andretti's mechanic from DVL and Parnelli. He did not win a race, but recorded five top-five finishes in seven races; the other two results were mechanical DNFs. At the 1981 Indianapolis 500, Andretti was controversially stripped of the win four months after the race. After leaving Alfa Romeo, Andretti joined CART full-time for the 1982 season. He finished third in the season standings, with six podiums in 11 races. As with 1981, all his other results were mechanical DNFs.


Newman/Haas (1983–1994)
In 1983, Andretti joined the new Newman/Haas Racing team, set up by and actor (and former team owner) . The team used cars built by British company , in contrast to the March cars in vogue at the time. The team lured Andretti by promising to run only one car, making him the focus of the team. Andretti spent the rest of his full-time racing career with Newman/Haas.


Solo-racer era
In 1983, Andretti worked with the team to develop the uncompetitive Lola T700 into a decent car. At round six, he took the team's maiden win at , and scored another win in Las Vegas. He recorded eight top-five finishes in 13 starts. in Long Pond, PA.|238x238px]]In 1984, the team commissioned a new chassis, which became the Lola T800. The car was designed by Lotus veteran Nigel Bennett and effectively utilized the ground effect technology that Formula One had just banned in 1982. (Various CART teams had been attempting to develop ground effect cars since 1980 at the latest.) However, the team got off to a mediocre start. Andretti won the season opener at Long Beach, but his Indianapolis 500 race was compromised by electrical issues, and his wheel fell off at the . After four races, he trailed by 58 points. In mid-season, however, he won five out of eight races, including the Michigan 500, where he beat Sneva by 0.14 seconds, the closest finish in IndyCar history at the time. After a tight, season-long battle, Andretti closed out the season with two conservative second-place drives, explaining that "I hated driving that way but that's what I had to do." He beat Sneva by 13 points to claim his fourth IndyCar title at the age of 44. At the end of the season, he was voted Driver of the Year for a third time.

The team took a step back in 1985. Other teams noticed that in addition to Andretti's six wins, won three races in a customer T800. To make more money, Newman/Haas agreed to distribute the Lolas to more competitors, watering down its technical advantage. Andretti got out to a fast start, winning three of the first four races and finishing second in the fourth, the 1985 Indianapolis 500. After four races, he had a 34-point lead in the standings. However, he recorded only one more top-five finish the rest of the way, and finished fifth in the standings.

From 1986 to 1988, Andretti's son emerged as a force in the sport. In 1986, Michael placed second, beating Mario for the first time. Father and son both scored five poles. At round five in Portland, Mario beat Michael by 0.07 seconds, setting another record for the closest finish in IndyCar history. In addition, at age 46, he finally won his home race, the Pocono 500, after 14 attempts. He called it "one of the happiest weekends he ever had." He led the championship with ten races to go, but did not pick up another podium the rest of the way.

In 1987, with an -designed chassis and new engines designed by , Andretti picked up eight poles but converted them into two wins. He dominated the Indianapolis 500 but dropped out with a blown engine late in the race. At the following race at Milwaukee, he passed A. J. Foyt for the all-time lead in career laps led. However, he crashed when his rear wing came loose and injured his neck. He called it "the hardest hit I've ever taken."

In 1988, Andretti finished fifth in the season standings, one spot ahead of Michael. He picked up two wins, but continued to suffer from reliability issues and was involved in several costly accidents.


Two-car era
Michael Andretti joined Newman/Haas in 1989, which added a second car for the first time to accommodate him. Mario and Michael became the first father/son team to compete in both IMSA GT and IndyCar racing. Michael reached the peak of his career, winning the 1991 championship and finishing second in 1990 and 1992. By contrast, Mario performed well but not brilliantly. During the 63 races from 1989 to 1992, he scored 30 top-five finishes but recorded no wins. In 1992, he set the all-time record for most IndyCar starts, passing A. J. Foyt.

Ahead of the 1993 season, Michael Andretti left CART for Formula One. Mario wanted to return to the old one-car system, but the team replaced Michael with the reigning Formula One champion, , and gave Mansell number one driver status. Mansell and Andretti raced as teammates for two years, but did not get along, owing to their mutual competitiveness and personality differences. Andretti scored his last IndyCar win during the 1993 race. At 53 years and 34 days old, he became the oldest recorded winner of an IndyCar event. Later that year, he qualified on pole at the Michigan 500 with a speed of , setting a new closed-course world record. He finished sixth in the season standings, while Mansell won the title.

