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Dan Gurney

Daniel Sexton Gurney was
born April 13, 1931, in Port Jefferson, Long Island, to John
Gurney, a Metropolitan Opera star, and his wife Roma Sexton.
Following high school, his family moved to Riverside,
California, where Dan developed his driving skills by weaving
through Southern California orange groves. He graduated from
Menlo Junior college and served two years with the United
States Army, most of that time overseas in the Korean War.
Dan has had 3 very successful careers A) Racing Driver
B) Racecar Manufacturer / Inventor and C) long term team
owner.
In the spring of 2002 Dan surprised the automotive world by
branching out into a new field of endeavor. He introduced his
revolutionary single cylinder ALLIGATOR motorcycle, a project
in the making for 2 decades
His racing career, which started with a Triumph TR2 in 1955,
spanned 15 years. During that time he became the top road
racing star in America, as well as one of the most popular F1
Grand Prix drivers ever. Gurney etched himself a place in
racing lore with exciting battles against drivers like
Stirling Moss, Jimmy Clark, John Surtees, Jack Brabham, Graham
Hill, Phil Hill and many others on the classic road courses of
the Nurburgring, the Targa Florio and Monte Carlo. He remains
the only US citizen to win a Grand Prix in a car of his own
construction in the 100 year history of F1 racing.
With his success, the Dan Gurney fan club flourished, with a
worldwide membership that included people from behind the Iron
Curtain. In fact, at one point, Car and Driver magazine
launched a "Dan Gurney for President" campaign that
is periodically resurrected.
By
the time he retired from active driving in 1970, Gurney had
raced in 312 events in 20 countries with 51 different makes of
cars winning 51 races and finishing on the podium an
additional 47 times! Among his most important victories: 7
Formula One races (four Grand Prix World Championship events),
7 Indy Car races, 5 NASCAR Winston Cup stockcar races (all 500
mile races in Riverside, California), and two second place
finishes at the "Indy 500". Additionally he captured
wins in Trans-Am, Can-Am and Sports car races including the
endurance classics at the Nurburgring, Daytona, Sebring and Le
Mans. He claimed 42 career pole positions and started on the
front row of the grid an additional and astonishing 58 times!
The many "races that got away", i.e. those that Dan
was leading - often by a considerable margin - but could not
finish due to mechanical problems, made him almost as famous
and popular as the wins.
This versatile and winning record made Dan the first driver
ever to win races in the four major categories of motorsports:
Grand Prix, Indy Car, NASCAR and Sports Car. To this day he is
one of only two drivers in history (the other being Mario
Andretti) who have ever accomplished that.
While his second and third career as a race car manufacturer
of the Eagles as well as team owner of AAR started while he
was still actively driving, it went into full gear upon his
retirement in 1970. At that time he bought out AAR co-founder
Carroll Shelby and has been sole owner, chairman and CEO of
the company ever since. AAR has been designing and
manufacturing race cars with great success during the last 30
years, winning 8 Championships and capturing 78 victories and
83 pole positions, including the Indy 500 and the 12 hours of
Sebring and 24 Hours of Daytona. 66 drivers from around the
globe have been employed at AAR between the years 1965 and
2000, the last one being Dan's son Alexander Gurney who raced
in the Atlantic Series.
Eagles bought by customers raced on the Indy circuit and
Formula A/5000 circuit with great success, capturing numerous
victories, most notably the Indy 500 twice with Bobby Unser
in1968 and Gordon Johncock in 1973, plus 3 Championships in
Indy Cars and Formula A.
A member of various Motorsports Halls of Fame, Gurney has been
a pioneer of racing innovations. In 1971 he developed the
Gurney Flap (wickerbill), an invention which has been adopted
by the automobile racing and aviation industries throughout
the world. He was the first race car driver to introduce a
full-face helmet to Indy Car racing as well as Grand Prix
racing. He was instrumental in launching the rear-engine
revolution in Indianapolis in 1963. He is the only American in
modern day Grand Prix racing who built and raced his own
Formula One car to victory (1967 Grand Prix of Belgium). His
exuberant gesture of spraying champagne into the crowd from
the victory podium in Le Mans 30 years ago has been emulated
worldwide by winners ever since.
One of the original founders of Championship Auto Racing Teams
(CART), Gurney came up with the name and acronym. He was
instrumental in bringing Monte Carlo-type street car racing to
the United States and became a co-founder of the Long Beach
Grand Prix in 1974 where he continued to serve on its Board of
Directors for 24 years.
Gurney is no stranger to Hollywood either. A member of the
Screen Actors Guild since 1965, Gurney has appeared in such
motor racing films as 'Winning', 'A Man and a Woman', and
'Grand Prix'. His win of the 'Cannonball Run' across the
United States in 1971 inspired his friend and co-pilot Brock
Yates to write the screenplay for the 'Cannonball' movies. His
long term relationship with Toyota started in 1982 when Dan
was hired by the company to do TV commercials for the
introduction of the Supra. This relationship has resulted in
three Drivers and three Manufacturers championships for the
auto maker.
An avid reader of political and military history, Gurney loves
old movies, opera, cigars, traveling to historical places and
riding motorcycles. Gurney and his wife, Evi, who was a junior
executive in the public relations/press department of Porsche
in Stuttgart and a well-known motorsports journalist in
Germany during the sixties, have two sons. Dan has four grown
children from his first marriage and five grandchildren. They
live in Newport Beach, California.
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