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Elliot Forbes
- Robinson

The racing industry is ever-changing.
Teams, drivers and sponsors come and go before people remember
they were there. But for over five decades now, at least one
thing in motorsports hasn’t changed: Elliott Forbes-Robinson
winning races.
Getting his start in the Sports Car
Club of America (SCCA), Forbes-Robinson went to driving school
in 1968 in Riverside, Calif. Receiving his racing license
shortly thereafter, he competed in his first professional race
in a 289 Ford Cobra at Stardust Raceway in Las Vegas later
that year. As soon as the checkered flag waved, he was hooked
for life.

Forbes-Robinson’s list of racing
accolades is spread among a variety of racing entities. A
former Trans-Am and sports car prototype champion, he has
scored victories in over seven different series, winning at
least one race in each of the past five decades. He won his
first professional race in the Trans Am Series, winning in
1969 at Sears Point in a Allred brothers Porsche 911S. Not too
long after, he agreed to run fellow road racing great Richie
Ginther’s parts department in exchange for seat time in
Ginther’s Porsche 914/6 and Super Vee cars.
Quickly showing speed and potential,
the driver now known simply as EFR, moved to the Formula
Atlantic series, going wheel-to-wheel with some of racing’s
brightest stars, most notably Gilles Villeneuve, Bobby Rahal
and Danny Sullivan.
He also became a staple of the
second-generation Can-Am series in the late 70s and early 80s,
joining Rahal and Sullivan but also battling on track with the
likes of Jacky Ickx, Patrick Tambay and Al Holbert.
Forbes-Robinson won the Trans-Am series championship in 1982.

EFR has truly raced it all. From SCCA
to Super Vee, Formula 5000 to World Sports Cars, he has also
competed in World Challenge, IMSA GTP, GTO, GTU and Supercar
and most recently Daytona Prototypes in the Rolex Sports Car
Series, where he won two races in 2005 at the age of 61. He
has even tried Pro Rally, the Baja 1000 (winning twice) and
Pikes Peak. He also competed in 23 NASCAR Cup races, finishing
inside the top 10 three different times.
Every driver has a landmark victory
that will forever be mentioned in the same breath. For EFR,
that victory came in 1997, when piloting a Ford Riley &
Scott with Andy Wallace, James Weaver, Butch Leitzinger, John
Paul Jr. and Rob Dyson, Forbes-Robinson clinched his first
overall victory in the Rolex 24 At Daytona. Two years later
(again with Wallace and Leitzinger), EFR scored his second
Rolex 24 victory. The win marked the beginning of a year which
saw EFR win dual sports car championships, in USRRC and ALMS.

Even with the list of accomplishments
as long as it is, Forbes-Robinson remains one of the most
approachable personalities in the paddock. His boyish demeanor
and ear-to-ear smile endear him to fans and competitors alike.
There isn’t a person who can better represent this
enshrinement more than EFR, but don’t think for a moment
that this induction signifies the end of an illustrious
career.
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