Andretti decided to race one final season, dubbed "The Arrivederci Tour." In 1994, the team as a whole took a step back, and Newman/Haas went winless for the first time. At his 407th, and final, IndyCar race, at , Andretti's race was initially derailed by a flat tire, but he weaved his way back up to seventh. His engine failed with four laps to go. At the time of his retirement, his 52 wins were the second-most in history, behind only A. J. Foyt's 67. ( passed him in 2022.) His 7,595 laps led remain the all-time record, nearly 1,000 laps higher than second-placed Michael Andretti's 6,692. His 67 pole positions were the all-time record. ( passed him in 2022.)


Indianapolis 500
Andretti won once at the Indianapolis 500 in 29 attempts, despite three pole positions and seven top-three grid placements. He finished all just five times, and quipped that "if it had been the Indy 400, I'd have had at least six." He had so many incidents and near victories at the track that critics have suggested the existence of an "Andretti Curse."

Andretti occasionally did well at Indianapolis. He won the 1969 race, but benefited from good luck: he completed the race in the team's backup car, a now-outdated , and on just one set of tires. His race engineer said that the Hawk's gearbox was failing and would not have lasted another five laps. He was also the first driver to exceed , during practice for the 1977 race.

Starting in 1981, Andretti encountered several out-of-the-ordinary instances of bad luck at the Indianapolis 500. In 1981, he lost after passed cars under caution. In 1985, he finished second to , who miraculously spun without crashing. In 1987, he led 170 of the first 177 laps but slowed down to preserve his engine, which ironically caused the engine to fail. In 1992, he broke six toes, his son Jeff broke both legs, and his son Michael lost a 28-second lead with 12 laps to go due to a mechanical failure.

(1994). 9780006383024, Collins Publishers San Francisco.
Finally, in his last serious chance at a win in 1993, he led the most laps, but his race was derailed after the team incorrectly changed the tire stagger on his car during a late pit stop. In addition, in 2003, the 63-year-old Andretti tested the injured 's car at Indianapolis but got into a "spectacular" airborne crash when Kenny Bräck crashed in front of him; he escaped with minor injuries. Reflecting on the curse in 2019, Andretti said that while he "thinks about all the times he should have won here," he also won in 1969, "when everything went wrong."


Sportscar racing career

North American endurance racing
Andretti's first race in a sportscar was in 1965, when he piloted a Ferrari 275 P at the Bridgehampton 500 km at Bridgehampton; he did not finish. Andretti won three 12 Hours of Sebring endurance races (1967, 1970, 1972), and a 6-hour race at Daytona in 1972. In early sportscar races he competed for , but later often drove for Ferrari.

Andretti signed with Ferrari in 1971, and won several races with co-driver . In 1972, he shared wins in the three North American rounds of the championship and at in the UK, helping Ferrari to a dominant victory in that year's World Championship for Makes. He also competed in 25 North American races in the late 1960s and early 1970s, with a best finish of third place at Riverside in 1969.


Le Mans
Andretti competed at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in four decades. In 1966, he shared a Holman-Moody Ford Mk II with . They retired due to valve failure. In 1967, during a 3:30 am pit stop, a mechanic accidentally installed a front brake pad backwards, causing Andretti's brakes to lock up at the Dunlop Bridge. He crashed, broke several ribs, and was left exposed to oncoming traffic, but pulled him to safety., co-driven with son .]]Andretti did not return to Le Mans until ending his full-time Formula One career. In , he partnered with son Michael in a Mirage M12 Ford. They qualified in ninth place, but although their car passed initial inspection several days earlier,
(1991). 9781855322288, Osprey Automotive.
it was disqualified shortly before the race started due to an improper oil cooler. They returned the following year and finished third in a Porsche customer car, behind two works Porsches. The Andrettis returned in with Mario's nephew added to the family team. Although they obtained a factory Porsche 962, one of the car's engine cylinders failed, and the team finished fifth.

