| Forceful George Follmer -- a
contender in any kind of racing he tried and a winner in most
- was Trans-Am champion twice and one of only seven Can-Am
kings.
Born in 1934, this
Californian didn't start driving competitively until he was
25, when he and his Volkswagen took up autocross. Moving on to
sports cars, he turned pro in 1965 - and promptly won the
SCCA's United States Road Racing Championship. He did it in
the California hot rod tradition; with a small-bore special he
helped build. It was a tiny English Lotus 23 powered by a
German Porsche engine.
Follmer then moved on to
bigger iron: Can-Am, Indy cars, Trans-Am, Formula 5000, NASCAR
and even Formula One.
In 1969 he took his first
victories in both Trans-Am, as a Ford factory driver in a Bud
Moore Mustang, and Indy car, in a Gilbert-Chevrolet. Follmer
helped Ford to the Trans-Am championship with a 1970 win. The
same year, he tallied two F5000 scores in a Lotus-Ford.
In 1971, driving a Moore
Mustang before switching to an AMC Javelin fielded by Roy
Woods, he won three more Trans-Am races. That same season,
Follmer the road racer also captured a first-place trophy in a
NASCAR Sportsman race. In 1972 he used a Woods Javelin to add
four more Trans-Am victories and earn his first series
championship. It was AMC's second title.
Only days after clinching
that title, Follmer got a call from Roger Penske. Could he
come to the Road Atlanta Can-Am to replace the injured Mark
Donohue in the powerful, turbo-charged Porsche
"Panzer?"
He agreed with two
conditions: "I'm not supposed to crash, and I am supposed
to win."
Win he did, five times in
the eight races he ran for the team in '72, and the Can-Am cup
went up on his shelf next to his brand-new Trans-Am trophy.
The following year, now with a privateer team, he drove the
same car to one more Can-Am victory.
Follmer debuted in Formula 1
in 1973. In his first F1 race, driving American Don Nichols'
Shadow-Ford, he came home sixth - thus earning a world
championship point. He placed third with a coveted spot on the
podium in his next grand prix. The rest of the international
season brought less success and Follmer resumed his U.S.
career.
Back in Trans-Am, he drove a
Porsche to clinch his second championship 1976. In the Can-Am,
he took one 1978 victory with a Prophet-Chevy. Leg injuries
suffered later that season in the same car effectively ended
his professional career.
Nowadays he keeps busy
off-track with various commercial ventures as well as his
immaculately maintained Piper Arrow place. But anyone who
watches him in his frequent vintage event appearances knows
that in a race car, George Follmer is as forceful as ever.
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