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Team McLaren has been the most successful team in world
motorsport since it appeared in 1966. McLaren cars and drivers have
taken the chequered flag at Grand Prix races 123 times, won 19 Formula One
World Championship titles (more than any other team in the history of the
sport), dominated CamAm events (56 wins between 1967 and 1972) and taken
three Indianapolis 500 races. The man who started it all, Aucklander Bruce
McLaren, was a brilliant driver, with vision that extended far beyond the
driver's seat. He became the engineer, the inventor, the
constructor, the tester. Bruce McLaren took the essence of the New Zealand Edge
and transformed it into arguably the greatest motor racing team in
history.
In the 1960s and 70s it was New Zealanders Denny Hulme and Bruce McLaren himself who drove the McLaren cars to victory; in the 1980s it was Alain Prost; in the 1990s the great Ayrton Senna; and in 1998 and 1999 it was Mika Hakkinen who took the Drivers Championship titles. The best and fastest drivers have always been attracted to McLaren - Hunt, Lauda, Fittipaldi, Revson and Mass included. The cars, then the reputation, grew from a combination of talents, Bruce McLaren's talents, which became very evident early in his career. Since McLaren cars first appeared on race tracks in 1966, they have taken eleven Formula One Drivers World Championship titles and eight Formula One Constructors World Championship titles; between 1988 and 1991 the McLaren team won four Constructors titles consecutively, the only team ever to do so. To date McLarens have raced in 496 Grand Prix and have scored 123 wins. This places the team second behind Ferrari by 6 races, however Ferrari started racing 16 years before McLaren cars. McLaren racers have not only achieved in Formula One. There were victories in the Indianapolis 500 in 1972, 74 and 76; and the McLarens driven by Bruce and Denny Hulme totally dominated the Can Am series, winning five consecutive Constructors Championships between 1967 and 71 (this was the "Bruce n Denny Show").
From McLaren A Racing History, Geoffrey Williams writes: "Just as Jackie Stewart came to personify the increasing professionalism, commercialism and safety consciousness of Grand Prix racing in the 1970s and similarly so with Ayrton Senna as the dedicated professional of the 1990s, Bruce McLaren typified the happy, often comradely spirit of earlier times. The most universally liked driver of his era, Bruces background suggested he may have something out of the ordinary to offer the sport." |
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Brabham was driving for the
Cooper team and he persuaded them to give McLaren a spot. He was promised a
workshop, a wage and a new Formula Two Cooper on arrival in England. His
"new car" turned out to be a mass of pipes lying on the Cooper
factory floor. He had to build it himself, from scratch; a skill not
generally required of drivers. Those years in the Auckland service
station workshop were immediately useful. |
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What made McLaren a brilliant
driver? A natural gift, yes, but also the New Zealand environment. Years
of tricky hill climbs one weekend, than a flat circuit the next; having to
mechanically improvise with old cars, learning how they worked and making
them faster. His experience brought rapid results in Europe.
McLarens performance in the 1958 German Grand Prix at Nurburgring confirming his promising potential. This 14 mile, 170 corner track intimidated the most experienced drivers. The race combined both Formula One and Two; McLaren took the Formula Two chequered flag, with only four Formula One cars ahead of him. Yet he had initially only been the reserve list for the race. Charles Cooper promoted him to
Formula One and the next year he won the American Grand Prix at the age of
22, the youngest ever driver to earn this honour. |
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Bruce McLaren's record: 101 Grand Prix starts 4 wins 196.5 points scored Formula One Championship placings: |
| 1958 |
Cooper ( German, Moroccan GP
only), 0 points |
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1959 |
Cooper, 6th |
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| 1960 | Cooper, 2nd | ||
| 1961 | Cooper, 7th | ||
| 1962 | Cooper, 3rd | ||
| 1963 | Cooper, 6th | ||
| 1964 | Cooper, 7th | ||
| 1965 | Cooper, 8th | ||
| 1966 | McLaren, 14th | ||
| 1967 | Eagle (French, British, German GP only) | ||
| 1967 | McLaren, 14th | ||
| 1968 | McLaren, 5th | ||
| 1969 | McLaren, 3rd | ||
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1970 |
McLaren, 14th (South African, Spanish, Monaco GP only) |
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Winner Le Mans 24 hours, 1966 Winner Sebring 12 hours, 1967 Can Am Series Champion, 1967, 1969 |
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Team McLaren's record: F1 Constructors Championships 1998, 1991, 1990, 1989, 1988, 1985, 1984, 1974 Drivers Championship
(McLaren drivers) Ayrton Senna 35 wins for
McLaren, 3 Championships While Ferrari has been the most successful team with 129 wins to date (April 2000), it has been racing for 17 years more than McLaren, has been in 128 more Grand Prix and has only achieved six more Grand Prix wins. McLarens win rate is 123/493 (one win for every four races), Ferraris is 129/621 (one win for every five races). Championships have been won with the aid of Ford, TAG Porsche, Honda and Mercedes engines. |
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| Sources
Web references: For the Bruce McLaren Trust
site: For the official Team
McLaren web magazine: For a site covering McLarens
times and placings: For Doug Nyes story of
Bruces 1968 Belgian GP win: Motorsports Hall of Fame Books: Jones, Bruce. ed (1st published 1995), The Ultimate Encyclopaedia of Formula One, Carlton Books, UK Becht, Richard. (1993), Champions of Speed, Hodder Moa Beckett, New Zealand Williams, Geoffrey. (1991), McLaren A Racing History, The Crowood Press, UK Articles: Pearce, Bob (1999) "Daimler to spend $1b on Stake in McLaren", New Zealand Herald, July 14 Potter, Tony. (1995) "Legend of the racetrack", Sunday Star Times, November 26 Dick, Allan. (1995) "Bruce McLaren", Driver Magazine, June COPYRIGHT NZEDGE.COM IP HOLDINGS LIMITED
1998-2009. |
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Aitken | Alda | Alley
| Atack | Batten | Bowen |
Britten |
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