Following Andretti's retirement from full-time racing, he decided to try for another Le Mans victory, joining Courage Compétition from 1995 to 1997. In , the team qualified third, but Andretti was brake-checked by the car in front of him and crashed, forcing him to pit and costing the team six laps. The team eventually rallied from 25th to second in the overall classification, and finished first in the LMP1 class. Andretti later said that the team "lost the race five times over" through poor organization, including a botched pit stop, an ill-considered switch to wet-weather tires, and a two-minute pit stop to wash the car to clean up the sponsor decals. Porsche withdrew active support from Courage in , and the team finished 16th after losing 90 minutes in the pits fixing an electronic issue and a broken axle. In , the "now ancient Courage" was a backmarker and the team did not finish the race. Andretti's final appearance at Le Mans was at the 2000 race, six years after his retirement from full-time racing. The 60-year-old Andretti drove the LMP-1 Roadster-S to a 15th-place finish.


Awards and honors

Legacy
+Mario Andretti career wins !Competition !Wins
American Championship Car (IndyCar)52
USAC Silver Crown Series5
12
F1 Non-Championship1
Formula 50007
Sports car7
Stock car2
3
USAC Sprint Car9
Midget Car9
3/4 Midget Car4
Over the course of his long career, Andretti won over 100 races on major circuits, although the exact numbers vary depending on the definition of a major circuit. The International Motorsports Hall of Fame puts the total at either 109 or 111, while Andretti and the Automotive Hall of Fame put the total at 111.

Andretti's name has become synonymous with speed in American popular culture. An extremely versatile driver, Andretti stands alone, or close to it, in several lists of drivers to win in multiple categories:

  • Only driver to win the Indianapolis 500 (1969), Daytona 500 (1967), and the Formula One World Drivers' Championship (1978) (as of 2025).
  • One of only two drivers (including ) to have won races in , IndyCar, the World Sportscar Championship, and (as of 2019).
  • One of only three drivers to have won major races on , paved , and dirt tracks in one season, a feat that he accomplished four times (as of 2007).

With his final IndyCar win in April 1993, Andretti became the first driver to have won IndyCar races in four different decades and the first to win automobile races of any kind in five. As of 2024, Andretti's victory at the 1978 Dutch Grand Prix is the most recent Formula One win by an American driver.


Awards
Andretti was named Driver of the Century by the (1999) and RACER magazine (2000). In 1992, he was voted the U.S. Driver of the Quarter Century by a panel of journalists and former U.S. Drivers of the Year. He was named the U.S. Driver of the Year in 1967, 1978, and 1984, and is the only driver to be Driver of the Year in three decades.

Andretti has been inducted into a variety of motorsports hall of fames, including the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 2000. Other halls of fame include the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Hall of Fame (1986), the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America (1990), Mario Andretti at the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America the U.S. National Sprint Car Hall of Fame (1996), the Automotive Hall of Fame (2005), the USAC Hall of Fame (2012), the FIA Hall of Fame (2017), and the U.S. National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame (2019).

Various race tracks have named areas after Andretti, including "The Andretti" (the final turn of the Circuit of the Americas), the "Andretti Hairpin" (turn 2 at ), and the "Andretti Road" (the grandstand driveway at ). renamed a portion of a street "Mario Andretti Drive" in 2019 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of his 1969 Indianapolis 500 win. Nazareth, Pennsylvania renamed Andretti's home street of Market Street to "Victory Lane" after he won the Indianapolis 500.

In 2003, the Champ Car World Series race at was renamed the "Mario Andretti Grand Prix" after Andretti helped broker a deal to keep it on the CCWS calendar. Andretti has also been honored by the Cancer Foundation (2007) and the Simeone Foundation (2008).

On October 23, 2006, the Italian government made Andretti a Commendatore of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic (OMRI), the most senior Italian order of merit, in honor of Andretti's racing career and commitment to his Italian heritage. In 2008, Andretti was also named the honorary mayor of an association of Italian exiles from Andretti's birthplace of Montona. Andretti has also received the Carnegie Corporation's Great Immigrants Award (2006, the inaugural class); the Italy–USA Foundation's America Award (2015); and honorary citizenship of , Italy (2016). In 2004, he was the grand marshal of the New York City Columbus Day parade.


