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Bob Bondurant

Bob Bondurant is America's uncrowned
world driving champion. He's also the dean of America's
high-performance driving teachers.
In 1965, Bondurant and his co-drivers
won seven of 10 races in the World Manufacturers Championship
series behind the wheel of a Carroll Shelby Cobra Daytona
Coupe. That feat earned Ford the GT class title, the first
international championship ever for an American automaker.
Had drivers as well as cars earned
points, Bondurant would have been the individual world
champion.
Bondurant was born in 1933 at
Evanston, IL and grew up in Los Angeles, where he raced
motorcycles and sports cars. He made his breakthrough by
winning 18 of 20 races in a 1957 Corvette. He says he was
especially motivated to win because of his deal with his
mechanic, who didn't charge Bondurant for maintenance after
races when he won.
In 1959 he was West Coast
"B" Production champion and Corvette driver of the
year.
He was working as a helicopter pilot
when he was recruited by Carroll Shelby to race Cobras in
1963. The following year Bondurant and Dan Gurney drove one of
Shelby's new Cobra Daytona Coupe's to a fourth-place finish
overall and a GT-class victory in the 24 Hours of Le Mans.
In addition to driving to the world
championship in 1965, Bondurant was part of Ford's GT-40
assault on Le Mans that year. In 1966 he raced sports cars for
Ferrari and also posted a fourth-place in the important
1,000-kilometer race at the Nurburgring in a drive for
Porsche.
In 1967, Bondurant was racing in the
Can-Am series when his car suffered a broken steering arm
while racing at 150 mph on the Watkins Glen track,
somersaulting eight times and high into the air. "I knew
I was in trouble when I
saw the tops of the trees," Bondurant said.
Bondurant was so severely injured
that doctors told him there was only a one percent chance he
would ever walk again.
In addition to racing sports cars,
Bondurant drove in nine Formula One races. He drove for the
Ferrari factory team in the U.S. Grand Prix at the end of the
1965 season, finished fourth at Monaco in 1966 with BRM and
also drove for Gurney's team.
In 1966 Bondurant had helped coach
James Garner for his role in the movie Grand Prix. To speed
his own recuperation after his accident, Bondurant decided to
open a driving school, which he did on Valentine's Day in 1968
with three Datsuns and a Formula Vee racer. Among his first
students were Paul Newman and Robert Wagner, who were
preparing for the Indy-racing movie Winning.
Thirty-five years later, more than
85,000 people have gone through the Bob Bondurant School of
High Performance Driving, including drivers who have gone on
to win Indianapolis and NASCAR championships.
But there is much more to Bondurant's
school than the preparation of future racing champions. The
curriculum includes courses in safe highway driving. There are
courses in skid control and accident avoidance and special
programs to instill good habits in new, teenaged drivers.
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