Personal life
Andretti lives in Bushkill Township, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Nazareth, on an estate that he named "Villa Montona" in honor of his birthplace. His late wife Dee Ann (née Hoch) was a native of Nazareth. They met when Dee Ann was teaching Andretti English in 1961.Spanish Grand Prix, Eric della Faille Photograph Collection, Revs Institute, Revs Digital Library. They were married on November 25, 1961, and had three children (, , and Barbara) and seven grandchildren. Dee Ann died on July 2, 2018, following a heart attack.


Andretti racing family
Both of Mario Andretti's sons, and , were auto racers. Michael joined CART in 1983 and won the 1991 title; he also finished second on five occasions. He was U.S. Driver of the Year in 1991, and was third on the all-time IndyCar career wins list when he retired. Jeff Andretti competed in CART from 1990 to 1994. Mario's nephew competed in CART and NASCAR, winning one CART race in 1991 and two NASCAR races in 1997 and 1999. In addition, in 2006, Mario's grandson won the Indy Racing League Rookie of the Year award and the Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year Award, as Mario, Michael, and Jeff had done before him.

During the 1991 CART season, the Andrettis became the first family to have four relatives compete in the same series. In addition, the Andrettis have competed as a team in endurance racing. Mario, Michael, and John finished 6th at the 1988 24 Hours of Le Mans. Mario, Michael, and Jeff finished 5th at the 1991 Rolex 24 at Daytona.


Business
Following his retirement, Andretti has remained active in the racing community. He serves on the board of the Formula One team, which will join Formula One in . Since 2012, Andretti has been the official ambassador for the Circuit of the Americas (COTA) and the United States Grand Prix. In the media, Andretti test drives cars for Road & Track and Car and Driver magazines and has penned a racing column for the Indianapolis Star. He also participated in the 2006 from New York to Los Angeles.

Andretti's business interests extend beyond racing. When he retired at age 54, his personal fortune was estimated at $100 million. In 1995, Andretti and saved a struggling Napa Valley vineyard and renamed it the . Andretti was interviewed about his winemaking activities for the documentary A State of Vine (2007). In 1997, he founded Andretti Petroleum, which owns a chain of gasoline stations and car washes in Northern California. He also owns a chain of tracks. He was the title character of several video games, including Mario Andretti's Racing Challenge (1991), Mario Andretti Racing (1994), and (1996/1997), the latter in association with his sons.


Film and television appearances
Andretti has contributed to several racing films. He features in and partially narrates The Speed Merchants (1972), a documentary about the 1972 World Sportscar Championship, in which Andretti's Ferrari won the constructors' championship. He also drove an IndyCar in the film (1996). He also appeared in the documentary Dust to Glory (2005), which discusses a race in which he served as grand marshal. In November 2015, he appeared on the first season of TV series Jay Leno's Garage, driving Leno in multiple fast cars and talking about his racing career.

Andretti has also made cameo or guest appearances in other media, generally associated with racing. Like many other IndyCar drivers, he guested on the television show Home Improvement. He cameoed in (1977); 's Cars (2006) (an animated film where he was represented by a sentient version of the Ford Fairlane in which he won the 1967 Daytona 500); and DreamWorks' Turbo (2013) (where he voiced the traffic director at Indianapolis Motor Speedway).


Racing record

Racing career summary
Lee S Glessner10000
Doug Stearly10000
Jim Robbins10000
NASCAR Grand National SeriesOwens Racing40000N/ANC
24 Hours of Le Mans10000N/ADNF
NASCAR Grand National Series610?1N/A51st
World Sportscar ChampionshipFord Motor Co.21?11N/ANC
NASCAR Grand National Series300?0N/A51st
Formula One101000NC
World Sportscar Championship1000006th
Can-Am400012211th
Formula One30000NC0
NASCAR Grand National Series10000NC0
Formula OneSTP Corporation50001415th
Can-Am10000823rd
Formula One51011128th
Can-Am100001019th
Formula One50000412th
SCCA Continental Championship73625972nd
Formula One200000NC
World Sportscar Championship100000NC
SCCA Continental Championship948251652nd
USAC Championship Car3000021023rd
Sugaripe Prune Racing Team10001
Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing20000
USAC Championship Car400?112009th
USAC Championship Car600?115807th
USAC Championship Car810?168117th
BMW M1 Procar ChampionshipBMW Motorsport30000227th
PPG Indy Car World Series100?170011th
PPG Indy Car World Series412?258016th
USAC Championship Car200?04037th
BMW M1 Procar ChampionshipBMW Motorsport100?00NC
PPG Indy Car World Series701?48111th
Formula One20101419th
TAG Williams Team10000
24 Hours of Le MansGrand Touring Cars Inc.10000N/ADNS
24 Hours of Le Mans 10001N/A3rd
IMSA GT Championship AG10100N/ANC
24 Hours of Le Mans AG10000N/A6th
IMSA GT ChampionshipBusby Racing10000N/ANC
IMSA GT Championship100001829th


American open-wheel racing
() (Races in bold indicate pole position)


USAC Championship Car
1964 ! nowrapDoug Stearly ! nowrapElder 61 FE !rowspan=4PHX
11
INDYMIL!rowspan=4 style="background:#CFCFFF;" 11th !rowspan=4 style="background:#CFCFFF;"530
1965 !rowspan=3Dean Van Lines Racing Division ! nowrapBlum 64 FE ! PHX
6

2
ATL
2
LAN
4
!rowspan=3 style="background:#FFFFBF;" 1st !rowspan=3 style="background:#FFFFBF;"3110
1966 ! Dean Van Lines Racing Division ! Hawk I !rowspan=2Ford 255 ci V8PHX
15

4
INDY
18
MIL
1
LAN
1
ATL
1
PPRIRP
1
MIL
1

1
PHX
1
!rowspan=3 style="background:#FFFFBF;" 1st !rowspan=3 style="background:#FFFFBF;"3070
1967 !rowspan=2Dean Van Lines Racing Division ! Hawk I !rowspan=2Ford 255 ci V8PHX
DNS
!rowspan=5 style="background:#DFDFDF;" 2nd !rowspan=5 style="background:#DFDFDF;"3360
1968 !rowspan=4Andretti Racing Enterprises ! Hawk II ! Ford 255 ci V8HAN
23
LVS
2
PHX
15

2
PPR
4
MIL
2
!rowspan=6 style="background:#DFDFDF;" 2nd !rowspan=6 style="background:#DFDFDF;"4319
1969 !rowspan=4 !rowspan=2Hawk III ! Ford 159ci V8 PHX
16
HAN
1
INDY
1
MIL
7

1
MIL
4
DOV
11

1
PHX
21
!rowspan=4 style="background:#FFFFBF;" 1st !rowspan=4 style="background:#FFFFBF;"5055
1970 !rowspan=5 !rowspan=2Hawk III ! Ford 159ci V8 PHX
13

2
LAN
8
MCH
21
MIL
24
PHX
8
!rowspan=5 style="background:#DFFFDF;" 5th !rowspan=5 style="background:#DFFFDF;"1890
1971 ! ! nowrapMcNamara T-501 ! Ford 159ci V8 RAFRAFPHX
9

18
INDY
30
MIL
11
POC
4
MCH
12
MIL
19
ONT
33

2
PHX
4
!style="background:#CFEAFF;" 9th !style="background:#CFEAFF;"1370
1972 !rowspan=2Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing ! Colt 70/72 !rowspan=2 PHX
2
!rowspan=2 style="background:#CFCFFF;" 11th !rowspan=2 style="background:#CFCFFF;"1135
1973 ! Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing ! Parnelli VPJ2 ! TWS
25

4

1
INDY
30

8
POC
7
MCH
5

19
ONTONT
12
ONT
2
MCH
5
MCH
2

7
TWS
17
PHX
7
!style="background:#DFFFDF;" 5th !style="background:#DFFFDF;"2400
1974 !rowspan=3Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing ! Parnelli VPJ2 !rowspan=3 ONTONT
9
ONT
25
!rowspan=3 style="background:#CFCFFF;" 15th !rowspan=3 style="background:#CFCFFF;"655
1975 ! Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing !rowspan=2Eagle 74 !rowspan=2 ONTONTONT
28
PHXINDY
28
MILPOC
25
MCHMILMCH!rowspan=2 style="background:#CFCFFF;" 23rd !rowspan=2 style="background:#CFCFFF;"210
1976 ! ! ! PHXINDY
8
POC
5
MCHTWSONTMCHTWS
4
PHX
3
!style="background:#CFEAFF;" 9th !style="background:#CFEAFF;"1200
1977 !rowspan=2 ! !rowspan=2 V8 ONTPHX
DNS
TWS
16
INDY
26
POC
2
MOSMCHTWSONT
4
PHX
4
!rowspan=2 style="background:#CFEAFF;" 7th !rowspan=2 style="background:#CFEAFF;"1580
1978 ! ! ! V8 PHXONT
15
TWS
5

13
INDY
12
MOSPOC
23
MCHATLTWSONTMCH
20

1
SILPHX
7
!style="background:#CFCFFF;" 17th !style="background:#CFCFFF;"681
1980 ! ! ! V8 ONTINDY
20
POC
17
MOH!style="background:#CFCFFF;" 37th !style="background:#CFCFFF;"40
1981-82 !rowspan=2 ! !rowspan=2 V8 INDY
2
ISFDSFINF!rowspan=2 style="background:#CFEAFF;" 6th !rowspan=2 style="background:#CFEAFF;"805
1982-83 ! Newman/Haas Racing ! Lola T700 ! V8 ISFDSFNAZINDY
23
!style="background:#CFCFFF;" 32nd !style="background:#CFCFFF;"15
1983-84 ! Newman/Haas Racing ! Lola T800 ! nowrap V8 DSFINDY
17
!style="background:#CFCFFF;" 20th !style="background:#CFCFFF;"20


PPG Indy Car World Series
1979 ! nowrap ! 99 ! nowrap ! nowrap V8 PHXATLATLINDYTRETREMCHMCHWGLTREONT
3
MCH
DNS
ATLPHX!style="background:#CFCFFF;" 11th !style="background:#CFCFFF;"700 !
1980 ! nowrap ! 12 ! nowrap ! nowrap V8 ONTINDY
20
MILPOC
17
MOHMCHWGLMILONTMCH
1
MEXPHX
2
!style="background:#CFCFFF;" 16th !style="background:#CFCFFF;"580 !
1981 ! nowrap ! rowspan=240 ! nowrap ! nowrap V8 PHX
11
MIL
3
ATL
3
ATL
2
MCHRIVMILMCH
2
WGL
16
MEXPHX
4
!style="background:#CFCFFF;" 11th !style="background:#CFCFFF;"81 !
1982 ! nowrap ! nowrap ! nowrap V8 PHX
2
ATL
11
MIL
9
CLE
2
MCH
2
MIL
3
POC
14
RIV
23
ROA
14
MCH
2
PHX
3
!style="background:#FFDF9F;" 3rd !style="background:#FFDF9F;"188 !
1983 ! nowrapNewman/Haas Racing ! rowspan=23 ! nowrapLola T700 ! nowrap V8 ATL
5
INDY
23
MIL
18
CLE
14
MCH
3
ROA
1
POC
7
RIV
16
MOH
2
MCH
4
CPL
1
LAG
2
PHX
2
!style="background:#FFDF9F;" 3rd !style="background:#FFDF9F;"133 !
1984 ! nowrapNewman/Haas Racing ! nowrapLola T800 ! nowrap V8 LBH
1
PHX
20
INDY
17
MIL
8
POR
26
MEA
1
CLE
21
MCH
1
ROA
1
POC
19
MOH
1
SAN
7
MCH
1
PHX
12
LAG
2
CPL
2
!style="background:#FFFFBF;" 1st !style="background:#FFFFBF;"176 !
1985 ! nowrapNewman/Haas Racing ! 1 ! nowrapLola T900 ! nowrap V8 LBH
1
INDY
2
MIL
1
POR
1
MEA
26
CLE
14
MCH
10
ROAPOC
7
MOH
7
SAN
15
MCH
21
LAG
11
PHX
3

27
!style="background:#DFFFDF;" 5th !style="background:#DFFFDF;"114 !
1986 ! nowrapNewman/Haas Racing ! rowspan=25 ! nowrapLola T86/00 ! nowrap V8 PHX
7
LBH
5
INDY
32
MIL
5
POR
1
MEA
24
CLE
3
TOR
3
MCH
21
POC
1
MOH
24
SAN
8
MCH
10
ROA
9
LAG
4
PHX
4

11 !style="background:#DFFFDF;"
5th !style="background:#DFFFDF;"136 !
1987 ! nowrapNewman/Haas Racing ! nowrapLola T87/00 ! nowrap 265A V8 LBH
1
PHX
5
INDY
9
MIL
17
POR
10
MEA
2
CLE
10
TOR
15
MCH
19
POC
19
ROA
1
MOH
17
NAZ
19
LAG
17

4
!style="background:#CFEAFF;" 6th !style="background:#CFEAFF;"100 !
1988 !rowspan=2 nowrapNewman/Haas Racing !rowspan=26 ! nowrapLola T88/00 !rowspan=2 nowrap 265A V8 PHX
1
LBH
15
MIL
17
POR
5
CLE
1
TOR
25
MEA
2
MCH
12
POC
17
MOH
2
ROA
3
NAZ
3
LAG
3

15
!rowspan=2 style="background:#DFFFDF;" 5th !rowspan=2 style="background:#DFFFDF;"126 !rowspan=2
1989 ! nowrapNewman/Haas Racing ! 5 ! nowrapLola T89/00 ! nowrap 265A V8 PHX
8
LBH
18
INDY
4
MIL
7
DET
3
POR
25
CLE
2
MEA
20
TOR
26
MCH
3
POC
5
MOH
7
ROA
7
NAZ
8
LAG
2
!style="background:#CFEAFF;" 6th !style="background:#CFEAFF;"110 !
1990 ! nowrapNewman/Haas Racing ! rowspan=26 ! nowrapLola T90/00 ! nowrap 265A V8 PHX
4
LBH
5
INDY
27
MIL
21
DET
25
POR
2
CLE
4
MEA
24
TOR
6
MCH
3
DEN
4
VAN
3
MOH
2
ROA
5
NAZ
4
LAG
26
!style="background:#CFEAFF;" 7th !style="background:#CFEAFF;"136 !
1991 ! nowrapNewman/Haas Racing ! nowrapLola T91/00 ! nowrap 265A V8 SRF
17
LBH
19
PHX
9
INDY
7
MIL
3
DET
7
POR
5
CLE
6
MEA
15
TOR
2
MCH
4
DEN
15
VAN
4
MOH
7
ROA
3
NAZ
5
LAG
3 !style="background:#CFEAFF;"
7th !style="background:#CFEAFF;"132 !
1992 !rowspan=2 nowrapNewman/Haas Racing !rowspan=22 ! nowrapLola T91/00 !rowspan=2 nowrapFord V8 SRF
7
!rowspan=2 style="background:#CFEAFF;" 6th !rowspan=2 style="background:#CFEAFF;"105 !rowspan=2
1993 ! nowrapNewman/Haas Racing ! rowspan=26 ! nowrapLola T93/00 ! nowrapFord V8 SRF
4
PHX
1
LBH
18
INDY
5
MIL
18
DET
3
POR
6
CLE
5
TOR
8
MCH
2
NHA
20
ROA
15
VAN
5
MOH
7
NAZ
13
LAG
9
!style="background:#CFEAFF;" 6th !style="background:#CFEAFF;"117 !
1994 ! nowrapNewman/Haas Racing ! nowrapLola T94/00 ! nowrapFord V8 SRF
3
PHX
21
LBH
5
INDY
32
MIL
14
DET
18
POR
9
CLE
27
TOR
4
MCH
18
MOH
10
NHA
19
VAN
11
ROA
16
NAZ
25
LAG
19
!style="background:#CFCFFF;" 14th !style="background:#CFCFFF;"45 !


Indianapolis 500
1965HawkFord43Dean Van Lines Racing Division
1966HawkFord118Dean Van Lines Racing Division
1967HawkFord130Dean Van Lines Racing Division
1968HawkFord433Andretti Racing Enterprises
1969HawkFord21
1970McNamaraFord86
1971McNamaraFord930
197258Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing
1973630Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing
1974Eagle531Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing
1975Eagle2728Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing
1976198
1977626
19783312
1980220
1981322
1982431
19831123Newman/Haas Racing
1984617Newman/Haas Racing
198542Newman/Haas Racing
19863032Newman/Haas Racing
198719Newman/Haas Racing
1988420Newman/Haas Racing
198954Newman/Haas Racing
1990627Newman/Haas Racing
199137Newman/Haas Racing
1992323Newman/Haas Racing
199325Newman/Haas Racing
1994932Newman/Haas Racing


NASCAR
() ( Bold – Pole position awarded by qualifying time. Italics – Pole position earned by points standings or practice time. * – Most laps led.)


Grand National Series


Daytona 500
19663937
1967Ford121*
1968Mercury2029


24 Hours of Le Mans results


Complete Formula One World Championship results
() (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)
! nowrap Gold Leaf ! nowrap 49B ! nowrap 3.0 V8RSAESPMONBELNEDFRAGBRGERITA
CANUSA
MEX! NC ! 0
!rowspan=2 nowrap Gold Leaf ! nowrap 49B !rowspan=2 nowrap 3.0 V8RSA
ESPMONNEDFRAGBR!rowspan=2 NC !rowspan=20
! nowrap STP Corporation ! nowrapMarch 701 ! nowrap 3.0 V8RSA
ESP
MONBELNEDFRAGBR
GER
AUT
ITACANUSAMEX! 16th ! 4
!rowspan=2 nowrap ! nowrap 312B ! nowrap 001 3.0 F12RSA
ESP
MON
NED
FRAGBR!rowspan=2 8th !rowspan=212
! nowrap ! nowrap 312B2 ! nowrap 001/1 3.0 F12ARG
RSA
ESP
MONBELFRAGBRGERAUTITA
CANUSA
! 12th ! 4
! nowrap Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing ! nowrapParnelli VPJ4 ! nowrap 3.0 V8ARGBRARSAESPBELMONSWENEDFRAGBRGERAUTITACAN

! NC ! 0
! nowrap Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing ! nowrapParnelli VPJ4 ! nowrap 3.0 V8ARG
BRA
RSA
ESP
MON
BELSWE
NEDFRA
GBR
GER
AUT
ITA
USA
! 14th ! 5
! nowrap John Player ! nowrap 77 !rowspan=2 nowrap 3.0 V8BRA
ESP
BEL
MONSWE
FRA
GBR
GER
AUT
NED
ITA
CAN
USA
JPN
!rowspan=2 6th !rowspan=222
! nowrap John Player ! nowrap 78 ! nowrap 3.0 V8ARG
BRA
RSA
USW
ESP
MON
BEL
SWE
FRA
GBR
GER
AUT
NED
ITA
USA
CAN
JPN
3rd47
!rowspan=2 nowrap John Player ! nowrap 78 !rowspan=2 nowrap 3.0 V8ARG
BRA
RSA
USW
MON
1st64
!rowspan=2 nowrap ! nowrap 79 !rowspan=2 nowrap 3.0 V8ARG
BRA
RSA
USW
BEL
GBR
GER
AUT
NED
ITA
CAN
USA
!rowspan=2 12th !rowspan=214
! nowrap ! nowrap 81 ! nowrap 3.0 V8ARG
BRA
RSA
USW
BEL
MON
FRA
GBR
GER
AUT
NED
ITA
CAN
USA
! 20th ! 1
!rowspan=3 nowrap Marlboro Team Alfa Romeo ! nowrapAlfa Romeo 179C !rowspan=3 nowrapAlfa Romeo 1260 3.0 V12USW
BRA
ARG
SMR
BEL
MON
ESP
!rowspan=3 17th !rowspan=33
! nowrap TAG Williams Team ! nowrapWilliams FW07C ! nowrap 3.0 V8RSABRAUSW
SMRBELMONDETCANNEDGBRFRAGERAUTSUI!rowspan=2 19th !rowspan=24


Complete Formula One non-championship results
() (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)
1971 ! nowrap ! nowrap 312B ! nowrap 001 3.0 F12ARGROCQUE
SPRINTRINOULVIC
1975 ! nowrapVel's Parnelli Jones Racing ! nowrapParnelli VPJ4 ! nowrap 3.0 V8ROCINT
SUI
1976 ! nowrapWalter Wolf Racing ! nowrapWolf–Williams FW05 ! nowrap 3.0 V8ROCINT
1977 ! nowrapJohn Player ! nowrap 78 ! nowrap 3.0 V8ROC
1978 ! nowrapJohn Player ! nowrap 79 ! nowrap 3.0 V8INT
1979 ! nowrap ! nowrap 79 ! nowrap 3.0 V8ROC
GNM
DIN
1980 ! nowrap ! nowrap 81 ! nowrap 3.0 V8ESP


See also
  • List of celebrities who own wineries and vineyards


Notes and references

Notes

External links
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